My first exposure to this song was when they performed it on SNL. Not being someone who pays a lot of attention to top 40 radio, I just thought it was a bad song by a band past their sell by date.
My first exposure to this song was when they performed it on SNL. Not being someone who pays a lot of attention to top 40 radio, I just thought it was a bad song by a band past their sell by date.
I thought the same thing. He looks bigger in other things I've seen, I though he even looked bigger on Talking Dead. Which is why I felt like they didn't shoot it right. The wide shots in particular made him seem small alongside the rest of them. Maybe tracking from behind him as he approached would have helped, or…
I like the concept of the scene. And in the teaser, it felt chilling. For some reason, as executed, it didn't click for me. Right from the moment he stepped out of the RV something just felt off. Like I thought I should be terrified, but I wasn't. I felt tense during the eenie-meenie-minie-mo sequence, but once it…
Such a missed opportunity. This could have been a tense, 45 minutes of television with a chilling ending.
Just hearing those opening synth notes makes me tense up. I actually heard this as bumper music on a radio talk show this morning, and even just five seconds worth made me cringe.
Yeah, but the one singer whose version she sort of complements has an even smoother voice than Sinatra. And she says she'd basically prefer no singer at all. I'm just not sure how she actually wants Christmas songs to be sung.
So, the writer takes issue with singers voices taking center stage when they sing a Christmas song, then takes Sinatra to task for having no "character" to his voice, but apparently in spite of that his "too-perfect" voice still dominates the song, and maybe to avoid that we should just stick to Christmas songs being…
Are you certain? I re-watched the ending last night, and all I saw was him throwing the glaive, it hovers mid-air, then starts killing the beast.
What I mainly remember is that the hero throws his weapon, a weapon I don't believe we've even seen him practice with or use in battle yet. It flies at the creature, then proceeds to move about on its own killing it while Krull hugs his princess and stands around. As heroic journeys go, it's pretty lazy.
As a kid, I loved this film. Although, as others have pointed out, even at age 12 I found the lead utterly bland, to the point that when I re-watched it for the first time recently this year, it took me a few moments to realize that this was, in fact, our leading man for the next two hours. I actually had much…
About half the second album was compiled from songs they'd done for film soundtracks (Tin Men, in particular), so I think it was always bound to sound disjointed compared to that first one. Someone posted earlier that "I'm Not The Man I Used To Be" is a classic, and I think it's probably the only song that comes close…
I just didn't feel connected to anyone in Darjeeling. I suppose there is literally a story there, but I felt so distanced from the characters and everything felt so random that I never felt like I was in the midst of one.
How original - make the obligatory "his voice drives me crazy!" joke, and then make a joke about high-voiced singers missing their balls. It's annoying when comedians feel they have to always be "on". This felt more like an excuse to launch a routine than an actual conversation about why someone doesn't like something.
I haven't, and even before I read this article I was thinking I should check out what I've missed.
I always assumed most people fell out of love with Wes Anderson after The Life Aquatic. Even the friends I had that thought he was brilliant were at the very least defensive about that film, as if they secretly knew it didn't quite work.
I often feel like he sold a bit of his soul when he committed so strongly to Marvel. I'm sure the money is hard to resist, but I think creators like Brubaker and Rucka were smart to not tie themselves down the way he has.
Well, this was over ten years ago. Maybe my e-mail slowly worked its way up the corporate hierarchy, and heads finally rolled as they fired the employees who couldn't tell the difference, defiantly taking a stand and saying "This shall happen no more!"
To this day I've still never seen Noah Baumbach's Kicking & Screaming because every time I ordered it from Netflix, it was the Will Ferrell version. After several attempts, and even an e-mail pointing out the mistake, failed to correct things, i simply gave up.
This is one of those stories that, even though I'm certain I've watched it 2-3 times, reading this review made me realize that I don't remember a thing about it. The Shadow? Drax? The Marshal? I don't remember any of these characters. Didn't even remember there was another Time Lord in this story. Or what The Doctor…
I've seen him three times, all back in the '90s. First time was excellent, second time a few years later was okay, the third time (literally the night after the second time) he was terrible. Apparently, he'd caught the flu the night before.