conniehinesdorothyprovine--disqus
ConnieHinesDorothyProvine
conniehinesdorothyprovine--disqus

My favorite was Mars Attacks!.

A real pity that Brian DePalma directed that trashy movie. For years he was one of the cleverest directors (Phantom of the Paradise, Carrie, Scarface). That movie was nothing but an excuse to show off the overrated religious wacko known as Tom Cruise.

I'd like to see Mary Poppins meets Snakes on a Plane.

Well get a load of this. When I was little I would sometimes spend the day at the house of an elderly woman whom we knew. I would sometimes watch her TV, and one of the shows that aired at the time was The Real Ghostbusters. As a result, that was the only Ghostbusters that I knew.

When Christoph Waltz hosted Saturday Night Live, they had a mock ad for Quentin Tarantino's next movie: Djesus Uncrossed, in which JC is out for revenge.

Let me guess: Gibson will use this next movie to "prove" that the Jews started all wars.

For an attempt to reverse all the dumbing down, someone ought to force Sarah Palin to read A Brief History of Time and explain astrophysics.

I liked it

That would be like making a documentary about how the sky is blue or how we breathe air.

These data are pretty much what I expected, although I would've expected Jean-Claude Van Damme to end up in the bottom six.

From what I read about that movie, you'd think that the video store would've been glad that he kept it and got it off their hands.

I once saw a Sylvester-Tweety cartoon that had almost the exact same plot as The Shining (although it got made years earlier).

I had no plans to see it.

How lame must a person be to like that celluloid version of a crime against humanity?

If you're wondering what's the movie version of a human rights abuse worthy of prosecution by the Hague, look no further than Mac and Me. It was half ripoff of E.T., half advertisement for McDonald's and Coca Cola.

Had I originally scene the movie including those scenes, it might've scarred me for life.

Haven't seen any of these, haven't even heard of half of them. Probably with good reason.

Didn't see any of those and I never plan to. John Waters's Cecil B. Demented referenced the Flintstones sequel.

You gotta love his performance as the president in Idiocracy.

On top of it, Elizabeth Taylor's final movie was that execrable Flintstones movie.