dce1978--disqus
Frank Stallone
dce1978--disqus

If there isn't an actual 'Doomsday Clock' prop somewhere with hands that can be moved forward by concerned looking scientists while ominous music plays in the background, I'm going to be very upset.

'Press X To Throw Sink Through Window'

Her work in 'Ordinary People' is really, really extraordinary. If you've never seen it, you really should, it's a wonderful, very upsetting film. Watch her face in the scene where she holds up two halves of a broken plate and talks about whether or not they can be glued back together. Just beautiful stuff.

Hopefully, he has returned to his porch rocker and resumed whittling. What a shame. He was awesome.

All she really wants… is some justice. A way to get her cash untied. Oh, how appropriate.

Okay. So, I just pulled out my iPad and looked at my copy of 'Good Clean Fun - The Audio and Visual Documents of The Monkees'.

Yes, but which was first? That is the crucial question that we are sweating over! Or, shall we just call it a tie and name a shared date of the release of PAC&J?

Google-fu won't give me a definite answer. Wikipedia claims 'Daily Nightly', other places claim 'Star Collector'.

This is a really great piece, but it has triggered some music nerd rage in me.

He did a similar thing in 'Derek', in which long stretches of talking head inteviews with the subjects bathed in golden light prattled on and on about how Derek is actually emblematic of all that is good in the world while wiping the tears from their eyes.

Yeah, that stuff is really weird - we're supposed to believe that his song and his band are uniquely horrible, but they're just mediocre.

He seems more impressed at his ability to say nasty things about famous people at award ceremonies than a newly minted comedy genius should be.

For me, the songs are emblematic of the entire failing of 'Life On The Road', and demonstrates that Gervais has forgotten what made 'The Office' work.

'The Office' is one of the crown jewels of British comedy, even if it was largely a happy accident.

One of the great slide players of the rock era, and while not the unhinged genius of Lennon, or the commercial genius of McCartney, was an absolute master of slow-burn, melancholy heartbreak. Even critically dismissed albums like 'Extra Texture' have moments of sublime beauty that remind you that, oh - that's right…

But it has 'Unknown Delight', which is one of his great solo ballads.

He would see sick children on TV and would demand to know how he could help them.

Say it isn't so!

Is it easy to hurt others when you can't feel pain?

No can do?