devilsadvocate666--disqus
Devils_Advocate_666
devilsadvocate666--disqus

Just like The Ten (2007). The funniest sketch features Liev Schreiber and everything else is disposable. Someone give this man a starring role in a comedy…

Sadly, international audiences seem to be picking up the slack for weak domestic grosses, thus making every blockbuster technically profitable on paper (budget-vs-worldwide grosses, not including marketing) and allowing Hollywood to continue making bad movies at inflated prices.

Sadly, international audiences seem to be picking up the slack for weak domestic grosses, thus making every blockbuster technically profitable on paper (budget-vs-worldwide grosses, not including marketing) and allowing Hollywood to continue making bad movies at inflated prices.

That would be great though. Asteroids as a black-and-white German expressionist art film.

That would be great though. Asteroids as a black-and-white German expressionist art film.

Colin Hanks is a black hole of blandness. A gaping void of anti-charisma. He's his father with all the same looks and voice but none of that pesky charm and talent. Everything that features him is worse for it. One of the best examples of nepotism-over-everything-else ever.

Colin Hanks is a black hole of blandness. A gaping void of anti-charisma. He's his father with all the same looks and voice but none of that pesky charm and talent. Everything that features him is worse for it. One of the best examples of nepotism-over-everything-else ever.

"the website is offline by requirement of the nickelback lawyers"

"the website is offline by requirement of the nickelback lawyers"

People seem to hate Mad TV having only seen the most 'famous' sketches - usually Stewart or Ms. Swan or other recurring characters. Yes, those were godawful…but most recurring characters are. Familiarity is the antithesis of great sketch comedy. Try introducing someone to SNL by showing them all 17 'The Cheerleaders'

People seem to hate Mad TV having only seen the most 'famous' sketches - usually Stewart or Ms. Swan or other recurring characters. Yes, those were godawful…but most recurring characters are. Familiarity is the antithesis of great sketch comedy. Try introducing someone to SNL by showing them all 17 'The Cheerleaders'

The McDonalds sketch was the worst kind of sketch: Too long, not funny, and too obviously trying to introduce new recurring characters (why is it that almost all SNL recurring characters are either working minimum wage or hosting talk shows? See also: The Girlfriends sketch).

The McDonalds sketch was the worst kind of sketch: Too long, not funny, and too obviously trying to introduce new recurring characters (why is it that almost all SNL recurring characters are either working minimum wage or hosting talk shows? See also: The Girlfriends sketch).

It's weird, the 'dress the cast up with wigs and facial hair and furry medieval clothing' sketch almost never works and the 'two drunk idiots in a bar talking in non-sequitors' sketch almost always works and yet SNL seems to try each type about the same amount.

It's weird, the 'dress the cast up with wigs and facial hair and furry medieval clothing' sketch almost never works and the 'two drunk idiots in a bar talking in non-sequitors' sketch almost always works and yet SNL seems to try each type about the same amount.

You said it. Zemeckis had such a great hit streak going, "I Wanna Hold Your Hand," "Used Cars," "Romancing the Stone," "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," the BTTF trilogy, and the extremely underrated "Death Becomes Her."

You said it. Zemeckis had such a great hit streak going, "I Wanna Hold Your Hand," "Used Cars," "Romancing the Stone," "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," the BTTF trilogy, and the extremely underrated "Death Becomes Her."

Reminds me of the Best Friends Forever episode (but not quite as good) with the overstuffing of references. While that one shoved Terri Schiavo, the PSP, and Constantine in a blender, this shoved Lance Armstrong, cause bracelets, and The Lorax hypocrisy into one episode.

Reminds me of the Best Friends Forever episode (but not quite as good) with the overstuffing of references. While that one shoved Terri Schiavo, the PSP, and Constantine in a blender, this shoved Lance Armstrong, cause bracelets, and The Lorax hypocrisy into one episode.

Thus finally answering the question we've been asking for years, "How
much money is enough, George?" Apparently, the answer: '$4 billion and change.'