disqus0esqvgi6xh--disqus
Jay B.
disqus0esqvgi6xh--disqus

They all died on the plane.

You had an almost shot for shot lift of the "look in your heart" scene right in this one.

NO ONE doubted Arnold could pull off an emotionless, remorseless, monotone robot.

When I was a kid, The Muppet Show had moments that would freak me the fuck out. The Vincent Price episode was one. But on a more general level, whenever one big muppet would eat a smaller one, that used to send me running from the room.

They make that movie now, the Pinkerton is the hero and the hobos all deserve what's getting to them.

Come on. The Untouchables is one of the few movies that works on nearly every level. It's close to perfect.

If only one of them were alive to test your hypothesis.

I think he may have, but he was one, like Altman, who came up through TV first, not the Corman factory, so he was just outside of the myth-making "70s auteurs" group, which put Coppola and Scorsese smack in the middle — while Lumet made expressly political films that rival the best of either. I mean he made some

This, like Lumet's Network, which came out the very next year, I think, absolutely, spot-on, capture not only the America of then, but the America of now. Both were so far ahead of their time in putting the media at the center of the culture, and yet critique the freak show and make the underdogs human at their core.

The healthcare system is markedly better — the "systemic improvements" include NOT BEING ABLE TO BE DENIED INSURANCE, so you really have no idea what you are talking about.

The only way you can possibly say that is if you AREN'T being honest — we have a better health care system, we still have an American auto industry, we've reduced our carbon output AND we aren't starting endless, ruinous wars, to name four things off my head that can be directly credited to the current administration.

I'm just glad Billy and the Clonesaurus got greenlit.

It was directly lifted in Miller's Crossing, right down the funeral and the chilly walk past and long road ahead.

The Men Who Stair Under People's Goats

If Those Stairs Could Talk About the People Under Them
Above Me I See Stairs: A Person Under the Stairs Talks About the Stairs Above Him
Why We Never Talk About the Boxes Next to the People Under the Stairs

The People Still Under the Stairs

I'm confused, is this a remake of Terminator 2?

The greatest thing about this song (and others — but not all — in their catalogue) is how absolutely current it sounds. It could have come out two weeks ago and it would have been the best thing of the year. But it's not arena rock, it's not punk, its sound isn't dated like most power pop — it's just a perfect song,

Why do you ask, Broken Rubber?