disqus4grqrfbujn--disqus
La Lucha
disqus4grqrfbujn--disqus

Are you saying they don't air "Up All Night" anymore?

Just wait a few years, and suddenly you're the target audience again! Just ask all the Twi-moms out there….

Dowd's Syndrome, you mean.

The part with the disappearing mannequin was pretty masterfully filmed. You were feeling the rising uneasiness right along with Smith's character. The guy's got a great feel for filming atmospheres where something's wrong, but you can't put a finger on it.

Oh, just my weird dog head is all. Thanks for noticing.

The answer is, unshockingly, "Japan."

I'm pretty sure that this is one of those "Great job, Internet!"'s that you're supposed to say sarcastically with a sneer on your face.

They're different! Emojis are emoticons… but all anime-like! Also there's a bullet train and a Tokyo Tower, which are pretty hard to render in emoticon form.

"I'm HUGE!"

I think combining the TV and movie universes is the only way to go. That would probably mean that Nightwing will now wear a hoodie and eye black instead of a domino mask, but it could work.

Here we go again!

Yeah, I thought Olympus was better than White House Down. Also… kinda weird that there are so many supporters here on the AV Club for a Roland Emmerich movie? I mean, I can see why people thought Olympus was boring (I sorta like the pacing myself, probably because I'm suffering action movie fatigue where things have

Really? The comic blogosphere I've been into has been pretty apathetic toward it. Then again, I tend toward things like Robot 6's Grumpy Old Fan, who got slammed in his comments for being… well, a grumpy old fan for liking "Superman/Lois Lane" better.

Not to mention that Shocktober also means that we also get the once-a-year nonsense Halloween themed rankings.

The best part of the Flophouse was Stuart's German-accented Woody Allen impression. It was a callback to his Werner Herzog, yes … but that's what made it funnier.

I was pretty hesitant at first with the Stuff You Missed In History Class, since the theme was "Haunted Mansion." Initially, it felt less like history and more like history as defined by the History Channel ("Made Every Day"). But… yeah, the hosts really did manage to make the subject super interesting, especially

WHERE'S FIREFLY

The rise of TV showing couples sleeping in the same bed correlates with and increase in the divorce rate.

Fred and Ethel were actually in their teens.

Definitely a weird choice for the media goddess. I mean, not that Lucille Ball was a bad looking lady, but I wonder if she'd gotten better results if she took the form of Joan Crawford.