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Miss Peregrine can turn into a falcon.

I was more asking if new horror movies scared you the way you remember being scared by old ones as a kid. But I like your answer. I don't know if you saw The Babadook, but that is the most scared I've felt in a horror film for a long time and it was largely because of the existential dread aspects.

I'm going to have to try it.

I have an uncle who mentioned finding the original The Thing from Another World the scariest movie he ever saw. I asked if he had ever seen the remake and he had no interest, nor any interest in revisiting the original. Being scarred like that, at that age, leaves a hold on you.

I present to you a recent reading of the first three Invaders films and how they fit in their time

Serious question: Are there any horror movies that can scare you quiet as much as an adult as you remember being scared as a kid?

Really? I could have sworn it was on TV recently. (Checks definition of recently)

Andy Warhol made the first adaptation of the novel, A Clockwork Orange asVinyl, so it is technically a remake.

People wanted to say it was ahead of its time, but it was very much a three camera comedy, a format that really fell out of popularity.

I just really wanted someone to point out that the Terminator always dies on camera.

I am too aware of how pretentious I was to be surprised by that reputation. In retrospect, I was at least partly avoiding aligning my taste with anything my classmates would comment on, lest they think it's bad.

I affectionately remember how much I loved Tori as a tortured adolescent. (And I really want to see her musical). But I just don't listen to music from that period of my life much. And when I do I'm mostly left cold.

It does share the unfortunate habit of her later albums in being too long. Frankly "Doughnut Song" would have been a great place to end. I like both the songs "Putting the Damage On" and "Twinkle" but they both sound like album enders which unfortunately leaves me thinking "isn't it over yet?" when I listen.

Jimmy's movie knowledge is faulty. The Terminator dies in every Terminator move (Minus Genysis? Which I haven't seen…) RoboCop technically doesn't dies but Murphy has one of the most painful murder scenes I've seen.

Remember several months ago when they were considering a Weatherly produced Little Women as detective series? Whatever happened to that?

I was shocked by it. My grandfather said that it was predictable because of his earlier speech about the need to beat up suspects. This made me feel for the first time like there are too many films and tv where that stuff is said by the good guys.

I looked at his age thought "that's just a couple of years older than my parents. I'm not ready."

My general frustration with ridiculous fan theories and cross overs is won over by how cute this is.

That one still hurts. I thought I was over it but then Kim published Girl in a Band.

He "he's missing a sensitivity chip" comment was proved true