disqusgltismt8jw--disqus
mike smith
disqusgltismt8jw--disqus

Good to see they've inherited the "visionary" pedigree from Zach Snyder

that was the show about the surfing jesus character, right?

I miss this tremendously talented actor

Surprised by this review. Thought this was a very good show.

Excited to see Jody Hill making another movie

The Matchstick Men are rotten through-and-through!

He was pretty funny in King of the Hill

I feel comfortable saying Dennis Quaid was clearly snubbed at the 2003 Academy Awards for Far From Heaven Best Supporting Actor. Still not sure what happened there. The nominees that year were Chris Cooper for Adaptation, Newman for Road to Perdition, John Reilly for Chicago, Ed Harris for The Hours, and Walken for

He's always playing it Safe

I always feel uncomfortable talking about "snubs" because I can't remember every performance nominated each year. In 1995, Stamp missed out in favor of Tom Hanks for Gump, Travolta for Pulp, Freeman for Shawshank, Paul Newman for Nobody's Fool, and Nigel Hawthorne for The Madness of King George. The last two I have

Some great but overlooked performances also come to mind: River Phoenix for My Own Private Idaho, Dennis Quaid for Far From Heaven, Terrence Stamp for The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert, and Christina Ricci for Monster.

All the kids were rolling in the aisles when I saw it

I recommend "Murder By the Book" which is the first "episode" (really a 90 minute movie) of Columbo Season 1 airing on Netflix. Directed by a young Steven Spielberg and featuring Jack Cassidy (the epitome of sleazy elitist arrogance at the time) this episode is mandatory for any Spielberg completists out there. The

It's quite possible this "Dirty McHick" had been in front of the same judge many times before, and that the judge was well aware of his lack of means and realized a steeper fine was meaningless because he wouldn't bother to pay it anyway. Comparing yourself to anyone else at the sentencing and crying foul doesn't

Wow, what a scoop this is. Did anyone actually think her show was a real courtroom with any power to bind anyone to pay what she says?

That plot description is incredible

It was awesome when out of all the young comedians out there anxious for some exposure Seinfeld invited her onto his show.

I can buy that Craven knew how to approach the material because of New Nightmare. I just have beef with the revisionism that Scream owes its existence to New Nightmare in any way, when the movie's personality clearly owes a debt to Tarantino.

No I'm saying pulp fiction and Tarantino was clearly the influence on scream and Williamson. in my opinion new nightmare isn't a very good movie and had no influence on williamsons script, although craven sometimes pointed out in interviews that he had done that kind of material first. This was typically in response

Close. His next role is a 1930's era wizard.