Yup
Yup
"most likely" is a pretty strong way of putting that.
They let her take the point as they went up the stairs too, because she… knew the way to the top of the stairs I guess?
I love the idea that the secret order of No-Wayne's has been rehearsing this death ritual for 200 years so when they finally managed to succeed at something they'd all know how to chant in unison and how the boy should be dressed, and all the trappings of the big event.
No, the unedited originals havent been released in like 20 years.
He had a gun pointed at him, and pretty much explicitly said "I'm going to kill you with this gun that I have pointed at you."
Yes, different in the sense that they will kill you and then you will become a zombie that also kills people who become zombies.
I wonder if they will get paid any money for this.
If you intend to share your life with someone, eventually either you or they will wake up next to a dead body, or something like that. So most people eventually deal with something along those lines.
zero because they get handled by society, because they stay where they are. If they lumbered around and bit the first person they met, you'd hear about them a lot more.
ya, that would solve the "What happened last night" problem as long as everybody sticks to it, but I was just using that as an example of their problem, which is that anyone can die at any time, and they immediately become patient zero for the new zombie apocalypse.
The big problem with this show is the problem with a lot of shows - it can't end or change as long as there's money in it. That's not too much of a problem when the show is Friends, but the zombie apocalypse should have some kind of arc to it. Things should be either getting noticeably better, or noticeably worse.
I only recently found out that Maya Rudolph's mother was Minnie Riperton.
I read that her weirdly specific breakfast combined with her sudden obsession with having a round stomach, is because she was going to tell Butch that she's pregnant but doesn't get the chance because he leaves in a fit to get his watch.
Tarantino loves doing that to people - he did the same thing to heroin addicts with Pulp Fiction, the loving presentation of Vincent's "works."
That was the most delicious looking omelet ever. All the food in that movie had that quality, and the actors really sold it too with their ecstatic reactions to their first bite - that first taste stops them in their tracks every time.
Good question! I had assumed he was being honest, because why not, but now that I'm thinking about it, when Vincent offers him some bacon he says "I don't eat pork." He doesn't mention the vegetarian thing there.
I love Vincent in the background of the Big Kahunaburger scene - he couldn't be less interested in the whole conversation. He's like "You're talking to a dead guy, about hamburgers. Can we please just get the fuck out of here and go get breakfast?"
Touche!
That's a great example!