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Liviania
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I do a bunch when I'm walking through the mall. I tend to go through the mall late, so when the kids with the clipboards ask me to participate they're usually pretty desperate to fill out their numbers. We get to the demographic info and they're like, "You're a 48-year-old mother of two. And you're Asian."

I honestly enjoyed this film. It barely has anything to do with the legends aside from names, the prologue does go on too long, and the fantasy parts aren't as good as the Guy-Ritchie-does-fantasy-gangsters parts, but it was still fun and I laughed quite often. It does have a sense of humor, and as the review says, I

True. (And that is used a bit by the employees to reassure themselves when the building first locks down, that there is totally a reasonable explanation for the building to even have this capability. Totally.)

John McGinley's character death:

Yes, I saw an early screening.

The movie is set in Bogota, Colombia, although the Belko office is outside the city itself. It is a nonprofit that helps companies moving to Colombia with hiring expat workers. The first tip-off in the movie that something is wrong is that there's extra security at the gate and all the local workers are turned away.

I loved the TSA subplot and so did everyone I talked to after the screening I went into.
But it really was a great little psychological horror film and I liked the camera work.

Speaking as a woman, you're never gonna get much response with "So what are you up to?" It's generic, puts the burden on her to come up with an intriguing response to a very open-ended question, and tells her nothing about you nor why you chose to message her.

My grandfather had that hat! He worked for Snapper and had a whole collection of turtle things. I'm now tempted to donate.

I saw an early screening + interview, and the answer is Phillips thinks these guys are secretly awesome and the military industrial complex that made what they did possible is terrifying. The movie does take potshots at the complex (especially at Dick Cheney's involvement), the most memorable one being a mention at

It was my friend's 21st birthday, and I baked and decorated a cake for her present. Her party was at a mutual friend's apartment that was one and a half blocks south of mine on the opposite side of the street — easy walking distance.

Eh, that's par for the course with "Based on a true story." I was just surprised that a person who would actually horse dive while blind existed. Because that's taking dedication to your job very seriously.

I loved this movie so much when I was a kid, although even then I thought Al was a bit old for Sonora.

I've gotten great mileage from "I think we're looking for different things in a relationship" for a not interested text.

Because it is hilarious and the lead actress won a Golden Globe?

In this case, Latham goes to the cops who can't help her much because stalking and harassment are hard to prosecute. The cop tells her (under the table) that her best bet is to buy a shotgun, fire a warning shot, and then kill the guy and have a great case for self-defense.

It can be two things at once. She genuinely likes it, which is probably an indication that she a) really loves her dad and b) has somewhat morbid/cute taste. But I definitely thought the subtext was that Scott couldn't scrape together enough money to buy her something that didn't come from the dollar store,

Scott Lang buys his daughter a crappy stuffed animal because he can't afford a nice one. I definitely didn't think that needed to be spelled out.

Why? I've lived near several stand-alone Sears stores.

I think it would be great if they just have the Olsen twins switch off playing her like they used too. However, they make no attempts to make them look alike and make no explanation about why Michelle looks like an entirely different person sometimes. That might be too out there for Full House, sadly.