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Commander X
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Now I have to see if there's such a thing as twelve dollar gum.

Well, some years are less lean than others, fortunately.

Oh, I've seen Bone Tomahawk. It was far better than I expected.

Whatever the reasons may be, the western as a film genre is pretty much dead today. We're lucky to even get one major studio western a year nowadays. I think the 1970s saw the major decline of film Westerns because most plots had been done, and there were too many sub-par efforts being released by the studios, too

I await the next Wayans parody film, which will probably be titled Pee Pee Caa Caa Doo Doo Fart Movie.

Let's not forget the car chase from The Seven-Ups

The novel Bullit was based on, "Mute Witness" by crime novelist Robert L. Fish (released back in 1963 under the pen name Robert Pike) was originally bought as a vehicle for Spencer Tracy, who was going to play the hard-nosed middle-aged detective protagonist, an NYPD detective named Clancy. In other words, he was

"What do you make of all of this, Wang?"
"Is confusing."
"IT! It is confusing! Say your goddamn pronouns!"

The thought in some conspiracy theories is that Masonry is not a single organization — not even a single rite is one organization, but many overlapping organizations. shells within shells within shells and so on. And the higher up one goes in the "degrees" of Masonry, past the rank and file, you find the leadership is

Exclusive excerpts from the first draft script for Blade Runner 2
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First episode is not promising, overwhelmingly mediocre, feels like Kickstarter-tier nostalgia bait. I don't remember the writing on the old show being quite this poor even at it's more questionable moments, and the Big Reveal (OR IS IT?) is pretty lame.

Then, Kevin Smith announces separate sitcoms devoted to some of his other favorite topics he likes to talk about, including how much junk food he eats and how isn't it amazing his skinny redheaded wife allows him to touch her? Huh? I mean, right? Huh?

If Sesame Street is going to appear on HBO they need something to fit in, like an unlikable female character that nonetheless attracts all sorts of attention from people, or a main character with a dysfunctional home life.

Also, in the ill-advised and ill-fated episode with Steven Seagal as host the Richmeister was shoved into the copier so hard broke, revealing it to be a hollow prop, then dangled out of a window when he wouldn't stop doing the bit. So there was that.

It's Pat played in theaters in two cities (in Indiana and Ohio) for one week, then—its "theatrical release" obligation filled, if in name only—the Disney people pulled the chute and breathed a sigh of relief.

Ghost clapping will return in The Conjuring 3: Private Eyes :clap clap: They're Watching You.

Mark Millar is the best at what he does, which is being the one really successful comics writer whose "high-concept" series are also blatant movie pitches - the business is filled with people convinced their hackneyed "twists" on old tropes that wouldn't sell as scripts will somehow make it as comic books, and then

Ben Mendelsohn might play the villain in Hey, Remember the 1980s?!?: The Motion Picture

Did someone mention doing the Honeymooners with James Mason as Ralph and Richard Burton as Norton? And Jackie Gleason as Rick?

From what I gathered from watching Girls, it was getting to behave like irresponsible, life-wrecking idiots - but that's Okay, because they're doing it with agency, or something.