Lizzy Caplan and Adam Scott are amazing together.
Lizzy Caplan and Adam Scott are amazing together.
Well…now I gotta know!
Gumby truly did fall into obscurity but I do remember watching that show as a kid. Along with Wallace and Gromit it peaked my weird discomfort towards claymation.
I saw what gobstoppers looked like after you microwaved them, it turned me off to most candy.
I love Jackie Brown but it could have afforded to be 25-35 minutes shorter.
Love this episode and the next episode Mona appears in. Was super unsatisfied with what ended up happening to Mona in her third(?) appearance. That episode sucked.
I have unconnected thoughts: First my favorite episode of Futurama is "The Sting" because it was a somber but still funny twist on the whole killing the main character thing. Then the latter Comedy Central episodes would "kill" Fry or Bender every other episode and it poisoned the brilliance of "The Sting".
Absolutely, season one Chang is the only one I find genuinely funny with the occasional non-sequitur moments "HA HA GA-AAY!".
AD cameos kind of remind me of The Muppets in that cameos there are not to be focused on they're just there to move the story along.
I like Rachel a lot, I wish she could be a regular.
Burton's Batman also characterized his version of Gotham. It visually looked like something out of an old comic book. I only bring this up because it reminds me of how Kenneth Branaugh talked about how he wanted Thor to look like a comic book so that meant put in as many fucking dutch angles as possible.
I read that with Foghorn Leghorn's voice. Basically the same as McConaughey.
But the goats seem to like it.
I consider all the Marvel movies thus far to be extremely fun and entertaining at their best and at least watchable at their worst (Iron Man 2). Also what I like is how different the separate character movies are from each other. Captain America in that regards is my favorite because it's a 1940s war film that has a…
Certainly one of my favorite movies of last year because I understood the characters so well. The third act where Jake Johnson helps Olivia Wilde move out of her apartment is one of the best character changing moments I've seen because it's all very simple but done with absolutely realism.
Read in the voice of Homer Simpson.
Best "Oh Yeah That Did Happen" Award.
I…ugh…this is bad…?
This is a weird in-between year where MTV is trying to break out of that feverish representation of what is popular as determined by 14 year old girls and trying to bring back it's slightly older audience but also completely missing the mark on a lot of these movies.
Can't speak for the teens as I am the superior beer-guzzling college student, but I think any form of validity and worthiness that the MTV Movie Awards used to have went flying out the window when online voting became "relevant" and "Twilight" just dominated everything because it was so "popular".