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Scott M
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Oh, I know. And it ended pretty well, in that it left me wanting more. The cancellation of Deadwood was bizarre.

I haven't read any of the books. Maybe someday.

That reminds me of this photo I took during a vacation to Europe this past summer. Gift Man

I watch Longmire. It's pretty good, and super dark sometimes. I wish that Netflix would also extend the lives of, say, Deadwood and Justified, which were both better shows, but more Longmire is good too.

The sequel was more fun than the reboot movie. The show seems fine so far. Who knew that all we needed were Muppets to make recycling Sorkin fun again?

Oh, they were able to secure the services of a writer from the Entourage movie? What a "get"!

I don't see that as a "problem" at all. Actual serial killers are banal, unremarkable misfits. For screenwriters to invent a series of puzzles and motivational psychodrama is just laziness on their part, following a formula that Hollywood believes works because a couple of these movies hit it really big and were

I remember seeing Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer for the first time and being so creeped out, but at the same time thinking "yes! This movie gets it!" And then hollywood made a million more serial killer movies where the killer left cute puzzles to solve. Ugh.

Less glib answer: there is a difference between a list of what you like and a list of what a bunch of ostensible working film critics rank as the best films of a given genre during a span of time. You can like any old thing you want. I like Megaforce and Road House. But I am not about to claim that either of them is

No, they don't.

Pretty good list, but I strongly take issue with The Babadook being on such a list at all, much less in the top fucking 3. Give your heads a shake, AV Club. There is nothing new or interesting about that film apart from the prop design, for which I do give them.. uh.. props.

Is there a kickstarter for preventing this? Because I'd be all over that. One for Dave Sim too, please.

Relax, guy. Someone's going to buy your screenplay any day now.

Sure. And I don't think many people would actually be able to demonstrate that The Babadook is a bad movie. But it's not particularly good either, apart from the prop design. It's just an average indie horror film that really caught the public imagination for some reason.

Y Tu Ant Tambien

That's based on a short story by Harlan Ellison. Common mixup, don't feel bad.

Max Richter, call your lawyer.

Fun fact, Real Steel is based on a Richard Matheson short story that was filmed as an episode of The Twilight Zone. Or maybe it was The Outer Limits. In any case, the story precedes Rocky by at least a decade.

Not to nitpick, but it looks like the Seed website only has the last two episodes and then a bunch of previews and trailers.

The A.V. Club