"Kooka-munker!"
"Kooka-munker!"
To this day, I still love how gutsy Brad was to blow up an airplane in "The Incredibles," in a world that was still 3 years post-9/11.
In the words of Tom Servo:
I saw this with Rifftrax commentary. Really, the only way to see it.
I still remember the one bit where she was Grandma Kim on "All-American Girl," there's something wrapped in bubble-wrap and she pops some of the bubbles.
I still remember that Oscars performance, though at the time, I was't fully ensconced in the ways of the 60's, and what they were going for.
If I go through O'Hare now, I'm going to be on the lookout for 'The Polish Woman of Doom.' Two things to look out for now: 'The Polish Woman of Doom,' and 'The Slob Avatar.'
I can hear the Coachman in Pinocchio: "QUIET!! You boys have had your fun…now PAY FOR IT!!"
Tippecanoe and Tyler Too?
Sounds like he went through what Charles Schulz did.
Opening credits used to almost envelope you in the world…and then it was just like, 'here you are, sit down, watch, and don't skip the commercials!'
I still don't feel there was a need for a sequel.
"They made us, too smart, too quick, and too many…we are paying for the mistakes they made because when the end comes, all that will be left…is us!"
Isn't it also like Walter Peck in "Ghostbusters?"
So, they've turned the Hamish character, into Lord Cutler Beckett from "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest," in how we have some stuffed shirt ruining the happy ending of the first film, and forcing the lead character to reunite with Johnny Depp, who now becomes, like Jack Sparrow, THE MOST IMPORTANT PERSON IN…
I was mainly thinking of foodstuffs within the main bar/room area of Cheers.
The final season of Cheers at times felt like it was one long 'curtain-call' in regards to a lot of things, including the destruction of Gary's, and the episode also served as the final appearance of Harry the Hat.
Adam Sandler mentioned?
The trailers were actually a lot better than their previous 'hip and cool' trailers that preceded 'Tangled' and 'Frozen.'
No crazier than in 1994, when Disney showed the entire opening of Lion King's "Circle of life" number as a trailer.