dontcallmehere
don't call me here
dontcallmehere

You will not ruin that happy ear worm! Besides, I've always enjoyed my Dune-themed bastardization too much to be shaken:

It might be rewatchable if you're showing it to someone for the first time. Get some of their residual tension. But generally I agree with you. The Innkeepers was more fun and has greater rewatch value.

Got to see the restored original the other night at our local indie. It was a lot of fun! (Also first time I've ever seen more than some isolated scenes.)

I'm going full one-a-day for the month & joining letterboxd's Hoop-tober challenge. Highlights I'm looking forward to: Zombi (Fulci), Salem's Lot, Satan's Blood, Suspiria, TX Chainsaw, The Orphanage

Basically this. Unless Clinton so gets under his skin that he looks like he's ready to run over there and throttle her. If she were to start every response with some variant of "Trump, you ignorant slut," followed by a substantive rebuttal, we might see red from him instead of orange.

A great callback to Kuchi Kopi's role in Bob's The Shining fever dream way back in season 1.

Cillian Murphy & Tom Hardy. Was a little sad that their scenes together in Peaky Blinders weren't focking epic, but that's OK, I still love 'em.

And she says it about 20 seconds in. No great hardship to watch, especially since there's no extraneous commentary. Just a bartender making the drink and telling you what's in it.

Yes! The mosaic episodes were thematically and aesthetically amazing! Hannibal's soliloquy to the mosaic maker from on high was one of the show's greatest moments.

Honorable mention to Sir Terry for the terribleness that is the name "Moist von Lipwig"

8 little words: The Evil Midnight Bomber What Bombs At Midnight.

That was my first exposure, too!

Yup. And to make it pale even more, I had just watched the "Safe Haven" segment of VHS 2, which went balls to the wall. This one just … sat there flat.

Same. Both Wingard and Ti West have earned enough goodwill from me that I'm willing to roll with the unnecessariness of a Blair Witch sequel* and the letdown of The Sacrament to see what they're up to.

Here's an esoteric one: Howard Hanson's 2nd Symphony. At the Interlochen Center for the Arts it's their theme music played after every orchestra concert, and every time since I have made the connection, I see Ripley drifting off to the stars at the end of Alien.

Yeah, I thought about that one. The Stones version still stands apart from Buffy, and I only know the cover from the show. (I did download it once upon a time, so I hear it pop up on various of my music devices.)

On the off chance I hear GNR's version of "Live and Let Die," the Muzak-y version in the convenience store is right there with it. "You can't go home again. But you can shop there."

Aw, poor Anton Yelchin. :(

Just finished Jo Nesbo's Blood on Snow, not one of his Harry Hole (yes real name, and yes, I'm pretty sure he's aware of how it looks to English speakers) detective series. Instead, this one's the length, scope, and tone of a classic pulp noir.

I started watching The Expanse a while back, but didn't make it past ep 2. It wasn't for any reason related to the show, just had fewer hours available. Does it fit in this category? If so, I'll pick it back up.