durandal1707--disqus
Durandal_1707
durandal1707--disqus

It's not completely unprecedented; that cartoon version of Doctor Who which I can't remember the name of right now that was going to be the official Ninth Doctor until the revived series rendered it non-canon, had the Master as a companion.

Colbert has specifically actually addressed this very important issue:

Dunno if it's a regional thing, but where I grew up, people often said "the cat's ass" to mean this.

If you got the Lazy Shell Armor and put it on the Princess, you were pretty much unstoppable as long as you had enough MP restoring items for Toadstool to keep her healing mojo going. Even Culex couldn't stand up to that.

Just because you don't see something as high art, doesn't mean you can't still enjoy it.

Did it change the giant ones as well? I don't remember, and can't be bothered to bust out an emulator to find out.

I loved SMB2, precisely because of its weirdness. I think it may have been my favorite of the series for exactly that reason. In how many games do you get attacked by the exit door? My brother got to that bit before I managed to, and told me about it — I was sure he was lying.

And the piranha plants turning into pumpkins.

It's his favorite Indy film and he's okay,
He sleeps all night and he works all day.

Sport peppers are *not* serranos, although they look kind of like them. They're actually closer to tabascos than serranos.

I wonder if, when Betty and Barney Hill were running away from the aliens, the "Yakety Sax" music was playing in the background.

But what about the Jpegs?

Yes, and Lycos also preceded Yahoo!, I believe.

Those people are weird. Personally, it seems to me that if you wanted someone to finish Tolkien's work, who better to do it than his son? He certainly knew his father much better than most other candidates.

This kind of stuff happens in music all the time. Mozart's Requiem, for example, was actually an unfinished work on Mozart's death, and was completed by his student Süssmayr. Similarly, most of the early Russian composers that weren't Rimsky-Korsakov left unfinished operas left and right, many of which were which were

god DAMN IT. A big part of the whole reason I was enjoying these reviews was because of how generally spoiler-free the comment sections were. And then I start running into spoilers, and IT'S ALWAYS YOU.

Most performances of the Unfinished are of only the first two movements, and in that form it is eminently performable (and one of the best symphonies in the repertoire to boot). The other unfinished symphonies by Schubert do not include movements that are completely fleshed out the way his No. 8 does.

While that's true, it's the only one that's perfectly performable as is, with the first two movements complete and only the last two movements missing. The other ones mostly exist in sketch form, such as the supposed "Symphony No. 7", of which you'll never hear a performance without someone else having completed it —

If you want to get really mad about a video game remaining unfinished, look up Secret of Vulcan Fury sometime. It had voice acting from the complete original Star Trek cast, a script by D. C. Fontana (about the cause of the Vulcan/Romulan split, no less), and graphics that were incredibly awesome-looking for the time.

If we want to have an entry from the "the composer finished it, but it could be considered 'unfinished' now for reasons" category, a more legitimate entry would, in my view, be Janáček's Sonata, 1. X. 1905. The piece itself has an interesting story, being a form of protest music, as it depicted the death of František