I always thought it was David Crosby, too.
I always thought it was David Crosby, too.
I'm sorry you are unable to process how you shoehorned her in there to validate your own opinion.
"My girlfriend had an issue with this too guys, so it's not just men! She's from Canada."
"References"
These shows now aren't directed towards you. They're not appealing towards your nostalgia, they're appealing towards very young kids who do enjoy what this animation looks like.
"Do you feel safer today than you did yesterday? I know I don't."
The AV Club is like government run by conservatives. They don't add anything new, but they do take away the features that you like.
You can't call it influential because most of the cast didn't do much after this? That's INSANE. This was hugely influential, around the world. The great South Korean movie, City of Violence, has an excellent tribute to The Warriors in it:
Yeah, no one's going to argue, but uh, that's not the issue here.
LOL imagine knocking Paul Feig about screentime for women.
You watched Deeds and said "this is tolerable"? Ooof.
AV Club, assing the hard questions and presenting the findings in a cheeky manner.
"You should just smile and THROW me!"
-if Mel Gibson voiced Mjolnir
"I live my life a quarter mile at a time" is a cheesy movie classic, just cause YOU can't remember it…
You don't need a sequel to explain the idea, but it does. Lots of brown and poor people are killed.
The second one is a very good modern B movie. Don't need to see the first. It wastes no times setting up the characters, motivations and stakes.
No, revenge would be PLOTTED over the weeks that followed and moves would be made the following year during the next Purge.
An oral history of MadTV that doesn't take the opportunity to revisit Artie Lange's infamous meltdowns (leaving the set to score coke while wearing pig makeup and taking a swing at a cop after running away from an intervention) is not the oral history we need.
If he was great in the first one, then it shouldn't be surprising that he's great in the second. I think he should have gotten a Best Supporting Actor nomination for the first one. Glad to read that he's on a similar path in this one and he isn't just along for the ride.
What is this golden age of the Disney Channel you're (mis?)remembering? What great adult oriented programming did they move away from? And whatever it was, you do realize they moved away from it and became even more successful, right?