eraserheadpencildick--disqus
EraserheadPencildick
eraserheadpencildick--disqus

It is odd, but PTA is good at getting solid-to-great performances from unlikely sources (see: Cruise, Wahlberg, Sandler — heck, even his use of John C. Reilly as a serious actor is at least in retrospect a novel concept).  I'm game.

Have you seen "The Booth at the End"?  Fun little Canadian show starring Berkeley.  Good times.

@Scrawler2:disqus , that's kind of eerie — the entire time this was in preproduction, since there were so few announcements about it and it wasn't foremost on my mind, I could never remember if it were about the Hudson River plane or the Somali pirate incident.  (To be fair, I didn't think about it too much because

Soylent Green is Tamora's sons.

Taymor's "Titus" is wonderful.  I rented it from Blockbuster when I was like 11, and boy was that a movie and a half.

This is weird because I'm one of those straight men that everyone completely assumes is gay (though once a very nice young woman said her assumption was that I was pansexual), and I really enjoy "Moulin Rouge!," so….yeah, no wonder people make assumptions about me.

I did, and it was.  I'll also always appreciate it for introducing me to Loretta Devine, Chi McBride, and Kathy Baker.

Whoa, thank you for managing to give some level of sense to that premise.  Kudos.

Just tonight's finale.

"Sleepy Hollow" sounds nuts.  I was obsessed with the folk tale as a kid, but obviously because of the Headless Horseman — who cared about Crane?  He was the 'random teenager' to the Horseman's Freddy Krueger/Jason/whatever.  What's the angle, anyway?  "I'm from the past, and I'm tall and skinny and easily frightened,

Well, that's less a problem with the casting of Khan and more a problem with the story they came up with for him, no?

The happy version of Henry Blake.

*Announcement*

I'll join your hate-team, @LurkyMcLurkerson:disqus !  I even read it as an assigned book in ninth grade as a sci-fi lover and hated it from the get-go!

Um, *spoiler alert* =P

Exactly, or Ricardo Montalban.

That's pretty much his entire job description.  "Hey, we need someone who gives off a vibe of 'generally brown!'"

I've always thought that as surreal identity-fusion films go, "3 Women" (two nurses) works well alongside "Persona" (a nurse and an actress) and "Mulholland Dr." (two actresses).

I dunno, they dropped him from "MiB 3," so I'm sure they'd just work around him here, too.  They'd dodge his calls.

"Dodgeball 2: Balls 2 the Face"