erichenwoodgreer--disqus
Eric Henwood-Greer
erichenwoodgreer--disqus

WHen Dracula was revealed last week (well, sorta revealed) that made me worried about future seasons too, as it always seemed like Dracula would be the end game. But renewals have always been announced after the finale—no? And I don't think one movie would get in the way—she has shot movies over the past two years.

Ha. I was actually thinking the Dr would need far more than three—couldn't a cylinder hold five minutes each?

It never occurred to me until a few people mentioned it in the comments last week… Still—I was thinking "Would Dracula really know his Jules Verne? It must not be him…"

One in Tokyo Disney Sea and one in whatever the tiny Studio part at Disneyland Paris is called though I think neither is specifically themed to Twilight Zone (come to think of it, I'm not sure California's is either…)

As a kid our family managed to go to Disneyland when I was 8 two weeks before Splash Mountain opened. Our second time going we were *one* week away from Indiana Jones opening… I feel your pain.

Wiki has a bunch of, probably, nonsense references to what age Mil starts at but 1978 is much earlier than any they list, which they lump in with Y. Not that, obviously, it really matters… But it's in the first section here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wi…

I apologize for a) I sorta realized I was implying that, and I wasn't—I think it's been a steadily increasing problem for a while now, certainly long before the Millennials.

Goodness, no! Without such classifications we would miss out on think pieces that are all based around extremely broad cliches of a huge swath of people and there would be no way to hold such arguments up!

It looks like it was on ABC at that time (it actually started as a daytime show on ABC but had moved to late night by then, I believe). Cavett's theme music though was Bernstein's overture to his musical of Candide (a fave of mine) which PBS uses for the opening of their Live from Lincoln Center and Great

SOrry, I sounded catty in my comment. I think it's important to point out that it wasn't PBS but network tv (CBS or ABC I think?) just cuz you'd never really see anything like that on network tv now…

I will watch season 2—I know I will, but I definitely felt that way with season 1 (to be fair most of my friends loved it). From a basic level there were so many bad sitcom punch lines that might have actually somehow been improved with a laugh-track (probably not). And the gay husbands really came off as… I dunno.

Being a teenager, not only with easy online porn but a smartphone (hell, even a cell phone with text) is, I think, a situation that undeniably would make a difference to how one grows up… (Although as a teenager I would have loved to have had both.)

Ha! I'll take it!

I always feel left out of these things. I was born in 1980. According to Wiki several sources say Millennials start at 1982, however many others claim the start date as 1980. I just don't belong.

It wasn't PBS…

I'd pay to see that! :P

It sounds like they could always use him next year… "

I think that's a fair argument. To me, though, Logan, while not really being super faithful to the original characters in fact, is being faithful to them in tone which the Universal versions often weren't. Frankenstein/Monster was a popular figure in Victorian England so I give him leeway for that, but perhaps

The Mummy isn't really a Victorian monster though—is he? Am I missing a piece of writing from the 19th Century (I mean I know he was set then, but—I suppose the werewolf stuff could be argued similarly but was more common…)

Logan already has complained that they couldn't get the rights (I assume they wouldn't be able to get the Invisible Man rights either—) and that Jeckyll was plan B