I'm willing to believe that, and will definitely take your word for it. Because I, like most sensible people, have never seen Monkeybone and don't plan to change that. So, I stand corrected.
I'm willing to believe that, and will definitely take your word for it. Because I, like most sensible people, have never seen Monkeybone and don't plan to change that. So, I stand corrected.
Aaaaaand, now I have Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog tunes stuck in my head again.
Also, by far the weirdest thing Anthony Kiedis has ever done, ever, is the time he dated Christina Applegate on Married With Children.
That's rough. Do you sometimes feel like you don't have a partner?
Oh lort, I just randomly un-mentally-blocked the fact that they even managed to turn Pole Position into a Saturday morning cartoon. It was a fucking car-racing game! But, somehow, somebody slapped together a whole cast of characters, plot, and theme song. ("Only their Uncle knows!")
Hah! (From the YouTube description) "It's like Rapper's Delight, without the Delight!"
I never got the impression Inventory lists were meant to be read as ordered. Which is why they're numbered counting up, not counting down to "#1" like most "Top N" lists would be. All of the films here are presented as equally deserving of mention.
…Really? I mean, I love it and think it's a great film, but I'm 41 and nobody cares what I think. Feels like you'd have trouble arguing it "still holds up", though, if you were to screen it for a group of under-30s. Not so's it could stand alongside the entries on this list, anyway.
"because Chris Kattan somehow manages to ruin every scene he's in" …not just in Undercover Brother, but every scene he's ever appeared in, in any medium, EVER.
Yeah, "Millennials" as typically used roughly translates to "current twentysomethings". Maybe early 30s, at most.
Maaat Daaaamon!
Team America is also a brilliant genre parody of the 1960s Gerry Anderson marionimation TV serieseseses — Thunderbirds and the like. A genre which, incidentally, is currently in the middle of an entirely-non-parody nostalgia-revival / renaissance, courtesy of the surprisingly watchable Thunderbirds Are Go!
See, there's your problem. You were looking for jokes, when what Young Frankenstein was filled with was absolutely brilliant humor and pitch-perfect satire.
To quote Patrick Stewart as Sterling, in Jeffrey, "Oh, me too."
It comes as no surprise to me that Weird Al has excellent taste in movies. Of all these films, Top Secret! will always hold a special place in my heart, because it's not just a parody. It's an excellent one, to be sure, but moreso than any of the others it's also an absurdist masterpiece that's served as a roadmap for…
That haircut explains everything about his subsequent decision to embrace the cueball look. Talk about a follicle debacle!
Plus, there was that spate of truly terrible 1980s cartoon properties based off of video games. I mean, some of the best hours of my childhood were spent playing Q*Bert in the arcade at the Green Acres Mall on Long Island… but this pile of nonsense was one of the most incomprehensible, unwatchable pieces of trash ever…
I really don't get why "What Up With That?" seems to have disappeared from SNL, when Keenan hasn't. I felt it was one of their stronger recurring sketches. I suppose it could be that both Sudeikis and their Hader-fueled Lindsay Buckingham have moved on. But my best guess is that either Meyers or Samberg was writing…
Over Macho Grande?
I think so, too. Plus, she initially joined the show as a writer, before she started getting screen time (and then was made an official part of the cast), so her contributions to the show are probably more than just what we see of her on-air.