I was pleasantly surprised about the B&B revival as well. Though I think you’d have to go out of your way to screw up a premise like “dumbass teenagers getting into wacky shenanigans”. I thought the "adult" segments were a nice touch.
I was pleasantly surprised about the B&B revival as well. Though I think you’d have to go out of your way to screw up a premise like “dumbass teenagers getting into wacky shenanigans”. I thought the "adult" segments were a nice touch.
Also attending were numerous 35-year-olds, continually insisting that animation isn’t a medium 0nly for children while also only watching animated content made for children.
Yeah, it’s a joke that peaked 20 years ago but that some people can’t let go of. Just like South Park.
We could do “The Other Texan They” or “The Other Three-Armed Zabroxian” for example
She may not have a license but SHE DRIVES ME CRAZY. LIKE NO ONE ELSE.
Hey, if you wouldn’t feel comfortable saying it to the person’s face, why say it online? If posting is the only way you feel any sort of power or control, you gotta find a constructive hobby. Me? I build ships in bottles and post like a human virus.
he’s probably a decent chess player, since he graduated from one of Canada’s top business schools with really good grades.
I was shocked to Renny Harlin’s name as the director on this. I thought he was forever in “director jail” and would never again be at the helm of a wide theatrical release.
just the way it is, once something kinda makes it then they have to milk it all the way to VOD, where we will get The Strangers: Tea Time...
R.I.P.
I like her. I think it's more glitchy kinja than anything
Men was great.
Yeah, there was seemingly a lot of hate for “Men” but I quite liked it too. Maybe it was too weird for most people? Dunno.
And have J’onn J’onzz over for Christmas at least once.
It’s the setting of the most recent (fourth) season - a remote town in Alaska.
Robinson screaming for people to hold the door open before slowly walking over to it is an absolutely incredible bit
“Born in Pennsylvania, Flaherty began his career at Second City in Chicago, working alongside comedy legends like John Belushi, Bill Murray, Gilda Radner, Chevy Chase, Brian Doyle-Murray, and Harold Ramis.”
There was a great YouTube video on a way someone suggested to adapt “House of Leaves” and I thought it was an amazing idea:
They may have to adjust the minor point that the “Navidison Record” (the movie within the book, or perhaps the movie within the book in the book) was produced by Harvey Weinstein.