Well that's just blatant false advertising.
Well that's just blatant false advertising.
So what's the "big twist" in this one? I mean, I'm never going to watch it since found footage horror is never worth it even as a hate-watch, but I always like to see what lame-ass SHOCKING TWIST the writers end up throwing out there.
Goodman's performance in this movie was pitch-perfect William Castle, right down to mimicking the movements and lines from some of Castle's movie trailers. They even made a full-length trailer for MANT! https://www.youtube.com/wat…
Core Concept, how many chapters does this have?
Stuff like this always reminds me of Terry Pratchett's and Neil Gaiman's novel "Good Omens", where a preacher is, uh, preaching about the Rapture and how it's going to be so good for the Christians because they'll be up in heaven watching the wicked suffer and die on Earth, then an actual angel comes in and points out…
Ha, I was just about to post the same thing. It's a weird omission from the articles this week. Especially in this case where they're ignoring a game where Zelda gets into the battlefield and starts fucking up monsters herself.
Actually, a bunch of these actually appear as weapons in Hyrule Warriors, but that's not a Zelda game as much as a Dynasty Warriors game with the Zelda characters. And one Original Character DO NOT STEAL.
It's nice to see Dreamworks taking the next logical step from ending all their movies with pointless dance numbers and putting the pointless dance number in the trailer. Saves everyone a lot of time.
This is NOT Mel Torme…
Just FYI: if you turn on the subtitles it tells you what movies the scenes are from.
No, it was actually called "Cannonball Run 2001". They basically put together mismatched driving teams for a cross-country race.
Man, nobody ever remembers the Cannonball Run 200 thing that USA did.
"youtubecomments.txt" right there.
"Scouts vs. Zombies" scriptwriter account spotted.
Remember me, Eddie? When I killed your brother, I talked just…like…THIS!
"Took voice lessons in the early 90s not only to boost her acting career but also due to the fact that she "used to not be able to order pizzas on the phone. "They'd say 'we need to speak to your mom or dad.'" She revealed in a 1993 interview."
I would just like to point out that, at one time, there was an honest-to-god tabletop RPG based on Tales from the Crypt.
"For Cryin' Out Loud" is such a great episode, specifically because of Kineson's delivery.
Nope, that was actually her speaking voice. She had to spend a lot of time with voice coaches to lose it.
"There was a thoughtful pause in the conversation as the assembled Brethren mentally divided the universe into the deserving and the undeserving, and put themselves on the appropriate side."
- Terry Pratchett, "Guards! Guards!"