givemelibby
Give Me Libby Casey or Give Me Death
givemelibby

Yeah, he's a definite liability. I'm not one for messing with classic movies, but if someone were to launch a Kickstarter to digitally remove him from Tiffany's, I'd contribute. But he has about three minutes of total screen time, so he's painful but not fatal to the movie (though I admit I might feel differently if I

Is it a comedy, though? A better Streisand fit for this list would be What's Up, Doc?

What, you can spare a runner-up position for the thunderously uncharming but weirdly beloved by the AV Club Sleeping With Other People, but not for Breakfast at Tiffany's? (Needless to say, Bringing Up Baby was the correct primary choice for B.)

Uh, yeah, okay. I must've missed when Saddle Creek Records proudly signed Prussian Blue.

The Book I Read had a title about Love going to a Building on Fire.

18-year-old me was crushed that they used stunt boobs for Heather Thomas' bra-popping scene. That may have been the first time I realized that movies engaged in such chicanery.

I had seen the preview where it said "Watch Begotten and you will be marked!" I should've heeded the warning, because I am indeed marked. Like I said, for about six months after watching, just catching a glimpse of a random black and white photo would make me sick to my stomach. Not so much now, though, like you, I

Well, hey! That price option was not there when I checked a few days ago. Maybe someone read this article and decided to unload their copy. Thanks!

I was never clear on how it worked, just that the whole idea scared the crap out of my 7 year old self. I remember that the story was mainly pretty simple - just the girl walking down the road to her house and becoming away that she was being followed, then lots of description of the lengthening shadows along the

Lonely country roads at dusk unnerve me due to a story about a girl being stalked by the ghost of a werewolf that was in a damn Scholastic ghost stories for kids book that I read in grade school.

I'm trying to think of where I saw the kvetching about it. It may have been on IMDB, in which case never mind.

One of the problems Manhattan faced was that its natural audience, history buffs, are also notoriously prickly about accuracy. A show that used a historical backdrop to tell a fully fictional story didn't sit well with a lot of historical minded folks who'd come expecting a docudrama, at least judging by the

I think soulless is overstating it for sure, but he does touch on my biggest problem with Abrams movies - they get their biggest reactions by evoking nostalgia for earlier nerd obsessions, to the point where it often seems that's their only purpose. They're kind of equivalent to pop culture references in Family Guy -

True, but in 1977 that Star Wars trailer was enough to put myself and all my fellow 13-year-old boys into a frenzy. It was the Farrah's nipples of movie trailers at the time.

I never checked this out at the time because I was under the impression it was just electronic noodling and was unaware that there were actual songs on it. I think I'll rectify that now - I liked the accompanying clip just fine, though it might have been better if the level of vocals in the mix and the level of

I like it, Ignaty! Now please send me the $50 or so I need to order a copy from Amazon.

It's been a long time since I've seen the movie, but for some reason I think the mountains were in the background of a scene supposedly taking place in Collinsville, Illinois. Granted, the world's largest man-made earthen mound is located there, as is the World's Largest Catsup Bottle, but neither of those really

I learned that there are mountains outside of St. Louis from that movie. I'd never noticed them in real life, and I'm still foggy on where exactly to find them.

The morning finds them with many more people agreeing with their comments. Some people should not be allowed to own a tv.

That's the one they specifically call out. How I managed to become friends with such Philistines is beyond me.