Oh, that's not right!!!
Oh, that's not right!!!
Ahem. *pushes up glasses* This isn't the music from the original show. It's actually Jerry Goldsmith's theme from Star Trek: The Motion Picture, which was reused for Star Trek V, and then for the Next Generation, along with a few of those movies. There are also sections of the themes for the Klingons and the bald…
"Mr. Wopat, you are under arrest for assault and drug possession."
"I bet ol' Luke misses Roscoe right now, don't you folks?"
"Mr. Jennings, you're free to go."
The entire subplot with Shephard's cult chasing the boy seems like it was just dropped halfway through the movie. His role was really nothing more than a cameo.
Watched The Right Stuff about a month ago for the umpteenth time. And finally saw Midnight Special last week.
*Remembers Jules Asner is a person that exists.
*Googles 'Jules Asner 2017'
*Retires to bunk for a few minutes.
Amen! The Paper is fantastic and criminally forgotten.
Is that the Polish National Anthem playing in the second clip? Because it sounds like the music to a 1920's Mickey Mouse cartoon.
"LaBeouf aside, Borg Vs McEnroe also stars Swedish actor Sverrir Gudnason as Bjorn Borg, and Stellan Skarsgård as Borg’s coach, Lennart Bergelin."
I read that entire sentence hearing it spoken in my head by the Swedish Chef.
Bork! Bork! Bork!
Just give it to Kasdan. The best dialogue ever spoken by the character was written by the guy, after all. And Dreamcatcher aside, the guy can make a solid movie. If you're gonna continue to go through with 'Smuggler Babies: A Star Wars Story', he's your best shot, and he's already on the payroll.
Goldman's version supposedly didn't include Chuck Yeager as a character at all. He didn't think it was necessary. I love Goldman, but I'm glad he didn't get that gig.
He was attached at one point to direct The Right Stuff, which with the original writer William Goldman, would have made for a MUCH different movie than the one we ended up with.
No, that was the theater across the street. They also got all the Rocky Horror midnight shows. More than once had to explain to someone in full Dr. FrankNFurter costume that they were at the wrong place.
God, 8 Seconds. I haven't thought about that movie in 20 years. It opened at the movie theater I worked at. The cowboys and rednecks came from miles around to see that one, every single one of them with a plug of tobacco in their jaws. We had little 8oz. courtesy cups we gave away for free that in a week we would…
I think John Lassiter got drunk one night, caught 'Maximum Overdrive' on late-night cable, and decided to make a Pixar-ified sequel.
I've heard a story that JW wrote a huge suite of music for the entire Battle of Geonosis sequence, beginning when Yoda shows up with the clone cavalry, and going all the way through to the Obi-Wan/Anakin/Dooku fight. George decided not to use it and tracked in music from The Phantom Menace instead.
The Superman II score was essentially a rerecording of the original score with a smaller, much less-talented orchestra. Then they just cut-and-pasted sections of it in to match whatever was going on in the movie.
Can we stop remembering this with fondness? It's just not very good. Tim Curry is fantastic, and that's about it. The cast is a bunch of 80's TV stars. Jack Tripper, Venus Flytrap, Judge Harry, and God help me, John Boy Walton! The horror was severely limited by early-90's network TV standards. I had read the book…
It premiered 40 years ago today, which was one day after my 4th birthday. It didn't open here in Little Rock until a month later, but I didn't see it until after it was rereleased on the first anniversary in May '78. My parents took my sister and me to pick up my Grandma Medium Talent and we went to see it. I have…
The Freeform network needed 35 shows to fill a few holes in their programming lineup. That's a pretty daunting task — and the producers weren't up to it. Instead, they churned out a Black-ish spinoff, transplanting already popular characters into new locales and situations. First up, a heartwarming College comedy…