guymann
Guy Mann
guymann

My sister was a waitress at a restaurant in Los Angeles. Woods would come in constantly with a different woman every time. Once she said he went out the front door, and ten minutes later came in the back door with another girl! He also hit on my sister when she waited his table, in front of the girl he was with,

The House of Cosbys is strong with this one...Not that I’m complaining. Brilliant episode! And great for Harmontown viewers to see Jeff Davis bust out his Sam Elliot impression.

This show just felt- like someone gave a rich a-hole a couple million dollars to do an elaborate Star Trek cosplay...If it’s going to have a chance of distinguishing itself, it needs to lean full tilt into absurd sci-fi concepts the way Rick and Morty does, otherwise, it’s just TNG with more lame jokes.

I can respect the guts it took to make this movie...but I don’t know anyone but budding serial killers who are going to want to watch it.

Isaac Asimov’s Foundation series would be great...Also, the Lensman series of books.

I thought it was cute indie movie. But it in no way indicated he should by the guy to helm giant action blockbusters.

What!? They used EDITING! On a TV Show! Who would have thought!?...FYI Julee, if Michael Bay ever calls you, you’ll want to decline.

I long reached the point with Lynch where I quit approaching his work with any kind of analytical mind. He deals in abstractions and the whole point of his approach is that you have to experience it, not think through it. Trying to make it make sense defeats the purpose. That’s why episode eight is the standout

These last two episodes were kind of like if David Lynch directed Back to the Future 2.

I shut off Green Room about mid way through. Just found it generally unpleasant and didn’t care for any of the characters. Blue Ruin was much more compelling.

Please, Canada, be next.

There’s always the possibility that Richard Horne ended up in the black lodge somewhere. We may see him again.

I was eleven and can confirm that it scared me shitless. The threat of nuclear war felt palpable in those days

Never loved this movie. Not for any political reasons, as I can put something in a historical context when I watch it, it just never did much for me as a film, and I love a lot of films from that era of filmmaking.

I think because to be an artist requires a dialectical mind, the ability to see both sides of an idea, and people on the far right only see one side of anything, their own. People on the far left on the other hand, see every side (even to a fault), which can make them extreme in their views but still good artists.