I enjoyed it. If it’s possible to hold these two thoughts about it in my head at the same time, I thought it was fun but not very good. I’ll have forgotten about it a month from now.
I enjoyed it. If it’s possible to hold these two thoughts about it in my head at the same time, I thought it was fun but not very good. I’ll have forgotten about it a month from now.
I just got home from seeing it, and there’s so much stuff cluttering all the various houses and apartments and schoolrooms, I can’t imagine that anyone’s going to see a piece of wire and say, ‘Oh look, a straightened-out Slinky!’.
The line about the slinky isn’t from the original movie. It’s probably from the sequel, but I don’t know it by heart like I do the first one.
“Let me get this straight: So Who’s on First?”
I usually make it closer to Thanksgiving before watching this; but what the hell, it seems called for here.
Knocking the jeep over the wall makes a lot more sense in this version.
I always enjoy the symmetry of Bill Murray playing Peter Venkman in Ghostbusters, then Lorenzo Music doing the voice for The Real Ghostbusters cartoon about the same time he was doing the voice of Garfield, which Bill Murray went on to do years later.
James Bond was the movie that got me back to the theater for the first time. Went on a Friday at noon. And we waited until just before we left the house to buy tickets so we could get seats as far away from others as we could. No one else on our row, and there were reclining seats with footrests, so there was a big…
‘Sir, you left this on the beach back there.
I’ve really moved on from this. I’ll guess I’ll keep my ‘issues’ to myself from now on. Thank you for your feedback.
I feel the same, although that may be because of my mentioned love of Harrison Ford doing comedy, plus I haven’t seen the original since before the remake came out. Need to watch it again.
My fondest wish is for another ESPN Classic with Pete Twinkle and Greg Stink.
Wow. So I just saw something that bugs me a little that I’ve noticed before on this and other pop-culture sites and thought I make a comment on it. But looking back on the reaction here, apparently I’m just a huge whining asshole. You’ve all given me a lot to think about.
Speaking of Sabrina, I think both the original and the remake would make for a great article. Feels like neither version really gets remembered much, but I’ve always enjoyed both of them. Plus I’m a sucker for whenever Harrison Ford tries his hand at comedy, even when it doesn’t work as well (Six Days Seven Nights).
Sounds like the guy that made the Full House opening with Ron Swanson has some more work to do.
And for the third time now, the issue I have is not about the spoiler warning. I saw the spoiler warning. I heeded the spoiler warning. I did not and have not read the article yet, and won’t until after I’ve seen the episode later tonight. I was simply talking about the fact that they always post these kind of stories…
Again, the problem isn’t avoiding the article. The problem is remembering to go back and find it once I’ve seen the finale. I realize this isn’t an earth-shattering inconvenience, it just bugs me. But go ahead and snark at me if it makes you feel better.
No one is making me read this article. But I would like to read the interview with the co-creator of a show I am very much enjoying, just not before I’ve seen the finale. However, by the time I have watched it, the interview will be buried behind however many other stories, newswires, interviews, and great job…
How about posting stuff like this the day AFTER the finale drops when people have had a chance to actually watch the finale? Most of us aren’t sitting up at 4AM breathlessly waiting for Hulu to drop each new episode. I’ll watch it with my wife tonight after work, by which point this article will be a distant memory in…
My impression has always been that she was a nun at the church where Father McKenzie was the pastor. She’s picking up the rice because it’s her responsibility. That why she ‘died in the church and was buried along with her name’.