Good to know that I’m not the only one who thought that interaction was really creepy.
Good to know that I’m not the only one who thought that interaction was really creepy.
Is one of these movies the one with an infamous “pool scene”?
Looks like AVClub forgot to add the all important “Jr.”
I haven’t seen Some Like It Hot in a long time, but I completely forgot Edward G. Robinson was in the movie. Without looking it up, I can’t remember who he played.
Jezebel gonna Jezebel... I’m surprised Barsanti didn’t sneak in some snark for this article.
I’ll take a Cadbury Cream Egg, please.
If you ever do a leaf-peeping trip to Vermont in the autumn, try Burt’s orchard in Cabot. They’re warm when you buy them, and just as good as you can imagine. The view from the property is also fantastic.
That was my thought. All those drugs and smoking did a number on his coronary arteries. He was right at the age where people used to regularly drop dead of “widow makers” before we got much better at preventing and treating heart attacks.
I remember watching one of those “Making of...” documentaries they used to do for just about every hit movie for Jaws. In the interviews, both at the time the movie was made and in the “present day” (I think it came from the early 90s), most of the cast and crew came across very pleasant. They admitted there were…
Can I nominate “A View to a Kill” as both the best Bond theme of the 80s and the most 80s Bond theme? The movie is a rather weak entry, but that opening title sequence has a kick that the rest of the film mostly lacks.
Wasn’t the recent BBC Dracula series fairly well received?
And now, they’re trying to maintain a cinematic universe with increasingly bad content.
Yeah, and its not like it was some great secret that Touchstone was Disney in all but name.
I enjoyed Shaun of the Dead while it was mostly a comedy. It seems once they got the Winchester, the tone suddenly got much darker and it definitely became more of a pure zombie movie. Especially when the zombies started graphically ripping David apart, which was played completely for shock without even a slight hint…
I just rewatched the kitchen scene from Gremlins for the first time in 30 years. It’s just amazing how heavily that movie was marketed to children.
“Dracula Boat” sounds like a cheap boardwalk dark ride.
I wouldn’t call it exactly scary, but the scene at the end of Frankenstein where the villagers burn the monster in the windmill is disturbing as he screams in terror and pain.
And confusing empathy with sympathy.
Williams only started working with Disney again after the studio’s president at the time Aladdin was released left the company and the new president offered him a public apology.
Even professional mid-century cookbooks with glossy photos struggled to make the food not look gross. If you’ve never seen it, I highly recommend spending some time browsing through Jim Lilek’s Gallery of Regrettable Food: