ihavefatparents--disqus
Amy Dunne
ihavefatparents--disqus

I haven't been able to play past 10 minutes of Outlast due to my nerves - and I grew up on survival horror. So kudos, seriously.

Getting through this game will be tough given how many emotional breakdowns I had during Alien: Isolation, but a new Resident Evil game actually has me excited, which I haven't been able to say since RE4.

Glad to see some appreciation for DH1, which I also found striking, tense, and haunting - more than I was expecting from the beginning of a two-part big budget sequel.

Lane's storyline post-Dave Rygalski was so awful. Shame there was never any course correction. She deserves better.

I kept waiting for the explanation that *that* dress was a much crappier substitute, but it never came.

Yes.

Better stock up on coffee and poptarts.

It's a travesty Finn and Colin got more screen time than Mrs. Kim.

Emily's arc was beautiful. Seeing her so happy and engaged while explaining whaling to children at the museum was heartwarming in a wonderfully gruesome way.

It was excruciating. As much as network shows are straightjacketed by commercials and a forty minute episode run time, at least something like this would have been trimmed to 30 seconds at MOST.

I'm still devastated his BioShock adaptation never got off the ground.

People didn't?

I agree that overall The Ring is the better movie, but Ringu still does the key scene better - Sadako emerging from the TV was much weirder and scarier. They laid the digital effects on Samara a little too thick.

Boy, there sure are a lot of bad comments about this.

ET is awful and ugly. My dislike of it largely comes from how much my parents pushed me to like the movie as a kid, which made it all the more grotesque to me.

I didn't like First Class either. It had a good cast, but the characters were awful, dull, or had no development whatsoever.

Boyhood? I'm a Linklater fan but I couldn't understand the universal acclaim at all. Visually flat, dull characters, and a story that would be laughed out of an MFA workshop. How Patricia Arquette was given an Oscar for her Lifetime TV movie performance, I'll never know.

This is why I skipped opening weekend and saw it on a weekday afternoon.

Young Adult was a dry, sardonic delight and this is good news.

I've only read the first dozen or so issues of Irredeemable but I remember finding it really scary and intense. If they can actually make a scifi/horror apocalyptic superhero movie that's full of dread, I'm on board.