independentthoughtalarm
IndependentThoughtAlarm
independentthoughtalarm

I honestly found that scene more intense than basically anything from Green Room except the scene on this list.

I think my favourite moment in The Nice Guys is when they haul the corpse over the fence and it lands on a dinner party and then there's no follow-up whatsoever.

It's not good.

"An Idol win" is a very generous way to describe 3rd place on Canadian Idol.

Paris' scenes at Chilton are probably the highlight of the entire revival for me. The terrified girls toppling out of the bathroom in a pile? Her kicking and holding the door shut with one high-heeled foot?

Gimme!

Wait what? This is really, really obviously not a real person. There can't actually be confusion about this.

I've read that it was to avoid offending certain Asian markets, but I don't know many details beyond that or how valid a concern it might really be.

My neighbour's cat's screenplay should obviously have been in the Adapted category so you're right, that *would* be crazy.

He has only one significant scene but it's probably the best scene because of the movie because of him.

I'd say it's more lyrical and hypnotic than House of the Devil.

They tried the opposite approach with the Camilla Belle remake, by getting rid of that whole dull middle portion of the original and stretching out the iconic part to full-length (so the whole movie takes place in one night). Unfortunately the result is so forgettable that I was about to write that I haven't seen it,

My main problem with Lady Gaga is that she isn't generic enough. She excelled at dancey pop music that was aimed squarely at the Top 40, but has floundered whenever she's tried anything outside of that, at least as a solo act (excluding, of course, projects that rely just on her voice). To her credit, she has tried to

Everything up to Million Reasons: alright I can get on board with this for the most part
Everything after Million Reasons: pass

I haven't seen the original either, but some reviews I've read have emphatically suggested you do NOT see the original before watching this, because it basically spells out the entire story in an expositional scene, and this movie is a way better way of getting that same information (plus the original seems like a

I'm actually looking forward to this. Mike Flanagan is a reliable enough name that I'll probably watch something I might not have otherwise if his name is on it, but this had enough appeal to me from the get-go (the period setting looks quite nice) that I'm mostly just relieved it's been well-received so far. I

I don't know, at least Can't Stop The Feeling doesn't try to get its audience to clap along like a kindergarten class.

I can't say I was super on board to begin with, but you definitely lost me at "Jared Hess-like". Nope, outta here, bye.

This sounds awesome.

I agree about Gretchen. What I've liked a lot about this show's forays into more dramatic territory is that the characters all show the capacity to get serious and understand each other (or at least try) when it matters. That scene from last season where Lindsay asks Gretchen if "it's back" is such a powerful moment