Hump, or death? Hump - death. Hump: death. Hump, death, hump, death…
Hump, or death? Hump - death. Hump: death. Hump, death, hump, death…
Exactly!
I only just saw that one recently, and was really impressed. It's almost like my platonic ideal of a Twilight Zone ep: a prosaic setting, a slowly mounting sense of unease and dread, a neatly-done psychological trap, and a perfect razor-edge of ambiguity.
It's so frustrating: while Pixar relit the pilot for American big-budget animation, they also laid the blueprint for stunt-casting voice talent as a given, to the point where big projects are being built around famous names (like fucking Bee Movie). Some of them put in solid efforts, but by and large they're just…
I…am! Your singing telegram…
*Jane Wiedlin is skinned alive*
Craig is always surprised that Andrews is more sly and irreverent than he thinks - so I guess he's totally forgotten that she was in a ton of Blake Edwards sex comedies back in the eighties.
Good Ol' Boys is a narcocorrido. Yeah I said it!
@avclub-21a8615938a206d4311a58a53ad8890e:disqus That's probably geographical too: when you strike it rich, you tend to end up around the rich people in your area. And the rich of Nashville or Houston are going to be different than the rich of New York or Los Angeles.
Do Jehovah's Witnesses ride bikes while evangelizing, like the Mormons do?
…If so, I really really want to see Prince's Preachin' Bike.
Those people usually forget that they don't like classical or jazz, either.
Hey, I also liked Intolerable Cruelty! As long as you don't expect it to be another pantheon-level Coen flick (if it helps, think of it as the Coens take on a screwball comedy Cary Grant and Claudette Colbert never made), it's a lot of fun.
Cronenberg's early film Shivers is pretty damn close to an adaptation of High Rise: the residents of a high-rise apartment building gradually succumb to a disease that turns them into ravening atavistic monsters. The movie certainly diverges in a lot of key ways from the book, but the premise and a lot of the core…
This show could really use another Walken - a host that brings a distinct energy and timing to whatever they do, and has the fearlessness and adaptability to roll with any ridiculous idea. It would be so great if that could be Waltz.
I suppose this is the only applicable place for this, but - as both a fan of Craig Ferguson and a resident of the Super Bowl host city, I was pretty disappointed in his post-game show. Not that he sucked or anything - in fact, at least in the live audience portions, Craig was in quite good form - but that the show…
Dini would probably cast his wife to play her.
Anneal before Zod!
Guy Maddin's Doom Patrol!
On the other hand, with fictional cities you now have license to weave entire alternate histories and urban worldbuilding into your stories. However, you'd need some sort of serialization to take advantage of that, and maybe come up with something better than Smallville's "This small Kansas town has been Monster…
Zanjayntango?
Method Man's Strasberg Workshop
RZA's Barbershop - We Cut Headz
The Genius' Chessboxing Gym
U-God's Unitarian Support Group Basement
Old Dirty Bastard's Genealogy Service