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That’s missing the point; the third row is rarely ever unfolded, 90% of the time it’s used as a four seater. For the two times a year you visit grandma, then you get out the third row. It’s the convenience of having it available instead of needing to rent a van when you travel, persay. That said, it’s also convenient

That’s what I immediately thought when the whole furor went down.

Should they have done the blackface bits in the first place? IMO, no. It’s too loaded of a topic and can come off as insensitive even under the best of circumstances.

But media companies banning the episodes and flagellating themselves felt like PR

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Not that I know of, but it has Jack Black as Officer Dick:

You showed restraint many wouldn’t have, well played. 

Jack Black as Henchman 21, and Ray Romano (of course) as Henchman 24!

I was walking my son home from school about five years ago here in New York during a snowstorm, and I literally bumped into Moranis while we were stumbling along. I said “Hi!” as if I recognized him, because I did, and he said, “Hi!” back as if he was just fine with that. That’s the entire story.

Right? There’s a part of me that bristles at the way he’s got the entire internet satisfied with any little thing he does, but I can also appreciate the engineering. He’s like a human Old Spice ad.

You know, I really want to hate Ryan Reynolds, but he keeps doing fun stuff like this. That dumb hot asshole.

Honestly, I almost teared up. Maybe it’s because it’s 2020 and everything is on fire, but seeing him just made me so happy.

I address the source material, which I have read, in the review. I also acknowledge the ways in which Kaufman radically transforms and expands upon it. Having seen the movie (twice!), I can assure you that he brings a strangeness to the material that is in not in the (also strange) novel.

Did I really had to put /s ?

Wrong. You are free to say whatever you want. You are, however, not free from the responsibility and consequences of what comes out of your mouth. 

The characters are not “well-rounded” or whatever but they are well-sketched and then given to actors who know what they’re doing. Dern and Neill and Goldblum play exactly what they need to play.

I think the idea of having the park open was a great idea, I just wish it was explored more, if it was structured closer to JP there could have been more time spent with the active park before the chaos ensued. It really needed a more experienced director and a few more rewrites to excise alot of the garbage, like the

I think you are the 1st person I have seen that thought Lost World was better. Personally I think aside from the effects, everything about that movie is done much worse. I don’t find any of the characters likable and Spielberg was clearly not interested in making it the same as he was for JP.

That entire T. rex scene, where the vehicles get attacked, is a bloody marvel in every way. There’s the beautiful visual shorthand of seeing the tethered goat (as a reminder it’s there - Chekhov’s goat? - and as a cue to the audience as to where the vehicles have stopped), the first, ominous ‘boom’ of the footstep

I’ve lost count how many times I’ve seen this movie, and don’t care to think how many more I’ll see it. Doesn’t matter if it’s on Syfy or Netflix, background noise or the main attraction, I’m still going to watch it.

Obama: “Donald Trump hasn’t grown into the job because he can’t.”

This certainly looks like a film about two people set against the back drop of a city that is a character unto itself.

NBC oscillates pretty wildly between retaining their big SNL-grown stars and carelessly pushing them away (like letting Brooklyn 99 get away, then turning around and picking it up for several more seasons post-Fox). It is definitely strange that the creator of Scrubs and an SNL guy who created this character for NBC