You mean Nicolas Cage's Wicker Man WASN'T a wacky comedy?
You mean Nicolas Cage's Wicker Man WASN'T a wacky comedy?
You've just summed up perfectly why Chapman was my favorite Python. I love a good straight man, and he was the best.
The US is one of the HAPPIEST countries? Man, the world sucks even more than I realized.
It's not you. Dark Knight Returns IS stupid. Frank Miller's writing is like looking into the id a maladjusted 12 year old boy.
Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?
It is pretty cool to skip around the video after you've seen the whole thing. While they all look like a gradual aging of the same person in the video, skipping around lets you see how different the women actually look.
That one REALLY caught me by surprise.
The ending of the Hunger Games trilogy is also pretty damn pyrrhic.
That's not really a victory, though. Just a cruel, needless punch to the gut.
Affleck adds a strong dose of rich whiteness that really helps Batman look more like Batman.
Another lead cause of binge eating: That headline image.
It definitely feels more "Batman" than any of the live-action Bat-films.
Considering the region with the most heart problems is the South, I think it's safe to say that shitty diet and unhealthy lifestyle are still bigger risk factors than a brisk winter morning.
Matthew Vaughn has yet to direct a movie that isn't awesome.
Eh, the graphical interface in Skyfall didn't really bother me, since it was obvious that it was that way so that computer illiterate viewers would know what the hell was going on.
Pretty sure Vin Diesel isn't hurting for money, what with the endless string of Fast and Furious sequels. It sounds more like he's just ridiculously excited about the prospect of being part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, in whatever capacity he can. Good on him, I say.
An American movie where the bad guy has a British accent. Surely it won't take you long to adjust to such a scenario.
David Hyde Pierce voices Abe Sapien in the first Hellboy movie. Doug Jones voices him in Hellboy 2.
Well, The Unwritten was also inspired by the case of Christopher Milne, so that comparison is quite apt.
Futurama's never been shy about going for the morbid humor, though. The Late Philip J. Fry is the most emotionally touching episode of the re-launch, and it also ends on a pretty dark punchline.