I kind of love that Kilmer would work with Michael Gough again a decade later in Batman Forever.
I kind of love that Kilmer would work with Michael Gough again a decade later in Batman Forever.
No, they're Commies. The movie is set in Communist-era East Germany.
So still no return of Bunheads.
That's floating around and doesn't seem to be part of the contract. Just that they have to air 700 Club daily.
The kicker joke in the issue is that the accountant makes his way into Doom's office and Doom is basically, "Oh. I'm sorry; DOOM always pays his debts!" and writes him a check.
Eh. I like them.
Say hello to the Wrecking Crew!
They're a hell of a lot of fun and there's a perfect position for Key; there's an issue entirely about the accountant for Damage Control infiltrating the Latverian Embassy to collect on an overdue premium payment from Doctor Doom.
MC is surprisingly earnest and sweet, too.
Man, look at all those shows that Fox gave a chance by putting them on the air, many of them for multiple seasons and had to cancel because no one was watching them.
To be fair, Edward Scissorhands isn't a minor burglar.
What I found particularly terrifying about it was how as things get slowly worse people get used to the horribleness. Daughter dies and it's horrible and sad and insane, then a little bit later in the movie the kid is riding his bike past piles of bodies in shrouds as they wait to be burned and this is his new…
Man, Testament. That's…um..yeah, that's something. (For the folks who haven't seen it, that's not sarcastic. It's brilliant but really, really harsh.)
It is, with an interesting depth in playable characters.
Hip hip fucking hooray, because I love how the "solution" to what happened is so far besides the point of the novel.
Now I'm wondering what it was.
"You embarrassed YOURSELF in front of Derek Jeter!"
Woah, that's a big one.
I loved that moment as well.
If nothing else, I now want to visit Reykjavik and meet these lovely-seeming people. Lordy, what a delightful episode.