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J. Thunder
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I like to think of TFA as a story told by someone in the Rebellion (or the Resistance) who prides himself as knowing the OT Trio, but misstates a lot of facts. Han Solo a smuggler who seems passive over his son being a child murderer? Luke Skywalker living as a hermit who stays disengaged even when planets are

Hollywood Homicide's a mess, but Ford was pretty funny in it.

Short Round is awesome. I felt more of a father/son bond between him and Indy than Indy had with Mutt in Crystal Skull.

MY MAN! (High Five)

My family would rewind that moment numerous times. We joked it was like Indy was treating that Nazi's head as if it were a basketball.

The Professional Left with Driftglass and Blue Gal is a good one for people who are frustrated with what passes for punditry on the cable networks. You won't see either host on CNN or MSNBC anytime soon, but they provide a sharper insight on how broken the news media has become which champions endless overpaid hacks

Tom Sizemore as the stereotypical mob boss who can't stop eating his pasta had some heat as well.

JT Walsh would have been a great Cheney.

Old Man: "I am 24 years old."

A sad part of that issue was after the election, when Stewart was trying to fight back on the notion that all Trump voters were racists, he name checked those responders as folks who went for Trump because they thought he would be better on health care. Frustrating because ultimately they endorsed giving power to the

And with Stewart, I remember him having a beef with Olbermann to the point of using him as an example of the breakdown in American discourse during the Rally to Regain Sanity. I know Olbermann can be a little theatrical, but I would never put him on the same level of O'Reilly. At least Olbermann was trying to defend

I'll have to rewatch that. I do remember when Supes flies away after the Metropolis fight in Part 2, there's 2 black kids watching, One says "Superman didn't do anything" and he sounds like Little Lord Faunterloy.

When Dr Romano was killed by that copter crashing on him, I'd like to think there was some surgeon,who also lost an arm by copter blade, screaming at the TV yelling no doctor would allow himself to be injured by helicopter TWICE!

"Please Mr. General! Please let my daddy down!" I like to think the kid travelled all the way from the UK to find his American daddy (who knocked up his mummy when she was stateside). The boy likely had all sorts of adventures getting to Idaho..before being murdered by those Kryptonians probably a day or two after

That bit is classic. Very few can mine laughs saying "UH-HUHH!" countless times the way Knight does during one pivotal scene.

I haven't seen it in the last few years, but as a child of the 80s I would say it holds up very well compared to other comedies I liked during that time. Ted Knight as the Judge never got the acclaim he deserved for his contribution.

The Jackal starring Bruce Willis: The Man with a Thousand Hairpieces.

Too bad no one thought to fly in Sessions' brother from Sicily to rattle him during the confirmation hearing.

I can recall Boyhood being tarred as another "White People Problem Movie" by some folks and I didn't feel that all. I'm not a diehard Linklater fan, but I think it's one of his best films. I can still feel the anger and frustration in Patrica Arquette's final line.