kanekofan
kanekofan
kanekofan

I am so tired of people misusing the phrase “lowest common denominator.”

“This woman was just SECONDS from giving birth, when suddenly vicious, malicious doctors forced her to PUSH the baby through her birth canal, aborting the pregnancy and leaving nothing but a bloody, screaming baby in its wake!”

I also place Part 2 at the top. By far the best visual style, fantastic editing that really builds effective tension, genuinely engaging characters, and Ginny’s confrontation with Jason in the shack is easily the best scene in the entire franchise.

And I also have a lot of fondness for Part 3. It’s one of the most

Alucard” traces back at least as far as 1943's Son of Dracula.

They’re probably grifting on behalf of foreign kids. Disrespecting America’s grifting heritage.

Just watched that episode last night!

It was pretty recently, though I can’t remember the movie off the top of my head. Generally, if my wife and I want to watch a recent release, we check how much it is to stream, and if it’s more than about $2.99, I make the 2-minute trip to our local Redbox and rent it cheaper, and enjoy the superior playback quality

Vampires specifically aren’t reflected in mirrors, because of the silver backing. There’s no silver in most puddles.

Wow, you found something positive to say about “Move Along Home”! Bravo!

You see those facial expressions and think the person wearing them looks “fun”? I just see “intolerably smug.”

That is how television episodes are numbered. Content from season one is from 1xx, season two is 2xx, etc.

Why would anyone try to split a single Oreo between two people?

That is my favorite episode of the whole series. Not only did it give us the marvelous Hotel le Rut runner, but also Plummet, First Poem, Fletcher Christian and Joymakers - wall-to-wall classics.

I don’t think it’s referencing anything, it’s just playing with the way that people can get fixated on the details of something, whether or not it’s really important.

What do you want us to think about? Chromosomes? Hormones? Internal reproductive anatomy? Social and psychological roles and experiences? If I can’t immediately and accurately label you based on one piece of external anatomy, then my whole life is a lie!

To my tastes, season 2 of Buffy and season 5 of Angel are the two top seasons of either show. Somewhat appropriately, Buffy peaked early, with its raw teenage emotionality; whereas Angel had to grow into its study of adulthood.

“Code-switching” is a linguistics term, and its earliest known use was in reference to native tribes in California.

I had the same feeling, but it wasn’t one I’d never had with Star Wars before, it was just one I hadn’t had since I first saw Empire. To me, TLJ always felt like a return to what Star Wars had once been.

It means exactly the opposite of what he thinks it means, in this instance.

“Floated” by A&W?