kitsunehazard01
KitsuneHazard
kitsunehazard01

Tough shit. I’m tired of being Captain Save-a-Ho to the rest of the knuckle-dragging mouth-breathing country. It’s not MY job to drag you kicking and screaming into the 20th century.

With that kind of clock management, the coach is clearly an Andy Reid disciple.

This is what it is like to be neck deep inmost hobbies, actually. The Society for Creative Anachronism can take over your life as well... Especially if you do any fighting whatsoever. Plus camping equipment, and fabric for sewing....

So...murder on the Hi-Cs?

Big with Tom Hanks raises some of the same questions for me.

You thought Spiderman looked Paula Abdul? I don’t see it.

Isn’t that why we’re supposed to watch the movie?

No, Sylvester Stallone is at his best when he’s playing an exasperated mob boss who’s trying to go straight in an almost blatantly pseudo-Shakespearean comedy. It’s not sci-fi, but if you really want to see Stallone at his best, watch Oscar.

Of course that’s fake, you can’t even see the turtle.

He’s so good at being a normal dude its almost bizarre.

Immediately thought of this.

It’s is more scary this way - to think about how bad they may fuck it up...

This makes a lot of good points, yet also seems to skim by what I consider the most important one — what made Deadpool such a breakout was also the one thing that many other Fox (and most WB) films lacked — respect for the material they’re adapting, and making an attempt to be as accurate to the spirit (and where

You’re kidding me! My grandpa’s from Ashland and my fourth cousins live fairly close by still. I haven’t been inside Ashland proper for years though, not since before my great aunt Betty died.

Yeah, that and his insane sounding emails that got leaked during the Sony hack made him come off as a bit of a jackass.

Seriously.. if they can give those ridiculous runtimes to Peter Jackson, why they hell not Star Wars? Was Disney really afraid of losing money because of reduced showings?

Alyssa,

I *think* you are referring to Tom Hardy when he apologized to Miller for getting frustrated on the set. ...and until that apology I don’t think he had said a word about it before that in any interviews. Ah here it is...what he said was:

I, too, interpreted the monster of the movie to be the inevitability of adulthood and the death of childhood innocence. It’s unavoidable and relentless. The monster is when I tossed all my action figures into a dumpster at 13 because I was done playing with toys. It’s what my 17 year old son is battling every time I