lightninglouie
lightninglouie
lightninglouie

Star Wars if you fed it into Midjourney.

But they cancel a lot of shows with dedicated audiences, too. That’s the problem. The streamers are so focused on short-term returns that they refuse to let shows find new viewers.

I dunno man, I usually stick with Whataburger. 

In the proper 4:3 aspect ratio.

Charlie Brown claimed that one before Lucas. If you try to take it from him, Snoopy will cut you.

I was really happy to see that Poker Face was getting a physical release (DVD and Blu-Ray only, though, no 4K UHD BD). That’s a keeper (especially the episode in which Nick Nolte basically plays Phil Tippett).

I’m putting even money on Kiefer Sutherland.

Not just VHS...

Good.

Is this movie being shown only in the R-Zone?

I can never remember if Life Day is Star Wars Thanksgiving or Christmas.

I wonder if he was aware that his protagonist was mostly just being used by another character? That seems awfully meta. (Caviezel could not remember any of his lines, so in many scenes where he’s having a conversation, the other actors likely have cue cards with his dialogue taped to their chests, especially if

I always heard good things about PoI but Caviezel was the dealbreaker. I just couldn’t watch anything with him in it. (I saw one episode of the awful remake of The Prisoner, but even McKellen couldn’t save it.) And that’s even more true now after listening to the QAnon Anonymous episode (“Enter The Cavortex”) about

Also, the success of Barbie and Oppenheimer demonstrates that viewers are getting tired of the 4K TVs they bought during the pandemic and want bigger experiences. They’re not getting that from Quantumania or The Flash, which look like the kinds of things the streamers were offering during the lockdown. The fact that Co

As someone pointed out on Twitter last month, the AMPTP underestimated the strikers because they assume that writers and actors will return to the table once they realize their “cushy lifestyles” are in jeopardy.

Lost has a lot to answer for, because it popularized the idea that you can introduce some random bullshit element out of left field and convince the audience that it signifies something that the writers have thought out in advance. I think by now the Mystery Box style of storytelling has fallen out of favor, though

The 1973 BBC radio adaptation of the original Foundation trilogy is very good and is still available on YouTube.

That show was amazing and the “what is their plan?” “where is earth?” mystery box crap was the least important part of the series.

Like DarthPumpkin says, the unions are against cutting services because it’s still a revenue lifeline for striking writers and actors.

I am now seeing from multiple sources that it does, in fact, have a crawl.