lonestarr357--disqus
lonestarr357
lonestarr357--disqus

I got a total DIE HARD-vibe from that scene:

A mostly-Jimmy Pesto episode would turn me into Elvis Presley.

I was watching this for a few minutes, but then I remembered that godawful Thanksgiving episode from last season and I tapped out. Gayle is definitely a 'small doses' character.

And now, I'm thinking of those two goober kids from Jim Wynorski's follow-up. Had no idea there was precedent.

Given that you're addressing a dyed-in-the-wool Spaceballs fan, I'm afraid not.

If nothing else, John Doe gives great head.

A-hyuh-hyuh!

Slacker!

Me too. Weird to think it's sort-of based on a true incident. Some people might chafe at how such a scenario could be played for laughs*, but I liked that movie.

Well we can't exactly get Anne Bancroft to co-present with Dustin Hoffman…unless you know of a pet sematary, someplace.

I noticed that there was no mention of Christina Hendricks (she's there for roughly a millisecond in the trailer). Depressing that (from the looks of it) she may as well have not been in this movie at all.

I remember someone at IMDb describing Wanderlust's mirror scene perfectly: "Almost like Paul Rudd turned to the camera, on his knees and begged the audience to laugh."

I don't know about that. Even as far back as Step Brothers, despite the lean running time, improv seemed to go on and on. Sometimes, it yielded comedy, but mostly not.

I will go to bat for Hercules. Yes, I know - Brett Ratner - but that movie was super fun.

I went to see Sex Tape in a theater. Thought it was decently funny, if uneven, but holy shit did it slam into a brick wall with the 'little kid blackmails the protagonists' plot point? Like the film just ran out of story and the writers just desperately cobbled something together to get the film to the 90 minute

And, IIRC, wasn't there a part where the woman - who was just kidnapped, remember - goes to pick up the ransom that she was taken for, suggesting that she was in on it with the criminals?

Dom DeLuise played the Pope in Johnny Dangerously.

Kind of reminds me of "How It Should Have Ended" poking holes in Superman: "…and not even you, with your incredible speed, can stop them both." Within moments, Superman returns to Luthor with both rockets.

#3 - Twilight Sparkle, not Pinkie Pie.

No Stephen Lang in Terminal Velocity, but Gandolfini is the chief baddie. Decent misdirect given the first half of the film. It's no masterpiece, but it's pretty entertaining. Fantastic score, as well.