Damn, between this and Spiderverse, I definitely need to keep a closer eye on Pemberton.
Damn, between this and Spiderverse, I definitely need to keep a closer eye on Pemberton.
Cavill should be Archer if they ever make a live-action version
I heard this one on Friday Night Lights and when they replaced it on the home DVD I was incredibly disappointed (but not totally surprised). I love both the original and this version for completely different reasons, and yet it all boils down to the rainy-day melancholy you can feel in both of them. Massive Attack…
I read “had a restaurant door open for Huey Lewis” and wondered what the door’s setlist was.
Hot take: Sure, this song takes liberally from Three Girl Rhumba (primarily the riff structure and drum beat), but improves on it in every single way possible with that fourth measure.
What they didn’t show was that all his brothers knew about it and had three billion mattress pads ready for him when he fell.
Yes. I’ll have to pay attention to Daniel Radcliffe next time.
Nope! Mine involved Mexican food. Time to play again.
I’ve seen it live, and yes to both. In particular, King George followed “kill all your friends and family” with a seemingly row-by-row sweep of his cane and death glare, and the longer it went on the more hilarious it got.
Sadly I haven’t seen one yet, and while anything goes in this, structurally I don’t see it happening here.
The one that happens pretty early on? That was amazing.
Also, they’ll strip out interactions you’ve already done. If they leave a choice you’ve already taken, there’s a very good chance you’re going to get an alt.
Because if it’s intended to be played in movie theaters, the theater audience would be the crowd.
Yes.
Or one wielding a Rickenbacher and slamming its victims on the head with it.
It’s on YouTube now!
“Fear-enabling” is probably a better phrase and more what was originally intended.
Chroma, I think it was called.
Isn’t tonight the Parks and Rec reunion? Shouldn’t that be the headliner tonight?
I’m speechless. I hadn’t seen him in a lot but he was always great in the films in which I saw him (particularly Slumdog Millionaire and The Lunchbox).