Oh, boo - no Josie Lawrence as Agnes McNutter.
Oh, boo - no Josie Lawrence as Agnes McNutter.
I do not get Salt Bae. At all. Also, edible gold is meant to be a discreet little decoration - this is just Trump level “if it sits still, gild it” bullshit.
If you are *that* dedicated to getting all the ketchup out of an individual squeeze packet, just buy some Dip & Squeeze packets to have on hand.
Related to Sarah Michelle Gellar and Buffy, Amy Acker not being nominated for Season 5 of Angel is an absolute crime. The way she could flip back and forth between Fred and Illyria was so eerie, and both Fred’s death scene and Wesley’s - where she’s grieving but clearly has no idea how to grieve - still hit me hard…
He was a nicely humble prince - he didn’t need to be taken down a notch like Prince Henry. Henry had more of a development arc from spoiled brat to Prince Charming, but the Disney adaptation was simply a lovely fairy tale - Ever After was more about making Cinderella a real young woman. Kit could be a little bit more…
This movie will always have a soft spot for me because I saw it with a bunch of great friends during a camping trip. (We’d go into town for supplies and a dose of air conditioning every other night.) None of us thought it was timeless cinema, but it made us laugh and we had a great dinner afterwards.
Do not forget Geoffrey Rush on the attack with his pinky nail. Totally insane.
I agree, but I have to admit - I love the live-action Cinderella. I think that has more to do with Kenneth Branagh’s direction than anything else. He always seems to see things in a Shakespearean way, and in this movie, it’s clearly more about using tremendous visuals to heighten the fairy-tale aspects of the story.
Weird Invertebrate Found in Burgess Shale? I’m shocked! (Okay, paleontology sarcasm aside, this thing is AWESOME.)
Basically, the Burgess Shale has long been associated with really, really, really weird invertebrates. It’s awesome. The Smithsonian’s Natural History Museum has a solid collection if you ever swing…
Either way, I’m going to call it here and now: despite the leeway science fiction usually gets, I predict Moonfall will be the most scientifically inaccurate movie ever made.
The turnaround to streaming/rentals/home purchase is shorter than in years past. So we’ll be able to watch it at home by Halloween.
See also:
Apparently Kurt Cobain thought the same thing.
I REALLY miss going to the movies right now. But even vaccinated, I’m a high-risk condition-haver, which means I’m not immunosuppressed, but my immune system does have to work a bit harder than normal as a result.
Ah, I’m sure this has nothing to do with it either:
So as a GenX who enjoyed the original movie - but doesn’t hold it in any real reverence - and mostly enjoyed the 2016 reboot? (As M3000P noted - Leslie Jones and Chris Hemsworth were the best things in that movie.) I feel like this is looking to hit two notes:
At this point, I’m not even sure I want to read them if they do come out. He’s clearly lost focus and interest, or he realizes he had so many characters in so many places that he wrote himself into a huge knot that was really difficult to undo.
Two years ago, I was behind an SUV that hadn’t properly secured their kayak. (This was the Twin Cities, it was a summer Friday, someone was probably going up north.)
Please feel free to send along that gift certificate, but with the overflowing cabinet I have of Penzeys spices, it will probably get unused. Quite thoughtful of you, though.
I almost never eat breakfast, either - my mother struggled to make me eat breakast before school for my entire K-12 career. I mean, I like breakfast food, but eating first thing in the morning is hard for me.