malleablemalcontent--disqus
MalleableMalcontent
malleablemalcontent--disqus

Shattered Glass is pretty damn amazing, period.

If you're in Kansas and really want to see barbed wire, you might also consider the barbed wire museum at the Garden of Eden in Lucas. I assume it has less barbed wire than the singularly-focused Barbed Wire Museum, but for elaborately symbolic turn-of-the-last-century labor-and-religion themed concrete art it has no

Have you checked Steven Segal's house? Orville Schell's book "Virtual Tibet", describes him as living with a Tibetan lama. This was around when he was making "The Glimmer Man", in which he mumbled a lot about Tibetan Buddhism while shooting bad guys by the dozens.

In a production I directed back in high school, one of the actors banged her head on a prop backstage just before a fight scene. Her scalp started to bleed, but she finished the scene and the show - the actors even improv'd some quips about it onstage.

The Enter the Dragon DVD release I own has an awesome 40-minute cut of the footage Bruce Lee completed filming for Game of Death. Taken together, I suppose those discs represent the height of his career and what could have been. Though, of course, the theatrical release of Game of Death is enjoyable for different

Sorry - woke up and saw this, and went back and edited my comment to be a bit less angry. But the point is - the article DOESN'T demonstrate the negative aspect of 'tenure', unless we assume the interviewee is cognizant of the reasons why this teacher was employed / not fired. It casually uses 'tenure' as a

"Tenure" invoked as the first potential explanatory culprit for why a problematic teacher remained in employment? Really?

It was an extraordinary shock when I took a class on UK documentary film and was surprised to find his name reasonably respected (at least inasmuch as he has a… style). I only knew him as the guy who made the Kurt & Courtney. I think the argument was that in stuff like K&C he's being something like the Paul Veerhooven

"Ryan Murphy production" - not interested.

Wow. It's always disappointing when you find out an artist you like is a right wingnut, but sheesh. I'll never be able to read a road atlas the same way again.

Did everyone forget about God's Not Dead, as well? That one's twice as ham-fisted as Crash and morally abhorrent.

I thought she had the most distinctive, appealing persona of the new core characters. Finn and Poe seem a little too… blandly millennial bro-like?

So did I! It was a regular part of 8-year-old me's Saturday night.

Sounds like it would fit comfortably alongside CBS' Touched by an Angel, The Pretender, and Early Edition.

Similarly, as it pertains to these sorts of discussions that occur regularly on the Interwebs, I think the number of confused audience members < MCU-familiar audience members distracted by the films' inevitable redundancies and inconsistencies.

And follow it with:

It's kind of fascinating just how popular hating on Barney was back in the 90s. It was mocked on The Simpsons and late night talk shows. Parents hated it. Kids past kindergarten hated it. I know I was in elementary school during the show's peak popularity and for some reason my friends and I had a personal vendetta

Luckily, my parents had a big basement for storage, and I never threw away any piece of pop culture ephemera. My Nintendo Powers (SNES era - Gamecube-ish) are in a few clearly-labeled boxes, right next to the Ninja Turtles figures and half a century worth of National Geographics I'll read in…retirement, I tell myself.

I think you mean "convolutes plot points from the three previous movies."

Dammit. Now I'm thinking what an intriguing Blofeld Clancy Brown could make…