marcus75
marcus75
marcus75

I’m fine with 20-30 bucks for the full theatrical experience (living in middle America more than 20 per person is pretty rare though). I guess the big thing for me personally is that I only really care about the theatrical experience for big spectacle movies; that 20-some-odd dollars is to see Godzilla stomping across

You are the weirdest 12-year-old.

Yeah, no one who’s going to put even a modicum of effort into trying to avoid criticism is going to reference Cosby ever again, and Disney puts a lot of effort into trying to avoid criticism. I’d put Roseanne ahead of Home Improvement on the uncomfortable spectrum because Roseanne has been much more blatant in her

Full House and Family Matters never really moved past the 80s (both technically first aired in the 80s, although just barely in Family Matters’ case). Blossom, Boy Meets World, et al I feel mark significant enough shifts in the form to merit consideration; the bigger problem is that the most 90s of all the 90s sitcoms

Yeah, I get the reasoning behind that kind of price, but I wonder how readily a home audience is adjusting to it when that’s been more typically a buy price for streaming. Yeah, that’s for a post-theatrical run movie in the before times, but I’m skeptical that most people are running that rationale through their head

Twenty bucks for a rental? That seems . . . high.

That false equivalence is kinda the point of the entire article. Way to miss it. You moved like they do.

“Pontiac Bandit” is one of my favorite running jokes in the show.

Good point. The meatier workplace aspects of the show were more generalized workplace issues like worrying about promotions, insecurity about competency, internal politics/competition, etc. The nature of it being a sitcom makes it difficult to take on serious issues with policing, although I think it’s pretty clear

Wuntch time is over! BOOM! Did it! Had it both ways. No regrets.”

Cage as the FBI assistant director in charge of the investigation.

I get where you’re coming from, but I don’t see Ryan Reynolds as capable of the subtle winking necessary for this to work on anything close to the level of the original. Ryan Reynolds winks at the camera the way a four-year-old winks. Jackman could do it for sure, and Reynolds makes the most obvious pairing on paper;

I would pay approximately 15 US dollars to watch Face/Off starring Michael Shannon and Tom Hardy.

It’s not about talent or even fame: its about a persona that is, as you say, over the top as well as recognizable.

That one starred John Travolta and Nicholas Cage, with both of them dialing it up to 11

That will balance out his excitement at learning that many have multiple rows of breasts during those weeks

MGS hid load times behind 32-minute cutscenes

Spoiled kids are always the ones who have the worst reaction to any form of correction.

Yeah, how many rough and tumble, strong female hero type characters get played by actors who don’t look like they stepped off the cover of fashion magazine, weighing in at just over 90lbs?