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I'd say Mel Gibson's entire body of work throughout the 1980s was damn near perfection.

You forgot Poochie, who was needed on his home planet.

I said elsewhere on the page, I know that's technically canon, but it's dumb, because it's totally the same character: a wild card with
a crazy flying contraption and ambiguous loyalties who ultimately decides to help the heroes at great risk.

Definitely. More people should have read The Dissolve.

Do you mean the Ayatollah of Rock and Rolla?

Same actor, different guy apparently.

I'm gonna be that guy:

I'll keep it brief: the idea that when someone gets murdered, they are forced to hang out with the other victims of their murderer in the afterlife (thus giving the murderer a supernatural power over their victims, which is exactly the kind of thing real-life psycho killers have often been known to fantasize about) is

This was also played during the climax of the awful Peter Jackson movie The Lovely Bones.

It's gonna be awesome.

#confusedboners

How much popcorn will Gregg Turkington give Ant-Man?

Yep, we've been well into 90s nostalgia for at least a couple years now.

There is a pocket in one of the novels of some really rich
interesting character material that I’m inverting and twisting around.

…I also had a great time with your mom.

…but Lisa Loeb!

SPOILERS. Sort of. Jacob's Ladder: main character is killed in 1st scene of film, the entire film is him grappling with imminent death. Ghost: main character dies in 1st act of film and is a ghost for the remainder. My Life: main character coping with impending death throughout film. Deadly Friend: character dies in

Ghost, Jacob's Ladder, My Life, even Deadly Friend. Bruce Joel Rubin was the go-to guy for movies about people dying.

Surely they didn't replace John Lithgow, who majorly went to bat for it when it was being completely rejiggered?