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MikeBSG
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Ever since I saw the trailer in which Alfred said something like "that weird phase you went through in 1966" I've been burning to see this movie. It should be a hoot.

I can't think of another way to say this.

A good write-up of this episode.

Great. Just great.

"The Fugitive" is terrific. I also love "In the Line of Fire." The dynamic between Eastwood and Malkovich is outstanding, up there with Eastwood and Wallach in "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly." And I have to say that "Last Action Hero" was a lot of fun.

I liked "La La Land." I took my 90 year old aunt to see it, and, consequently, had to sit way closer to the screen, in the handicapped accessible seats, than I normally would do.

I wonder if Radcliffe is actually in league with Coulson and is infiltrating Senator Nadeer's organization.

I just really enjoyed the episode last night.

I really like "The Abominable Dr. Phibes." It seems to pull the rug out from under the viewer several times, not least of which is the answer to what Phibes' doctorate is in.

I remember I took my daughter to see this movie. She was maybe in 2nd grade. We had loved "Muppets in Space." We were muppet fans more than we were Elmo fans.

To me, the problem with this episode was that so much of it was "false information." The opening scene with Mycroft was basically just a hoax. He was never in danger. There wasn't a girl on the airplane. There wasn't an airplane. Moriarty visits Sherringford, only it turns out this was five years ago.

I loved the second clip, with the shovel. I never could get into "Home Alone."

I love "Trial on the Road." I remember the characters vividly: the Soviet soldier who speaks German but in the Volga German way, the teenager who joined the Germans to get more food, the female translator. I remember scenes such as the barge of Soviet POWs towed beneath a bridge so the partisans won't blow it up

Terrific article. This one made me laugh several times.

Sorry to hear about your Bipolar Disorder.

She does a great job with it, doesn't she?

Thanks for the link to "Suzy Snowflake."

I didn't dislike "Star Trek Beyond," but I found it didn't care about it one little bit. There was all this frantic action, and I couldn't connect with it.

I liked "Zootopia" less the further it went along. It became too preachy for me, as if all the cleverness and style was only there to get the message across. Give me "Wreck-It Ralph."

Just a little correction on Karloff's radio career. He only appeared on "Suspense" twice. He was far more important to "Inner Sanctum Mysteries," and was that New York-based show's guest star of choice when he was doing "Arsenic and Old Lace" on Broadway. Karloff appeared over a dozen times on "Inner Sanctum."