misterfilmgeek--disqus
misterfilmgeek
misterfilmgeek--disqus

Affleck, Damon, whatever it takes.

And two years to release with no script yet. Movies with big budgets like this will certainly have typically take three years to get done.

"I guess it looks as if you're reorganizing your records. What is this though? Chronological?"
"No."
"Not alphabetical?"
"Nope."
"What?"
"Autobiographical."
"No fucking way."

This is an internet forum. People with disagree with you for millions of reasons, and wanting to down-vote someone who disagrees with you rather than rebut their argument is lame, no matter how you try to sugarcoat it. Making up their own rules? All of us do that with every post.

Saul will just call the vacuum cleaner guy if things get too heated. He's smarter than most people give him credit for.

You want to down-vote someone for criticizing you? I bet you 'Like' your own comments on Facebook.

@e_buzz_miller:disqus Since there is no "sarcasm" tag in your post, I will assume you're not, um, being sarcastic. I'm paraphrasing myself here (there goes Chet again): Clearly you don't remember the summer of 1982. Ads were everywhere. It opened on more screens than any other movie that year and had the biggest

Agreed. When You Come Back To Me is excellent, and that mix of Tempted is the best one. And I do like the dumbass song. As much as I loathe this movie now (how did I ever think it was even decent?), I still have the physical CD of this soundtrack and have no intention of tossing it anytime soon.

@avclub-53a226780628f3d898494942ad3dd491:disqus OK, thanks for that explanation, but it doesn't makes sense in this way: If you're the #1 song in the entire country, and you can't top the chart in your own genre, then you are not of that genre.

Get me a Pepsi.

How is "Stay" lower on the Alternative chart than the Hot 100? Doesn't the #1 song overall, by definition, have to be placed at #1 on it's genre chart? I just don't understand charting, I guess.

So that's the week I stopped listening to pop music.

The only thing that rings true for me about that movie now is that at the time the movie came out all of my friends were using their parent's gas cards to buy bunches of junk food.

@avclub-a14343d7aea171bddd5aa6b80e500fd3:disqus I think it helps illustrate how frustrated she could get with Harry, and thus how much she cared about him. Just chalk it up to her having to prove Harry wrong so much that she was blinded to her surroundings long enough to act it out. Plus, the line from Mrs. Reiner

1989 has a good argument, too: Batman, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, When Harry Met Sally, Dead Poets' Society, Do the Right Thing, The Abyss, Ghostbusters II, Honey I Shrunk the Kids, Lethal Weapon 2, License to Kill, Parenthood, Uncle Buck, Road House.Re: When Harry Met Sally. I managed a theater at the time,

(Replying to myself here, which is very Chet of me) Also, it is extremely weird that we are discussing the hype surrounding a summer movie season two years from now. When I was a kid, we were lucky to get a teaser (with no actual footage) for a movie six months in advance, and that's the only notice we got until a

@avclub-b0dae075785888267fc19871f3e7dab7:disqus You are correct. My brain chose to not see that for some reason. I withdraw my snarky remark.

While I liked Argo a great deal, I would have to give the nod to Apollo 13 for keeping up the tension while knowing the outcome. Ron Howard was robbed that year.

@avclub-b0dae075785888267fc19871f3e7dab7:disqus Clearly you have no actual memory of 1982.

"summer 2015 is going to be the most stacked summer in the history of ever (Avengers 2, Batman/Superman, Star Wars Episode 7, Pirates of the Caribbean 5, Assassin's Creed, Terminator 5, and countless other films yet to be announced)."