muchsarcasm--disqus
muchsarcasm
muchsarcasm--disqus

The only thing in his defense is you can only experience each colossus for the first time once. It's a game I play through at least once a year and while I love it, it's not as amazing as when it first seemed so larger than life and I didn't know the strategies to beat it. (That or he tried to beat the 15th colossus

Unfortunately it's clear both "Dancing in September" and "Bamboozled" didn't know how to end without **SPOILER** resorting to gun violence. Each seemed like a cop-out.

Two problems: 1) There aren't enough heroes in the Marvel cinematic universe to make it a war. There would need to be dozens of heroes on both sides.
2) Who among the current heroes has a secret identity?
Iron Man - No
Captain America - No
Hulk - The public doesn't know it but the government does
Black Widow - She

An evangelical missing-person whodunit for moviegoers who already know who done it

There's also the Silverball Museum on the boardwalk in Asbury Park, NJ (right by The Stone Pony). It's pay one price, and they have everything broken out my decade.

Well I know what I'm doing tomorrow after delivering the Tripolydine and before I work out at the judo range.

That might be the first I've heard the Ico save music where it wasn't preceded by Ico calling to Yorda with "Oh-ba?!" three or four times.

What is the bright line between pop culture that it's ok to dislike and the pop culture that is "ignorant" to dislike? You keep conflating cultural impact with personal taste. I can appreciate what a gamechanger Nirvana was to the musical landscape while at the same time find them unlistenable. One's personal taste

Nevermind was released just before I started college, and I can say that at least in my dorm there were some people that liked them and more people that didn't. I'm sure there were plenty of colleges and certainly many high schools where the opinions were reversed. They were certainly popular and have the gold

I'm not saying that everyone or even anyone is wrong to really like Nirvana. What I'm saying is that it's kind of silly to note how surprising it would be to find someone who didn't think Nirvana was amazing. A lot of people don't like them, even ones who recognize their place in music history.

"I mean, they’re everybody’s favorite band. I think it would be very rare
to find someone who wouldn’t say Nirvana’s an incredible band." I guess I'm a rarity unless incredible has been redefined as kind-of-shitty and extremely overrated. I know a bunch of people list Nirvana as their favorite (or at least one of

At least she's not a stupid anteater.

Agent Elman Nevertells

The problem with Rope is that the killers' plan seems to be "1) Kill classmate. 2) Act as suspiciously as humanly possible."

Agent Bob Johnson?

The writers are the same guys who did "The Joe Schmo Show". So maybe only one of the people they cast for this thing will think this is going to be a real movie.

I'm probably in the minority, but I'm quite interested to see that article about Newhart's changes from season 1 to season to 2. Not only did they change from videotape to film, but they dropped and added characters and they played up more of Bob's "lone sane man" persona.

Go watch John Frankenheimer's "The Train". It's based on the same source material and it's the complete opposite of boring.

Nice! Or Shahrazad shows up and there's a smaller movie within the movie.

The scene I'm waiting for is when the Royal Assassin tries to sneak up on a Prodigal Sorcerer. The sorcerer turns around and the two characters spend the next 10 minutes trying to determine what happens if they fight.