Yowza!
Yowza!
"Lost" entered syndication and then disappeared very quickly.
I liked it a lot, but I had a great deal of trouble understanding the dialogue. (Not sure if it was the fault of the recording, the actors, the theater's sound system, or my acknowledged difficulty at times understanding people with accents—perhaps a combo of all of those things.) Anyway, I look forward to seeing it…
Will this take place in an alternate universe? John Amos's character died in the show.
I think that's either on Netflix or Amazon Prime. Enjoyably terrible, I take it? (I didn't read the reviews.)
WGN isn't even on my cable system. Am I missing much? No, right?
Hahahahahahaha!
I don't know if was a problem at my local TV station (the Fox affiliate in NYC) or my cable provider (Cablevision/Optimum), but in the opening scene, the dialogue track completely dropped out after the first few lines and the sound effects/music kept going, so it seemed like a deliberate choice at first—like Nick and…
My worst roommate experience: Sophomore year. I was living with someone I was friendly with from my freshman hall, but you never really know someone until you live together, right?
I just wanted to point out that Jurgen Knieper's score is terrific.
Bates is Batman? C'mon, that's a spoiler.
I'm getting a result of exactly one feel-good gay or lesbian movie, "Were the World Mine." That can't possibly be right. (I mean, most of the gay/lesbian movies on Netflix are terrible and therefore make me feel bad, but that's not their intent. I know there are a bunch of attempted comedies.)
I did not read this whole thing—life is precious—but I remember an anti-drug episode that had a tone so weird that it seemed pro-drug. Which is pretty odd for a show explicitly aimed at kids.
Glad the audio is improved. The print that TCM aired last year had terrible sound and it wasn't closed captioned, so I eventually gave up as too much of the dialogue was inaudible. If you can't hear the words in a movie like this, that's a problem.
Yes, that is it. I read an interesting article about it not long ago, though I don't remember where.
(Never mind.)
I find the works of Neil Breen more entertaining for their sheer what-the-fuck? qualities.
Don't sweat it—I think you're sweet. Good luck!
Interesting—I didn't know that.
Surprised 1940's "Brigham Young" didn't come up. Full-on Hollywood biopic with Tyrone Power distributed by Fox. I have never seen it, but always found its existence curious. There was a big enough non-LDS market for something like that in 1940?