“Shut up and deal, Gambit."
“Shut up and deal, Gambit."
“2005’s memorable Fantastic Four remake.”
As long as Hank Azaria’s available for Patches’s public information films from (I guess) the seventies, I’m in.
Dust.
The Dodgeball
That won’t help a school bus, but still Yes - the train companies should pay to put up, and maintain to standards set by the town, accessible pedestrian bridges (meaning ramps, not just stairs), every 500-1000m in the towns their trains bisect.
Obligatory “missing from the list” post:
Add Desperado to the list:
We’ll miss you, Harry, and your lifetime of accomplishments, not to mention one of the most instantly recognisable opening notes in all of music.
Please don’t have links that say “recent sit-down with NBC”, but actually point to the Daily godsdamn Mail. It is, simply put, the Fox News of the printed word, and I worry what adverts I’m going to start getting now that my browser has touched it.
She truly was a humble outsider that came in and nailed it.
They had one appearance in the MCU, at the start of Spider-Man Homecoming, where they’re dicks, and they cause previously honest hard-working joes to become the Vulture and Shocker. Not a great success rate.
You missed VI’s biggest failure (in English, anyway): Sean Bean. I’ve never heard a more bored voice-over in all my days. After the magnificence of Leonard Nimoy in IV, then the solid work of William Morgan Sheppard in V (I didn’t realise he was also the Rura Penthe prison warden in Star Trek 6), Bean clearly came to…
Coach Finstock’s wisdom still holds:
Wow, Lexus really want to kill pedestrians, don’t they?
I thought season 2 hit the Goldilocks zone of “funny riff on Trek, but also legitimately good sci-fi”. Season 3 never even tried to be funny, but it did produce “A Tale Of Two Topas”, so I’ll forgive all its other flaws.
People kept seeing his snake in their matter streams.
“Great pitch, I love it, but one note: could you make it more conquerish and less commandish?”
In the film itself, you’ll almost certainly get the same “young Hugh Grant” vibes I did.
We can but hope. It does, however, indicate a low confidence in Colin Woodell’s ability to sound like a young Ian McShane.