Throw in The Wire’s McNulty and Bunk investigating a murder scene, and I’m in.
Throw in The Wire’s McNulty and Bunk investigating a murder scene, and I’m in.
I haven’t seen Crawl, but a friend from work whose movie tastes match mine pretty closely - which is why he's a friend from work - said it was shit.
Don’t watch it on Halloween, give the spot to a purer horror. It’s a superbly fun creature feature, but Horror, it ain’t.
Came for the 021C, wasn’t disappointed. Other things to note: front seats that turn to face backwards, rear-hinged rear doors and no central column for massively easy access (even easier with the rotating front seats), and a trunk that slides open like a drawer.
Missing option!
Wait until they find out how those babies were made - they’re going to lose their shit.
Exactly. None of these plans ever account for the immutable fact that your kids are more inventive than you.
“The childless have little stake in the future” says the guy who wants to abandon the planet, in favour of a gated community on Mars.
Not an IQ test, because IQ as a measure came about with some particularly icky eugenics nonsense. Perhaps an issue-based understanding-of-facts test? A few questions on the economy, a few on the environment, a few on immigration, etc.
It delights me that In The Heat Of The Night, Moonstruck, and Rollerball all came from Jewison.
It’s also the fifth-best Star Trek movie, after Wrath of Khan, Undiscovered Country, Galaxy Quest, and First Contact.
If they did, people would want a canon explanation for why Spider-Man’s suit computer had Betty’s voice.
I don’t mind the ads that come into my device - it’s the only way the sites can make money. What I mind is all the data that goes out of it.
At the end of the video, she does the journey in her own car, and drives right up into the museum car park.
There was no outcry - there’s a conspicuous outcry-shaped hole in the article. On the other hand, this may be a rare instance of the (very dull) truth getting round the world before the lie has got its socks on.
Be pedantic.
Do see it, it's brilliant.
Let’s go full-tilt: Don Cheadle as Morgan Stark.
The movie is set at the fictional Black Lake in Maine. A character, looking at the eerie flatness of the water, makes a crack about the name “Lake Placid” already being taken.