That movie, and this conspiracy theory, remind me of a reverse telling of The Philadelphia Experiment: The Final Countdown, in which an aircraft carrier from 1980 travels back in time to 1941, a day before the Pearl Harbor attack.
That movie, and this conspiracy theory, remind me of a reverse telling of The Philadelphia Experiment: The Final Countdown, in which an aircraft carrier from 1980 travels back in time to 1941, a day before the Pearl Harbor attack.
And that one thing is Hardcastle and McCormick.
You know it in your heart to be true.
I will fight anyone who says that Cannell’s Hardcastle and McCormick wasn’t A- / A material that screams for a remake in these troubled times.
I almost agree about Guillermo (hell, Shape of Water is a B- at best though considering how forgettable a movie I found it my honest opinion is C+), but Pan’s Labyrinth is a solid A, A+ film and it’s a shame that I don’t think he’ll ever reach those heights again.
How about Stephen J. Cannell? A shitload of pretty good stuff, but really only one thing that might maybe be considered great.
Donald P. Bellisario, the creator of Magnum PI, Tales of the Gold Monkey, Battlestar Galactica, Quantum Leap, and NCIS.
I’m going with an Oleg, Elizabeth, Stan shootout in the park. Philip grabs Henry and runs. Paige goes to the slammer. Renee shows up for duty at Claudia’s house.
Does this mean I won’t be seeing the same first trailer with every. damn. movie. for the rest of the summer?
Oh, no. Resurrection was bad. I do have a soft spot for Aliens Cubed, though.
I have tried to give Alien3 multiple chances to change my mind but I can’t. It’s not a good movie. The “Director’s Cut” is slow and turgid while the theatrical cut is often a confused mess and, behind both, is story that is neither engaging nor original.
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WOW there are some STRONG opinions about this.
Show name officially changed to “Chicago 99"
IIRC, the play treats him as if he’s an actual dude. That’s my read on it.
The very beginning of the movie shows his corpse lying in the (unburned) cabin. So he came in and got stabbed, but the fire was fantasy. I think that’s why he’s so blase when Michael Shannon tells him he’s sitting on gasoline, or whatever.
The last shots of the film show him dead alone in the foil-covered room and also the motel room conpletely normal as if none of this happened. This I believe is to deliberately tell the viewer that what really occured is up to your interpretation.
I find it to be a deeply ambiguous moment; you could make a plausible case either way. I’ve had someone argue that he just pretends to partake of drugs to try and win her over, but it’s really an odd one.
In Wick World there’s only two ways to permanently die.
Sorry, Claire, but an Aviation without Creme de Violette? Sacrilege!