Well, personally speaking I’m more inclined to dislike someone who’s clearly exploiting people who have deepseated mental health problems than to dislike the people with those problems, so that’s probably part of it!
Well, personally speaking I’m more inclined to dislike someone who’s clearly exploiting people who have deepseated mental health problems than to dislike the people with those problems, so that’s probably part of it!
This timeline is cursed.
Alas, what a terrible moment in time to be literate.
Except for her OF, any time she does something like this and I think “This is dumb and no one will buy this” I'm almost immediately proven wrong.
29-year-old Kaitlyn Siragusa is a businesswoman.
This is not a speed-run.
Please delete this post, thank you.
So so ridiculous. Agree with others, the internet was a mistake.
It really cannot be said enough: the internet was a mistake.
This is my old man screams at cloud moment.
I was in the same boat. First one was a breath of fresh air in its own way and had a good story rooted in this sorta reality based story....a buncha people decide to make a haunted house walkthrough out of an abandoned hotel and strange shit begins to happen. I liked it because it had some creepy parts that got a lot…
the Five Nights games amped that factor up so much that most remaining Chuck E. Cheese locations removed their animatronics completely
Dragon Tattoo is way too low (swap places with Mank), but this is a good list.
If placing “Fight Club” behind “The Game” and “Panic Room” is an almost criminal, then placing it behind “Gone Girl” is pure evil.
Benjamin Button is much better than popular culture remembers. Lazy writers take pot shots at it because it’s easy. It definitely deserves a reassessment.
I don’t disagree with the criticisms about “The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo”, but the issues come mainly already in the novel.
You have to be trolling.
I can live with Zodiac being #1 as I quite enjoy the movie, but there is no way Mank, Panic Room and Gone Girl are better movies than Fight Club or Seven.
The doctrine of the right to travel actually encompasses three separate rights, of which two have been notable for the uncertainty of their textual support. The first is the right of a citizen to move freely between states, a right venerable for its longevity, but still lacking a clear doctrinal basis.