I feel exactly the same.
I feel exactly the same.
You even hated the dad?
Ha ha!
I too am done after that. I can’t support in any way a company that treats its employees with such grotesque contempt. But I’ll say this: I’ve always enjoyed your posts, Miller, and enjoyed making Dick Miller jokes is response to them. (He’s my favourite actor by a long way.) I’ve been around here a long time - I used…
I used to really enjoy this website, back when I was Burl. I too stand with the writers and editors who are getting the shove from this sick-minded company and its doughboy CEO.
Jack Nicholson used to pick his projects almost exclusively based on who was directing them, and while some of these fellas may have been a little shaky, ethically, it did result in an uncommonly long string of great, good, or at least interesting movies.
You mean you also thought it was set at a Cajun law firm in the bayous of Louisiana? “Yo ‘onna, mah claant done claam heezaone done cawt dat mess o crawdaddies, nawt tis utha fella heah, noway.”
I guess that was my assumption, insofar as I considered the show at all.
I agree about the words thing.
I never saw the show, but I always thought it was the FRENCH prince of Bel-Air, and that he was a French-speaking prince who had to adapt to life in sunny Los Angeles.
All you actually have to do with Hitler is suggest a few alternate art schools he should apply to.
The message I’m getting from these responses, if I’m understanding them correctly, is that the scenes I’ve described are from something called Batman & Robin.
Is that the one where Arnold Schwarzennegger says “Ice to see you,” then cries a single CGI tear? Or is it the one where Uma Thurman pushes plants up her bum?
Yes, I have a lot of affection for that one too, but it is awfully convoluted. Let’s see if I can explain it from memory (and spoilers follow of course):
This is 1978, remember.
Terror Train does indeed look awesome, being as it’s one of the few slasher movies shot by the cinematographer of Barry Lyndon.
I like New Nightmare, but I think it might have just been a little too meta for the Freddy fans, who didn’t know what to make of the actors playing themselves, and too Freddy for the crowd who might have appreciated that kind of thing outside of a franchise horror picture.
Also the fact that there are always two killers instead of one.
They say the (nameless?) character played by David Arquette is a deputy, but I think that word should be pronounced “de-PYOO-tee.”
It’s clearly Wicker Park.