Dammit. Now I'm thinking about Ron having a relapse and having a marathon threesome with Linsday and Tammy 2. I'll be in my bunk, weeping and masturbating furiously.
Dammit. Now I'm thinking about Ron having a relapse and having a marathon threesome with Linsday and Tammy 2. I'll be in my bunk, weeping and masturbating furiously.
Yo. Chinese person here. Offended as fuck. Just sayin'.
You, sir, are a gentleman and a scallop! Thank you!
So many 80's cartoons were sheer crap in terms of craft, and He-Man was one of them (other perennial favorites include Voltron, both the Lion and Vehicle versions). I thought this was pretty fucking funny and actually decently put together. I think I'd prefer to watch these guys recreate the cartoons rather than the…
I'm actually really psyched to see this. Not available on Netflix DVD yet, but here's hoping!
You just hella jelly, brah. Eat a couple of Rum Christophers and you're sorted out and ready to shag away!
I don't for a second believe that Edgar's PTSD is what everyone else's experience is like - but this portrayal was an eye-opening example for me.
I don't know about the verisimilitude of the VA scene in terms of factual detail. But I'm certain that's what many veterans FEEL like.
Season 1 - fun rom-com about sociopaths.
It's like how Jimmy builds the sofa fort, and Gretchen cries, and then, the next episode starts with, "You mean you could have fixed this all by simply taking a pill?!"
OH
MY
GOD
Lisa needs braces!
Yarh, McAllister be his name, that barnacled captain of the Frying Dutchman.
Except Miller's Crossing was inspired by The Glass Key, which doesn't feature the Op. In fact, the main character in both are pretty far removed from the Op. The Op is supposed to a hard-edged, no-nonsense middle-aged shlub; Ned Beaumont/Tom Regan is a bit more delicate and has a lively sense of humor.
I love Kindle Unlimited. If you're willing to dig, there's a lot of really fun genre stuff there. Richard Laymon's catalog is on there now. There's a fair amount of good space opera and military sci-fi. There's a TON of "thrillers," some of them pretty decent (JA Konrath). Plus, a lot of these books come with…
I didn't know that about the Corman version. I am such a huge fan of his space movies (just got done watching Galaxy of Terror a few night ago) and love the weird little cost-cutting measures that are evident (most notably the recycled space footage from Battle Beyond The Stars).
Agreed. Watched both of them recently, along with reading the Charles Portis novel. Admittedly, I am a fan of the Coens and of revisionist Westerns - much more so than I am of John Wayne - but I thought the newer version was truer to the novel and a superior movie, to boot.
I dunno if Red Dragon was better than Manhunter, tho. I think Brian Cox's Lector was arguably better than Hopkins' for their respective films. By the time Red Dragon was made, Hopkins seemed to be coasting, esp. where Lector was involved.
I recently watched all three over the course of a week. The original (starring Ricardo Cortez) is an interesting example of why so many silent film stars and directors didn't successfully transition to talkies. Cortez's smile is a great example - while probably a natural for silent films, where he had to emote like…
How did The Maltese Falcon miss being on this list? Is it because it was the second remake that took (the first remake starred a young Bette Davis; Bogie's was the second remake)?