roguelike
roguelike
roguelike

Talk about a Hail Mary…

I'm gonna go watch Swordfish now. Please respect my privacy.

Grew up listening to The Lone Ranger and The Shadow on LP sets my parents had. The latter definitely wore out a needle or two when I was six and seven. Great stuff.

I didn't catch the fact that it was in Spanish fast enough and as soon as Bart and Lisa start speaking I nearly fell out of my chair laughing. And I'm not even drinking!

I didn't really get into the album as a whole until 1998, but it was good timing as I was going back and forth between Columbus and Pittsburgh and it was almost exactly a three hour trip. I could put this in the CD player when I hit the road and fill the remaining hour of travel with whatever Pearl Jam/Led Zep/Ben

WTF is a Jackson Galaxy?

Granted I like all his travel writing, but I still re-read Happy Isles of Oceania every year or so. Seems the most well-rounded of all his travelogues and definitely a slice of the time when he was paddling around and writing it. Can't imagine he does the book tour thing these days but I had the opportunity to hear

Ewwww!!!

I'd easily go with Bill Murray. And apologies if someone said this already, I only scrolled thru the first 25 comments or so. And simply because it's Bill fucking Murray. Second choice: the author Paul Theroux, because I see myself getting cranky about travel and writing as I get older as well.

I really don't think this is on quite the same level as Watergate.

I would have gone more with "It" than "The Thing," but point well taken.

Perhaps we need movies about all those things as well?

I'm honestly wondering who thought this was a good idea to make into a film. Maybe in another 50 years perhaps? But only 11 or so odd years afterwards? I voted for Kerry and Obama, so it's not like I'm an apologist, but this is hardly Watergate. Perhaps I'm missing the point of this waste of time.

Reading this review made me glad I grew up reading King rather than Stine. Oddly enough he apparently lived for a bit (maybe still does?) in the nicer part of the suburb of Columbus that I grew up in.

I have a secluded place in my heart for TLBS, probably because it was the first movie review I read where the reviewer (for the Columbus (OH) Dispatch) gave two reviews and grades for it. One from the level headed, this is for meatheads side, and the other from the action movie side. I believe the rankings were 1.5

More like a step up I would think.

Just one bone(er), right?

That kind of money doesn't even exist!!!

Boorman is an amazing director. That's all I have.

They seemed like a family within the company from the first episode. That's what really stands out. It's a good mesh of all the best parts of work and family. Cause unfortunately those folk you work with become family.