screamingmango
scrEaMing mANgo
screamingmango

Buckaroo banzai was what I was looking for in that list.

Awww, why take the fun out? There should be someone crazy and unconventional in any office. Too many stiff upper lip can ruin a workplace.

It works.

Okay, the nerd/geek members of any crime fighting, terrorist busting tv team always bring the extras. But I still root for Abby. And yes, LLCoolJ's character ALWAYS harp on vinyl being better than mp3 or cd. Which is cool, because I agree.

I have always loved the way Sulaco is so huge and yet not too many crew is needed to navigate with the chunky body. And it's all business.

Well, it was from the 80s, hair, and all . . .

I only learned to appreciate foreign films (other than American, of course) when I worked for an animation company.Because then I can afford to have cable, among other reasons, and because I have acquired a taste for Anime. Soon I was watching French, Italian, Japanese, Chinese and Bollywood films, not bothering to

This looks more like Robocop-ish. No. That doesn't sound right. But it does look more like the old one, although more sleek and updated.

Hmm . . .after finding the source, the book I mean, not the movie screenplay will Smith starred in, I'm fascinated what a very different story it was. Sure, I could go with "updated" trend in adapting movies from books and comics, but it would have been fun to see the book in it's true storytelling. But I won't say I

Here's something I'm always fond of - realy scary books - which is why I found some titles here that would need my immediate attention. I have Stephen King and Clive Barker books, they are there on the shelf (or my audiobook stash) along with Straub, Poe, Alighieri among others. Someone mentioned Dhalgren and I would

Oh, and here I am, thinking I'm the only one who actually enjoyed the movie.

You're right. Can't wipe this stupid smile off my face. Stretched ear to ear. I look like a raptor already.

That could be it. At best, they have become more sensual, in a form more sensitive than the living could not understand. I suspected AR to have written it , referring to the the wisdom of shamans and sorcerers, that humans are born with both male and female souls, and that the paths chosen as we grow old. We have

In The Children Of Hurin, there were more "named" female characters, so I could surmise it was the NAMING issue being the source of how females are not appropriately represented in the story.

Hmm. Yup, have to start reading the whole series again . . .

I had a lengthy discussion like that with a friend years ago. All I said was, "Well, Frodo and Sam are close but not gay, so's Merry and Pippin, so why say Louis and Lestat are homosexuals?" He answered " Read the effing book again". And I did, and do, every year. Makes the term "Brotherly Love" as broad as the

My cousin thinks so too, even when first bought it, which was when we were still way younger.

Oh there is no doubt, AR is one of the best writers I have ever read. It's why I keep her books among my stash. Have to find a new copy of The Vampire Armand though, mine was lost long ago.

AR said it. But I still read "Interview With A Vampire", "Memnoch The Devil" and "Queen of The Dammned" without ever thinking the vampires were homosexual. And I read these books at bleast 2x a year. Is it me or I'm just too dumb?

It's David Carradine, after all. And UZIs, lots of UZIs.