Huppert is the only thing I'm on board for. Casey would be nice.
Huppert is the only thing I'm on board for. Casey would be nice.
That ending saved it.
Hopefully it's non-biased and looks at the facts as they are presented objectively.
I've never really understood adaptations in the first place. Taking a fully-realized and produced version to another medium is often wasteful and pointless.
Colin Farrell forever gets a pass from me for loving to act in fringe and independent cinema.
Being upset about GITS being whitewashed is a little in error, as it's just a basic story that can applicable to any culture.
I got high, spent way too much at some kitchen store, and watched Troma movies. It was a good day to not care about social media.
It's still the best we have.
The kid in the happiest moment of his life is so tragic considering they've already planned another reboot.
It was fun, but had way more hench-r-us than the first one, which got annoying. Good ending, though.
Suddenly I'm interested.
Netflix is really good at casting.
I mean I'm glad to have something original [and Aronofsky!] instead, but how do you fuck up at Friday the 13th?
All those people who converted VHS-to-DVD should have put everything on cloud by now anyways. Very easy to do so, and cheap.
This is the Ghostbusters reboot we all deserved.
This is actually kind of a shame. Will they remain available to read? The fact that they've been around for 20 years has been very helpful in terms of obscure, doomed and thought lost movies, TV and information.
It's okay. The people that matter watched and loved it.
They don't have to back off, just don't obsess on it like they did last season.
It was bad. Like, "throw every rogue-cop cliche and dark comedy trope in a pot and it'll taste good" bad. And it's smug about it too, like it's challenging you with its dulled edges.
No nom for Hall, Huppert will lose, don't care.