Part of one trailer was funny, but after seeing Ms Rauch on some show talking about it, I was even more convinced to save my money or see some other movie instead.
Part of one trailer was funny, but after seeing Ms Rauch on some show talking about it, I was even more convinced to save my money or see some other movie instead.
That's a shame. I was hoping to watch it someday. Meh. It's bike riding season, no big loss.
It's just comic books.
Cool. Very cool.
I have the issues that were published in the 1980s and 1990s. I did not know they would be re-published 25+ years later because my time machine was not completed until 2006 and medical school and establishing a specialty practice and having a family got in the way. But I did get about ½ of them from the dime boxes at…
I bought them in single issue form when originally re-published by Eclipse in the late 80s - early 90s for less than that. I did get them all and was able to get Eisner's autograph on a few at one or two conventions over the years before he passed.
Find them and read them. They were originally part of the Sunday Funnies and later collected into comic book form. When I first read them in the 1990s I realized that Will Eisner was a god and all other comic book writers and artists merely copyists. Check out his work on sequential art and storytelling. They…
Woody Allen.
The comics are so much better. The filmmakers should apologize to Eisner's estate for that pile of dreck.
Woody Allen's Manhattan remains the only movie I have ever walked out of and asked for my admission to be returned. Since then I watch trailers and read reviews with a more jaundiced eye. Saved me lots of money that would otherwise go to bad movies.
There were a few years when the only time I watched Letterman was to see his mother. She was cool in her own way.
I think so as well. Jim Parsons just camped it up and the show shot to #1 in the ratings and here we are.
Good list. You left out Sheldon Cooper. Very good.
Science AND Ice Cream?!?!?!?!?!?!
Nothing wrong with an intermission in the middle of the movie. 2001, Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago and a few others had them. And there were quite a few silent films that ran over 150 minutes as well and had intermissions.
All the way from Omaha.
Hey, that's the name of my new heavy metal grunge ska garage band.
You'll get no disagreement from me. Those three would do a great job.
As long as Tara Strong is in it, either or both, I'll watch it. Maybe Mary Elizabeth McGlynn, even if just as voice director.
She puts her time and effort into perfecting her craft, what's inside, rather than trying to make a prettier package for the outside. One of the great ones. Not enough awards on her shelf.