My favourite scene of his was "Once again, I've had a terrible time in your weird loft," so I think I agree with you.
My favourite scene of his was "Once again, I've had a terrible time in your weird loft," so I think I agree with you.
I skipped the "guilt" part.
And here I thought that was an Ivy League a cappella group!
Okay, just go ahead to the same part of Vancouver Island with some video equipment and demonstrate it for the rest of us.
Everyone is a decent survivalist on the Internet.
I look forward to your extensive water-plus-blanket footage, where you show us all that you're the best survivalist out there.
I was one of those dozens as well and had a similar experience.
I also had the pleasure of…well, I met him, at any rate.
Jury Duty is a great movie to discover if you love the evergreen comedy that Judge Ito jokes have to offer.
Hey, if directly-relevant flashbacks in every episode can happen on Forever Knight and Highlander: The Series, they can happen here.
Series with a "floating timeline" tend to have this problem…you can see it pop up in everything from Degrassi to One Tree Hill.
I'll save a bunch of you the trouble and let you know that the direct-to-video sequel to WarGames isn't especially worth watching…and it includes the indignity of WOPR being relegated to running a power substation in rural Québec.
I've always wondered how "Portugal Revolution" was supposed to escalate.
[slides]
The director of TMP is the same guy who edited Citizen Kane. You can fault the finished product, but it's not for a lack of available knowledge about film editing.
Her incorporation of "Smallville-ages" and mentioning the temperature in Kent were my two favourite references.
Many elements of the first film also feel very familiar to us Winnipeggers (whether from immigrant families or not), as Vardalos is from here and this is where her real-life wedding occurred.
There was an attempt to get a Firefly animated series off the ground around 2003, but it never went anywhere—possibly because the feature film Serenity was already in the works.
That doesn't seem to be the trend these days—audiences seem to want franchise stories to continue indefinitely.
I would relish that.