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There was also a track on the 1967 Christmas album (and a track on Let It Be, but that postdated George and Ringo's split with Northern Songs). There's also a track on Rubber Soul ("What Goes On") that's credited to everyone except George. So "a few" was an overstatement unless you count stuff that wouldn't have been

George was so upset at the way the publishing rights were handled through Northern Songs that he did a song about it ("Only a Northern Song"). Both he and Ringo dropped Northern Songs in March 1968 and set up their own companies, but songs they wrote before that (including a fair number of Harrison songs and a few

Oh, fuck!
Patient just died in room 105
Cirrhosis of the eye
Nurse, come in, please, where are you?
Fuck it, he's dead
Oh shit, there's a horse in the hospital!

I dunno, I think Neil Hamburger burned his last bridge with them for suggesting that their chicken has the same texture as Colonel Sanders' foreskin.

Disappointed that he didn't work the word "boo" in there somewhere, after directing two episodes of two separate series with that title (Amazing Stories and CSI: New York) and slipping it into a Hawaii Five-O episode in the form of graffiti.

It's not the NHL, but I like that moment in Slap Shot where the announcer introduces one of the players as "a college graduate…and an American citizen!"

India has a huge population (a decent chunk of which knows at least enough English to use the IMDb) that's absolutely passionate about their national cinema—there might be no country outside of the U.S. where domestic films are so dominant. To give an idea of how dominant, there was a lot of hand-wringing in India

Also not Indian, but:

Which is pretty much the perfect title for a Noah Baumbach movie starring Ben Stiller, Adam Sandler, and Dustin Hoffman.

I'm in the same boat—Breaking Bad wasn't on my radar at all until it was like three seasons in and it was too difficult for me to catch up. Odenkirk made Saul a must-watch for me from the beginning (and in fact it's the only show I watch live now). I had a broad idea of the type of guy that Jimmy eventually becomes,

My guess is dog lovers and possibly Chinese users (it's in the top 15 at China's two big IMDb equivalents, Mtime and Douban, though Farewell My Concubine is a top five title at both sites and doesn't even crack the IMDb's top 250, so Chinese users alone probably aren't that powerful a voting bloc at the IMDb).

Wow, the first TV series in a 3:1 aspect ratio!

iQue is the English name (and is presumably supposed to be pronounced English-style). In Chinese it was called the "Shenyouji."

Not sure if it appeared there first, but they did this in All-Star Superman, with the highly scientific explanation that it was made from "super-dense dwarf star matter."

I can't believe they left off the hidden cylinder included with the original release of Len Spencer's "Ain't I Yer Honey Boy?"

There was an episode ("Pen Pal") where one planet after another was breaking apart in this particular system. They figured out it was because the planets had unusually high amounts of dilithium creating a "piezoelectric effect" that "take the planet's heat and turn it into mechanical energy," which eventually tears it

The V/Vm album Hate You has an "interesting" example of a hidden track that comes immediately after the last listed track, the "hidden" part being that the last listed track is twenty minutes of this and most people presumably never got through it. (The real last track is just some ring-modulated version of a hokey

There's a lot of good points here, but the writer isn't drawing a distinction based on themes or anything else except hand-to-hand combat; if we take that as the defining characteristic of a kung-fu film, then The Chinese Boxer, the early Lee films, and so on aren't the first of the genre except in the sense of a "new

The Chinese Boxer is credited with being the first full-on kung fu movie, the first one based around hand-to-hand fighting choreography.

To be fair, the decision to shoot in English was made by the Weinstein Company before Netflix came aboard. I haven't seen this yet and feel no compulsion to do so, but everything I've read about it sounds exactly like what I would expect from a Crouching Tiger sequel produced by Harvey Weinstein.