thelivingtribunal2
The Living Tribunal
thelivingtribunal2

It's weird, because I would gladly pay an extra $50 or something for the airline that tends to treat me better in terms of legroom, meals, customer service, etc. but that otherwise gets me to the same place at the same speed.

Needs more Joe Don Baker.

For some reason, it's memorable to me mainly because of the strangest red herring I've ever seen in a movie: the whole subplot about the ominous machines and other inventions, which turns out to be completely unrelated to all the other goings on.

I would rate the drop in quality between Robocop 1 and Robocop 2 to be about the same as the drop in quality between Predator 1 and Predator 2. Robocop 2 is definitely worth a look, if only for the greatest stop motion creature ever. The Cain cyborg is moviedom's ultimate badass killer robot as far as I'm concerned.

Seriously. Something about using AI to determine whether I'm an AI or not is deeply unsettling.

OK then. I guess it's just not my cup of tea. It's weird because recently I was replaying Fallout: New Vegas and I found myself complaining about the opposite, namely the overly harsh, gritty textures. I must have some kind of weird Goldilocks thing about visual textures: they need to be just right.

I haven't played it myself, so at first I thought all these pastel, soft light Breath of the Wild screenshots were cutscenes or something. But I guess this is really what Breath of the Wild looks like. Wow. I've grumbled for years about how the trend toward a harsh, high saturation look in movies and games has been

I've never forgotten that Reubens death scene, because it's just so damn odd. I was never sure if the implication was that he was actually unharmed and was just messing with Buffy, if he was supposed to be breaking the fourth wall in some way, or what. Learning that it was improvised sheds some light on it I guess,

This makes no sense. If we have to click to open up the comments section now, then why can't this same click just open up the view we're all used to, with the article on its own page and comments on the bottom?

I never appreciated it before, but now I can see how weighty those three words are. Thanks!

It truly is that bad. I generally try to tell myself that I'm old and therefore have no right to complain about hip hop in 2017. However, the emperor really, really seems to have no clothes in this case.

Oh shit, it does work.

or Moby Dick

I agree that the movie was quite faithful, and I think this was the main reason it failed. What looked awesome on a comics page turned out to look laughable in real life, drained of all its operatic badassery. Beyond the atrocious CGI, the whole movie just seemed clunky. Spawn was obviously just some guy in a

It's unfathomable to me, regardless of how much one loves, hates, or doesn't give a shit about Trump, that anyone would want to wallow in it constantly. Personally I try to avoid it as much as possible, but I guess the market has spoken.

I guess he was fine. I feel like he just had very little to work with though. Green Room really would have benefited from some kind of centerpiece monologue from Stewart, something like Quint's story about the USS Indianapolis in Jaws. All we actually get in Green Room is Stewart wheezily giving instructions to his

Star Wars is a trademark. I can't name my new entertainment product "Star Wars" for the same reason that I can't name my new soap product "Tide Detergent." You can't copyright titles of creative works that consist of generic words and phrases though. If we could, we would run out of words and phrases awfully fast.

You can't copyright titles.

Yeah, I'm kind of surprised at how low A Link to the Past is on most of these personal lists. Except for maybe Pong or Tetris, it's the most perfect game I have ever played.