tonymacaroni52--disqus
Tony Macaroni
tonymacaroni52--disqus

Nah, he got my number…

He called me a dirty wop and a no good dago!

Because economic anxiety and working in a rundown coal mining town is rough, right? At least that's what the "fake news" said in the "failing" New York Times like every other week last year…

I've been calling Soros for weeks, I figure he owes me like 5 grand at this point…

If Wolverine studied harder he could've gotten an A or A+, but with his current grades he'll be lucky to make it to Arizona State!

Not a safe space for our little snowflake.

Hey, his warmup music is the "Chariots of Fire" theme!

I agree, though I think that's true for every Bond film that goes to the US(with maybe the exception being Live and Let Die). But it's especially true in Diamonds Are Forever, where 70s Las Vegas looks so cheap and crappy for a Bond film.

Last time he we checked in with Hayao he only had a week until retirement and kept saying he was "Getting too old for this shit."

How does he know that? Family reunions, probably.

Yeah, the book was a sequel to another book that was the basis for The Detective starring Frank Sinatra. Meaning we missed out on a Die Hard starring Frank Sinatra.

Kind of like his role as the dad in Hot Rod.

The hoopleheads are in charge.

Which is another weird fact about the first two Die Hard films, the first two were based on completely unrelated books and then the third was a original screenplay that wasn't Die Hard originally.

It's an interesting one, because it doesn't feel like the first two or the last two. It would've worked as a thriller on it's own that wasn't even a Die Hard film.

1995 was a pretty good year for action films and it was actually pretty pivotal in how the genre would turn out in the 2000s.

"Damn Trejo, those are some big craters." - The Moon

"Keep your friends close but your enemas closer." - Don Corleone

The Da Get Down?

Vintage sneakers are expensive, yo…