tonywatchestv
Bart, That's A Bran Muffin
tonywatchestv

Is this racist, though? He prefaced his question by saying that she had martial arts training, which she technically does not, but she goes on to explain how she received specific training for all the movies she was in that featured martial arts. I’d call that a reasonable mistake on his part, and he apologized for

“Didn’t _______ & Chevy Chase get into some kind of altercation?”

My understanding of modern-day Fred Durst is that he had matured into a film director (The Education of Charlie Banks with Jesse Eisenberg is .. well, quite good) so it’s interesting to see him still doing the ‘Fred Durst pose’ and performing with Limp Bizkit. I mean, why not, I guess. If I were at Lollapalooza and

Did he “do it with him”, though? I know that Fred Durst helped a lot of those bands along, but the song itself was just Aaron Lewis playing and singing a song while Fred Durst tapped his feet and said “Real mutha-fuckin’ deal, y’all!” Maybe they co-wrote it and I’m just learning that?

The two things I remember most about An American Tail: My mom being completely annoyed at how close Fievel and his family always are to reuniting at every turn. She’s not wrong; the movie does really seem to rub it in. The other is just how impressive/garish looking that gigantic rat boat thing was. Weird and scary

I’d love to watch those again, and maybe part of the reason for confusing them is that they seem so similar in tone, or at least to the ‘pre-renaissance Disney’, The Great Mouse Detective, The Fox and the Hound, etc. I could also be completely off, but not remembering the details makes me want to watch them again more.

The Rescuers Down Under is one of those sequels I saw before even knowing about the original, probably just due to being a kid when it came out. It’s a great little movie, and it’s nice to see it in that visual next to the others. In fact, I’m excited that I can’t even remember the plot, aside from Wyle E. Burp and

Also Canadian, the comic strip For Better Or For Worse did that as well.

A movie I’ve (sadly) seen only once. The first image that pops into my head is of Dan Aykroyd’s blink-and-you’ll-miss-it finger-point swagger move he pulls when they first take the big stage. It was just cool.

Or go even further and order a dozen dump trucks of topsoil to be personally delivered to your front yard.

I’m what you would call an original Star Wars fan in that I was born in the ‘80s and raised on the movies. My crayon journals as a kid were filled with Star Wars (and Ninja Turtles), and I was lucky enough that an older kid was Toy Story 3 enough to give me all of his original Star Wars toys. I never got why anyone

Love this guy. Also, I was impressed that he almost threw an actual “Did I do that?” into this interview, without even seeming to realize it.

But you misunderstood the intent of the scene you’re criticizing. Is it otherwise shallow? Sure, I guess, but the point was to show that she’s capable of realizing when someone is trying to take advantage of her. You could have the same scene take place in a chocolate store. In which case, your criticism might be

Caring foremost about appearances and not daring, gasp, to be caught wearing last year’s model while millions of people make $3 per day to make these clothes to prop up your ego is the exact definition of shallow, or perhaps those other people, who are mostly women, do not matter.

I honestly don’t think I hate anything as much as people seem to hate Season 4. Imo, the show suffered similarly if not just as much from the ‘gas leak year’ snark from after. It was mostly good/great throughout, but the decline didn’t exactly 180 itself when Harmon came back. 

Also, eating pizza in the kitchen. (Sorry for the blast from the future, and the Kinja scroll for what this is referring to.)

The three trailers for the first one were better than the three movies. That isn’t a knock on those movies - they’re just that good and hit the right notes perfectly. No movie could be that good.

This looks good, and I like Val Kilmer. I only saw Heat within the last five years (loved it), but it’s always Batman Forever. I was nine when it came out, and 22 for The Dark Knight. If you’re a Batman fan, that’s like winning the lottery of target demographics.

Separately, imho, it’s also replaced “Wonderwall” as the song you’re statistically guaranteed to hear at a ‘live music’ night.

D’oh!