tshepard62
DrMemory
tshepard62

While “The Haunted Palace” deserves it’s criticism for sacrificing Lovecraft’s authorship of the story for the more popularly known at the time Poe, the film itself is a well done adaptation with some excellent visuals and color photography and an excellent performance by Price.

...And special consideration should go to KOTOR 2: The Sith Lords, which not only allows you to be just as evil and sithy as the original but also makes you question the good choices you make.

Because he’s a hack who needs a notorious controversy to sell his script rather than it’s relevance or quality?

Given the whole Jimmy Saville scandals, the Brits are more than a bit justified in taking action.

Lest we forget the sequels h-i-l-a-r-i-o-u-s golfing mini-game that puts the SPLAT! back into Splats-Stick.

Hairy Who?

Byrne doing his best Yoda impersonation.

And in 2023 that anti-vampire senator seems tame compared to the actual bat-shite crazy fascists that have taken over the Republican party.

I’d also defend Sweeney Todd as being better than more than half the films that are above it in the list.

The ending was pretty much the twist from Pierre Boulle’s original novel, but what worked in print didn’t when translated to a film and it’s easy to see why the creators of the original POTA ditched it for the classic twist at the end of that film.

I had the same issues with the Clone Wars, but once you get past the awkwardness of the 2 hour movie and the first season there’s some pretty effective story-telling going on, especially in season 3 and beyond.

Trying to term “Rocky Horror Picture Show” as a summer 1975 movie is stretching that concept further than Frank N. Furter’s leather panties.

The exclusion or Firesign Theatre makes this list an abomination of ignorance, depravity and poor choices in shoes.

I’m not a big fan of any organized religion, but when I decided to stop tithing and attending Lutheran church services I got a disappointed look from my Mom and a lecture from the Pastor but that was the end of it. I can still talk to my Mom and didn’t get disappeared into some Sea Org hell-hole for the remainder of

The celebrities don’t really have to sign the billion year contracts. They get blackmailed using potentially career ending personal confessions made while undergoing auditing sessions.

Bribery and peddling influence really can’t be construed as harassment.

If I was going to chose a Del Toro haunted house movie, I’d pick “The Devil’s Backbone” over Crimson Peak any day.

1979's The Amityville Horror has been aptly described as economic horror.  

True, but there are four novels in the source material.