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Razor
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It's been two years and the first movie still bothers me. I don't believe in ghosts or anything, but some nights when I'm laying in bed, the movie just pops in my mind and I instantly shoot out of bed and turn something funny on TV. I dread having dreams about the movie and just thinking about it makes the hair on my

Watch Instantly gave me "Lake Mungo" though, so therefore it is immune to all criticism. Scariest non-Paranormal Activity movie I've seen in the last decade.

It wasn't scarier than 1, but I'd say it was the best movie of the three, in terms of overall quality. Granted, these movies hinge on their scares, but I feel for the characters much more in this one and their circumstances are more believable. Woman gets pissed at her husband for filling her kids minds with ghost

I personally loved that 2/3rds of the trailer weren't in the movie. I cannot stand this recent trend in horror and comedies to give away 90% of the good stuff in the trailers.  Friggin' Quarantine based its entire ad campaign around the ending of the goddamn movie!

You mean the high-risk highway shootout that they totally botched, thinking there were just two men in the car, which wound up getting an officer almost killed?

Last night's show was written by someone who wrote 16 episodes of The Shield… maybe it's just not going to be your cup of tea, ever?

Not to spiral this into a major political debate, but I generally find libertarians to be more naive than liberals. Sure, liberals have goals that can't be achieved (like eradicating poverty and ending the mix of money and power), but their methods of dealing with a problem are generally reasonable. "Hey, let's raise

I can't tell if this is serious and the best point-proving moment in internet comment history or the best joke in internet comment history.

Well, they like crappy fucking politicians, so it's not terribly surprising.

I don't understand why one would want clear-cut ways to define themselves. Perhaps that's my 20s talking though.

Are these actual things men think about? What it means to be a man in the ever-changing bullshit concept of male identity? I'm a heterosexual dude and can gladly say these are not things that affect me whatsoever. I look at shows like this and wonder why we're still hammering a joke that Married… With Children pounded

Solution: Walking Dead to CBS!

It perhaps wasn't executed well here, but the balance between Rick needing Carl to grow up and wanting him to have some semblance of a childhood is a major theme of the books.

I don't think that's always the case. The American version of The Ring was superior to the original (yeah, I said it) and I thought Let Me In was a terrific companion piece to Let the Right One In. In the right hands, it can be done well.

I think this show is suffering from disappointment more than anything else. It was hyped to the moon last year and now it's being hailed as AMC's godly gift to you. It's not as good as the hype and does have some serious issues, but I thought last night was almost great. Characters desperately need to be fleshed out

They explained in the episode that the self-destruct mechanism was to keep all the viruses housed at the CDC from escaping into the environment when the power failed. Obviously, I don't think the entire building needs to crumble to solve that problem, but it was addressed.

I'm sitting in the office right now, and just your mere suggestion of Troy's voice box and armless Jeff made me burst into laughter.

Gilligan said it in the NYTimes interview… I'm sure some things were reworked or tweaked, but yeah, I can see it working as the finale.

It was meant to function as a series finale in case negotiations with AMC fell through.

I've seen the Huell theory around, also the possibility that Walt swiped it when he asked for a smoke.