ultwarrior--disqus
Warriors Ripped My Flesh
ultwarrior--disqus

I love cannabis and feminism as much as is adequately respectable but I still have to ask who owns those killer gams up top.

Re: Banner image. Cabbie cosplaying Snake Plissken.

I realise this is low hanging fruit. But I'm an old man and all I have is a set of low hanging fruit

If she really wanted to get back at him she could just have made him watch his acting or listen to his music.

To be fair, an actor from the UK winning a BAFTA isn't exactly a portent of great change.

Somewhat related to Alex's entry: the ability to pick up a case in a record shop, read the track listing, nod like seeing song titles imparts some measurable assessment of the album itself, and put the CD back, secure in the realisation that no, today is not the day I purchase Seasons in the Abyss.

"Die Hard With A Vengeance—the third (and second-best) installment".

Worst action movie? If I ever see it, which is a wild hypothetical, I guarantee I'll still enjoy it more than Kick Ass.

It's slower, uses more effects pedals and I was into it before it was cool, but pretty much.

Dear Margaret Cho,

I think it falls victim to something they've done far too much of on their last four or five albums, which is to just drag it out much longer than it needs to be.

I'd ditch Bleeding Me and Hero of the Day personally, add Mama Said, The Outlaw Torn and Better Than You. Maybe Slither too.

Ahead of both, very deliberately. I enjoy more of its songs and I enjoy them more thoroughly. Death Magnetic is one constant same-y mess.

Load and ReLoad could have been culled into one great album, but as it was they were two pretty decent ones. I don't dislike the black album but it's their second-worst in my own opinion (just ahead of Death Magnetic). It's too heavy to be melodic but not heavy enough to be fun.

I just threw some snark at it for being poorly presented, I don't seem to be the one overreacting in this exchange.

Where are you getting that I'm threatened? I just don't think that the right way to address a problem is to pretend it's caused by something else; you could say that cancer is caused by moonbeams, it'd address the existence of the problem but it wouldn't do jack for the solution.

Because the presentation clearly is putting the onus on the actors for sensationalism.

So how much of this is actually conscious choice and how much is just working on whatever sounds like a [good/profitable/interesting] film regardless of director?

The fewer things Melissa McCarthy features in, the happier the world is overall.

An interesting article, but I wish the author had taken a little more time to express his opinion on Joe Eszterhas.