At that price I'd expect the actual prop.
At that price I'd expect the actual prop.
I thought the "thirty-odd people watched and did nothing" story was as famously and widely debunked as a flat earth by now.
I forgot Clive!
I got:
1. Arn
2. Ian
3. Gillian
4. Paul Thomas
5. Gerry
This is definitely a time when Hanlon's razor has failed—this is a strong mix of malice and stupidity.
This series is swiftly becoming a case of scrolling to find any familiar names at all. I am out of touch, man. 99% sure the last new album I bought was by Ian Anderson (who, now that I think about it, is possibly a better candidate for my second favourite Anderson than Gillian).
It definitely was two movies squashed together, one of which I really liked.
I did think of some of those but i don't believe they focus on the strangeness of the towns themselves.
But… a butt
Please, please tell me Moby Lick wasn't a lie.
Very little I'm aware of, even less I care about. The closest to interesting for me is a Melvins release, because although I've not listened to them, I know I should.
I feel like Yello's "Desire" should be in most films, but especially some of Michael Mann's more detached work. Could work well in early scenes of Manhunter.
I get the feeling this week's "Watch This" could be populated entirely by The X-Files—"Humbug", "Our Town", "Blood", "Roadrunners" and "Small Potatoes", perhaps. Miami Vice's "Glades" might also be interesting.
Try Commander. You can get pre-made decks for it easy enough, every card is limited to one-per-deck so you don't get the same sense of buying your power level, and it's usually played by dedicated multiplayer-fun-havers.
I'm just saying, I'm gonna buy the shit out of this set and live in a cardboard house for a while.
You tell me a better way to carry peanut butter around.
Slashing up corporate cyborgs? Look, just give us a damn Raiden movie and be done with it.
I tend to think of it as a one-season show, I think the more episodic nature of the second season felt like it was a whole different beast entirely. Benzali was brilliant, of course. But I really dug Tucci as well, thought he played a person complex enough to seem a villain but not a monster.
Haven't read the article yet, just scrolled down after the standard Bochco introduction to point out that Murder One never seems to get its time in the sun as a great work of his.
I think a sequel would concretely detract from the first film by removing the power of its ending. As Thing-alikes like The X-Files' "Ice" show, you can retell that story without doing a straight sequel and Carpenter is smart enough that he could do that.
And I don't think the prequel was the worst thing ever, it's…