Could anyone else see Alex Hirsch go on to work on Rick and Morty if he didn't go on to a series of his own?
Could anyone else see Alex Hirsch go on to work on Rick and Morty if he didn't go on to a series of his own?
This is just going to be Ok Computer with the sound of Martin and Paltrow dry-humping dubbed in over the lyrics as Beyonce's baby screeches in the background.
First off, fuck you, don't bring up Gamergate or those crazy fucks will show up. Second off, my personal opinion of Felicia Day is that she is a bad, unfunny actress with no perceivable talent other than drawing a large audience. From what I've read of the other two choices, they fit the same bill, save for not being…
I'm doing the opposite, in the off-chance I get famous for being an unemployed alcoholic stoner. My plan is to go full-on Gibson/Labeouf and just say whatever comes to mind, then tearfully apologize and blame my caustic actions on a substance abuse problem I do nothing to correct. Maybe, just maybe, I will show my…
In the wiki for Nanook of the North it is mentioned that Arnold's grandpa's nickname for Arnold is "Nanook".
Of all the people to cast, they could have at least gone with someone funny instead of Felicia Day, whose main talent consists of being "delightfully quirky" in a way I find intolerable. I have no idea who the other two are but if Day is any indicator, they are going to be pandering and bland.
Pitch Black was a really good movie, and everything in the Riddick universe so far has been entertaining space shenanigans that remind me of those Boba Fett novels "The Bounty Hunter Wars" that came out back before the prequels.
I think I might be the only one, but despite being over-long, I enjoyed The Hobbit trilogy and its foray into some lesser known LOTR lore. The only part I did not enjoy was the unnecessary inclusion of Legolas and that lady that looked like Arwen but was not Arwen and her weird romance with Kili. I also felt like…
With Vonnegut, I find it's really a personal thing as to which novel you choose to be your favorite as almost all of them are good. I will admit Timequake bored me when I read it at 19 years old, but that was probably just my mood at the time. Mother Night's message of, "We are what we pretend to be, so we must be…
I've gone through the type of depression where you feel absolutely nothing; it would have been terrifying if I could have felt such an emotion. The only thing that ever helped me was massive quantities of weed, and even that had its limits. I feel for Gretchen's character, but being an emotionless husk has a tendency…
I think if anyone can adapt Kurt Vonnegut well, it's that Fargo guy. Reading that list, I realized there are more of his novels that I need to remember, but of the ones I've read, Mother Night is my favorite.
I have to admit, that was a good trailer but a part of me understands that it's going to be a combination of ridiculous and terrible and either way I'll enjoy it while drunkenly watching Netflix because I'm the American viewing audience.
Oh and Hal was the best part because Craaaanston.
I grew up on this show and loved it then, but I love it even more as an adult. As a kid I identified with Dewey, but as an adult I realize I was probably more like Reese with a bit more of a brain.
If you read any of the articles on this website over the past week about which characters they wanted more backstory on, you'd be going "They did that 30 years ago, it was called the Lando Calrissian Adventures and it was weird."
Upon seeing the trailer for the upcoming sequel, my mom said: "Oh, wow, I hope they're not as bad as those last ones." "The prequels?" I asked, "Yeah, I fell asleep during all of them," She said. "Me too," I replied.
This was pre-prequel, children trusted him still.
My older brother and I had those "Star Wars Essential Guide to____" all of which we read until the covers started to disintegrate. I wasn't as into it as my older brother, whose 13-year-old heart nearly imploded when Lucas made the announcement that the EU wasn't canon anymore.
Psyched for It's always sunny and Man Seeking Woman, whose tentacle monster episode last season caused me to gut laugh for the first time in a long time.
I stopped watching Die Hard when they PG-13'd out the "Yippe Ki-kay, mother fucker." I don't remember which sequel it was, but as soon as that line cut to an explosion instead of a "motherfucker"I turned off the movie in disgust.