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WayneCha
waynecha--disqus

I've never heard it, but judging by the title, I'm guessing it's not in favor of Jesus.

Oh yeah, I forgot about "Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam." If that could be considered pro-Jesus, then it should've definitely been included.

Glad to see "Jesus Was Way Cool," which I've always loved. Only thing I would add is "Jesus is Waiting" by Al Green just cause it's so damn sexy.

I guess I'm the only one who digs "The Muppets." Not that I'm watching anything else, but still.

I'm going with the originators . . . Phil Spector and The Crystals.

I'm a big Beatles fan, but all I want of the new product are those DVDs. As for George Martin, he embarrassed himself with his Beatles tribute album In My Life. Did we really need to hear Jim Carrey mangle "I Am the Walrus" or Goldie Hawn giggle her way through "A Hard Day's Night"? George, actual musicians who loved

I agree with "Vanilla Sky," but I'd like to see Alejandro Amenabar take a shot at it. Seems like he'd be a good fit for the material. I'd keep Penelope Cruz but replace the rest of the cast with unknowns. And I'd release it in 1997 just for the hell of it.

One of my favorite movies, and the Coens proved that remaking a classic was a bad idea when they spat out The Ladykillers, so hell no!

I agree that it's pointless to remake bonafide classics or even something with a strong following like the Twilight series. My choice for a shitty and obscure film that has potential with the right guidance is presented above.

How about That Hagen Girl, which might never make it to DVD due to the post-mortem humiliation it would bring to the film's stars Ronald Reagan and Shirley Temple, be remade by Atom Egoyan? The whole "He might be my dad but he's still kinda hot" vibe is right up Egoyan's alley. And mine too!

I agree, the originals are pretty good and the covers should have been dropped.

I'm also a fan of Helen's drumming. Whether she knew what she was doing or not, it sounds pretty awesome to me.

Birds are unknowable, although I'm sure they would try to explain their motivation if they remade the film at some point.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer is my all-time favorite show, although it often tried to determine why people are motivated to do what they do, which is fine because it rarely tried to oversimplify. In the episode "The Prom," they included a brief flashback to show that week's villain getting rejected by a girl he had asked

The only film I couldn't finish because it really unnerved me is Andy Warhol's Bad. The scene involved a woman dropping her screaming baby out of a window in a tall building because she could no longer wait for the hitman she hired to knock it off for her. Another woman sees the bloody carcass on the sidewalk in front

I apparently missed that episode, but I think you've made it quite clear that something wasn't right with Jimmy Olsen. Talk about jumping through hoops just to get two characters together when they had no business being anywhere near each other!

Yes, he was. He was passing through Smallville in one episode and was never seen again. Smallville played very loosely with the Superman mythology to the point where it lacked credibility.

I was a dedicated fan of Smallville until I finally gave up on it near the end of its run. There was much to admire about it, but it also jumped the shark many times. Jimmy Olsen was just a few years younger than Clark, for one thing. And does anyone remember the episode where Pete returned and it became obvious that

The Hall of Fame nominating committee probably don't even know the That 70's Show theme song performed by Cheap Trick was originally by Big Star. Or if they do, they don't realize how influential and AWESOME they really were. For us it's WTF that they'll likely never be inducted. For the rest of the world it would be

I'm with you there. It's a shame she got just a perfunctory Emmy nomination this year after being snubbed twice. She definitely deserved to win at least once for her extraordinary work.