xtlhogciao
xtlhogciao
xtlhogciao

I guess they chose the “Dark Tower” date based on it being Friday the 13th?

Hahaha. It’s Film Brain!

I’m actually kind of surprised at how close the racial makeup is to the U.S population at large (according to link: http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/000…): White 77.7% vs 73.1%; Black 13.2% vs 12.5%; Asian 5.3% for both!; American Indian and Alaskan Native 1.2%, with Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander

Ok. Another comment regarding the baseball bats that I read directly before, and including yours, made me question whether I was being clear or not on that.

I know it , that’s why I pointed it out - Eph was actually right about something, the kid was made to look like more of an ass because of it, and it also actually kind of made sense of the beginning of the scene (though I’m sure it’s not what they were going for) when I was making fun of how he picked his bat in less

Looking into the characters (who I don’t know much, if anything about, for a lot of them - Negasonic’s never appeared in a comic with Deadpool as far as I can tell), and noticing Carano’s character was a Morlock, I started thinking that they’d be really good for a television (or Netflix) series (though I’ll admit that

“Of course, if Spy had featured an almost unrecognizeable Tilda Swinton...”

So were the vampires actually able to kill themselves by jumping from the building- from a height that I think I might survive - or do they have to land in a way that chops their heads off? Are swords, silver etc. actually necessary - can they be killed in the same ways as any regular person, except they get killed by

If I remember correctly, the Mos Eisley scene where Boba was alongside Jabba (a deleted scene shot 20 years earlier, with a fat guy Jabba stand-in) was added later for the 20th anniversary special editions, right? So before that - not counting the “Holiday Special” - was the first time Boba was shown on screen “Empire

Cool. Thanks for the reply. Didn’t remember the mother/actress part (rembered “dancer”).

Now playing

Great sound-editing all around (Do not underestimate the power of a good film score...or voice-acting).

I thought that the last time D’av and Dutch interacted in the episode, it played out something like this: D’av says something like, “you realize that wasn’t me that tried to kill you, right?” And she basically responds with, “yes. But you did still try to kill me/it was you who I was fighting etc....*pushes away a

  • Was there a special significance to the movie (maybe even just a fun extra bit - like some theme that whatever the movie they were watching shares with this show) Paul’s mother and fiance were watching in the motel (outside of there being a baby; and the mother saying Paul enjoyed it when he was younger)? I couldn’t
  • Your thoughts on Dutch’s reaction are interesting - because I was pissed at her for - what I think was the last time we see the two of them together - storming off, upset (I yelled something like “you know he was mind-controlled...you’re the one who figured it out!”). I think both our reactions are justified, though.
Now playing

The thing is, with Reg E. Cathey doing the narration, it basically just comes off as a second, voice-over-version of the 1994 original’s music-heavy trailer (he sounds too much like Don Lafontaine, and all the other guys who did the trailers back then).

Who was the guy doing the jump-spinning-roundhouse-kick supposed to be? Or is he someone famous (I noticed Tommy the Power Ranger in there)...that’s not Star Trek: Voyager’s Harry Kim, is it?

Those floating tubes will get you too. We were on vacation in FLorida when I was 9 and we were at (what I believe was; pretty sure, though) Typhoon Lagoon. Seeing all the cool grownups older, experienced swimmers swimming with, then being carried by the giant wave, I swam out to where they were: the deepest part, or

I don’t understand why Lombardo would “hope that they would change their mind.” He doesn’t want them to milk out another season? Or is it possibly a misquote (the rest of the same quote - “but for that’s how they are feeling now” - does kind of sound a bit like Taz (Looney Tunes) answered the question)?

Questions:

Editing Note: I wouldn’t normally even bother mentioning something like this, but I found the result of the Google-search (I figured typing the director’s name would be the quickest/easiest way to get to that specific Most Dangerous Game adaptation) too funny. (Oh yeah, and it’s supposed to be Ernest B. (not “P”)