xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
User#
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

It’s...blue.

I realized recently that seeing the trailer for this in the theater as a kid gave me serious nightmares.

I knew it had to be someone! I’m surprised I didn’t know that, I’m sure I would have looked up the cinematographer when I saw it, and I already loved Barry Lyndon. Thanks!

It’s not a spoiler that David Arquette, Courtney Cox and Neve Campbell are all up front in the advertising.

Scream 3 was pretty meh, I agree. I loved the first two, and didn’t get very far into Scream 4 before losing interest. There was a great joke going around though that it should have been called “iScream” haha.

I agree about the Hollywood gloss providing an extra element of enjoyment. When the genre took off in the 1980's, there were several glossy big-studio examples - “Terror Train” comes to mind, which really looks awesome as I recall.

Well, the idea is that maybe he’d have gotten better. But if he was someone who could improve, he probably wouldn’t have turned down the chance in the first place. If that makes sense.

I stopped watching Supergirl when it moved to CW, mainly because I was still watching TV via rabbit-ear antenna, and our local CW station was just about impossible to get in. But I did make the effort when I read about the “Crisis” event, and was really glad I did. I didn’t like “Superman Returns” much at all, but was

Don’t stop there, “The Bob Newhart Show” is the one. “Newhart” is another which I didn’t share in the adulation for, not least because the previous show was so much better, an all-time favorite for me.

I don’t share my opinion of the show often, because it doesn’t bother me that people like what I don’t. Much. Anymore. But god, just...this show. To me, not good, ever. Ugly to look at, hack zingers right and left...and not helped at all by the ghosts of superior shows and characters from the past hanging over it (don’

Yeah, “Halloween” was recognized pretty universally at the time as being the perfection that it was - a huge popular moneymaker which was also critically praised by pretty much everyone. None of his other movies even come close to me, though I’ve liked and respected a lot of them well enough.

Honestly, I think I liked it so much almost solely due to the various genre/time period exercise that the various segments were. If there was intended to be overarching themes, or interesting characters with depth, it was lost on me. But I was pretty entertained by each segment on its own, and yes I have a short

I loved Cloud Atlas, and Jupiter Ascending was literally one of the worst, worst, WORST pieces of idiotic garbage I’ve ever seen. Holy shit was that stupid. Holy shit. 

Don’t you hate Murray’s wife???

Because, again, they don’t understand even the basics of what they’re saying. Ever. That’s why they’re so blase about blatantly lying, and even smug and proud of it. 

I would agree, but it clearly doesn’t - it hardly covers any of his face, and isn’t secure at the bottom at all. People one hundred percent have a right to wear panties on their faces! Over their masks!!!

And even...these idiots love to say “People in the industry have actually THANKED ME for not wearing a mask!”. Which - 1. no they didn’t, dumb fuck, and 2. So what, even if they had?? But. They didn’t.

RNS is right, “Your rights end where mine begin” is a perversion of an actual quote which makes sense, but I can’t quite think of it - basically it’s that your rights end at the point where they cause me/others immediate, clear physical harm. But that’s hard for little pea-brains to parse.

I just watched it for the first time last week. And I enjoyed it much more than I expected to. I thought the whole Overlook segment was, no kidding, just utterly brilliant - one master filmmaker saluting the brilliant work of his master filmmaker friend. I love “The Shining”, and find it intentionally frustrating, in