ykoriana
ykoriana
ykoriana

I think I own the same set as you do. What a precious thing those discs are.

If Carol Danvers shows up at the end of AOU I will not make it out of the theatre alive.

I can't wait for the Youtube compilations of show watchers secretly filming book readers as they approach a major traumatic chapter.

I guess it's about one's personal view of it, but I don't really qualify it as a happy ending. I thought Coop coming home to have a two-minute reunion / goodbye with his aging, dying daughter was absolutely heartwrenching.

That was so beautiful I almost cried. Of course Thor and Cap would play baseball with hammer and shield.

If they'd gone and casted Angela Lansbury as Mrs. Potts again I'd be standing in line to buy tickets right now. What a wasted opportunity.

David Hasselhoff will play Fin's (Ian Ziering) father, Gilbert Shepard.

Excellent comparison. The Mom death in GotG is realistic and it is a main event in the formation of Peter Quill's character but does not make him bitter or eternally disillusioned and unable to form attachments. You can see him evolve as a character in the course of the movie, make new friends and learn to trust

Prayer circle to have Kenneth Branagh return for Thor 3. Thor 2's only saving grace are the scenes with Loki, I spent the rest of the movie trying not to laugh because the Dark Elves looked like Teletubbies.

When I was a child I stayed with my grandparents for a while as my dad had left the country to avoid being sued for debts and my mother had to get a job far away and was saving to get me with her. At the age of six I developed sinusitis and my grandmother, an emotionally abusive individual with the pathological need

Ah, the Expanded Universe. Home to the good (the Zahn books), the bad (the five or six plots about people building new Death Stars and superweapons, and that time they tried to invent a love interest for Luke who was the most boring character ever written into a book) and the embarrassing (the young adult novels with

I admit to owning The Birds Barbie because I'm a Hitchcock fan and the doll really looks a lot like Tippi Hedren.

I want a Masterchef competition where all the competitors are robots and they can kill Gordon Ramsay in horrible ways if he says bad things about their food.

I can't think of a show I loved so much and then disappointed me so deeply.

I have the weird feeling I might be the only person in the Universe actually looking forward to this, and that's mostly due to the fact I think Eddie Redmayne looks very intriguing as a full-blown sci-fi villain. Action/adventure movies are so serious these days. Bring me all the space opera with the camp turned up to

I watched this on the cinema when I was 6 or so - my grandparents made the old "cartoons are for kids" assumption. I don't remember much of it, but I remember enough that it definitely fascinated me. I also remember wondering why the pretty girl was nearly naked in the middle of an Ice Age.

Re: Spider-Man

When you start counting the number of people with blue eyes among the Egyptians and Hebrews you know you've got a big problem. Even Cecil B. DeMille made almost all people with light eyes wear brown contacts in The Ten Commandments, and that was in 1956!

I remember waiting two hours to download the Phantom Menace bootleg 20MB trailer over the internet.

I have an unexplained fondless for Chronicles of Riddick. Which has now been increased by the mental image of Dame Judi Dench playing D&D with Vin Diesel.