That was a great movie. Maybe the best TV movie ever.
That was a great movie. Maybe the best TV movie ever.
I had completely forgotten about the camera by the time the game climaxed so it was a really nice touch when I saw all the photos I had taken earlier on when the credits rolled. But yeah, I felt the game encouraged you to be thoughful with the pictures you took. And in the days before digital cameras, you had to be a…
Wasn't there a Gran Turismo competition where if you managed to plat the game by a certain point, you were entered into a competition to earn a scholarship in a real race team?
Why, I was sure that Michael Bay was a thoughful and sensitive auteur who treats cast and crew and all those around him with understanding and succour. I'm SHOCKED.
I got Doom 3 on the PS3 for cheap and I think I've played Doom and Doom 2 a lot more than the title game. Playing it on a T.V. with a PS3 controller is a great experience.
Bow-ties are fucking frustrating to tie. The last time I had an engagement I spent about an hour trying to follow a Youtube tutorial. The pay-off is how cool you look at the end of the evening when you can untie it and sling it over your neck to show that's it's a real bow-tie.
Slow video game reflexes is the price we pay at the moment we lose our virginity.
Nimoy was who I had in mind when I said that Craig wasn't being respectful enough to the role/character that made him famous.
Yeah, I doubt any of this is actually true.
He doesn't have feelings because apparently he's a fictional character that doesn't exist. That point needs to be made expressly clear.
Maybe not praise but certainly more than indifference. You seem to admire his blase attitude.
The fact that he played him and made his name from playing should preclude him from making slights about Bond. That's just common respect. And if you want to praise someone for turning down $100m for making a couple of movies in Hollywood then go ahead but that's some strange behaviour to be praising.
They went with Roger Moore when he was around the same age and a few films later it was getting harder and harder to make a nearly 60 y/o man a genuine love interest for 20 y/o Bond girls.
Dalton was the one closest to what Fleming had in mind but Brosnan was my favourite, funnily enough. He didn't take himself seriously but did just enough to portray a government agent doing something important.
I enjoyed DAD. TND on the other hand is tied with Octopussy for my worst.
Turn down $100m, insult the character that made him famous, and get praised for being 'edgy' and 'not giving a fuck'. If it wasn't for James Bond I doubt he'd be sniffing at $100mil.
Tubular on Super Mario World. I think 9 y/o me came close to tears with that fucking level. Funnily enough though, I replayed it during my early 20's whilst smoking skunk and managed to beat it first time. I assume the muscle memory is burned deep into my sub-conscious.
I bypassed the NES era straight onto the SNES so my experience of LJN was Alien 3 which, even though it was frusratungly hard, was a very good game that creeped me out with its music and atmosphere. So, for me, that rainbow has positive connotations.
My lack of a vagina is the only barrier to me taking up her advice.
It was the other way around for me. The guy who was that wise-cracking smart-ass who was in all those Saturday evening comedy movies was suddenly storming Normandy or electrocuting people to death and winning Oscars in between.