Buried in this article is the casual mention that George Miller hopes to start shooting the Furiosa prequel spinoff next year, and he's contacting names he's interested in (including Anya Taylor-Joy) via Skype
I would watch the hell out of a Furiosa prequel spinoff starring Anya Taylor-Joy
Buried in this article is the casual mention that George Miller hopes to start shooting the Furiosa prequel spinoff next year, and he's contacting names he's interested in (including Anya Taylor-Joy) via Skype
I would watch the hell out of a Furiosa prequel spinoff starring Anya Taylor-Joy
Post-apocalyptic wasteland seems like a good place for social distancing. Let's start production right now.
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MaddocI'm Bobbin Threadbare, are you my mother?Registered Userregular
Buried in this article is the casual mention that George Miller hopes to start shooting the Furiosa prequel spinoff next year, and he's contacting names he's interested in (including Anya Taylor-Joy) via Skype
I would watch the hell out of a Furiosa prequel spinoff starring Anya Taylor-Joy
Post-apocalyptic wasteland seems like a good place for social distancing. Let's start production right now.
I hope we get at least one good remotely-shot-in-various-people's-living-rooms quarantine movie
I feel like actually seeing any of the re-animator movies would diminish my appreciation for the music video from one of the sequels and I'm not sure I can allow that.
come on you can't mention that without sharing it with the class
I was too lazy to google and figured this'd be faster
I need help:
In seminal awful movie tie-in rap song, "Deepest, Bluest," Mr. L. L. Cool J. repeatedly asserts that his "hat is like a shark's fin." I had previously assumed this referred to the brim of a baseball cap being kind of, sort of like a fin if you squint at it enough, but upon close examination I've just realized he's not wearing a baseball cap in the music video at all, rather some sort of skullcap or do-rag, when he's not animorphed into a rapping shark. So which part of L. L. Cool J.'s hat is like a shark's fin?
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KetarCome on upstairswe're having a partyRegistered Userregular
A few years back I was at the Bruce Campbell Horror Film Festival for the second or third ever screening of Beyond the Gates, among other quality films. Barbara Crampton was there for that screening, and ended up sticking around pretty much the whole weekend from what I can recall. I got to meet her briefly, and she was absolutely awesome. Very gracious, friendly and just plain fun to talk to for a few minutes.
I've been trying to remember the name of a movie for a looong time now. Gonna shoot my shot here.
Very few details sadly, but I'm pretty sure it was a late 80s film (could be early 80s or even super early 90s probably).
All I really remember is that some school dudes, probably teens, probably high school, are terrorizing a male teacher throughout. I believe that at or toward the end of the movie they try to invade his house where his wife also is and they end up on the roof? Or the teacher and/or his wife try to escape via the roof? That part takes place at night, I think. I think the teacher, the wife, and students were white.
I'm not sure if it was a thriller, horror, or what. It wasn't comedic at all. I remember it being tonally pretty dark and foreboding. Not School Daze. Not The Substitute or its sequel(s). Not 187 or anything.
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Hey guess what movie kicks ass
move your dead bones bones bones
Buried in this article is the casual mention that George Miller hopes to start shooting the Furiosa prequel spinoff next year, and he's contacting names he's interested in (including Anya Taylor-Joy) via Skype
I would watch the hell out of a Furiosa prequel spinoff starring Anya Taylor-Joy
Steam
Post-apocalyptic wasteland seems like a good place for social distancing. Let's start production right now.
Very happy about this
I was planning to go see it in theaters before, uh, all of this happened
re-animate your feet
I admire an hour-and-a-half action flick where the first 25 minutes are all exposition and Kurt Russell acting like a surly teen stepson.
To Lee van Cleef, no less.
it was aggressively fine
one extremely good song and one okay song, just like the first one
I was too lazy to google and figured this'd be faster
it ruled
Which is which is the question,
I don't remember any of the others
LOST IN THE WOODS IS THE POWER BALLAD OF OUR TIME HOW DARE YOU.
You’re not my dad, I do what I want!
In seminal awful movie tie-in rap song, "Deepest, Bluest," Mr. L. L. Cool J. repeatedly asserts that his "hat is like a shark's fin." I had previously assumed this referred to the brim of a baseball cap being kind of, sort of like a fin if you squint at it enough, but upon close examination I've just realized he's not wearing a baseball cap in the music video at all, rather some sort of skullcap or do-rag, when he's not animorphed into a rapping shark. So which part of L. L. Cool J.'s hat is like a shark's fin?
A few years back I was at the Bruce Campbell Horror Film Festival for the second or third ever screening of Beyond the Gates, among other quality films. Barbara Crampton was there for that screening, and ended up sticking around pretty much the whole weekend from what I can recall. I got to meet her briefly, and she was absolutely awesome. Very gracious, friendly and just plain fun to talk to for a few minutes.
The Shape of Paddington Mom and Fishman Cabooses more like.
A-plus cabooses.
Good for both of them
Pretty inconvenient if you didn't though youd have to sell it
Yeah I looked it up, and I wouldn't call it a wagon, but she does have a very nice butt.
Please address all hate mail to your mother.
From the window, to the wall!
~ Buckaroo Banzai
Kirk Fox is also a darn fine standup, from what I recall of his Comedy Central specials back in the day
Very few details sadly, but I'm pretty sure it was a late 80s film (could be early 80s or even super early 90s probably).
All I really remember is that some school dudes, probably teens, probably high school, are terrorizing a male teacher throughout. I believe that at or toward the end of the movie they try to invade his house where his wife also is and they end up on the roof? Or the teacher and/or his wife try to escape via the roof? That part takes place at night, I think. I think the teacher, the wife, and students were white.
I'm not sure if it was a thriller, horror, or what. It wasn't comedic at all. I remember it being tonally pretty dark and foreboding. Not School Daze. Not The Substitute or its sequel(s). Not 187 or anything.
Are you referring to the 1987 version with Kurt Russell, or the 2018 remake with Anna Faris?
Because it was neither of those.