clashwho's Replies


OP is right. Ava is just a soulless machine. I've heard some people describe the movie as misogynistic, because they're making the same mistake Caleb did. Of the four leads in the film, none of them are women. I was surprised it apparently doesn't have a back door. That must be a fire code violation. This post was deleted because I saw it eat a rocking chair one time. He killed a dog in Jurassic Park's first sequel "The Lost World." I know this was eight years ago on another website and you'll probably never see this, but I doubt George Roy Hill had much regret about working with Paul Newman and Robert Redford on Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid considering he shot The Sting with them a few years later. Thank goodness moviechat saved this epic rant of comedic genius from the IMDB apocalypse. The part when he said, "Mynoks. Why did it have to be Mynoks." I saw it in a movie theater yesterday and am very glad I did. I say spring for the movie theater experience. It's worth it. This post was deleted because it was karate-ing the picket fences. Well done. You sound pretty racist. I thought Kurt Russell's Ego was the best thing in the movie, followed by Michael Rooker's Yondu. I particularly loved the scene where he's teaching Star-Lord how to use the energy of the planet and it turns into a game of catch between father and son. If you've seen the movie, you will know exactly who we're talking about here. I concur. Enthusiastically. Capaldi has been a terrific doctor. The episode "Heaven Sent" is the best hour of television I've ever seen in my life. Seriously. Too bad the writing can't always be that great. 2001: A Space Odyssey is my favorite from Kubrick and one of my top 15 favorite movies of all-time. Number two from Kubrick for me is Dr. Strangelove, which probably lands in my top fifty somewhere. [quote]So many pointless scenes.[/quote] Name one. [quote]Always, always, in the exact perfect spot to move the story along. Her character was almost always connected to every event or person involved in any of the crimes that Foyle was investigating. How many times was she working in a place that was the scene of a crime, or friends with someone who had vital information, or positioned to hear a very secret conversation. Foyle didn't even need a police force, she was connected to every one and everything.[/quote] So true. Next time I watch this series I'm going to count how many conversations she conveniently overhears. It certainly strained credulity. Thank you so much for all you have done, Jim. I've only seen him in Shane and 3:10 to Yuma, but he's excellent in both.