dreaming's Replies


,I I like Blunt too---she's one of these actresses that always seems to take challenging roles in interesting films,like Wind Chill,Sicario,The Huntsman:Winter's War,and I really wanted to see her in this film,since I liked the book. I missed it in theatres,but definitely see it as soon as hits DVD. She's a good actress,though,who doesn't just play the pretty girl roles she could easily fall back on,and that's why I've come to like seeing her in anything she's in recently. Yeah they are---that's already a known horror movie trope, and a good and scary one. The antagonists who put up a facade are simply more terrifying because they lull the protagonist into trusting them. Then that's when they finally drop the mask and began to show their true evil selves,lol. Yeah,he made this interesting action flick called The Fifth Comandment (2008) which he produced and starred in himself,and it's a pretty good tough action pic worth watching.He's currently playing a role as a drug addicted prisoner in the newly rebooted Prison Break series,which is an excellent action-packed series worth watching---check it out sometimes. Plus he still looks good,too. Uh,she's had a good career long before she met her co-star. She certainly doesn't need anyone to "propel" her career at this point in time,as long as she's been in the biz. And she still looks good too. I agree that she shouldn't have been so quick to defend Cosby,but to be fair,she wasn't the only person willing to defend him when those accusations first came out,either. I'm sure she's changed her mind since then. Actually,Crawford was a pretty good actress,especially when she got a part she could sink her teeth into. Davis usually owned whatever role she played,whether it was heroic or a villainous role---so they both were good in their own different ways. You don't respect anyone who doesn't think exactly like a stuck-up,self righteous right-wing idiot such as yourself? Get the hell over yourself,please. The whole damn world dosent have to think exactly like you in order to operate. Plus the fool currently in office is right-wing, and he's nothing but an ignorant fckg fool. Enough said there. Adams actually reminds me of some '40s era actress (probably because I saw in a period film where she was really good---can't recall the name, though) and she also has what used to be called girl-next door looks---fresh and clean-cut, beautiful in a down-to earth way, and all that. I've only seen a couple of her films,and she does have a fresh presence,and is likable. Id have to see more of her films to make a definite statement on her acting,though. Loved the hell out of this show back in the day because it was so damn weird,plus all the crazy,eccentric,offbeat characters on the show made it worth watching. It took me a minute to get used to the humor but it gradually grew/crept up on me like a fungus,lol. Glad it did. Not hard to see why it lasted so long,because it was a unique comedy classic in its own right. Loved the funky-as-hell theme song too. Very few shoes nowadays have memorable theme songs at all anymore. It comes on the digital channel Laughs now. Also liked the judge---thought he was cute and the fact that he was a magician made him even more intriguing (and funny too.) I really liked this show back in the day because the leads were so appealing,and the show was so funny. I always thought it was better and funnier than Friends---I've never gotten why that show was so damn popular. I was in the demographic for Friends but I just could never muster up enough interest in it. Interestingly enough,when the names of classic '90s shows are brought up,Mad About You's title doesn't come up much. The same goes for other shows of that period I really liked,such as Caroline In The City, News Radio,The Awful Truth,Ned and Stacey,Wings, The Steve Harvey Show,Moesha, Picket Fences, Living Single,In The House, and a number of others. I honestly didn't recall Mad About You being on that long,probably because I watched the first couple of years of it, then lost track of it after finding other shows I liked. Friends was an extremely popular show that lasted a decade even if I never liked it or thought it was funny in the least. What? That same reason is why another show I love called Frank's Place has still never been released on DVD--due to the music rights issue. A damn shame too,since it was such a great show. tsegat: Yeah,like the majority of trumpf's cabinet,and trumpf himself,lol. Oh shut up. Tired of right-wing idiots like you whining about "libs" this, "libs" that. It was liberals who started nearly every social movement worth a damn in this country----the civil rights movement, the women's movement, the environmental movement,the fights for worker's rights all that. Liberals have contributed a great deal to this country even died for it in wars to serve it. So you can miss me with the snide BS remarks about "libs"---especially since we always seem to have a economic depression along with a war every time a republican's been in office for the last 25 years. Explain that if you can,please. Archer Bunker was a conservative figure on TV. So what's your point? For real---tired of these damn conservatives whining about every show that they claim doesn't reflect their conservatism. Guess what, y'all? Everyone in the whole damn world isn't conservative like you and they don't have to be. Being conservative doesn't make you better or smarter than anyone else,any damn way. I liked Murphy Brown back in the day and frankly, I could have given less than a damn about its political bent back then,because I was much younger and didn't understand or give a damn about politics like I do now. I just liked the show and thought it was funny. Ain't seen it in forever, so I might want to revisit it after all this talk about it by whiny-a** conservatives who can't conceive of the fact that every damn thing/the whole world doesn't revolve around them/is not just about them or whatever the fck they believe. I don't know why the OP is so bothered by the fact that a show can have a liberal viewpoint. I mean the show was written and produced by a liberal Hollywood power couple,who were big names in TV at the time. No big surprise there if you're done the research on it. I mean,give me a break. No,she's not. She usually knows what she's talking about,and only goes off when somebody says something stupid,or when she's ticked off by certain subjects. Just because you don't like or agree with her,that alone does not make her a moron. Everybody you don't agree with isn't stupid or ignorant because they don't agree with you---that's life. Also,WITCHCRAFT THROUGH THE AGES, by Benjamin Christiansen (a good silent and imaginative docudrama on the history of persecution for witchcraft) and TEN MINUTES TO LIVE (1930) by the pioneering black director Oscar Micheaux. This is another interesting example of a silent fim transitioning into a sound film----it's basically a group of stories---one involving gangsters and all that. It's a sloppy put-together flick,and not all that great,but it's worth studying just as an early example of black indie filmmaking. Another film called THE BLACK KING (1932) is another better made indie with an all-black cast that would definitely be worth studying in a class,because it's kimd of funny (it's not a comedy though) but it also deals with the theme of black pride in one's roots,which is unusual subject matter coming from the era it was made in. Hell,yeah,it was excellent--it was thrilling,suspenseful, and unpredictable---I was all in with the goings on, and I'm already hooked. Can't wait until next week's show already. I want to know---why did Michael play dead all these years? Why has he been hanging with all these bad guys for? What the hell's his endgame gonna be this time around? Who the hell knows? Tune in next time for...............Prison Break:The Re-Up--Part 2,lol!