Apparently I’m not alone…
Just saw this: “More than 400,000 American homes have cut the cord and ditched their cable and satellite pay-TV services since the start of 2012. The figure includes 169,000 subscribers shed by… Read Article →
Just saw this: “More than 400,000 American homes have cut the cord and ditched their cable and satellite pay-TV services since the start of 2012. The figure includes 169,000 subscribers shed by… Read Article →
Frankly, I thought the first sequel to The Car would have featured the drive shaft. But whatever. Related PostsMonster of the Day #3686 (Feb 28, 2025) Monster of the Day #3685 (Feb… Read Article →
Basically built around the question of which were successful enough to prompt sequels. But there are signs of Hollywood’s ongoing structural problems here. As noted in the article, Universal had three successful… Read Article →
For some reason, women’s focus groups did not find the new Beauty and the Beast TV show was romantic as the old one. Related PostsMonster of the Day #3681 (Feb 21, 2025)… Read Article →
“A doctor reanimates the corpse of his mad scientist grandfather, THEN figures out it was a bad idea!” Even for the dedicated genre movie fan like myself, Jerry Warren movies are often… Read Article →
Boy, get rid of the silverfish and then this happens. Related PostsMonster of the Day #3676 (Feb 14, 2025) Monster of the Day #3675 (Feb 13, 2025) Monster of the Day #3674… Read Article →
This made less domestically than that awful remake of When a Stranger Calls, and that was following the Spider-Man movies. I don’t get it. Related PostsMonster of the Day #3671 (Jan 29,… Read Article →
[Note the highly misleading poster art. Hope never wears anything like he is pictured here, and Dorothy Lamour certainly never appears in a bathing suit. And I seriously have no friggin’ idea… Read Article →
This scene is quite paneful. Related PostsMonster of the Day #3665 (Jan 21, 2025) Monster of the Day #3664 (Jan 16, 2025) Monster of the Day #3663 (Jan 15, 2025) Monster of… Read Article →
The opening paragraph of the Chicago Tribune review of this film mentions the awkwardness of releasing a film about a neighborhood watch following the Trayvon Martin shooting. “Timing is everything,” Michael Phillips… Read Article →