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R_Kane's Replies


Similar to Dolph: Mathias Hues, a Dutch actor trained in martial arts. In terms of fighting skills, either Dolph or Mathias would have arguably better choices. I freaking love Arnold, but I was trained by the world's highest-ranking sword master, Founding Master Chang Sik Kim, and Arnie's sword work is so slow you have time to bake a cake between each of his techniques (moves). Nonetheless, this is my favorite movie of all Time. I want Valeria to have my children. It's not the difference in looks. It's the difference in emotional maturity, class and poise. He's not at her level. And I think that he'd be ... uh... faster than a speeding bullet in the sack. You got that SO right! She is 'way too hot for Mafoy. I expect so, but there are fates FAR worse than death. There is also a glorious death. I'd like them all to survive and thrive, but I want none of them to go through anything agonizing or humiliating--like getting shot to death on the toilet! You assume correctly. I thought her name was spelled Den ... and didn't know it begins Daen... None. It's just you. Without a great antagonist you can't have a great story. Nicholson destroyed the first film. Compare his Joker to what should have been an Oscar-winning performance for Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight. Bateman IS dark, you mutt. I have this movie in my library. You couldn't pay me to put the Nicholson Joker movie there. And Pfeiffer's Catwoman is bone-inducingly spot-on. Much better than Halle Berry's. Then they're doing an outstanding job. Even though I thought the pacing in the pilot was too slow, I've been consistently impreserssed with the show's digital FX. But, if this project has been kicking around for several years, why was there so little production time? That's like asking, "Which of these shit sandwiches tastes the best?" C'mon, it's the freaking CW. And I watch The Flash, Arrow and Legends of Tomorrow each week, so I know about the network and its actors. The place is fun, but so is McDonald's. It just not substantial. I like Danielle Pannebaker the best of the bunch. Penile Implant, you know, the thing Cisco needs. Also, because it is so Goth and cool. The Prisoner American Gothic (1995) Maybe he works out a lot? I hope we find out next week! I want to know who the red-colored guy whom Dorothy freed from the tree is. This episode was tremendous, especially the scene where Tip transformed back into Ozma to save West. Fantastic emotion and FX. There are SO MANY people who want to kill Frank now. I hope that Jane keeps bringing him back from the dead so they can all kill him over and over. What a schmuck! EC improves with each episode. "Of all the words of tongue and pen/The saddest are these: it might have been." The same thing happened in 1995 with another Shaun Cassidy-produced show with a similar tone, American Gothic, with Gary Cole playing the Devil. CBS played episodes out of order, didn't play some of the eps at all, and kept moving the show to different times and days; but, today the show is a cult classic. I think the same will happen with EC. I agree that almost no one watches in real time, especially not with all those commercials to wade through. (Which is another problem with EC. How effective would GoT be if you cut to a diaper commercial right after Arya guts someone?) But, to choose to stream or record, you first must like the show. The premier was bad, Friday night viewing is low, and Grimm is the wrong lead-in. NBC treats EC like a bastard child. It's sad. Nonetheless, West rocks hard. Her wail of grief when Tip died gave me chills in my spine. Ana has the talent to show the good that is still inside this very damaged and emotionally vulnerable witch. Hood smashing the Albino's head. Hood blowing half of Chayton's face off. Proctor feeding the real Hood's son's corpse into a meat grinder and making Rebecca watch. Every time Rebecca got naked, including . . . Rebecca and Proctor doing the Wild Mambo. Job performing a song in a drag cabaret and, while wearing a dress, kicking the shit out of three redneck hecklers. The skilled blind warrior has long been part of martial arts lore, e.g., the Japanese stories of Zatoichi, the blind Samurai, or Rutger Hauer's movie, "Blind Fury."