elfie-5's Replies


No. I live in New Hampshire. We don't even have a native wolf population. See? The fish and game dept. even says so: Wolf, Eastern (not yet in NH) https://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/wildlife/species-list.html I thought the point was just that black people can also be stereotypical evil hillbillies. How could you tell? The movie was so dark it was impossible to see much of anything during all the underwater scenes So they've posted the adult cast now. I correctly predicted who would play Eddie! (James Ransone) How'd everyone else do? Here's the cast list: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7349950/ Except the show isn't about sirens at all, it's about mermaids. Sirens are part woman, part bird, and they sing beautifully to lure ships into dangerous waters so they'll wreck. The only scary thing in this movie is [spoiler]when the mother says that they should kill one of the kids instead of her because they're still young enough to have another one.[/spoiler] Nicolas Cage plays an inept human resources director whose deaf mistress gets kidnapped by the God Zeus and Cage reads aloud from Ice By Ice, the autobiography of Vanilla Ice, for the remainder of the movie. Nicolas Cage plays a black man whose imaginary friend gets kidnapped by a pack of resentful saber tooth tigers and Cage releases a sex tape to draw the villain out of hiding. Thanks It means she can get her learner's permit. As she's gotten older, she's begun to look a lot like Chyler Leigh did when she was on Grey's Anatomy. Here are my picks, based entirely on which currently late 30-to-early-40s actors the kids in this film (kinda) look like. Bill: DJ Qualls Bev: Maggie Gyllenhaal Mike: J. August Richards Eddie: James Ransone Stan: Johnny Galecki Richie: Matt Bomer Ben: Tyler Labine I'm 40. I saw the mini-series for the first time when I was 13 and it first aired on TV. I saw it for the second time about a month ago. Grindovermatter is right. Tim Curry's performance aside, the mini-series is pretty terrible. It had a lot of parts that didn't make sense, and it's a pale imitation of the book. Yes they did, at least in the book. It wasn't a hallucination, it was their way of forging a bond IT couldn't break. Oh, and if you don't have time to re-read the book for yourself, it's talked about here: http://www.looper.com/85207/disturbing-moments-book-cut-movie/sl/the-sewer-escape The possibility that any of them survived never crossed my mind...until I found out there's going to be a sequel. Holy crap that looks awful. None of the charm or uneasiness that marked the original, and lots of stupidity was packed into that trailer. Because, as another thread so aptly notes, everyone in this movie was stupid. "Yeah, I don't know why their winter break is in February rather than December. And it's too early for spring break." K-12 schools in the northeast of the US have four vacations over the course of the school year: December (a week and a half or so), February (1 week), April (1 week), and summer. Colleges here have a much longer December/January break, spring break in March or April, and summer, but the school in this movie was clearly high school, not a college. I assume this story takes place in the northeast, although I can't think of any place called Portsmith instead of Portsmouth (which to be fair is *pronounced* port's-mith) so it may take place in a made-up town up here. The cast list makes it look like it'll be just the kids in this movie. I'm not sure that makes sense given the structure of the book, but I guess we'll see how it works once both movies are made. If you're still wondering, yes and it's on Netflix now. It's pretty similar to As Above So Below.