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Paul Blart: Vampire. It would be the most successful movie/tv show of all time.
But can we be sure, Watson, that the Brothers, Jonas were not themselves the very perpetrators that Principal Marchi seeks?
As far as journalism, this is kind of like this decade's version of the release of the pentagon papers. By which I mean, no it's not.
Happened upon this trailer in an emailed "Jeremy Piven and Ving Rhames" Google Alert.
True story: I actually did watch this with my dad a couple weeks ago, and he seemed to mildly enjoy it. (Okay, not much of a story I guess.)
"An unnamed source told the Daily Express: 'Cool is colour-blind. Jamie would seem to be born to the role.'" An unnamed source, Daily Express? So someone said to you "Cool is color-blind. Jamie would seem to be born to the role. Oh, and it is of the utmost importance that you keep my identity a secret."
keyboard cat, a nation turns its lonely eyes to you
A word about Broken Flowers. The last scene redeems it.
Jeff, shouldn't you be playing Medal of Honor?
"You haven't seen war until you've seen it through the eyes of Quentin Tarantino." I didn't know Quentin Tarantino had seen war through the eyes of Quentin Tarantino.
It was going to be either Batman Forever or Real Genius.
Hey, have you seen The Snuggie commercial? Definitely Videogum material. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xZp-GLMMJ0
You were a kid, and the movie had an orangutan. So, according to MATH, you had to like it. Riposte!
Yeah, you're right. And apparently Ed was also released in 1996. So I guess in the mid 90s, Ed and Dunston Checks In were kinda like the Beatles and The Stones.
Correction: no Matt Lebanc. Must've been thinking of something else. Sorry. But still. "Dunston Checks In" is worth it (as in still bad).
I've got it. "Dunston Checks In." It's got Jason Alexander and Matt Lebanc. Plus, here's the film's description on IMDB: "Young boy befriends larcenous orangutan in luxury hotel." I think the film's producers were psychic because they made this movie for Videogum in 1996.