Big Movie. Big Screen. Loved it.
Big Movie. Big Screen. Loved it.
::phone rings::
"Hello? Yes, this is the character portrayed by Paul Henreid in NOW, VOYAGER. What's that? Oh, yes, you're the doctor from the sanitarium where my young daughter is a patient. What's that, doctor? You've fired the nurse looking after my daughter? And…you're going to let the patient next door to my daughter be in charge of my daughter's care? Uh-huh. I see. And then you're going to let my daughter move in with them at the beginning of…
If you're under 35 you can disregard this review, but there's a weird allure swirling around this film mostly due to the fact that if you were between the ages of 13-18 in the late 90's/early 00's this movie was playing on either TBS or USA like once every month or two, much like Back To The Future. And much like BTTF or say, Goodfellas, it had that hypnotic quality where once you started it, it didn't matter how far…
You can buy a TV that murders your friends, what everyone has always wanted. It's crazy that the cliche/trope of old TV shows just being nothing but shoot-em-up Westerns existed all the way back in 1953, practically the dawn of TV, as opposed to being something that gradually became apparent over decades. If they made this cartoon now, it would be nothing but cop/lawyer shows.
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