-
Content count
8 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Community Reputation
8 NeutralAbout She-Tar
-
Rank
Wolfpup
- Birthday March 23
-
Episode 168 - Hard Ticket to Hawaii: LIVE!
She-Tar replied to JulyDiaz's topic in How Did This Get Made?
On the sex scene where she's kneeling down and he's moaning and saying how good she is, does anyone else think that maybe he's just sticking it in her belly button? And if so, how deep is it? It reminded me of that Family Guy abstinence episode where the kids were sticking it in each other's ears so maybe a belly button isn't that weird for this movie. -
Episode 168 - Hard Ticket to Hawaii: LIVE!
She-Tar replied to JulyDiaz's topic in How Did This Get Made?
The Emma Stone movie you're thinking of is Aloha. -
There it is, the Cock Starter kit... that kid looks happy
-
The entire movie is ADR'd it's tremendous. I'm not sure where they're supposed to be because everyone has a different accent... all hail She-Tar
-
Yeah, this movie deserves to be covered, the whole thing is insane.
- 14 replies
-
- pleasure bots
- sex contracts
- (and 6 more)
-
Overall a couple of things struck me watching this: 1. The clearly could have hidden easily from these robots, they couldn't look down as evidenced by the "hiding" behind a bag of dog food on the bottom shelf of the pet store. - Sub-point: if you watch this movie in widescreen in the pet store it shows a box that appears to be a Cockatu starter kit but it's cut off so you only see Cock Start. 2. Either they are all the worst shots in the world or the robots are bullet-proof to some degree based on the amount of ammo expended. 3. What kind of name is Ferdie? 4. These kids needed a crawling coach. Either they can't and get blown up by a robot or at the end they crawl super ass slow to build tension... and run time I assume, even though she appears capable of limping into the paint store/explosives factory.
-
Did you notice the water from the bucket the robot spilled had marshmallows in it? I'm pretty sure he was mopping the floor with Hot Chocolate.
-
Not only that but if you divide 2,900,432 tuneups by 85 years that means they're doing 34,123 tune ups per year or 93.5 tune ups each day if they worked 365 days a year. Now if you divide that by 2 you get 46.75 tune ups per person per day for the next 85 years...