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Showing results for tags 'film'.
Found 5 results
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One of the craziest, cheesiest, and weirdest superhero movies of the 90's. It also features potentially the creepiest last line of dialogue in a comic book movie ever: "No one refuses The Phantom." It's on Netflix Watch Instantly and definitely worth a look.
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I found the podcast a few months ago and have not stopped listening. Right when I heard about it, The Pumpkin Karver popped into my head as a film that must be discussed at some point in an episode. Here's a taste: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-mGxa-_85M Nothing I could say will do this atrocity justice. When I saw it for the first time, a friend of mine called me and asked if I was watching it on TV cause he just knew I would be. We proceeded to stay on the phone for the entire film just laughing and questioning everything about it. Highly recommended.
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- the pumpkin karver
- minka kelly
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(and 4 more)
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Denzel Washington as a detective trying to catch a killer he already had put to death? John Goodman and James Gandolfini? The rolling stones? I remember seeing a commercial for this coming out on VHS and for some reason never remembered what it was called until this year.....ooph. This movie is a mess
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- Fallen
- Top 500 Denzel Washington
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First post! (I know, what a brag.) In honor of JumpTheShark (RIP), and its patron saint, Ted McGinley, I got to wondering who might best be the avatar of the HDTGM anthology of movies. Initially of course, you have the usual suspects: Stallone, Cage, JLo, Pacino, Travolta, Schwarzenegger... Names synonymous with bad movies and the podcast in particular. Going this route, I'd have to go with either Stallone or Cage, not only because of their quantity of work, but also their quality of it. Stallone is unbelievably bad in unbelievably bad movies. Cage at least is spirited in a not quite so disastrous way while appearing in unbelievably bad movies. But I was also thinking of going another possible route for it; what if the Patron Saint we all eventually chose was someone who was amazingly good in a terrible movie? Essentially three episodes in a row as of late have featured the panel praising the transcendent performance of a star in a terrible film: the great Gene Kelly in Xanadu, the fantastic Dolly Parton in Rhinestone, and the wonderful Emma Thompson in Junior. But who deserves top spot? I guess that depends on whether you think Kelly agelessly gracing through an aimless Xanadu, Dolly carrying an overwrought Stallone vehicle on her back, or Thompson carrying the comedic weight of an uneven film where she shouldn't be responsible for that at all is the hardest task. Or do you guys think there is a worthier Saint deserving of canonization? I'm excited for the debate.