Holy shit!!!
Could anything?
Which one’s to please me? I do hope you don’t mean The Wicker Man with Nick Cage, 'cuz it suuuuuuuuuuuuux.
Really? Oh, damn… it came really highly recommended from a friend. Crap. Swing and a miss.
haven’t seen it in a while (Branagh’s ego sort of took over the planet with that one, but certainly worth a watch)
You’re more than welcome to judge that on your own, but it’s really predictable and NC is really phoning it in, except for a couple times when he horrifically overacts.
But other than that, it was great.
Wow, this episode really took an abrupt turn at the end.
It’s really a creepy one.
So…
um…
what…?
Is she working over librarians across the city? WTF’s going on?
accepting doughnuts from strangers? hardly seems prudent. is that code for random anonymous hookup?
Well, I got it, so might as well give it a shot. I was talking to a friend about what I thought of The Evil Dead vs. Evil Dead 2, and he recommended The Wicker Man. I shall go kill him now.
no–Eric didn’t show up for work. cancer’s back
Cameron: Protector of John, Befriender of Librarians, Bringer of Doughnuts.
Well, one interpretation is that he went into treatment because of cancer coming back. Another interpretation: he killed himself.
As Freud would say, sometimes a donut is just a donut.
guy in scenes from next ep is Carlos Jacott of Firefly, Angel and Buffy guestage
who played the demon masquerading as a human (Ken) in 3.01 Anne, previously played an agent in Being John Malkovich. He has been in She’s All That (with Sarah’s husband Freddie Prinze Jr), The Last Days of Disco, Grosse Point Blank, and he played Ramon the Pool Guy in Seinfeld. Carlos played Lawrence Dobson in Joss Whedon’s Firefly, and Richard in the Angel episode 1.07 Bachelor Party. He is one of five actors to appear in all three of Joss’s TV shows.
gods, I’m pathetic
Evil Dead has no pretensions of being more than it is. The Wicker Man does. The original '70s wasn’t much better, but at least you could expect that level of crapitude from horror movies back then.
Yeah, I went back and rewatched it. I guess I missed that the first time around.
Don’t forget Folder of Laundry.
Or one and then the other. :eek:
This introduces interesting concept: why don’t the machines just all go back 200 years into the past and take over the world and kill everyone? Surely no one can stop them. It’s gonna be easier than trying to fight the resistance in their present time (i.e. future), or trying to find John Connor in his teenage years. It’s just be so much easier to go back far enough that no one could offer resistance, and just kill everyone. A full-blown invasion of year 1850. It’d late 50 terminators just one year, tops.
borg already tried that–remember what happened to them?
Pathetic? That’s one way to put it… another way to put it? AWESOME!!!
Seriously, that is so cool that you know this.
Except that dramatically altering the past could prevent Skynet from ever coming online. Not to mention that if humanity is wiped out, who’s going to build the machines in the first place?
By the way, if Cameron goes through all these librarians one by one in southern California, how long before she runs into Giles? And then the machines vs. slayers, witches, vampires… that’s gonna be fun!