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| Warewolf... |
Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 1:50 pm |
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Guest
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Chris Sobieniak <sobieniak at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote in news:c43a0a26-0233-4247-
8299-ca4b74caed6b at (no spam) o13g2000vbl.googlegroups.com:
Quote: Let alone planning one for Gigantor as well.
[Scene: a generic hangar]
[The camera pans slowly upward]
[displaying portions of a familiar giant robot]
[as an americanized theme song plays...]
Bigger than bi-i-ig
Taller than ta-a-all
Faster than fa-a-ast
Stronger than stro-o-ong
Gi-gan-TOR!
[The camera stops at the head level]
[as the robot's entire body begins to shudder]
[and collapse into a pile of rusted scrap]
[A 12-year-old boy runs over to the pile]
Jimmy Sparks (stilted): No!! Gigantor! What-have-they-done-to-you?!
[The kid picks up one of the pieces]
[and discovers the words 'Made in Hollywood']
[engraved upon its surface]
[He screams in frustration toward the heavens]
Jimmy: NOOOOOOOOOOOOooooooooo!!!
[Nearby, a certain 'jive-talking' Autobot]
[breathes a sympathetic sigh]
[before he transforms and rolls out] |
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| Invid Fan... |
Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 3:00 pm |
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Guest
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In article <BbidneBt9eIVL3jXnZ2dnUVZ_jNi4p2d at (no spam) giganews.com>, Ubiquitous
<weberm at (no spam) polaris.net> wrote:
Quote: lukebenward at (no spam) gmail.com wrote:
"Astro Boy," which animation studio Imagi Entertainment produced at a
cost of $65 million, opened to a dismal $7 million. Summit
Entertainment distributed the movie, which drew a very modest family
crowd and will be a tough blow for Hong Kong-based Imagi, which was
financing its own movie for the first time.
I fail to see the reasoning behind making a theatrical movie based on
that cartoon. There certainly is no demand for it in the 'States.
A Hong Kong studio making their first big GGI movie about the biggest
character in Japan? Makes perfect sense. If you can con some US
distributor to pick it up, all the better. Now, a US company making
that movie aimed only at the US market would be really stupid, but an
international company has a different set of priorities.
--
Chris Mack *quote under construction*
'Invid Fan' |
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| Anim8rFSK... |
Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 3:20 pm |
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Guest
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In article <Xns9CB082B3B2053warewolfshawmail at (no spam) 69.16.185.247>,
Warewolf <warewolfmypants at (no spam) shaw.ca> wrote:
Quote: Chris Sobieniak <sobieniak at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote in news:c43a0a26-0233-4247-
8299-ca4b74caed6b at (no spam) o13g2000vbl.googlegroups.com:
Let alone planning one for Gigantor as well.
[Scene: a generic hangar]
[The camera pans slowly upward]
[displaying portions of a familiar giant robot]
[as an americanized theme song plays...]
Bigger than bi-i-ig
Taller than ta-a-all
Faster than fa-a-ast
Stronger than stro-o-ong
Gi-gan-TOR!
[The camera stops at the head level]
[as the robot's entire body begins to shudder]
[and collapse into a pile of rusted scrap]
[A 12-year-old boy runs over to the pile]
Jimmy Sparks (stilted): No!! Gigantor! What-have-they-done-to-you?!
[The kid picks up one of the pieces]
[and discovers the words 'Made in Hollywood']
[engraved upon its surface]
[He screams in frustration toward the heavens]
Jimmy: NOOOOOOOOOOOOooooooooo!!!
[Nearby, a certain 'jive-talking' Autobot]
[breathes a sympathetic sigh]
[before he transforms and rolls out]
Gamera is really neat
He is full of turtle meat
I believe in Gam-er-aaaaaaaa!
--
Stargate Universe SGU: It puts the "U" in "SUCKS"!
It's the show 'Defiling Gravity' would be if DG had more regulars,
fewer abortions, worse writers, and no budget for lighting.
Remember, you can't spell "disgust" without SGU! |
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| Not Sure... |
Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 5:06 pm |
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On Oct 26, 5:14 pm, trotsky <gmsi... at (no spam) email.com> wrote:
Quote: RichA wrote:
On Oct 26, 9:38 am, trotsky <gmsi... at (no spam) email.com> wrote:
RichA wrote:
On Oct 25, 5:06 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Company Town
The business behind the show
'Paranormal' continues to impress as the overall box office loses its
mojo
October 25, 2009 | 1:09 pm
LA Times, KJIH-TV Media (tinyurl.com/kjihtv)
Four movies with combined production budgets of more than $100 million
opened this weekend, but none of them managed to beat a movie that
cost $15,000.
6. "Astro Boy" (Summit/Imagi): Debuted to $7 million.
You could tell something was wrong. The ads for it were subdued and
few on TV from what I could see and it looked like a piece of crap.
Some heads will be chopped off for this one.
Hopefully at your house.
Sure, like I'd product Japcrap like that.
Can you translate that to English for those of us who don't speak asshole?
All that time up Steven's must've given you some fluency  |
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| trotsky... |
Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 6:14 pm |
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Guest
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RichA wrote:
Quote: On Oct 26, 9:38 am, trotsky <gmsi... at (no spam) email.com> wrote:
RichA wrote:
On Oct 25, 5:06 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Company Town
The business behind the show
'Paranormal' continues to impress as the overall box office loses its
mojo
October 25, 2009 | 1:09 pm
LA Times, KJIH-TV Media (tinyurl.com/kjihtv)
Four movies with combined production budgets of more than $100 million
opened this weekend, but none of them managed to beat a movie that
cost $15,000.
6. "Astro Boy" (Summit/Imagi): Debuted to $7 million.
You could tell something was wrong. The ads for it were subdued and
few on TV from what I could see and it looked like a piece of crap.
Some heads will be chopped off for this one.
Hopefully at your house.
Sure, like I'd product Japcrap like that.
Can you translate that to English for those of us who don't speak asshole? |
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| meistermag... |
Posted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 3:50 am |
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Guest
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On Oct 26, 8:14 pm, trotsky <gmsi... at (no spam) email.com> wrote:
Quote: RichA wrote:
On Oct 26, 9:38 am, trotsky <gmsi... at (no spam) email.com> wrote:
RichA wrote:
On Oct 25, 5:06 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Company Town
The business behind the show
'Paranormal' continues to impress as the overall box office loses its
mojo
October 25, 2009 | 1:09 pm
LA Times, KJIH-TV Media (tinyurl.com/kjihtv)
Four movies with combined production budgets of more than $100 million
opened this weekend, but none of them managed to beat a movie that
cost $15,000.
6. "Astro Boy" (Summit/Imagi): Debuted to $7 million.
You could tell something was wrong. The ads for it were subdued and
few on TV from what I could see and it looked like a piece of crap.
Some heads will be chopped off for this one.
Hopefully at your house.
Sure, like I'd product Japcrap like that.
Can you translate that to English for those of us who don't speak asshole?- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
So, Astro Boy only debuted at $7 million after costing $65 million to
make. It's not nice to mess with a Japanese original. |
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| Remysun... |
Posted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 6:15 am |
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Guest
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On Oct 26, 6:00 pm, Chris Sobieniak <sobien... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: Only odd difference I guess was the Jetsons film was animated, while
the Flintstones was live-action, but still, it's another attempt at
raping someone's childhood!
Better than taking it out on the child. |
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| Remysun... |
Posted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 6:17 am |
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Guest
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On Oct 26, 3:54 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: Stop making films out of retro cartoons! Didn't the 'The Flintstones'
movie teach you *anything*?! Before that, the ill-conceived 'The
Jetsons' movie.
No, because the live action Flintstones made just over a $100 million.
There was even some guru who referred to the movie in his "Nine Act
paradigm" involving a double reversal.
Act 0-- something goes bump in the night?!
Don't bother, it's not McKee or Syd Field. |
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| trotsky... |
Posted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 7:44 am |
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Not Sure wrote:
Quote: On Oct 26, 5:14 pm, trotsky <gmsi... at (no spam) email.com> wrote:
RichA wrote:
On Oct 26, 9:38 am, trotsky <gmsi... at (no spam) email.com> wrote:
RichA wrote:
On Oct 25, 5:06 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Company Town
The business behind the show
'Paranormal' continues to impress as the overall box office loses its
mojo
October 25, 2009 | 1:09 pm
LA Times, KJIH-TV Media (tinyurl.com/kjihtv)
Four movies with combined production budgets of more than $100 million
opened this weekend, but none of them managed to beat a movie that
cost $15,000.
6. "Astro Boy" (Summit/Imagi): Debuted to $7 million.
You could tell something was wrong. The ads for it were subdued and
few on TV from what I could see and it looked like a piece of crap.
Some heads will be chopped off for this one.
Hopefully at your house.
Sure, like I'd product Japcrap like that.
Can you translate that to English for those of us who don't speak asshole?
All that time up Steven's must've given you some fluency
We already know you speak asshole, fred titmouse. LOL!!! |
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| Anim8rFSK... |
Posted: Wed Oct 28, 2009 12:32 am |
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Guest
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In article
<9c9f616b-88c2-43a2-8b83-fa6c263abcf0 at (no spam) y23g2000yqd.googlegroups.com>,
Chris Sobieniak <sobieniak at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Oct 26, 2:54 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 25, 5:06 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Company Town
The business behind the show
'Paranormal' continues to impress as the overall box office loses its
mojo
October 25, 2009 | 1:09 pm
LA Times, KJIH-TV Media (tinyurl.com/kjihtv)
Four movies with combined production budgets of more than $100 million
opened this weekend, but none of them managed to beat a movie that
cost $15,000.
Paramount's "Paranormal Activity" expanded from 863 theaters to 1,945
this weekend and sold a studio-estimated $22 million, making it No. 1
for the first time since it opened more than four weeks ago. The
horror flick, which was produced for $15,000 and Paramount acquired
for $300,000, has grossed an astounding total of $62.5 million.
Paramount plans to add as many as 500 locations Friday. In theaters
where it played last weekend, "Paranormal Activity" was down a mild
33%. If current trends continue, the movie will almost certainly end
up collecting more than $100 million.
Perhaps more impressive, it vanquished one of Hollywood's most
successful horror series. "Saw VI" opened to a disappointing $14.8
million, obviously damaged in large part by "Paranormal." That's the
lowest debut for any film in the annual series, even the original in
2004, which started with $18.3 million. All the other "Saw" films have
debuted to more than $30 million.
The movie was better received by horror fans than "Saw V," however.
Last year's poorly regarded entry got an average grade of C from
moviegoers, according to market research firm CinemaScore, but the new
movie got a B. Although "Saw VI" will almost certainly end up as the
lowest-grossing entry in the series, Lionsgate is hopeful that it will
benefit from solid word of mouth, particularly among horror fans who
chose "Paranormal" this weekend.
The good news for Lionsgate is that "Saw VI" cost a modest $11 million
to produce, meaning it shouldn't be a big money loser and could even
eke out a profit.
The same can't be said for the weekend's other new movies, all of
which cost more and opened far worse.
"Astro Boy," which animation studio Imagi Entertainment produced at a
cost of $65 million, opened to a dismal $7 million. Summit
Entertainment distributed the movie, which drew a very modest family
crowd and will be a tough blow for Hong Kong-based Imagi, which was
financing its own movie for the first time.
The news was equally bad for lead financier Ted Waitt, co-founder of
computer company Gateway Inc., and Fox Searchlight: Their "Amelia"
opened to a very weak $4 million. The movie cost $40 million and
received largely negative reviews, which probably turned off its
target adult audience.
"Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant" was aimed at tween girls
and boys, but didn't do much better, opening to just $6.3 million.
Universal Pictures and Relativity Media split the $40-million
production budget.
There was some good news among holdovers. "Law Abiding Citizen" fell
only 40% on its second weekend, and "Couples Retreat" continues to
play well, dropping only 36% on its third weekend. But "Where the Wild
Things Are" played more like a big-budget event film and less like a
family movie with good buzz on its second weekend, dropping a sizable
56%.
Total box-office receipts fell more than 9% this weekend, according to
Hollywood.com. They will probably be soft next weekend as well,
because Halloween is on a Saturday and the only new movie will be the
Michael Jackson flick "This Is It," which debuts Tuesday night.
Overseas, Fox opened "The Fantastic Mr. Fox" in author Roald Dahl's
native land of Britain to a disappointing $2.5 million.
In limited release, IFC opened the new Lars von Trier film
"Antichrist" to a decent $70,000 at six locations.
The well-reviewed "An Education" continues to play well as Sony
Pictures Classics expanded it to 31 theaters. It grossed a solid
$408,002, bringing its total to almost $1 million.
Here are the top 10 films at the domestic box office, according to
studio estimates and Hollywood.com:
1. "Paranormal Activity" (Paramount): $22 million on its fifth
weekend, bringing its total to $62.5 million.
2. "Saw VI" (Lionsgate): Opened to $14.8 million.
3. "Where the Wild Things Are" (Warner Bros./Village Roadshow/
Legendary): Dropped 56% on its second weekend to $14.4 million. Total
U.S. and Canadian ticket sales: $54 million.
4. "Law Abiding Citizen" (Overture/Film Department): Declined 40% to
$12.7 million on its second weekend. Domestic total: $40.3 million.
5. "Couples Retreat" (Universal/Relativity): Down a modest 36% on its
third weekend to $11.1 million, bringing cumulative domestic ticket
sales to $78.2 million. Overseas it has grossed $17.2 million in seven
countries.
6. "Astro Boy" (Summit/Imagi): Debuted to $7 million.
7. "The Stepfather" (Sony Screen Gems): Fell 44% on its second weekend
to $6.5 million. Domestic total: $20.4 million.
8. "Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant" (Universal/Relativity):
Launched to $6.3 million.
9. "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs" (Sony): $5.6 million, down 30%
on its sixth weekend, bringing its total ticket sales to $115.2
million.
10. "Zombieland" (Sony/Relativity): Declined 44% to $4.3 million.
Domestic total: $67.3 million.
-- Ben Fritz
Top photo: Katie Featherston and Micah Sloat in "Paranormal Activity."
Credit: Paramount Pictures.
[KJIH]
Bottom photo: John C. Reilly and Chris Massoglia in "Cirque du Freak:
The Vampire's Assistant." Credit: David
Lee / Universal Pictures.[KJIH]
Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, go, go.
Stop making films out of retro cartoons! Didn't the 'The Flintstones'
movie teach you *anything*?! Before that, the ill-conceived 'The
Jetsons' movie.
Only odd difference I guess was the Jetsons film was animated, while
the Flintstones was live-action, but still, it's another attempt at
raping someone's childhood!
I'll never forgive The Jetsons for dubbing Judy with Tiffany.
--
Stargate Universe SGU: It puts the "U" in "SUCKS"!
It's the show 'Defiling Gravity' would be if DG had more regulars,
fewer abortions, worse writers, and no budget for lighting.
Remember, you can't spell "disgust" without SGU! |
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| Taylor... |
Posted: Wed Oct 28, 2009 12:57 am |
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Guest
|
On Oct 28, 2:32 am, Anim8rFSK <ANIM8R... at (no spam) cox.net> wrote:
Quote: In article
9c9f616b-88c2-43a2-8b83-fa6c263ab... at (no spam) y23g2000yqd.googlegroups.com>,
Chris Sobieniak <sobien... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 26, 2:54 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 25, 5:06 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Company Town
The business behind the show
'Paranormal' continues to impress as the overall box office loses its
mojo
October 25, 2009 | 1:09 pm
LA Times, KJIH-TV Media (tinyurl.com/kjihtv)
Four movies with combined production budgets of more than $100 million
opened this weekend, but none of them managed to beat a movie that
cost $15,000.
Paramount's "Paranormal Activity" expanded from 863 theaters to 1,945
this weekend and sold a studio-estimated $22 million, making it No. 1
for the first time since it opened more than four weeks ago. The
horror flick, which was produced for $15,000 and Paramount acquired
for $300,000, has grossed an astounding total of $62.5 million.
Paramount plans to add as many as 500 locations Friday. In theaters
where it played last weekend, "Paranormal Activity" was down a mild
33%. If current trends continue, the movie will almost certainly end
up collecting more than $100 million.
Perhaps more impressive, it vanquished one of Hollywood's most
successful horror series. "Saw VI" opened to a disappointing $14.8
million, obviously damaged in large part by "Paranormal." That's the
lowest debut for any film in the annual series, even the original in
2004, which started with $18.3 million. All the other "Saw" films have
debuted to more than $30 million.
The movie was better received by horror fans than "Saw V," however.
Last year's poorly regarded entry got an average grade of C from
moviegoers, according to market research firm CinemaScore, but the new
movie got a B. Although "Saw VI" will almost certainly end up as the
lowest-grossing entry in the series, Lionsgate is hopeful that it will
benefit from solid word of mouth, particularly among horror fans who
chose "Paranormal" this weekend.
The good news for Lionsgate is that "Saw VI" cost a modest $11 million
to produce, meaning it shouldn't be a big money loser and could even
eke out a profit.
The same can't be said for the weekend's other new movies, all of
which cost more and opened far worse.
"Astro Boy," which animation studio Imagi Entertainment produced at a
cost of $65 million, opened to a dismal $7 million. Summit
Entertainment distributed the movie, which drew a very modest family
crowd and will be a tough blow for Hong Kong-based Imagi, which was
financing its own movie for the first time.
The news was equally bad for lead financier Ted Waitt, co-founder of
computer company Gateway Inc., and Fox Searchlight: Their "Amelia"
opened to a very weak $4 million. The movie cost $40 million and
received largely negative reviews, which probably turned off its
target adult audience.
"Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant" was aimed at tween girls
and boys, but didn't do much better, opening to just $6.3 million.
Universal Pictures and Relativity Media split the $40-million
production budget.
There was some good news among holdovers. "Law Abiding Citizen" fell
only 40% on its second weekend, and "Couples Retreat" continues to
play well, dropping only 36% on its third weekend. But "Where the Wild
Things Are" played more like a big-budget event film and less like a
family movie with good buzz on its second weekend, dropping a sizable
56%.
Total box-office receipts fell more than 9% this weekend, according to
Hollywood.com. They will probably be soft next weekend as well,
because Halloween is on a Saturday and the only new movie will be the
Michael Jackson flick "This Is It," which debuts Tuesday night.
Overseas, Fox opened "The Fantastic Mr. Fox" in author Roald Dahl's
native land of Britain to a disappointing $2.5 million.
In limited release, IFC opened the new Lars von Trier film
"Antichrist" to a decent $70,000 at six locations.
The well-reviewed "An Education" continues to play well as Sony
Pictures Classics expanded it to 31 theaters. It grossed a solid
$408,002, bringing its total to almost $1 million.
Here are the top 10 films at the domestic box office, according to
studio estimates and Hollywood.com:
1. "Paranormal Activity" (Paramount): $22 million on its fifth
weekend, bringing its total to $62.5 million.
2. "Saw VI" (Lionsgate): Opened to $14.8 million.
3. "Where the Wild Things Are" (Warner Bros./Village Roadshow/
Legendary): Dropped 56% on its second weekend to $14.4 million. Total
U.S. and Canadian ticket sales: $54 million.
4. "Law Abiding Citizen" (Overture/Film Department): Declined 40% to
$12.7 million on its second weekend. Domestic total: $40.3 million.
5. "Couples Retreat" (Universal/Relativity): Down a modest 36% on its
third weekend to $11.1 million, bringing cumulative domestic ticket
sales to $78.2 million. Overseas it has grossed $17.2 million in seven
countries.
6. "Astro Boy" (Summit/Imagi): Debuted to $7 million.
7. "The Stepfather" (Sony Screen Gems): Fell 44% on its second weekend
to $6.5 million. Domestic total: $20.4 million.
8. "Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant" (Universal/Relativity):
Launched to $6.3 million.
9. "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs" (Sony): $5.6 million, down 30%
on its sixth weekend, bringing its total ticket sales to $115.2
million.
10. "Zombieland" (Sony/Relativity): Declined 44% to $4.3 million.
Domestic total: $67.3 million.
-- Ben Fritz
Top photo: Katie Featherston and Micah Sloat in "Paranormal Activity."
Credit: Paramount Pictures.
[KJIH]
Bottom photo: John C. Reilly and Chris Massoglia in "Cirque du Freak:
The Vampire's Assistant." Credit: David
Lee / Universal Pictures.[KJIH]
Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, go, go.
Stop making films out of retro cartoons! Didn't the 'The Flintstones'
movie teach you *anything*?! Before that, the ill-conceived 'The
Jetsons' movie.
Only odd difference I guess was the Jetsons film was animated, while
the Flintstones was live-action, but still, it's another attempt at
raping someone's childhood!
I'll never forgive The Jetsons for dubbing Judy with Tiffany.
Dana Hill as Elroy Jetson. *just shudders*
George Jetson was one of _the_ biggest asshole cartoon dads.
Quote:
--
Stargate Universe SGU: It puts the "U" in "SUCKS"!
It's the show 'Defiling Gravity' would be if DG had more regulars,
fewer abortions, worse writers, and no budget for lighting.
Remember, you can't spell "disgust" without SGU!- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text - |
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| Your Name... |
Posted: Wed Oct 28, 2009 2:04 pm |
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Guest
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"Anim8rFSK" <ANIM8Rfsk at (no spam) cox.net> wrote in message
news:ANIM8Rfsk-00C5FB.23320927102009 at (no spam) news.dc1.easynews.com...
Quote: In article
9c9f616b-88c2-43a2-8b83-fa6c263abcf0 at (no spam) y23g2000yqd.googlegroups.com>,
Chris Sobieniak <sobieniak at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 26, 2:54 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, go, go.
Stop making films out of retro cartoons! Didn't the 'The Flintstones'
movie teach you *anything*?! Before that, the ill-conceived 'The
Jetsons' movie.
Only odd difference I guess was the Jetsons film was animated, while
the Flintstones was live-action, but still, it's another attempt at
raping someone's childhood!
I'll never forgive The Jetsons for dubbing Judy with Tiffany.
Last I read they were making a new Jetsons movie, a silly live-action one.
:-(
On the original topic, its says the movies only "made" $X as if it's all
over, which is complete nonsense since most (if not all) of those listed
haven't even started playing in many countries yet, like here in New Zeland.
Astroboy, for example, is probably being held until the school holidays in
December. :-\ |
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| Taylor... |
Posted: Thu Oct 29, 2009 3:14 pm |
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Guest
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On Oct 28, 4:04 pm, "Your Name" <your.n... at (no spam) isp.com> wrote:
Quote: "Anim8rFSK" <ANIM8R... at (no spam) cox.net> wrote in message
news:ANIM8Rfsk-00C5FB.23320927102009 at (no spam) news.dc1.easynews.com...
In article
9c9f616b-88c2-43a2-8b83-fa6c263ab... at (no spam) y23g2000yqd.googlegroups.com>,
Chris Sobieniak <sobien... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 26, 2:54 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, go, go.
Stop making films out of retro cartoons! Didn't the 'The Flintstones'
movie teach you *anything*?! Before that, the ill-conceived 'The
Jetsons' movie.
Only odd difference I guess was the Jetsons film was animated, while
the Flintstones was live-action, but still, it's another attempt at
raping someone's childhood!
I'll never forgive The Jetsons for dubbing Judy with Tiffany.
Last I read they were making a new Jetsons movie, a silly live-action one..
:-(
Wow, did William Hurt, Mimi Rogers, Heather Graham, Matt LeBlanc, etc.
in 'Lost In Space' teach them *nothing*?!
Quote: On the original topic, its says the movies only "made" $X as if it's all
over, which is complete nonsense since most (if not all) of those listed
haven't even started playing in many countries yet, like here in New Zeland.
Astroboy, for example, is probably being held until the school holidays in
December. :-\- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text - |
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| Gazelle MacFrenzy... |
Posted: Thu Oct 29, 2009 6:47 pm |
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Guest
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On Oct 29, 6:14 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Oct 28, 4:04 pm, "Your Name" <your.n... at (no spam) isp.com> wrote:
"Anim8rFSK" <ANIM8R... at (no spam) cox.net> wrote in message
news:ANIM8Rfsk-00C5FB.23320927102009 at (no spam) news.dc1.easynews.com...
In article
9c9f616b-88c2-43a2-8b83-fa6c263ab... at (no spam) y23g2000yqd.googlegroups.com>,
Chris Sobieniak <sobien... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 26, 2:54 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, go, go.
Stop making films out of retro cartoons! Didn't the 'The Flintstones'
movie teach you *anything*?! Before that, the ill-conceived 'The
Jetsons' movie.
Only odd difference I guess was the Jetsons film was animated, while
the Flintstones was live-action, but still, it's another attempt at
raping someone's childhood!
I'll never forgive The Jetsons for dubbing Judy with Tiffany.
Last I read they were making a new Jetsons movie, a silly live-action one.
:-(
Wow, did William Hurt, Mimi Rogers, Heather Graham, Matt LeBlanc, etc.
in 'Lost In Space' teach them *nothing*?!
On the original topic, its says the movies only "made" $X as if it's all
over, which is complete nonsense since most (if not all) of those listed
haven't even started playing in many countries yet, like here in New Zeland.
Astroboy, for example, is probably being held until the school holidays in
December. :-\- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I'd love to have Beany and Ceicl..my username sounds like something
Beany would have used in the 60s cartoon, even better in the fifties
since Giselle MacKenzie was more current in the puppet show era.
Anyway, Janet Waldo, aka Judy Jetson, was and is unmatched at those
voices..she was in Hanna-Barbera, also possibly Warner and Disney on
rare occaisons, Tiffany will NEVER touch me. Thanks Debbie Gibson for
not auditioning for the role, but then she also had more and different
connections.
As for Wild Things Are.. the falling office doesn't hurt it overlal,
especially in the world of second weeks..
Clint Eastwood made "Law Abiding Citizien"! LOL, no not really, it's
F.Gray Gary, but the "white due who's gonna get justice even if it
means risking himself" to me rung as such..though it ain't like Gerard
Butler was looking forward to a surprise at the end that might make
his character question his means. This was Jamie Foxx's first since
the SOloist, which on a Princess Cruise ship I had the pleasure to
rewatch.. |
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| Anim8rFSK... |
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 5:59 am |
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Guest
|
In article
<8c806c8b-a929-4475-8627-214b24f7df30 at (no spam) f1g2000prf.googlegroups.com>,
Gazelle MacFrenzy <johncrrs at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Oct 29, 6:14 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 28, 4:04 pm, "Your Name" <your.n... at (no spam) isp.com> wrote:
"Anim8rFSK" <ANIM8R... at (no spam) cox.net> wrote in message
news:ANIM8Rfsk-00C5FB.23320927102009 at (no spam) news.dc1.easynews.com...
In article
9c9f616b-88c2-43a2-8b83-fa6c263ab... at (no spam) y23g2000yqd.googlegroups.com>,
Chris Sobieniak <sobien... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 26, 2:54 pm, Taylor <lukebenw... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, Speedracer. Go, go, go.
Stop making films out of retro cartoons! Didn't the 'The
Flintstones'
movie teach you *anything*?! Before that, the ill-conceived 'The
Jetsons' movie.
Only odd difference I guess was the Jetsons film was animated, while
the Flintstones was live-action, but still, it's another attempt at
raping someone's childhood!
I'll never forgive The Jetsons for dubbing Judy with Tiffany.
Last I read they were making a new Jetsons movie, a silly live-action
one.
:-(
Wow, did William Hurt, Mimi Rogers, Heather Graham, Matt LeBlanc, etc.
in 'Lost In Space' teach them *nothing*?!
Nope. They keep hiring Akiva instead of running him out of town.
Quote:
On the original topic, its says the movies only "made" $X as if it's all
over, which is complete nonsense since most (if not all) of those listed
haven't even started playing in many countries yet, like here in New
Zeland.
Astroboy, for example, is probably being held until the school holidays
in
December. :-\- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I'd love to have Beany and Ceicl..my username sounds like something
Beany would have used in the 60s cartoon, even better in the fifties
since Giselle MacKenzie was more current in the puppet show era.
Anyway, Janet Waldo, aka Judy Jetson, was and is unmatched at those
yes
Quote: voices..she was in Hanna-Barbera, also possibly Warner and Disney on
rare occaisons, Tiffany will NEVER touch me. Thanks Debbie Gibson for
not auditioning for the role, but then she also had more and different
connections.
As for Wild Things Are.. the falling office doesn't hurt it overlal,
especially in the world of second weeks..
Clint Eastwood made "Law Abiding Citizien"! LOL, no not really, it's
F.Gray Gary, but the "white due who's gonna get justice even if it
means risking himself" to me rung as such..though it ain't like Gerard
Butler was looking forward to a surprise at the end that might make
his character question his means. This was Jamie Foxx's first since
the SOloist, which on a Princess Cruise ship I had the pleasure to
rewatch..
--
Stargate Universe SGU: It puts the "U" in "SUCKS"!
It's the show 'Defiling Gravity' would be if DG had more regulars,
fewer abortions, worse writers, and no budget for lighting.
Remember, you can't spell "disgust" without SGU! |
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