I really liked this movie, Great songs and Great acting. Fun for the whole family.
MelBert8929's comments
Watching the trailer makes me looong for Gene Wilder. He embodied Willy Wonka. I hope Timothy Chalamet can fill the shoes that are set out for him. Willy Wonka is a bit mad-cap, after all!
Love this series. I think kids would love the stories and learn more about nature of animals and insects that live around them.
So far the first season has been alright, Looking forward to see if it gets any better in the 2nd.
Amazing movie
The Series that followed with Jack Klugman & Tony Randall was good too.
What a bizarre and horrific society.
I like the acting and the premise, Would love to see a longer version though.
Going to watch the previous movies so I get the story line straight..
This series was a completely new concept and I haven’t seen any like it since. There are only a few shows like this.
I watched this when it first came out. Loved it then, Love it now..
I have been impressed by Nicolas Cage’s acting of late, I have liked him since he did the Ghost Rider films.
I’m sorry, who are you talking about? I’ve never seen this show.
George Segal (February 13, 1934 – March 23, 2021) He Played Pop-Pop on the show
Now that Kate is confirmed dead can we get on with the original plot..
Nostradamus was on Drugs when he did his Quatrains.. Now if someone on Drugs tries to do what he did would get sent to an out patient facility & Treated for Drug abuse..
I have been watching this for years and it just keeps getting Better…
I love all of these Bond movies, Take’s me back to when they first came out…
Granted the man has his demons and has hurt a lot of people but that does not make him any less of a Comedian. He made a lot of people laugh through the years also..
I Was on the Streets of DT Seattle at the time of this Documentary, I knew all of these Kids, They were my friends and I morn the ones that died too early…
Been watching this show since it’s beginning.. Love it and what it morphed into.. Keep it UP!!
A much misunderstood and sadly dismissed musical was Herbert Ross’s 1981 “Pennies From Heaven”. It’s aching Art Deco melancholy was simply too much for audiences of the early ‘80s, awash as they were in “Morning in America” pomp.
Ironic, as its whole point was the contrast between the lighter-than-air musicals of the 1930s, built to soothe the despairing moviegoers of the day, and the bitter realities they faced upon leaving the theater, in the very depths of the Depression. As they were.
Ross did this in large part by re-imagining some of the most iconic musical numbers, subtly shifting them into a darkness more appropriate for the times. The film, while not entirely successful in its reach, at several points is indelibly powerful. This is one such moment.
George Carlin explains in his own words where he came from, what motivated him, and why he is who he is. Carlin reveals a much more sensitive and thoughtful side of himself. His demeanor stands in stark contrast to his angry stage persona. This film was surprisingly touching.