A Movie for Kids? - Mar 04, 2008 - 02:07pm
Sleeping Beauty's mother is not dead. She and King Stephen are present when the curse is put upon the baby and at the end of the film when she is re-united with her parents. You're probably thinking Snow White... or Cinderella... which, of course, proves your point... But not Sleeping Beauty.
SMALLVILLE: Siren - Feb 11, 2008 - 12:58pm
It amazes me that no one, including the writer of this article, knows what the word "melodrama" means. From the dictionary: "a sensational dramatic piece with exaggerated characters and exciting events intended to appeal to the emotions."
Sounds like a Star Wars prequel to me. What we get with Smallville is mellow drama, not melodrama.
RANT: Rivet Counting - Feb 11, 2008 - 12:43pm
I don't think Supernatural is a repeat this week. TV Guide lists it as one but the description seems new and Lee Whiteside's upcoming episode guide (http://www.sftv.org/sftv/sftvschd.txt) shows it as a new episode. So you Supernatural fans might want to tune in on Thursday.
HEROES: Setting The Record Straight - Dec 10, 2007 - 12:08pm
Where's the Journeyman love? New episode tonight. New episode next Monday night and the last one produced next Wednesday night. Come on, watch and become a believer!
Small Screen, Big Screen: Star Trek - Dec 19, 2006 - 12:03pm
Stephen, come on. You're the one writing the article. You're the one positioned as the expert. It's one thing to be wrong on the Goldsmith count. He's listed, after all, despite his death. But your mentioning, twice, of the names "Brannon and Braga" is pretty much lazy. The first time I came across it, I shrugged, figuring you'd sorta spat it out. Everyone's allowed a typo here and there. But then I came across it again. For the record: "Brannon and Braga" are the same guy. His name is Brannon Braga. The other guy you're probably thinking of is Rick Berman. Rick Berman, as even the manliest of fanboys knows, was the guy who inherrited the Star Trek universe when Roddenberry died by virtue of being Roddenberry's glorified gopher on TNG at the time. It's Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, whose names are often spoken together as "Berman and Braga." Come on, man. When you write an article like this, you're supposed to be the expert.
Sleeping Beauty's mother is not dead. She and King Stephen are present when the curse is put upon the baby and at the end of the film when she is re-united with her parents. You're probably thinking Snow White... or Cinderella... which, of course, proves your point... But not Sleeping Beauty.