Reviews
It's Like, You Know... (1999)
It's Like, You Know... funny as hell
I finally figured out the title... it's muttered by someone atleast once an episode (usually the worst joke of the episode... but still) but it seems so fake. When I first saw an ad for this, I thought it looked stupid and pointless, but I watched an episode anyway... and I found I couldn't stop, it was the best written show sence M*A*S*H and the best cast sence NewsRadio, and is the best show sence "The Simpsons". It has the same setup as Seinfeld (Punchline before the explanation). And haven't we always wondered why "Q" is in the middle of the alphabet? The best new show of 1999, followed closely by "Futu
Small Soldiers (1998)
Some fun, but lacks something... Phil/
I saw this movie because I learned that Phil Hartman was in it. I have always been a Hartman fan, and I'm 15. When I saw this movie I was disappointed. The only scenes remotely funny were the scenes centuring around the creators of the toys and some of the scenes with Phil. Phil Hartman has proved time and time again that he is a great actor, and yet he appered very little in this movie. I think it would have been more humerous if it was all adults dealing with these toys. One of them happens to be a toy collector, gets this toy, and it starts trying to destroy them.
Wild Wild West (1999)
Ugh...
Kevin Kline made a horrible move from going into this film... I found him funny... until now... Remember the scene in Butch Casiddy where they jump off the cliff and shout out "S---"? Well they do the same thing, only land in it. And the movie is it. Don't waste your cash
Titanic (1997)
I don't see what the fuss is.
It's a decent movie. But it was all hype. The two most hyped parts of this film, Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio were the two worst actors in the movies. Billy Zane and Bill Paxton were surperb, but they didn't get nearly enough screen time. Anyway, if you see this movie, expect to both hate and love the bad guy, which is what a makes a good movie great. The rest of the acting (excluding Victor Garber and Bernard Hill) was weak. Overall, it deserves a 3. Sorry, girls.