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May 31, 2007

New stuff

PAPRIKA finally opens in theaters this week, and I hope everyone goes to check it out. Among other venues, it'll be playing at the new Landmark Westside Pavilion megaplex opening tomorrow.

I reviewed the film a month or so ago...This week, I have an interview with the director up.

Plus a review of another cool indie: PIERREPOINT - THE LAST HANGMAN. Here's a sample:


Morbid Goths and reserved Anglophiles can at last find some common ground, as both groups are likely to be fascinated by Adrian Shergold’s Pierrepoint—The Last Hangman. Much like Vera Drake, directed by Shergold’s mentor Mike Leigh, it’s the story of an average, modest-looking, middle-class Brit who just happens to deal a little death on the side.

“It’s just in me. I always knew it would come out someday,” says Albert Pierrepoint (Timothy Spall) of his vocation as an executioner, one inherited from his father. Right off the bat, we learn the tricks of the trade as he does—how to greet the condemned in a manner that gets them quickly turned around and disoriented (or rather, since this is England, “disorientated”), confusing them enough that they can be swiftly walked into the gallows room before they can get a bead on what’s happening. The first time Pierrepoint participates as a hangman’s assistant, he manages to be completely businesslike and routine, while his mentor shows signs of falling apart. It isn’t long before the trainee becomes the expert.

read the whole thing

Posted by LYT at 3:32 PM | Comments (0)

Survey Sez?

Reader poll...

Do you want me to update here every time I do a new blog post at OCweekly.com?

Or have you bookmarked it already? (if not, you should...it's me plus approximately six other wordsmith geniuses)

Posted by LYT at 1:51 AM | Comments (5)

May 29, 2007

Do tell...

Recent reader feedback:

"I have to say what you've written is not a critical review but an opinion of yours."

Posted by LYT at 3:33 PM | Comments (3)

New blog about sodas

Complete with nifty new logo for me.

Let us pause again to give thanks and be amazed that an acclaimed publication actually lets me do my thing this freely.

Posted by LYT at 3:29 PM | Comments (4)

May 28, 2007

Memorial Day

On Earth Day, recently, I noticed more than one conservative blogger "joking" about how they were going to celebrate by polluting, littering, driving an SUV in circles, etc. Hilarious stuff, right? Let's destroy our own environment just to piss off some lefties. Naturally, liberals were humorless for not seeing the joke.

How well do you think it would go down if I were to write something like this: "It's Memorial Day, and I'm going to celebrate by shitting on a soldier's grave, and wiping my ass with the American flag. Then I'm going to spit on some returning veterans at the airport, burn a stack of Bibles for good measure, pray to Mohammed, and have a little gay sex on the front lawn of an elementary school."

Funny, right?

Obviously I mean not a word of that hypothetical paragraph. But how did it make you feel?


UPDATE: I actually ended up spending the day with some U.S. Marines fresh out of training and ready to ship out in a month or so. Man, them guys can drink! Interestingly, perhaps, those who expressed an opinion said they disagree with the president, but that it doesn't matter -- their duty is to God, country, and corps. It's given many of them a purpose, and it's clear to me from talking to them that even if some of us on the outside may think troops are dying in vain, they don't at all, nor would they ever, because their purpose is to serve, no matter the mission.

These guys WANT to go to Iraq. Whether we want them there or not, I support their decision to choose that. Is that what we call supporting the troops?

Posted by LYT at 12:46 PM | Comments (4)

May 27, 2007

Harvey Keitel is doing Gatorade commercials?

Relax, I'm not going to accuse him of selling out. I'm sure he needs the money for prostate treatments.

I just wonder who decided that he should be the poster boy for a sports drink. True, he looks like he needs to hydrate more often, but I'm not sure he reaches the target demographic.

Posted by LYT at 1:46 PM | Comments (4)

May 26, 2007

Wow - Star Wars SEQUELS...sort of

The new animated series continues the saga with the original characters!

Check out the trailer.

I'm not crazy about the stylized look, but if the writing's good enough, that won't be an issue. Looks like there are flashbacks involved, as there are some Episode II Clonetroopers in there as well as Vader and Mace Windu.

Here's hoping they can get some of the original cast to do voice-overs -- how cool would that be? (I imagine Anthony Daniels has the time).

Posted by LYT at 12:28 PM | Comments (2)

LYT, food critic

well, sort of.

Posted by LYT at 1:20 AM | Comments (0)

May 25, 2007

I KNOW WHO KILLED ME trailer is now online

Get your first glimpse at what happens when my twisted friend Chris gets a budget and a megastar to work with.

GO LOOK!

Update: and now that I've seen it, I have to say that if I didn't know enough to get me to go already, this trailer would not have sold me. Makes the movie look really generic and blah.

I know there's a lot more to it than they're showing, though.

Posted by LYT at 6:03 PM | Comments (2)

Hot chick trying to look smart

albasmall.jpg

Jessica Alba getting all scientific in the new Fantastic Four sequel. God damn, she's smokin'.


[obligatory disclaimer: I like all types, and you do not have to look like this for me to be attracted to you. That should go without saying, but somehow it never does.]

Posted by LYT at 12:45 AM | Comments (6)

the family gets bigger

My cousin Lucy just recently welcomed to the world her first-born son, Zack Huntly.

Can't wait to meet him in a couple months.

Posted by LYT at 12:12 AM | Comments (1)

May 24, 2007

Depp-a-dee-doodah

My Pirates 3 review is now online. Here's the lead:

You can say many things about Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End, but you can’t say it doesn’t give you your money’s worth. For 167 minutes, you get familiar characters, elaborate set pieces, visual spectacle, multiple double-crosses (some genuinely unexpected), epic battles, thoroughly un-Disney-like blood and guts, and some impressively weird moments that would never be allowed in any mainstream movie if there were a doubt its financial success is all-but-guaranteed. What there isn’t is a slow moment; unlike its cinematic predecessor Dead Man’s Chest, this third installment doesn’t waste your time.

And the whole thing is here.

Posted by LYT at 2:34 PM | Comments (2)

May 23, 2007

LOST - season finale [spoilers]

Okay - I never would have thought those were "flash-forwards" without reading AICN talkbacks.

I thought the big reveal was that Kate and Jack knew each other before the crash, and were maybe related somehow. But the consensus seems to be that this was a look into the future.

What's the proof of that? Anyone?

Posted by LYT at 11:36 PM | Comments (3)

Bug

BUG is the only major movie that dares go head-to-head with PIRATES 3. I reviewed it last November, but if you're like me you maybe skip over festival reviews until such time as they become relevant again.

If that's the case, here's a link to my original blog review of BUG.

Posted by LYT at 7:05 PM | Comments (0)

The Three "Arrrr"s

Pirates of the Caribbean 3 comes out tomorrow, as will my review of it. I was initially mixed on the first film, but liked it quite a bit better on second viewing. Two I was really mixed on, finding it pretty but empty, with some awkward direction and storytelling.

I'll reveal that I liked three quite a bit (detailed reasons why tomorrow). But the developing consensus seems to be that critics aren't liking it, in large part because they find the plot "confusing."

This is where I have a bit of an issue. People who'll gladly sit through David Lynch's three-hour INLAND EMPIRE trying to make sense of the plot even when Lynch himself has more or less said that there isn't one per se; people who piss and moan that summer movies sacrifice character development at the expense of special effects; people who complain that Spider-Man 3's story was silly and nonsensical...

These people are now complaining because there's actual character development and intrigue in POTC3? If it were a Bollywood movie, they'd give it a chance, I bet. If an Eastern European movie about the futility of life had exactly the same amount of subplots, it'd be on ten best lists across the board. If my pal Andy Klein doesn't like it, I will insist that he would if it were in Cantonese.

I'm often surprised by mass reactions. I remember coming out of THE MATRIX RELOADED thinking it was as perfect a sequel as you could get, only to realize that I was the only person who felt that way. I came out of THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING wondering if Peter Jackson knew what a medium shot was, and certainly not thinking it Oscar-worthy.

So people may hate PIRATES 3 as well. I'll be surprised if they do, but I've certainly been surprised before.

Oh, and another thing to watch out for: when critics get frustrated at confusing plots in big summer movies, they tend to start throwing out spoilers left and right. Steer clear of all reviews on this one if you're looking forward to it at all. Even mine, while free of the movie's biggest surprises, may have more than you want to know about.

Posted by LYT at 1:36 PM | Comments (7)

May 22, 2007

News that will make some of you very happy

I just bought my first cellular telephone.

No, you can't have the number. It's for EMERGENCIES. Besides, I haven't activated it yet, and won't until I need to.

What was my final impetus? A combination of a 4 am freeway breakdown, and a ride into the deep desert that was hell on the suspension.

The dude at Best Buy was dumbstruck when I told him it was my first. And even though it cost $20, they tried to sell me an "insurance plan" for $5.99. No thanks.

Posted by LYT at 9:52 PM | Comments (10)

May 21, 2007

Were you hoping I'd blog the Fangoria convention?

Because I did.

Posted by LYT at 2:17 PM | Comments (0)

May 18, 2007

New OC blog entry

go look.

Posted by LYT at 5:36 PM | Comments (0)

May 17, 2007

New article by me

Here's the lede:

The competitors come from all over Orange County and run the gamut of shapes and sizes. Some wear tutus, others black skull-emblem T-shirts. A few sport fancy jewelry, and more than one don flame-etched goggles to shield against the morning sun. The richest are backed by crews with matching team T-shirts, but many are here simply with two companions to ensure the day’s events run as planned.

The search for America’s fastest Chihuahua has begun.

Go read the whole thing.

Also, I did a new blog post over there.

Posted by LYT at 6:01 PM | Comments (0)

Have you seen Fred Thompson's wife?

In this article, at least, which is pro-Fred...she looks like his granddaughter!

Wonder if that'll be a factor in his decision to run for prez or not?

Posted by LYT at 1:25 PM | Comments (3)

And while i'm plugging shit...

...It occurs to me that I've been very lax in promoting NO SHAME THEATER, a troupe I've been a part of for months now.

The last show of the season is Friday, at 11 pm. at the Powerhouse theater in Santa Monica, at 2nd and Marine.

Here's the deal:

No Shame features a series of scenes, all original, all less than 5 minutes long. If you want to write one, bring it and turn it in by 10, casting it with people who are already there. If you want to act, show up by ten and sign up.

Whether you come as participant or spectator, it costs $5 and comes with a free beer.

If you don't think I have an acting range, please do me a favor and show up to be proven full o' shit.

Posted by LYT at 1:48 AM | Comments (5)

FANGORIA CONVENTION this weekend

I have friends to plug here...

First, Jaye Barnes Luckett will be on a composers panel to discuss her work on Lucky McKee's films. This will be the first opportunity to purchase her new soundtrack CD compilation, which features photos by ME!

ALSO, Paul Hough's short film THE ANGEL, which I worked on and inspired the story for, will be screening as part of a short films program on Saturday at 1 p.m.

AND Nathan Baesel, star of BEHIND THE MASK: THE RISE OF LESLIE VERNON, whom I gave a lot of press to on this site back in February (see photos to the left of this entry, still), will be there too, along with the movie's director Scott Glosserman. If you get to meet Nathan, tell him you read about him here.

More info at the convention website

In related news, I finally got a look at the ROMAN dvd, and can report that the feature entitled "highlight reel" gives you a couple shots of the good ol' rainbow hair and some LYT audio. It's too bad my full scenes didn't make the extras. A bad appendix, and a lack of schedule flexibility for same, kept me out of the film itself. It's still one helluva time capsule, though.

[I wish I could be at the show too...but I have to work]

Posted by LYT at 1:09 AM | Comments (0)

May 15, 2007

Falwell

I feel much the same way about Jerry Falwell's death as I did about the death of Saddam Hussein.

Celebrating a death feels creepy. But I'd be hard-pushed to say the world has suffered a loss.

If Jerry was even close to being right about anything, he's having the time of his (after) life right now anyway. And either way, we're rid of his two-faced, corrupt, exploitative ways down here on earth. So everybody wins.

HOWEVER: I think it's pretty silly to say, as some are, that he's in hell.

If you believe in that kind of eternal damnation, you don't have a whole lot of room to criticize a man for basing his career around that very concept.

Posted by LYT at 11:36 PM | Comments (4)

The Bloggfather

Offpat, aka my uncle Pat Graham, now has his own blog. And he's also interested in learning how to customize it a bot more, so if anyone wants to offer some pointers, let me know and I'll put you in touch.

But it got me thinking -- do I have any regular commenters who aren't bloggers of one sort or another?

Jaye Luckett -- the blogmother, whose blog sometimes gets taken down but always goes back up eventually, was my blogging inspiration;

ReJeKt -- briefly tried blogging, gave up after moving to Boston;

Peggy C -- now blogging;

sean (connery) -- now blogging;

David and Julie Scott -- now blogging;

MarioGeorgeNitrini111mariogeorgenitrini111(The OJ Simpson Case) -- has multiple blogs, all of which are about Rocky Bateman and/or Anthony Pellicano;

Ghostboy -- blogging;

Justin Stone -- now blogging;

Brian/Bgone/BrainDogg -- blogs about family outings;

Matt King -- has a myspace blog;

Crid -- no blog that I know of;

Amy Alkon -- blog.

Who's left? J. Stimpel and Garrett recently checked in after a long posting absence, and I don't think they blog. Is that it?

Posted by LYT at 6:51 PM | Comments (6)

Keep on Truckin'

I had a bit of adventure this past Friday...

Posted by LYT at 3:40 PM | Comments (1)

Peter Jackson, Steven Spielberg, and Tintin

together at last

I'm curious what you all think of this. Tintin is huge in Europe, and I grew up loving the books, but I never got the sense he's much of a big deal in the U.S.

Do you care that there are three movies coming? I imagine it'll do better than the last big-budget French cartoon adaptation, DOOGAL (a.k.a. THE MAGIC ROUNDABOUT), but how much better?

(link via movie city news)

Posted by LYT at 12:14 PM | Comments (2)

May 14, 2007

My Grandfather's Column

Here and There

For a short time, long ago, I was chaplain to a psychiatric hospital. There, I used to take services in the hospital chapel, and they were for me exciting and enjoyable occasions, partly because I never knew what was going to happen next. I am told, though I don't remember it, that I once asked my congregation: "Why are we all here?" to receive the immediate response: "Because we're not all there."

The real problem for most of us is precisely that, unlike those psychiatric patients, we are all there when we should be all here. When I should be paying attention to someone or something I find my mind floating off to something or someone else. Another way I find I am not all here is that, when involved in some discussion I want to produce some witty comment or idea and then the appropriate moment passes and I've missed the chance but then I still try to get back to a situation where I can bring up what I wanted to say. Meanwhile I've not been paying proper attention to what is actually being talked about.

"Don't worry about to-morrow" were the wise words of Jesus; "Tomorrow will look after itself." The more we learn to live in the here and now the happier we shall be and the better able we shall be to serve and love other people. I think it's almost impossible for us never to take thought for the past or the future. We need to be able to go here and there but we could almost all of us learn from the mentally ill patient who declared himself not to be all there because he was "here" in the chapel of that hospital. It is better by far to be all here than all there.

--Peter Graham

Posted by LYT at 11:27 PM | Comments (2)

May 13, 2007

git R undone

Of all the film critics out there, I'm probably the second-most-likely to give props to any movie starring Larry the Cable Guy (Texas-tough Dave White is the most likely).

But, well, I just couldn't bring myself to dig DELTA FARCE, as you'll see if you click through to the short review.

Posted by LYT at 10:34 PM | Comments (3)

Get her done

Here's an interesting video of Larry the Cable Guy back when he was plain old Dan Whitney. I occasionally enjoy the Larry act, but I actually think this comedy is better, though he's made a fortune dumbing it down...

Posted by LYT at 12:44 AM | Comments (1)

May 10, 2007

My cover story is online now

Here's a sample:

Vampires on sticks stare icily through the darkened room. To the right, an elaborately constructed airport terminal made entirely of cardboard brims with facsimiles of uncomfortable travelers on their way to the deepest circle of Hell. On the walls, projected film loops tell tales of singing socks, musical graveyards and chimps with typewriters. But it’s in the back corner where the biggest display stands: a fluorescent-colored birthday-party set-up populated with truly homicidal-looking puppets and featuring slices of cake that appear to be topped with body parts.

In front of this grim tableau, an effervescent and extremely unscary young woman is trying to keep her balance on a raised, wheeled platform.

“Is this high enough?” she asks. The photographer thinks so. “Do you want my hair down in front of my face?” Just a little. But once the lens starts clicking, all worries evaporate— Heather Henson, as expressive as any figure in the show, knows how to strike a dramatic pose.

If you didn’t know who she was, you might be able to guess just by being in her presence. There’s that familiar-looking face, which echoes her late father, Jim, the man who became America’s most famous puppeteer. But there’s also something of a puppet-like quality to her, from her stick-thin physique to her dramatically demonstrative body language in front of the photographer’s lens, recalling some of the gestures of her dad’s beloved Kermit the Frog.

Henson says she can see her father’s soul when she looks at Kermit; it seems that all Jim Henson’s children, be they flesh-and-blood or cloth-and-cardboard, have the family resemblance.


read the whole thing

Posted by LYT at 4:14 PM | Comments (0)

All hail the well-written sentence

I love this one, from the profile of Robert Scheer in the current LA Weekly by Dwayne "Mr. Fish" Booth:

"From the back of a very crowded auditorium, I watched him use three words — blow and job and bullshit — to aptly describe the pistil and stamen and life-giving manure of modern politics; and also to lose his temper and actually raise his voice to Christopher “Hic” Hitchens, whose excruciatingly precise incoherence over his support of the freshly launched invasion of Iraq had the overwhelming majority of the bleeding-heart eggheads in the audience wishing, first, that the overwhelming majority of them didn’t throw like girls and, second, that rotten fruit had been permitted into the ballroom."

You can read the whole thing, but that is the best sentence in it.

Posted by LYT at 1:12 PM | Comments (6)

The kudos keep komin'

LA Press Club Award finalists, newspapers under 100,000 circulation

C8. ENTERTAINMENT REVIEWS/CRITICISM/COLUMN

*Anthony Miller, Los Angeles City Beat, Review of Julie Phillips’s biography of science fiction author James Tiptree Jr.
*Gina Nahai, Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, An examination of Salman Rushdie’s legacy, in his writing and his politics, since the fatwa against him.
*Sasha Stone, Santa Monica Mirror, “Is it no longer the incredible, edible egg"
*Tom Teicholz, Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, “Susanna Hoffs walks like"
*Luke Y. Thompson, OC Weekly, “Unreal Estate”


UPDATE: If you missed it the first few times, here's the nominated article.

Posted by LYT at 9:54 AM | Comments (2)

I have the cover story today

ocwheather.jpg

It's not posted online yet. Check back later.

Posted by LYT at 9:50 AM | Comments (3)

May 6, 2007

Is it my imagination...

...or is Ultimate Warrior sporting a Hitler mustache in this picture?

[note to those without facial hair -- the part of the upper lip left unshaven in the Hitler 'stache is the most sensitive and hardest part to shave. Unfortunately, Adolf ruined it for everyone. A relatively minor sin compared to his others, of course.]

Posted by LYT at 11:14 PM | Comments (7)

Officially a real critic

With all the idiocy that's come my way out of New York in the last year, I am pleased to report that my true peers in LA just gave me a resounding vote of confidence -- I am now a member of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association (incidentally, I wonder if some of the disproportionate NY negativity helped influence the vote in my favor?). The biggest perk of which is that the studios make it much easier to do your job at year's end by facilitating special screenings, DVDs, and the like.

And yes, I've had some criticisms of the group in the past, but from here on out, I shall keep them constructive and internal.

Also...my former editor at E! Online still hasn't really "replaced" me a as freelancer. If you're interested, send me some samples done in that style, and I might pass them along. You must have a loose schedule and be able to see movies during the day. Must be LA-based, too.

Posted by LYT at 12:47 PM | Comments (5)

Real quick...

If you're a horror fan, go see VACANCY before it leaves theaters. Trust me. Echoes of SAW, HOSTEL, and the original TEXAS CHAIN SAW MASSACRE. Kate Beckinsale hasn't been this good in maybe ever.

It's by the director of KONTROLL, which isn't a horror movie, but is set in a subway and is imbued with a palpable sense of damnation throughout. Rent that one.

I was in a theater full of really annoying giggly girls who were talking to each other non-stop, but when the shit hit the fan in the movie, they all shut the fuck up. That's how good it is.

Nice life-size model of the Silver Surfer in the lobby. Overheard from one of the giggly girls: "'Ay, take a picture of me touching his booty!"

Posted by LYT at 12:02 AM | Comments (9)

May 4, 2007

Gregory Hatanaka interview

It's the first interview I've read with him where his actual personality comes out a little bit. Hey, maybe I should do one for this site!

Also includes some MAD COWGIRL stills that I haven't seen used before. Good shot of "G. Swan."

Posted by LYT at 11:49 PM | Comments (1)

Attention readers, known and unknown

Please take my blog reader survey!

It's for the benefit of Blogads. They ask a lot of questions about alcohol, so I hope that means more booze ads in the future.

I urge lurkers who've never made themselves known to take it also. I will not be able to trace your identity from it, I promise.

Posted by LYT at 11:33 PM | Comments (3)

Erik Estrada would be nicer

Multiple choice question:

You're a cop in the California Highway Patrol. You see someone who has broken down by the side of the road, with hazard lights flashing and hood up. He's standing there waiting for help, and tells you he called Triple A and they;re coming shortly.

do you:

(A) Offer to help in any way you can?

or...

(B) Give the motorist grief for being stopped on the freeway, as if there's any other option when a car suddenly stops working. Push the car to the next exit with your own car. Deliver a field sobriety test by making him follow your finger with his eyes (while keeping head perfectly still), then force a breathalyser. Question him about drug use. Then finally call Triple A after your insinuations and interrogations turn out to have no merit -- a call that only serves to further confuse Triple A, who were on their way already.

Which do you think happened to me at 4 a.m. last night?

Oh, and I can't even do that fucking eye thing when I'm at the peak of alertness. But just try explaining that.

Posted by LYT at 10:04 PM | Comments (7)

May 3, 2007

MCG Q&A w/LYT 4 MGN - answers

Could "Mad Cowgirl," the movie, become a cult classic like "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" movie did?

Not exactly like Rocky Horror did -- it would have to actually play theaters for a while in order to do that. But we're hoping it'll carve out a cult of some kind. The next Rocky Horror is Tommy Wiseau's "The Room."

And why did Luke Y. Thompson (aka LYT) curse using the F word near the end of the movie? Shame on him, or, well, maybe that was in the script and he had no choice in saying yet.

Nope. There was no script for those scenes, just Greg prompting me from off camera. "Say 'f**k you' five times...again...say it twenty times in three seconds...faster...again...HEH HEH!...again...that was great, more!"

WHY>>>>>>>>??? did they (whoever that is) "KILL OFF" the character:Lenny/Big-brother-Chung,in The Movie "Mad CowGirl"?????

They didn't. He's a hallucination, so he can't die, because he was never alive. Depending upon how you read the ending, it's possible he could return.

Will there be a Mad Cowgirl 2 Sequel?

There'd have to be a Mad Cowgirl 2 before there could be a Mad Cowgirl 2 sequel. And I can say with 95% certainty that there will NOT be a Mad Cowgirl 2. Which is not to say all the characters are done with -- Dr. Suzuki (Linton Semage) is quite likely to show up again in a future project.

What are the DVD "easter Eggs"?

Glad you asked, Sweet Sock Puppet O' Mine! One is a hidden interview that can be accessed by going to the "DVD credits" screen and highlighting Douglas Dunning's name.

The other two hidden featurettes follow a common formula -- go to "deleted scenes" or "sides of beef." Highlight "Return to main menu," hit left once, then hit enter. That should do it.

Which characters in the movie are played by LYT?

1. A churchgoer in the front pew of Pastor Dylan's congregation, who looks not unlike Jasper Boring.
2. One of the voice-overs reading letters aloud on Pastor Dylan's show.
3. The Chinese usher in the 3-D movie theater, who says "You want kung-fu movie or porno movie?"
4. A blonde club patron very briefly glimpsed.
5. Lenny/Big Brother Cheng, the last of the Ten Tigers to do battle with Therese.

Deleted scenes and "sides of beef" feature additional LYT characters, including a right-wing talk show host named Wally, a leather-masked bondage freak, and a member of a really terrible music quartet.

Posted by LYT at 3:12 PM | Comments (2)

May 2, 2007

Next time someone tells you Republicans are the grown-ups...

"Utah County Republicans ended their convention on Saturday by debating Satan's influence on illegal immigrants."

you know you want to read this


P.S. to Republicans: please keep this up!

Posted by LYT at 6:55 PM | Comments (1)

May 1, 2007

If Big Robots Fighted

I don't normally post press kit photos, but Optimus Prime in action is looking good!

optimus.bmp

(Transformers movie image copyright Paramount pictures, all rights reserved)

Posted by LYT at 6:55 PM | Comments (0)

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