aramis-112-804880
Joined Jul 2011
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aramis-112-804880's rating
Anyone watching a certain video.has a week to live. You'd think it's like "Jaws": if you don't want to be shark-bait, stay out of the water. But this is a good, compelling flick.
I watched horror movies as a kid but stopped. I found them too cheesy and ridiculous and often unpleasant.
Furthermore, as an adult I no longer believe in spooks.
But catching this movie surfing while yawning for bed, I was not only hooked, I was scared out of my gourd.
Why don't I simply laugh at the kid with the silly hairdo? I don't know why, but she creeps me out.
If you want a well-made and actually creepy horror movie that will stick to your ribs, this is it.
I watched horror movies as a kid but stopped. I found them too cheesy and ridiculous and often unpleasant.
Furthermore, as an adult I no longer believe in spooks.
But catching this movie surfing while yawning for bed, I was not only hooked, I was scared out of my gourd.
Why don't I simply laugh at the kid with the silly hairdo? I don't know why, but she creeps me out.
If you want a well-made and actually creepy horror movie that will stick to your ribs, this is it.
Col. Crittenden is back and that's a good thing. His episodes always raise the bar on HH.
However, this unnecessarily two-part episode, well set-up in part one, fails.
First of all, it relies on the notion of look-alikes. Do people resemble each other that closely in real life? Well, there are only so many different facial features. One morning at work a co-worker said the day before she'd started a conversation with a stranger because he looked like ME (poor fellow)!
But when it happens, as it frequently does on sit-coms and soap operas, it's because writers are running low on ideas.
And, forgetting this is a comedy, it becomes altogether two serious. Watch Part One but give this one a miss.
However, this unnecessarily two-part episode, well set-up in part one, fails.
First of all, it relies on the notion of look-alikes. Do people resemble each other that closely in real life? Well, there are only so many different facial features. One morning at work a co-worker said the day before she'd started a conversation with a stranger because he looked like ME (poor fellow)!
But when it happens, as it frequently does on sit-coms and soap operas, it's because writers are running low on ideas.
And, forgetting this is a comedy, it becomes altogether two serious. Watch Part One but give this one a miss.
Usually any episode involving Marya (the wonderfully flambouyant Nita Talbot) is worth a peek. I love her. But this one is near the bottom of the barrel.
The Soviets were Hitler's allies at the beginning of World War II and they were carving Eastern Europe between them. Their flip-flop to the Allies is behind the suspicions Hogan holds about this crazy Russian lady who always seems to play both sides of the street. There may also be a sly wink at the unreliability of the Soviets in the Cold War.
In this episode she's supposedly at Stalag 13 with Goering. But what is she really up to and who is she with? It has a plot about stolen Nazi art, with a sly dig at the Soviets, who did the same thing.
Unfortunately, even the normally dependable Major Hochstetter, shouting to arrest everybody, can't salvage this one.
The Soviets were Hitler's allies at the beginning of World War II and they were carving Eastern Europe between them. Their flip-flop to the Allies is behind the suspicions Hogan holds about this crazy Russian lady who always seems to play both sides of the street. There may also be a sly wink at the unreliability of the Soviets in the Cold War.
In this episode she's supposedly at Stalag 13 with Goering. But what is she really up to and who is she with? It has a plot about stolen Nazi art, with a sly dig at the Soviets, who did the same thing.
Unfortunately, even the normally dependable Major Hochstetter, shouting to arrest everybody, can't salvage this one.
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