xCanIBeYourMemoryx
http://www.flixster.com/user/xcanibeyourmemoryx
| Name | x♥Desiree W♥x |
|---|---|
| Gender | Female |
| I'm From | my own little world... |
| Member For | 550 days |
| Last Login | Wed. Jun 18 |
| Profile Views | 15057 |
| Age | 15 |
| MCT Score |
|
lol Well, I like making new friends, but I hate making friends with the wrong people. So, I don't want to be your friend if you are weird. (I may be weird, but there is a fine line between weird and creepy). Haha. Only add me if you are actually going to talk to me and talk about something interesting...Mhm... Well, I am nice to people who are nice back, I LOVE MUSIC!!!, I like to hang out with my friends and go shopping. I absolutely love traveling/going on vacations! ATV'ing is such a blast! WOOT WOOT!!! I tend to get labeled quite a lot, you know like; emo, skater, prep, goth, stupid stuff like that. I am me and if you can't accept that, well you have problems! I dress how I want to and act how I want to. You can't define me and put me into a category. I am not clothing, nor a soup can, SO QUIT IT! I can be pretty hyper and I am usually happy. Don't get me mad, things could turn ugly. I thank you all who actually read to this point of my little intro about me. I love you! ^__^ That's it for now, CIAO!!! <3 I AM:
![]() Flixster - Share Movies This is one of my AWESOME friends!Lauryn "Cendrillon!" She always makes me smile, and takes cute pictures! We are fricktards together and a little clueless. BUT WHATEVER! See, we took a space trip...you jealous? I bet you are. I picked up Lauryn on the planet Pluto, yeah it was cold there, and there weren't any cool people there either! So yeah, I was taking Lauryn back to Saturn when we got this call from Alex who was on Mars. So, of course, we picked her up to. Alex was being chased by these weird creature things. I didn't have the manual to find the lazer...thank goodness Lauryn found it! But yeah, we are all on a ship together...well, we were, that is until Alex pushed the big red button! XD And I was trying to find Lauryn's dentures. LMFAO Yeah, now we are floating through space! WAHOOOOO! Lauryn is one of my besties! TE AMO MI AMIGA!!! @)-^---
![]() Flixster - Share Movies Austin is my best guy friend! I don't know what I would do without him! lolz He is so funny and yet again, he is one of those people that make me smile. You would think that I smile a lot, now wouldn't you? haha. He is my Preppy Emo! Heck yeah! We have a song together. ^_^ Yes, we really do! teehehe it is called "Let Me Take You There" by the Plain White T's:
![]() Flixster - Share Movies This is TTTTIIIIIIFFFFFAAAAAANNNNNNYYYYY!!!!!!!!!!! She is my gorgeous nerd! Heck yes! I talk to her like ALL OF THE TIME! Why do you think that she's at the top of my list?! lol. We have fun going on our Crystal Ball mission. Shhh!!! We are secret agents! Dun-Dunna! On the way, we meet weird people. Yepperz, we do! She throws candles at people with big hair! We like to bust into Simon Coward's (Cowell) dressing room and knock him out and I tie him up and lock him in the closet. lol That's what he get's for being such a loud mouth! We like to have Orlando Bloom distract this crazy lady with bee hive hair, and run away with Johnny Depp! Johnny Depp and I don't get along well together. He's such an "IDIOT" *Napolean Dynamite voice* He made Tiffany fall through a whole in the vents! GERSH! We act weird together, and we're hyper! She makes me lol all of the time! Gosh, I love her to death! If you wanna mess with her, you're gonna have to go through me first, and that's a BIG NO NO! I would suggest that you BACK OFF before I MAKE YOU BACK OFF! Chyeah ILY Tiffany! bahahahahaha.
![]() Flixster - Share Movies
![]() Flixster - Share Movies
![]() Flixster - Share Movies ![]() Flixster - Share Movies
![]() Flixster - Share Movies Okie Dokes. Can I have a Mini Soda with Indie Ice please?!?! Bahahaha. Lexie, that's the girlie who is the bestest! lol She is so kind, smart, funny, and all around the AWESOMEST friend that you could ever want! I love this girlie to death! hehe She takes gorgeous pictures! My goodness, she should be a model! lol We can talk like forever...until one of us has to go. But yeah, I love talking to her! If my day is boring, I talk to her, and then it is super FANTASTIC! lolz Anyway, she makes me smile A LOT and sometimes makes me a little COO-COO. haha I can be weird around her, and she won't really care. She joins me in being a litte PSYCHO. Chyeah, TE AMO LEXIE!
![]() Flixster - Share Movies
![]() Flixster - Share Movies This is one of my BEA-utiful friends. If you don't know her, well, you're missing out! teehehe This is Mariah! She is one of the nicest people that you will probably EVER meet. We love cinnamon pretzels from Sam's Club! lmao She takes the cutest pictures, I swear! hehe She's the icing and I am the cake! Together, we're so delicious! bahaha
![]() Flixster - Share Movies Okay, this is Miss loverLY! Hehe she is the nicest person that I have EVER EVER EVER met! Well, in her own little way. And one of the funniest too. I am her Lollipop Stealer, and she is my Cookie Poisoner. XD We like being reporters together. She's Joe, I'm Dick. Chyeah. I slept with Joe's wife. Joe knows about it though. >.< There was this dangerous love triangle going on between Bob (the imaginery friend stripper), Ly, and I. Yeah, Ly killed both Bob and I, and she committed suicide. ANYWAYS, I LOVE LY TO DEATH! If you do ANYTHING to her, I hope that you learn how to drink your food through a straw! MUAHAHAHAHAHAHA. xx
This is my favorite song. XD I LOVE THE MEDIC DROID!!! (((And Pon and Zi. They're such cuties!))) ![]() Create your own visitor map!
|
||||
x♥Desiree's Recent Reviews
No new reviews. Rate some more movies.
x♥Desiree's Favorite Movies
1.
The Break-Up
PG-13
I saw this movie with my friends. I liked it but there was a lot of jealousy going on in the movie.
x♥Desiree... Movie Scrapbook
Videos
x♥Desiree's Talk
-
I recommend you see...
Red Eye
by Jackposted 12 days ago -
I recommend you see...
National Treasure: Book of Secrets
by JackNational Treasure: Book of Secrets starts off on a gloomy night in April 14th, 1865. We aren't exactly sure where we are just yet with the camera panning around, but by the date alone it suggests that the Lincoln assassination is just around the corner from happening. We are immediately introduced to Thomas Gates who is a relative of Ben Gates played by Nicolas Cage. Thomas is offered a cipher from the diary of John Wilks Booth to try and decipher. Thomas begins to ponder over the clue of "The Debt That All Men Pay" when he suddenly notices his guest needing his service might be a bad guy. A struggle ensues and then we cut to seeing John Wilkes Booth in an amazingly well realized recreation of the Lincoln assassination. Mr. Booth kills Mr. Lincoln and then jumps onstage and shouts Sic Semper Tyrannus (Thus Always to Tyrants) before fleeing.
We then cut to present times with Ben Gates and his father Patrick Gates (Jon Voight) giving a lecture on their brand new Civilian Heroes Exhibit. It's quickly established that since the first film the Gates family name has been cleared and is recognized with new prestige and honor. They are clearly basking in a newfound limelight and glory.
However, no sooner than the audience is allowed to take this when Mitch Wilkinson (Ed Harris) enters the scene proclaiming that their great great grandfather Thomas Gates was one of the main people behind the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Due to the initially establishing to the audience that Thomas is innocent, we immediately react with the same shock and aplomb. How can this possibly be? Who is this rabid dog Mitch character and what are his true intentions?
Mitch produces a page from the John Wilks Booth diary that has a list of all the men behind the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. This page he claims has been passed down throughout his families history. We are immediately shown this page seems to be very real and certainly seems to somehow cast Thomas as a ringleader in something we know he didn't do. The plot certainly thickens right out of the gate before there is even any hint that a quest for a treasure might happen. With the rapid pacing of the first film the audience isn't left hanging too long before the film morphs into familiar ground of also being a quest for a treasure in addition to being a quest by Ben and Patrick to vindicate Thomas.
The main characters for the first film are all back for this outing. Harvey Ketiel is back playing the role of The Wolf, I mean FBI badass. Justin Bartha returns in the films Han Solo role as Riley Poole, the wise cracking everyman. Although, we quickly see him lose his red hot sports car early on while noting of this unfortunate turn of events: "You know what taxes are for 5 million? 6 million!" I find it odd in general that frisky single people always seem to opt for red sports cars. Jon Voight also returns as the cranky father figure. This time around he seems to have lightened up some. Diane Kruger reprises her strong female character of Abigail that while dressing prim and proper can be just as gritty and no holds barred as any male. Nicolas Cage of course is back as the cryptographer and historian extraordinaire Ben Gates. This is certainly a role that Mr. Cage shines in, yet I never quite understand why he runs like a retired NFL football player in both films. Mr. Cage is the right mix of classic movie hero charisma and quirky offbeat charm. He is a happy puppy like character with brains that won't bite you, but will certainly find a way to beat you or sneak out of the backyard. New to the cast of particular note are Ed Harris and Helen Mirren. Mr. Harris is effective in a limited role. Helen Mirren seems to just revel in being in a silly role as the mother of Nicolas Cage.
Just like the first film, the film is just as interested in the main characters figuring out each clue as it is with them finding the treasure at the end. In many treasure hunting films the clues merely serve as a small plot device to keep the main plot moving forward or to place the lead character in another exciting location. The National Treasure series aims to have each clue and the solving of it as its own unique set piece. Most sequences of sleuth and solving the clues do seem to be too greatly simplified, in comparison to the first film. The massive screenwriting team the film boasts clearly doesn't want the audience to have to think as much as it did in the first one. While this certainly works to give the audience more time to sit back and enjoy the ride, it results in it having large set pieces with even less things to do in. And with less things to do, things do feel more padded out than they should be. The padding mostly comes in the form of character development, so if you like the characters and really enjoy them, then you have nothing to worry about. We spend more time exploring the characters, what makes them tick and how they respond to adversity. The themes of adventure, history, patriotism is still there, but it is themes of family and global harmony that mark this second outing and set it apart.
Just as in the first film we get to travel to and explore locations tantamount to American history. Book of Secrets unlike the first film sweeps through American history on a global scale and more national scale, we aren't just stuck on the east coast of America. This serves to make the new outing even more sweeping and epic. We also once again get to see historical locations with an all access type insiders' glee, which adds some additional excitement in seeing areas we in our real lives would never be able to.
The set design like the first film is just amazing to take in. One of the huge selling points of this series to date is how rich accurate they try and craft their set designs. History from the past is wonderfully realized through massive and imaginative sets and finished out with digital effects. The blending and balancing of the two creates a magical universe we get to travel into with our characters. In addition the film once again makes incredibly fun use of actual historical places that civilians would never in real life get to explore in this fashion. I think many people have often visited a historical place and wondered what was behind roped off or closed areas. The National Treasure films play into this curiosity very well.
Book of Secrets is constructed into two parts. The first part works as more of a traditional spy film. As we see our main characters chart across the globe as they try to unravel each subsequent clue and riddle. The second half of the film really switches in into more traditional action and adventure film territory. An over the top heist is still on the menu along with a car chase and some escape scenes.
Despite the fact the film features many more locations than the first outing, it seems to be much more about exploring the characters themselves than everything else. So if you like the main characters from the first film, then chances are you will really like this one. If your looking for more action and adventure this time around, then you might walk away disappointed. It's less about being a cat and mouse thriller or adventure and more character driven.
Book of Secrets is a film crafted for the entire family to go out and see and have fun this holiday season. As such it's easily the most thrilling family adventure of 2007.
Overall, I think Book of Secrets is a way too simplified version of the previous film on a much grander scale. I think what the ending really gets wrong is not introducing any mythical, supernatural or resonating moments of transcendence in its final act. Some combination of these elements and themes at the end would have certainly taken it to another level of spectacle. We get to a spectacularly realized set piece that gives us and the characters little more to do than just yawn, which is an odd way to go out of an otherwise often exciting film.That took me ages to write...
posted 16 days ago -
I recommend you see...
The Skulls
by JackLaced with horribly clichéd secret society mumbo jumbo and unintentionally funny homoerotic undertones, "The Skulls" is a laughable thriller about a pre-law Yale student (Joshua Jackson) so shallow and ambitious that he's willing to throw over his best friend and the girl he loves just to be accepted in an underground campus club of power-hungry blue bloods.
The Skulls, you see, are an indomitable, clandestine handful of the country's social and political elite -- all Yale men -- who the movie tells us founded the CIA among other ominous undertakings. Members are members for life. They get branded and paired up with other members as "soul mates." They live by a musty, leather-bound, 200-year-old book of rules. They cover up each other's scandals.
When this brotherhood accept new members, money is deposited money in their bank accounts, they're given expensive cars, tuxedos (which are worn to frequent Skulls dinner parties), nice wrist-watches, nights with call-girls in a Christian Dior gowns, and -- most importantly as far as young Luke McNamara (Jackson) is concerned -- they pay their conscripts' tuitions and see to it they get into the law school of their choice.
But above all, they keep each other's secrets. So once Luke is in -- following an funhouse initiation ritual so ridiculously cabalistic and ostentatious it's reminiscent of "Phantom Of the Opera" -- he finds himself in a tight spot when The Skulls murder his now-estranged best friend, a campus paper cub reporter looking to expose them.
Caught in a slow-witted, collegiate retread of "The Firm," Luke realizes (a bit late) that The Skulls aren't such a swell bunch of guys after all and has to run for his life while looking for a way to blackmail himself out of the organization and bring the murderer to justice.
Got all that?
Helmed by journeyman director Rob Cohen (Daylight, Dragonheart) and aimed squarely at easily entertained teenagers with eight bucks to burn, "The Skulls" isn't a bad idea for a movie. But when Cohen started casting weightless heartthrobs like Paul Walker (Varsity Blues, She's All That) as Jackson's well-to-do rival, and Wonderbra hotties like Leslie Bibb (TV's "Popular") as his scholarly arm ornament, it became a project with plenty of looks but no brains.
Most of the movie's budget seems to have gone into presentation. It's well-paced and edited, the photography is crisp, clean and exciting and the sets are ludicrously spectacular. The Skulls meet in an ceremonial underground chamber lined with marble pillars, and even Luke's 400-square-foot dorm room has vaulted stone ceilings.
But the characters are deadly dull and the Swiss-cheese scenarios so frequently laughable that the crowd at the preview screening -- enlisted by a local top 40 station, the picture's target audience -- couldn't stop snickering through the whole show.
Without a single moment of genuine suspense and with a climactic confrontation that seems to ignore many of the plot revelations, the movie's biggest problem remains that its main character is fundamentally unlikable because he's so utterly selfish, turning his back on his friends until he needs to be rescued.If you look up the word "Rubbish" in the dictionary, there's a picture of this there.
posted 16 days ago -
-
-
YOUR NAME ON MY HAND, BUT IT WASHED AWAY. I WROTE YOUR NAME IN THE SAND, BUT THE WAVES WHISPERED IT AWAY. I WROTE YOUR NAME IN MY HEART, AND FOREVER IT WILL STAY. SEND THIS TO EVERYONE U LOVE (as a friend or more) INCLUDING ME. IF U SEND THIS TO 10 PEOPLE IN THE NEXT 45 MINUTES, THEN TOMORROW WILL BE THE BEST DAY EVER!!!
posted 19 days ago -
I recommend you see...
The Number 23
by JackJim Carrey's The Number 23 finds the former stand-up comedian tackling the thriller genre. The film has received awful reviews from most critics, which is a shame.
Carrey plays Walter Sparrow, happily married to Agatha (Virginia Madsen), with one child, Robin (Logan Lerman). Agatha comes across a book titled The Number 23 and buys it for Walter. As Walter gets deeper and deeper into the book, he begins to become obsessed with 23 and discerns several similarities between the characters in the novel and his own life.
Please dismiss the dreadful reviews this film has received and give it a chance. It really isn't that bad, I have seen a lot worse in this seemingly plagued genre. I must admit despite the intriguing idea behind the film of a number referring to everything in someone's life and therefore driving them insane, the script and eventual plot twists offer nothing new or particularly thrilling. Not that I am saying I knew what was going to happen; the twist certainly surprised me, but it didn't leave me in complete awe.
However whilst the main plot of the film gradually nosedives into all too familiar territory, the film's biggest positive develops from the story within the, err, story. As Walter reads the book, director Joel Schumacher shows us what is actually happening in the novel. The scenes are beautifully shot and lit to create a unique look, perfectly separating it from the rest of the picture.
With the two stories commencing we get two doses of Carrey and Madsen as they also portray characters in the book. Carrey is solid anyway as Sparrow, delivering a very subtle performance as the number slowly obsesses his character. But it is his turn as the lead character in the novel, Detective Fingerling, where he really shines and shows just how far he has come as an actor. As for Madsen, she doesn't really get enough screen time to fully develop both her characters but it is her character Fabrizia in the novel that she is clearly relishing playing.
So okay, I will admit that The Number 23 is an average thriller at best, but still there are positives to help counter the negatives. If you are a fan of Mr. Carrey you most certainly should check out The Number 23; and even if you aren't, don't be completely put off by the way the movie has been received, see for yourself. And after you have watched it, I almost guarantee you will be searching for that number one way or the other.Hey, you should really see this!
posted 19 days ago -
-
-
YOUR NAME ON MY HAND, BUT IT WASHED AWAY. I WROTE YOUR NAME IN THE SAND, BUT THE WAVES WHISPERED IT AWAY. I WROTE YOUR NAME IN MY HEART, AND FOREVER IT WILL STAY. SEND THIS TO EVERYONE U LOVE (as a friend or more) INCLUDING ME. IF U SEND THIS TO 10 PEOPLE IN THE NEXT 45 MINUTES, THEN TOMORROW WILL BE THE BEST DAY EVER!!!
posted 24 days ago -
OMG i have not talked to you for ever! Its Zak, you probally dont remember me, We talked on flixster alot.... for awhilw, you have Myspace? if so add me Three Days of Grace- Peace
posted 25 days ago -
-
I recommend you see...
The Art of War
by JackNeil Shaw (Wesley Snipes) is a covert operations agent for the United Nations (UN), providing a little persuasive power when traditional diplomatic channels don't do the trick. Shaw operates under the guidance of Eleanor Hooks (Anne Archer), who's the right-hand person to the UN Secretary General (Donald Sutherland). To say that the methods Shaw employs (usually involving some form of blackmail) are unorthodox would be an understatement, but they are effective.
As one would expect, the movie starts with a furious action scene just as the year 2000 is about to turn in Hong Kong, where Shaw persuades a North Korean general to get back to the bargaining table. Shaw escapes from this mission in a grandiose manner, parachuting off from a tall building with a few bullets lodged in his shoulder.
The pacing after this sequence never lets up. Shaw is soon framed for the murder of the Chinese ambassador who's negotiating a trade agreement with the UN. This leads to yet another one of those situations where the protagonist has to overcome unsurmountable odds to uncover the truth: Shaw has to deal with his own government (the FBI and the NYPD), people on his side who may not be what they appear to be, Chinese gangsters, New York City traffic, and a love interest in the form of a UN translator, Julia (Marie Matiko).
Snipes has played this sort of a role before (in U.S. Marshals) and does a fine job. The rest of the cast, however, is given a terrible script to work with. While Marie Matiko is attractive, the conversations between her and Shaw are groan-inducing. As is anything said by Anne Archer, and Michael Biehn who plays Shaw's partner. Even Donald Sutherland, can do little to save this film from an acting/script perspective. Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa plays a decent villain.
Set in the present, the film makes some intriguing points. The notion of The Art of War is borrowed from Sun Tzu's work, and the core theme of the film is that the enemy should be defeated from within. The right-wing idea that the Chinese are undermining American "democracy" from within (thus winning the war) is put forth. The notion that wars can be fought effectively in this subversive way is shown, but also illustrated is the idea that such a war inevitably does more harm than good. The argument is made that allowing free trade with China would lead to a reduction in sweat-shops and other Chinese slave labour, because of "western competition". I'd argue the result would be the opposite in reality.
But forget the logical holes in the plot or the pseudo-philosophy. Director Christian Duguay is best at setting the mood of the film, as he freely borrows from the classics, including the slow-motion martial arts and bullet sequences from The Matrix. Duguay also uses bleached and black and white scenes to illustrates flashbacks and action sequences; New York has rarely looked this bleak.
The Art of War is a fast-paced high-energy action thriller, with some amazing visuals and camera work.Hey, you should really see this!
posted 28 days ago -
-
I recommend you see...
The English Patient
by JackSynopsis: Tuscany, as the Allies pursue the Germans north at the end of WWII: traumatised by loss and carnage, Canadian nurse Hana (Binoche) decides to stay behind in an abandoned, bombed monastery and care for her dying patient (Fiennes). He seems to recall little of his life, but when Caravaggio (Dafoe), a vengeful, morphine-addicted thief, turns up and quizzes him over past dark secrets, and as Hana reads from his beloved Herodotos, memories return of the pre-war years when, as an archaeologist/cartographer in the Sahara, he had a passionate affair with Katharine (Scott Thomas), wife of a British colleague.
My verdict: Though Anthony Minghella's adaptation of Michael Ondaatje's novel simplifies, jettisons and changes certain elements of the original story, it remains a rich, complex, entrancing piece of work. Part poignant romance, part suspenseful adventure, part enigmatic mystery, it's essentially a study in different responses to love and war, honour and betrayal, nationality and identity, falsehood and forgiveness, which sounds subtle echoes as the narrative flashes to and fro between two main time frames. Needless to say, the performances are flawless; more surprising is the fluency, poetry and scale of Minghella's direction (John Seale's sensuous desert photography is superb), equally eloquent whether depicting boudoir intimacies, bomb-disposal skills, drunken dementia or a deadly sandstorm.Hey, you should really see this! Really.
posted 31 days ago -
I recommend you see...
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
by JackSynopsis: It's 1938 and when Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) is informed by a wealthy American businessman that his father, Henry Jones (Sean Connery), has gone missing while researching a clue to the whereabouts of the Holy Grail, Indy sets off in search of him. With his father's Grail diary as a guide, he enlists the support of Dr Marcus Brody (Denholm Elliot) and the enigmatic Austrian professor Dr Elsa Schneider (Alison Doody) only to realise that the latter is not all she seems.
After finding his father, the Jones boys find themselves in a frantic race against time to beat the Nazis to the Holy Grail, the cup that holds the blood of Jesus and can grant men immortality.
My verdict: The third installment in the Indiana Jones saga bucked the trend of most sequels (ie, the law of diminishing returns) by actually bettering the sequel [Temple of Doom] and matching the feelgood element of the original Raiders Of The Lost Ark.
Part of this lay with Steven Spielberg's welcome decision to lay off the nastier elements of the sequel (or prequel) in favour of the knockabout fun of Raiders.
But most of it lay with the decision to cast Sean Connery as Indy's father. It was a stroke of genius.
The banter and camaraderie between Ford and Connery added a new element to proceedings that made for an even more enjoyable adventure. It was both funny and touching and played to the strengths of both actors.
Key moments in their relationship included a terrific scene in which they were bound back-to-back to each other on two chairs and forced to unite to escape a burning room (caused by Connery's own incompetence with a lighter) and their reunion in Africa following the tank chase sequence, when Snr thought Jnr had perished.
Alison Doody also played her part in accentuating the rivalry that existed between father and son, having bedded both of them during various twists and turns in the story (though we're thankfully spared a sex scene involving Connery).
In fine Indiana Jones tradition, The Last Crusade also boasted a number of spectacular set pieces, including the aforementioned tank sequence, a cracking canal chase in Venice and a moment involving the Jones boys on a motorbike and sidecar not to mention an exploding Zeppelin and the opening flashback (that found River Phoenix playing the young Indiana Jones).
And let's not forget the audacious sequence in which Indy gets an autograph from none other than Adolf Hitler!
The Last Crusade also boasted memorable support from returning cast members Jonathan Rhys-Davies and the late Denholm Elliott, who was finally given more to do as Indy's bumbling college colleague and some typically formidable villains.
Indeed, such is the overall sense of enthusiasm surrounding this third film in the series, that it's little wonder to find that Steven Spielberg has since declared it to be his own personal favourite. It's a fun ride that actually plays to a wider audience because of its emphasis on family values over harder violence. I'll go with Spielberg and say it's the best one.Nearly all of you have seen this, but I just felt like sharing my opinion.
posted 33 days ago -
I recommend you see...
Películas para No Dormir: La Habitación del Niño (Films to Keep You Awake: The Baby's Room)
by JackThis film was bizarre, to say the least.
The story follows a family who move into a house which they think is perfectly normal. But when they have a baby listener to keep a check on their baby, they hear someone's voice, and find out there's more sinister things in the house.
Sound crap? Well, it is. It was...stupid, to put it simply. Not very scary for a film claiming to be a horror either. Oh, and it made no sense. And it was crap. Oh wait, I've already said that.
Whatever.Ugh.
posted 59 days ago













































