Friends, I've got a funny feeling like I've never had a runnin' through my head. Yes, I've got the feeling that's the best, I've got that Zuton fever in my head. For this reason I traveled to the distant Electric Factory to see the Zutons put on a show. Like all shows, it had its defining moments.
Once again, Pierce Brosnan (Die Another Day, Laws of Attraction) fails to disassociate himself from the James Bond franchise, while Salma Hayek tries desperately to reassert her as a class A celebrity. Right off the bat, the scene opens with the wily Max Burdett (Pierce Brosnan) using a high tech remote control to pilot the FBI's armored SUV.
From the makers of Finding Nemo and Toy Story comes the latest Pixar/Disney film of a family of superheroes known as The Incredibles. Mr. Incredible (voiced by Craig T. Nelson) and his wife Elastigirl (Holly Hunter) enjoy an exciting life of fighting crime and saving people's lives on a daily basis.
The Halo 2 Multiplayer game is sweet. Anyone who argues otherwise, for any reason, is wrong. The game had a lot of hype behind it, veritable dumptruck loads of hype backing up to the metaphysical driveway of gamers all across the world. That, however, is not a failing of the game itself.
The Halo 2 Multiplayer game suxors. After all of the hype I was half-expecting Halo 2 to possibly improve where Halo fell short, I should have known better. Halo 2's multiplayer mode is nothing but another carbon copy of all other first person shooters on the market.
There were a lot of things wrong with the single-player campaign game in Halo. As far as I can tell, they have all been corrected for the sequel. The most awesome thing that got cahnged was the philosophy behind vehicles: there's more of them, you can use more of them, and the Marines can finally drive.
I'm a senior in engineering this year. Somehow, I have successfully avoided "the Drexel Shaft" for five years. Pretty amazing. I've still got a few terms to go, but I'm crossing my fingers. I actually love Drexel. I think it's a great school. Like anything, you get out of it what you put in.
Alan Bennett is a household name among British theater enthusiasts. Some of his better known plays include The Madness of George III and Single Spies. Now this brilliant playwright has brought us another masterpiece. The History Boys debuted at the National Theatre in London in May of 2004.
About four years ago, the first "cancel The Simpsons opinion articles were released onto online periodicals. Of course, at the time, I scoffed. That's not possible; this show is spectacular. I grew up with this show, quoting the lines from the previous night with such love and fervor, to a point where it became annoying.