Game Review: Locked Door (2022, Cody Gaisser).Great Moments In Comic Book History #17: Spider-Man and The Dallas Cowboys Battle The Circus of Crime.Great Moments In Television History #13: The A-Team Premieres.Mason of the Mounted (1932, directed by Harry L. Fraser).Honor of the Range (1934, directed by Alan James).Across The Plains (1939, directed by Spencer Gordon Bennett).Death Rides The Range (1939, directed by Sam Newfield).Ten Wanted Men (1955, directed by Bruce Humberstone).Sierra Stranger (1957, directed by Lee Sholem).Drive-In Saturday Night #5: MALIBU BEACH (Crown-International 1978) & VAN NUYS BOULEVARD (Crown-International 1979).4 Shots From 4 Films: Happy Birthday Fay Wray!.Cleaning Out the DVR #24: Crime Does Not Pay!.
Built For Speed: Richard Pryor in GREASED LIGHTNING (Warner Brothers 1977).Big Bad Bob: Robert Mitchum in MAN WITH THE GUN (United Artists 1955).Halloween Havoc!: ISLAND OF LOST SOULS (Paramount 1932).Halloween Havoc!: Peter Cushing in TWINS OF EVIL (Universal/Hammer 1971).Halloween Havoc!: DEATH CURSE OF TARTU (Thunderbird International 1966).Happy Valentine’s Day From The Cats and the Humans at Through The Shattered Lens.Happy Father’s Day From The Shattered Lens.From The Humans and the Cats at the Shattered Lens, Congrats On Surviving The First Day of October!.And now, a word from Doc Bowman concerning the holidays….Merry Christmas From The Cats and the Humans Of The Shattered Lens!.Happy 2022 From All The Writers (and the Cat) at the Shattered Lens!.Artwork of the Day: Naked In The Night (by Rafael DeSoto).Artwork of the Day: Death Turns The Tables (by Victor Kalin).Artwork of the Day: The Gallows Garden (by Robert McGinnis).Artwork of the Day: Hangman’s Harvest (by Robert McGinnis).The Exciting Covers of Dime Western Magazine.
Artwork of the Day: Contrary Pleasure by Owen Kampen.Artwork of the Day: Dead On The Level (by Carl Bobertz).The Cost of Living, Short Film Review by Case Wright.MeNA, Short Film Review, By Case Wright.Deep Dish Apocalypse, Review by Case Wright.Bioshock, Horror Videogame Review, By Case Wright.“My Monster”, Short Film Review, By Case Wright.Don’t Answer (Really Don’t), Review by Case Wright.Creepshow, “Time Out”, “The Things in Oakwood’s Past”.JRJR Gone, Review and Analysis- Case Wright.Titans S3 Ep6, “Lady Vic”, Review by Case Wright.Horror Review: The Walking Dead Season Two.Horror Review: Yahtzee Croshaw’s Chzo Mythos Part 1 – 5 Days a Stranger.Horror Review: Yahtzee Croshaw’s Chzo Mythos Part 2 – 7 Days a Skeptic.Sci-Fi Review – Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (dir.In the United Kingdom, Always was the very first number-one single on the UK Rock and Metal Singles Chart, which just goes to show you the sad state of metal in 1994. Questions abound like, How did Jack blow up that apartment? Why would two incredibly attractive women settle for Jack Noseworthy? Where did the painter disappear to? Those questions go forever unanswered. Later, Jack thinks that he sees Carla standing in his bedroom but it turns out that it’s just his imagination. (So why did you call him in the first place, Carla?) Jack sees the painting, gets upset, stabs the canvas, and then somehow makes the apartment explode. When Jack starts to look at the painting, Carla tries to stop him. For some reason, Carla then calls up Jack and invites him to the the apartment. Carla runs out of the apartment and meets Jason Wiles, an artist who paints a terrible portrait of her. Either way, it was a pretty stupid move on Jack Noseworthy’s part. He also decided to cheat on her with Keri Russell, who is either Carla’s roommate or maybe her kid sister. The video features Jack Noseworthy (who was very briefly a semi-big deal in the 90s) as a young man who is so stupid that he can’t just be happy having the amazingly sexy Carla Gugino as his girlfriend. And rather than allowing the song to appear in a bad feature film, they instead decided to feature it an even worse music video. Instead, Bon Jovi recorded and released the song on their next album, Cross Road. However, after Bon Jovi saw a rough cut of the film, he decided that the film was not worthy of his music so he declined to allow Always to be played over scenes of Lena Olin and Gary Oldman shooting guns at each other.
In 1993, Jon Bon Jovi wrote a song called Always for the soundtrack of a movie called Romeo is Bleeding.