Media Research Failure/Film: Difference between revisions
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* In 2011, Celio (a cloth shop franchise in France) decided to do a special ''Star Wars'' themed collection. The iconic vehicle of the saga they used for their TV advertisement? A [[Battlestar Galactica|mkII Viper]].
* [http://animatedviews.com/2011/superman-the-motion-picture-anthology-blu-ray-collection/ This review] of the ''[[Superman (film)|Superman]]'' Motion Picture Anthology Blu-Ray keeps crediting Bud Collyer as the lead of the 1940s serials and portrayer of Lois Lane's father in the extended version of the first movie. However, Bud Collyer voiced Superman in [[The Adventures of Superman (radio)|the radio series]], as well as some cartoons from the 1940s and '60s. Kirk Alyn actually acted as the lead in the serials, and Lois' father in the first movie.
* More Roger Ebert. In [https://web.archive.org/web/20120108071648/http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=
** In his review of [[Sherlock Holmes]] - A Game of Shadows; Ebert also says that "I've luxuriated in the genial atmosphere of the Conan Doyle stories, where a step is heard on the stair, a client tells his tale, and Holmes withdraws to his rooms to consider his new case during a period of meditation (involving such study aids as opium).". Given that Holmes ''never'' took narcotics during a case (only when out of work) and even when he did, it was either Cocaine or Morphine, one can wonder just how much of Conan Doyle Ebert actually read.
* The [[Movie Guide]].org review of ''[[South Park]]:Bigger, Longer, and Uncut'' refers to Big Gay Al as being black. [[It Got Worse|and]] claimed that "the whole point of SOUTH PARK is that the children in the movie should have been allowed to see the Terrance & Phillip movie, just as the world's children should be allowed to see SOUTH PARK, [[Animation Age Ghetto|even though it is rated R.]] Furthermore, the message of the movie is clear: that adults should let children engage in depraved actions and foul language, and that all this is just part of growing up."
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