You should write a short book detailing how the movie has grown in reputation via the internet. That sort of thing would get a publisher interested quite easily.
It seems like a sort of flavor of the month thing. But it might be interesting to look at all of the things that have become popular because of the internet like Snakes on a Plane, the Badger flash, Strongbad, and banana phone. Not to mention the petition to get the Star Wars kid a part in Episode III.
We got motherfin’ snakes on this motherfin’ forum…
An another point here’s a short video clip of Silvio Berlusconi (the 4th most corrupt European leader of all time) sexually harassing a public servant…
SIATD, according to the video comments, the vid is apparently a hoax.
And it seems you have resorted to tweaking the forum so that your post count will not hit 5000 until the appropriate time. You must have something big planned.
I like how it seems that Berlusconi stopped at this particular street for the sole purpose of dry humping a meter attendant. Like his to do list for the day was like…
I really don’t know whether or not the video is a fake or not, it’s from a site aimed at defaming ol’ Silvio so it could be a mock up. My post count is none of anyone’s business, but yes, I’m playing out a joke for a few more days, I promise that I’ll stop soon.
It occured to me today that one of the great things about Snakes on a Plane is the potential for sequels. Snakes on a Plane 2 is simply a matter of adding a number 2. It still has the same instant appeal, the same assonance. If it plays its cards right it’ll soon be rivalling the Bond franchise for the ‘most movies made under one banner’ status.
I thought for a sequal they should have the snakes in a different location like on a train… Snakes on a Train! and for the third one Snakes on a Space Station!
Snakes on a Crane? Snakes on the Insane? Snakes in the Membrain?
Assonance: # Resemblance of sound, especially of the vowel sounds in words, as in: “that dolphin-torn, that gong-tormented sea†(William Butler Yeats).
The repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds, especially in stressed syllables, with changes in the intervening consonants, as in the phrase tilting at windmills.