FourFingerWu
FourFingerWu
FourFingerWu

They were filming some FOX cop show in the neighborhood next to mine in B.R. and I thought someone had been murdered. Coroner’s vans, trucks, cop cars, etc. Stupid TV.

Forever Knight was the shit.

Underrated Burt. That’s a good one.

Drunken Master (1978). Very fun and funny.

First season of True Detective for people who live in South Louisiana. Supposed to be set in the Southwest part of the state in Cajun country, but clearly shot below New Orleans on the East side of the Mississippi. They even eat at a little Pho place. Only locals would notice but it kind of took me out of the story a

Ha ha. Very nice. The truth, as they say, is much weirder. There is a mostly friendly rivalry between New Orleans folks and the rest of the state.

You’re not the only one. I’ve never made a crawfish pie. They sell little frozen pot pie size ones at the grocery that aren’t bad. That was Britney’s little sister in the crawfish eating gif by the way. One of my best friends at LSU was from Kentwood.

Mudbugs is also acceptable.

Doesn’t sound right, does it?

Suck da head!

A million stars for this comment. No, a billion. A billion stars.

spacedFBI may be a wee bit tipsy this evening.

Kick his ass, Chuck!

If you had been wrong I would have been happy to point out you were wrong. I’ve seen this man eat soup! It is one of those stories that becomes accepted over time. Alex Cox goes to great pains in his book to point out the differences in each movie. The Man With No Name has a name, minor costume changes, etc. It’s just

All of that is very true, just not in this case. There was no intent from the filmmaker for there to be any continuity between the films. Very easy to think this way because they are so similar, but the Eastwood character is different in each film if you pay close enough attention.

Sure. This is not some big controversial point of film history. It’s been covered. Leone’s biographer is on the commentaries. He knows the story.

No. You are wrong. louie is right. All of this is backed up in print by film scholars in various places and the DVD commentaries.