arthuredens--disqus
Arthur Edens and His Bread
arthuredens--disqus

Like an M.C. Escher work, only less sanitary!

I once saw a Yoda-fish. It was great.

I've seen an SUV in my area that has an entire family tree, showing three generations of stick-figures, with two grandparents at the top, their five or so kids below, and then grandkids below those. The best part is that one of the kids obviously got a divorce; one of the stick-figures in that generation was crudely

As a fellow San Diegan ("O" for Oceanside!), I can confirm this.

I've been a big fan of Bennett Miller ever since the FIRST time I saw Capote, so I'm definitely on board for this. It helps that the reviews from Cannes were generally full of high praise.

Yeah, that's why I think it's the exception. Playing it dramatically made it all the funnier. Gosh, what a swell film!

Counterpoint: Robert Stack, Peter Graves, Leslie Nielsen, and Lloyd Bridges in Airplane!. Though I suppose that might just be an exception that proves the rule.

There were a lot of things wrong with The Monuments Men, but know what really stood out to me? There was almost no ART in the film. The Men are all accomplished art historians and artists themselves, yet there wasn't even a single scene of them admiring the extraordinary art they were saving. How could the script not

Ah, too cool! Break a leg!

I spent a lot of time happily working my way through Robert Caro's The Power Broker. That Robert Moses sure was a bastard!

Which role will you be essaying, Steve?

Ooooo, that movie choice is a good one. The slightest error in audio/video synchronization vexes me to no end.

Back in college, my roommate and I were watching The Wire; specifically, the Season One episode in which the police launch their mass arrest on D'Angelo's project. Anyway, this loathsome little troll from next door comes stumbling in, drunk, stares at the TV, and says, authoritatively, "This is so unrealistic." I

That's especially problematic for people like me on the west coast!

A few years back, I saw Speed-the-Plow on Broadway, and during a scene in which William H. Macy seduces Elisabeth Moss, some old guy in the audience started talking. And not just talking, but, so it seemed, talking to the characters on stage. I'm pretty sure he was warning Ms. Moss's character to leave! Everyone

It's a perfectly cromulent word.

Much obliged!

Absolutely! July 18th it is!

"Eh-HEH-heh!"

I remember that "Ehhhh" too, Dick. Nobody Ehhhh-ed like Oskar!