*Jerry: (responding to Kramer's question if he wears silk underwear) No, not for me. A little too delightful.
*Jerry: (responding to Kramer's question if he wears silk underwear) No, not for me. A little too delightful.
"Elaine is the textbook definition of breathtaking."
I really hope there's a character who's at least similar to the one created for Williams. What an intriguing, original idea. To have a black slave be a thuggish muscle-bound henchman to an evil white plantation owner is absolutely brilliant. The slaves were human beings. Not all of them were gentle, guiltless…
Harold and Jean Weir, "Freaks and Geeks - Boring, conservative, overbearing, and kind of lame, but could there be a pair of more stable, loving, devoted, and principled parents than them?
Great piece, Mr. D'Angelo. As hilarious as "Planes, Trains, and Automobiles" is, the dramatic moments are some of the picture's highlights. The surprise ending is absolutely killer. It is one of the most brilliant, underrated, heartbreaking final twists I've ever seen in a movie, and the scene above foreshadows it…
At least in this photo, Jobs kind of looks like James Rebhorn, but that casting wouldn't really work.
Other observations
Spader and Romano were both pretty amusing, especially in their brief interaction together. I thought having Warren Buffett play a potential managerial candidate was rather clever, as well. I wish Carrey's appearance had been a surprise, though, because it was so heavily advertised but only lasted…
Other gems in "The Marine Biologist"/"The Dinner Party"
*Obviously, George's epic final speech about saving the beached whale is one of the greatest Seinfeld moments ever, particularly his hilarious "old man sending back soup in a deli" analogy. What tremendous acting from Jason Alexander.
Also…
Now, I'm not sure if the following two count, because the actors aren't at all well-known and therefore, the roles can't be considered cameos, but the performances of Steve Park as Mike Yanagita in "Fargo" and Bill Bolender as Andy's wife's killer Elmo Blatch in "The Shawshank Redemption" are tremendous and…
Great list
The shining performances of Baldwin, Stockwell, and Sheen in "Glengarry Glen Ross," "Blue Velvet," and "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" are particular favorites of mine. The only other films that I've seen on this list are "Atonement," "Borat," "The Cable Guy," and although I've forgotten about what Bowie's…
"The Airport"
One of my all-time favorite episodes, a truly underrated gem.
Jerry telling George about the chick's dirty talk
I'm surprised you made no mention of George accidentally squirting the ketchup bottle across the room after Jerry tells him about Elaine's assistant's dirty talk. It's one of the show's all-time great pieces of slapstick.
Oh, how I'd like to do it
With Jennifer Love Hewitt.
DONALD!
When I saw this episode as a little kid (yes, I was an addict even then), I remember asking my Dad, "Is that Christopher Lloyd?"
Russell's apartment
The scene with George in Russell's apartment is truly one of the best of a terrific season and certainly the best in the episode. I love how desperately affable he tries to be ("We're people, you and me. Businessmen…colleagues, if I may…"), the dryly-comic way that Russell's statuesque blonde…
Other Great Moments/Lines
*Morty, to the back specialist after finding out that his wallet's gone: "What kinda clip joint you runnin' here?"
Absolutely, LloydBraun. (Props on your screen name, by the way.)
Also…
What about Jamal and Latika from Slumdog? Not totally sure myself on that one, though I'm leaning a little more towards non-doomed.
Ted and Mary (plus others)
I always believed that Ted and Mary would make it long passed the end of There's Something about Mary, getting married, having a baby, and and living a long and passionately-loving life together.