Toxic is a song that I love whenever I hear cover versions of it, but I can't stand Britney's original version of it. Same goes for Umbrella which I only like when it's not Rihanna.
Toxic is a song that I love whenever I hear cover versions of it, but I can't stand Britney's original version of it. Same goes for Umbrella which I only like when it's not Rihanna.
See also: Frailty.
I thought that did hapen in Monster-in-Law. I need to rewatch it.
I checked the rest of the 2000s, and A Beautiful Mind was the other film that only got 75% (its contender Moulin Rouge stands at 76%) and still won Best Movie.
Gladiator only has 76%, but was up against Chocolat's 63%. (Remember Chocolat being nominated for Best Film in a field of five? What were they thinking?)
It could have led to vote splitting, but come on, of course everyone went for Traffic instead of Erin Brokovich. It's the Academy after all.
Crash has 75% on RottenTomatoes which is a tad below Munich's 78% that same year.
Soderbergh was nominated twice that year, so it wasn't a surprise that he won.
I hated Babel and Birdman, but loved Amores Perros and liked this one. I'm still not sure about his art, but the person seems to be insufferable.
I liked that. I loved Gravity which was Revenant in space - Sandra Bullock surviving one impossible obstacle after another. My main problem with Revenant are all those flashbacks/dream sequences which brought the movie to a screeching halt for me every single time.
One of the few? In what universe is Boyhood universally beloved?
No. I couldn't stand Upstream Color and Under the Skin, especially because they lacked coherent storylines, yet I love It Follows which has a very simple, pure plot.
He was snubbed for Gilbert Grape in my opinion.
Please don't rob us!
Well, Logan not looking like priest material is exactly the same thing that Sue says to him, so the show is aware of that.
Exactly. It was awkward for them because they're friends, not because they are both guys. Axl's biggest worry was that Sean now thinks he's a bad kisser.
I should have seen it coming, but I laughed out loud at Sue falling down in front of Logan after leaning on the counter with buttery hands.
As for the Axl/Sean stuff, I wouldn't read too much into that. It wasn't even a storyline, it was two-and-a-half short scenes, and I think it's cool that it didn't lead to…
If you think the intention was to ridicule gayness, then that's on you and not the show.
I didn't know that the finale of Joe Wright's Hanna was set in Berlin so I did that spit-take when I immediately recognized the subway station where a cool one-take fight scene took place.
People in my town were all excited when George Clooney shot scenes for his World War 2 movie in the area, and then they didn't even end up in the finished movie.
Brick's burn and high five was a highlight.