avclub-46936add066bd6422b3ac74a0ccb7174--disqus
abcdefz
avclub-46936add066bd6422b3ac74a0ccb7174--disqus

So… what exactly happened?
Spoilers, please.

I never read the book, but the movie (TEXASVILLE) is awful.

I'm really hoping Eisenberg does win. I think to pull off what he did with the degree of difficulty is amazing.

It's a Soderbergh movie, so it should at least be interesting.

"…it's for a film version of 'Garfield.'"

I loved the mom's passport scene. That would have been kind of tough to play, I think, but if I remember right, she doesn't come off bitter or as sarcastic as she could have.

SEE: ALICE IN WONDERLAND

"This draft is too hot!" she exclaimed.

Previously:

Kind of funny that India was flat and boring but Indiana was not.

A funny thing about BREAKING AWAY
First off: I really like that movie.

If Wikipedia is to be believed, I'm not entirely wrong:

I looked at the old page, and the excerpt doesn't show up for me. Is it still there? Can anyone provide a link?

@ Garrison

Rent? Food? Utilities?

Two things I don't understand about drunks in entertainment
1) How do the unemployed stay drunk all the time, especially drinking in bars? Especially living in big cities? IT'S EXPENSIVE. (See: SHAMELESS, BARFLY, Norm in CHEERS, et al.)

Funny or Die
That was actually somewhat kinda genuinely mildly amusing.

The riff might be from the Commodore's "Machine Gun."

That Eagles riff on PB was the huge surprise to me.

A note about PAUL'S BOUTIQUE
…is the album still revolutionary if, more or less, laws have changed so that such a huge amount of sampling is now more or less prohibitive?