Needs more exclamation points.
Needs more exclamation points.
Pusher trilogy is a must if you're attempting to familiarize yourself with Refn. Each installment is strong and better than the previous one, I would argue.
Elle Macpherson the dog, Rosie O'Donnell's diatribe against men's perception of the ideal woman, Sweet Caroline, the piss rock, apps.
The closest we've gotten to a young Larry was the flashback of Cheryl promising him his 10th anniversary present.
The concept of the fucking chair doesn't quite work with me either, but I think the situations it led to were incredible: Larry nonchalantly discussing chips and dips while his girlfriend was achieving orgasm, Leon discovering the chair's capabilities and Larry suffering through Susie's sexual experience (the non-stop…
"… (which implied to me that the Judge berated Wanda with racist insults)"
Just so everyone's on the same page, we all remember that the car periscope was mentioned on SEINFELD, right? Just before he meets his (soon-to-be-ex)fiancee/female doppelganger played by Janeane Garofalo, Jerry daydreams of a future in which he and Kramer are the only two left of the gang. Kramer comes into Jerry's…
He took liberties like no other.
Shotguns and briefcases
I only work for blowjobs.
"Three month recap to my psychiatrist? That's just the crib."
I didn't realize how hilarious that cake was until now
The hair is the best part.
"You may be entitled to compensation if you were once given a bad peach."
The greatest disappointment of the finale was …
… the minor appearance from Isiah Whitlock Jr. without a trademark SHEEEEEEEIT from him.
FUCK YEAH, TERRIERS
Great unintentional finale.
Mother
It's been airing intermittently on various HBO channels for the past few months and in my random channel-surfing, I've rewatched a couple of times. I'm finding myself liking it even more than I did before. Debbie Reynolds completely nails that sweet, motherly facade with the occasional, thinly veiled biting…
The heavy exposition near the end is a bit much, but I don't think it takes away from the intensity that precedes it.
I don't think Gabe's fate is ever clarified. He shows up in Claire's apparition-y dream later on in the series, but it's just based on her belief of what happened to him or something.
My jaw literally dropped when I saw the title of this article. Can't wait to read it.
Use it in a sentence.