Even Alan TwoDicks couldn't save it.
Even Alan TwoDicks couldn't save it.
That seems overly dramatic.
I noticed and I like the hat.
The hat was still there, just less. She was playing with it when she showed the mom the autopsy photo.
It's a Titanic. Versus iceberg. I'm pretty sure no one has used that before.
Reynolds frequently shows up on lists of squandered second chances. In fact, there may have been an inventory with him on it.
Snowman? Blast from the past.
It's not basic cable, it's network. And more, it's on FOX so even "network" is pretty wobbly.
Needs more Thomas Jane.
Nor is it Italian Spiderman …
Bollywood Patch Adams, soon at a dvd redbox near you!
Or trannies. At least when HDB is around.
Yeah, I feel that this, unlike Once, is at least not BORING. I doubt I'll follow it much but I wouldn't mind dropping in on occasion. I will only put on Once if I feel like taking a nap.
Me too. The first 2/3 of that flick was hypnotic. I wish they'd been able to sustain that feeling of claustrophobic boardom punctuated with brief peiods of dread. The final third did not ruin the movie for me, but left me unable to completely recommend it.
Doesn't Infinite Jest come up at some point on every comment board here?
I saw 5 minutes total (a minute here, two minutes there) and was constantly yelling at the TV, "Why are you laughing at this shit?!?"
Re: silent movie acting. I really don't have enough of a background in silent cinema to know for sure, but it seemed like there was a divide between the large acting tendencies in European and American films. I've always though that say, Metropolis featured more big acting than Greed. Although Stroheim was German,…
You know, I think silent films require a kind of 'losing yourself' in the moment that isn't for contemporary cinema. It's a little like listening to old timey radio shows and not being able to get past their nasaly affectations. We have our own affectations of course, but to us they just sound normal. I know people…
Maybe so, but Axl delivered the goods with, "What's wrong little Gaga?" Besides, this ain't a show that is strong in realism.
The Playboy club was about female empowerment!