avclub-671355f4110cbbec1ff35af7e0754971--disqus
shrimped
avclub-671355f4110cbbec1ff35af7e0754971--disqus

Mmm that's how I felt when I saw the Superman Returns messiah/John Williams/Marlon Brando teaser trailer. I was so naive back then.

Chris Brown must allergic to society or something - is there anyone in entertainment with more social capital right now than Frank Ocean, or less than Chris Brown? It would be as if Ray Lewis were to win the Superbowl next week and then go out and kill som…wait.

I'm sorry - which is which?

I was just thinking the same thing. Sometimes in life it's just comforting to know there's a system for even mundane things like this. And suddenly I feel like I'm a step away from promoting Of Pandas and People.

I'm suddenly having a harder time taking him seriously when he cries on 60 Minutes about not being with his family during a shoot.

So do they defecate on Anna Faris' face, or just prepare to? No Spoiler Space for this one?

Ah the classic recently-departed hagiography. This should be interesting.

While it's not specifically music, Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies are fantastic, not only because the humor (generally) has got staying power, but there's some fantastic classical and jazz music that you hear and internalize, and then recognize even decade later when you hear it in the original context. Kill da

Agreed - very counterproductive - only these absurd boycotts are able to make Noam Chomsky look as pro-Israel as George W. Bush. Even if you have issues with the occupation and the settlements (and I sure do), so does half the country of Israel, and the best scholarship about it comes from Israel.

He seems to get so sick of them too - he's a super-liberal, and even he can't stand the constant braying.

It was pretty fantastic television - she told him that they were discussing trivial things, he called her "darling" and asked if she was under 30 (unrelated to this context), and he asked her what she wanted to talk about. She's bright, he's a dick, and I wound up liking neither of them as people.

I thought A Serious Man was fantastic for a handful of reasons, but I can just as easily see people not getting into it. Part of what I liked about it was how it was able to tinker with my emotions, and that kind of thing is way too personal for it to register with everyone.

Refreshing to see Oscar Isaac (AKA the king from the crappy Robin Hood movie/the guy from the crappy Sucker Punch movie) getting a decent role.

Part of the charm of Die Hard is that while yes, a handful of good guys get shot or otherwise killed, at the end of the movie Bruce Willis has just saved the day and a whole lot of people, and he's a true hero, instead of what it looks like this will be, with Gerard Butler being the only person who isn't a corpse by

Isn't she one playing the former FLOTUS?

Given the importance of the movie and quantity of related content included in this release, I wonder why it gets just a 'B'. But hey, I think I might check this out.

Lipstick?

"How do you like that, Mr. Hitler?!"

I saw "two-term misadventure" and initially thought it was an oxymoron, until I remembered "love child".

"Y'know I'd like a little government."
She said, "Me too, mine's as big as a house!