His first line in the trailer is about how he grew up in Minnesota, so I'm going to go out on a limb and guess he's probably not playing a transplant.
His first line in the trailer is about how he grew up in Minnesota, so I'm going to go out on a limb and guess he's probably not playing a transplant.
First of all, Bro does drugs? Who could have guessed. I hope this doesn't damage his clean-living brand…
Very easily a combination of all these options. I agree, Harry was objectively more memorable image-wise whereas Marv's name is less common and therefore easier to recall.
Or like opening a box that says "Eyes Wide Shut" and finding The Perfect Storm! Wait…
This is so much better. There were no real parallels or juxtaposition highlighted in the article version, but somehow putting the goofy Seinfeld tune over the moody Twin Peaks visuals is instantly funny.
I scrolled all the way down here just to see if anybody pointed that out. Despite the article's insistence Harry couldn't be recast, French Stewart is clearly playing him in everything but name. Far more likely the screenwriter just forgot which one was which when naming him.
Disappointed?! That's like opening a case marked "Silver" and finding gold!
Spidey I'm In Love?
You can see the entire arrow part below his feet.
So in that one where he's hanging off the A on the Avengers Tower, he must be at least forty feet tall, right?
Short T over long T, wallet chains, men with bangs, frosted tips, skate stuff, lip gloss, pedal pushers (again,) shirts that didn't cover the full torso but weren't short enough to be full crop tops. bucket hats, etc. Filming wise, lots of angles and whooshes, pop punk/nu-metal soundtracks, band posters on every wall.…
Didn't it come back a little while ago?
It was Dan Harmon playing Ice T on that episode. I'm 100% sure they didn't ever ask the real Ice T. Why would you pay big bucks for a celebrity to voice a parody of themself when somebody already on the payroll can do a good enough impression?
"they're not hurting people, right?"
If I'm thinking of the same joke, I think the implication was it stood for "screw them," or "suck it" or some similar phrase. The line was something like "if they don't like it, well, that's what the S stands for," right? That's what I read into it, anyway.
Yes, this is still true. Cool. For sure.
No thrill, that point just wasn't clear to me at all. There was a fuss about that stuff in the early days too though - several American actors screen tested for the role early on but were eventually decided against due to their nationalities.
Nope, it's just confined to the Newswire section for now. Given AV Club's good track record of listening to feedback and not fucking up the layout in the past though, particularly the comments section, it should be safe to assume it won't spread throughout the site anytime soon. PAUSE NOT.
OK, but the things you've seen him do that in outside of Sunny are big, successful movies.
Aside from Alan Dale, whose American characters are all major Aussiephiles judging by their thick accents.