No man, it goes back to Toasting. Listen to some old Jamaican records. Or Dolemite.
No man, it goes back to Toasting. Listen to some old Jamaican records. Or Dolemite.
Its getting harder and harder to fit that in.
Everything Is Terrible ^ - cut outs the middleman.
Rebecca De Mornay was doing all the heavy lifting in Risky Business.
"Most successful marriage of commercial and artistic vision"… You know what I mean.
NCFOM: not their most artistically successful film. Their most successful marriage of commercial and artistic success, the former outweighing the later. I could've phrased that better, but I was still reeling from being called "fat".
Oh, yeah. Except for that…Unless he was including me and himself as being fucking idiots along with everybody else. I'd go along with that.
Teadoust does disrupt the mutual admiration society, but that's not always trolling. His take on my post was 100% correct!
Thanks Teadoust. Now all I need is the support of Lobsters1 and I'll make a reputation for myself here. I was kind of surprised at the hate and fatboy humor. It's like the Coens don't actually have a career in the world and must be protected from registered poster shame.
Right, there's no comparison between the Coens and Bay.
I'm thinking of Terry Gross right now and I agree!
Miller's Crossing is my favorite. It's not dry. It's pretty funny.
I didn't mention this and nobody else did, but one of the reasons that Ladykillers is a drag is that it is a remake of a better movie:
I was disappointed in the Coens for a long time because they were losing their voice.
Intolerable Cruelty was at least original. The Ladykillers was nothing….and a serious error in judgement. it took A Serious Man to lure me back into the theater with the Coens. It was worth it, but the bloom is off the rose, forever.
I have seen Civ end a marriage. Not mine, but still.
Shots to the dome?
I caught Last of the Summer Wine on NC public tv and - presuming that it was just a six-episode series about codgers dying - I thought it was pretty good.
That last clip with the slow-motion trampoline gravity jump is pretty enough to make me watch the whole movie.
Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange > Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange