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onthewall2983
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Homicide: Life On Sesame Street

Wesley Rutina sounds like an athlete's name.

I've only seen it once on cable, what I thought was funny was the death scene. It's the most perfect fall you'll ever see.

The debate intrigues me. It's too bad Mann wasn't interviewed for the Side by Side film. Honestly Fincher is doing a better job of utilizing digital (I love this film but Zodiac is the best use of digital in a period film that I've seen), but what Mann is doing is wholly suited to his style. Interesting how some of

I'm kind of in agreement about the 2nd part. I'm sure a whole movie could have been made about Lili Taylor's character.

Stephen Lang is stoic as a motherfucker in this one. That was my prevailing memory of it after I saw it. Depp and Bale are great too, and one can't help but be mesmerized by Cotillard, especially on the big screen.

That's what's keeping me from going full tilt on it. I have more faith we'll be seeing that more with indie/foreign stuff (like it never stopped, really), Duke of Burgundy for example will be a good antidote to that mess.

It appears that way too, but that makes no sense in the real world because why not reach where there isn't glass?

Well you said "almost killed sci-fi", so I thought you meant the genre as a whole.

Fair to say The Matrix saved it, or just took the focus off those films?

*looks at the Grimm picture* Someone forgot their safeword.

The studio shelved it. Another reason to hate on Fifty Shades of Grey.

The Anderson Tapes would make for an interesting modern update.

Maybe recently, but he's been in several impressive films for a long time since he originated Lector. Mostly in supporting roles but in at least a few of them he steals the show. 25th Hour specifically, holy shit is he heartbreaking in that.

The film never really talked about who he murdered. In fact, Hannibal is really not nearly the focus of the film as he would be in the later ones.

I am too, and I'll go as far as to say I enjoyed it more than Silence.

The music at the end of the film which is Zimmer's is glorious in and of itself.

I think I've only ever watched it on TV, and every time there was glass.

Damn it I'm going to have to watch that again now.

This brings up an interesting point, whether or not the movie would have done a bit better at the B.O. with a female lead?