"First they came for the Netflix subscribers in Chicago, and I did not speak out…"
"First they came for the Netflix subscribers in Chicago, and I did not speak out…"
I watched Leo McCarey's An Affair to Remember on Wednesday not knowing that a pivotal event in the movie occurred on July 1st, so imagine what an amusing coincidence that turned out to be!
My June 2015 first-time film viewings, ranked:
1. Make Way for Tomorrow (1937)
2. Inside Out (2015)
3. Strangers on a Train (1951)
4. Johnny Guitar (1954)
5. Killer's Kiss (1955)
6. A Star is Born (1954)
7. Songs from the Second Floor (2000)
8. Children of Paradise (1945)
9. The Lady from Shanghai (1947)
10. A Pigeon Sat on a…
I just realized that in the four days since the Obergefell v. Hodges ruling, not once do I recall someone using any of the Dean's "Gay marriage!" fishsticks. Our 2012 selves would be dissappointed.
"…while Darius Khondji handles the cinematography, having worked with Phoenix on last year's best-shot film, The Immigrant,"
PARTY DOWN
John Wick is airing on HBO currently for anyone interested in a movie to watch pre-Deadly Adoption live chat.
Yo, Affro: looks like your brother's wedding will not go down as Saturday's most infamous after all.
Yep. Sony was its studio, as you might have guessed from the 11th hour uncancellation.
Today, I found out that for the second time in two years, the place in which I live in will be a Nielsen family household (only this time, it will include a week-long survey instead of a box). So, Hannibal may be cancelled, but its 18-34 viewership won't go down without a fight!
Between this one guy asking why "white pride" is considered racist (additional context: he's half-Mexican), and this other guy sharing an Instagram post explaining why the Charleston shootings weren't a hate crime, I'm really starting to question why I still follow my elementary school classmates on Facebook.
Starting July 30th, Hannibal, Rectify, Review, and Comedy Bang! Bang! will all be airing on Thursdays. That is a quality night of television.
Since that and Spellbound are in a 2-2 tie, I will rent both!
But…Dellavedova! He's scrappy!
Yeah, I've been meaning to watch that for a while. I think Hitchcock even said that this was a personal favorite of his.
That's our Affro!
/Affro mugs into the camera
//audience laughs while also filled with tension over whether or not NRRJ will discover the body of his girlfriend that Affro killed hidden in the living room chest
Suggest for me a 1940s Hitchcock movie to watch that isn't Rebecca, Notorious or Rope. Please?