Well, I still vote in the affirmative.
Well, I still vote in the affirmative.
The panicked "No. No. No no no." from the paparazzo made me laugh so hard.
Holy shit, they're all free! Thank you so much for this.
Yeah, everyone knows you got to sync the Mummy up with Floyd's Wish You Were Here.
Also, Karen Gillan shaved off all her hair for Guardian of the Galaxy!
Eek. I couldn't imagine Luck without him. The end of episode conversations between him and Hoffman were always a delight. They really seemed like they were old friends.
I've wanted to watch Crime Story for a while now, so if someone knows where/if it's streaming, it would be greatly appreciated.
Is that because she's a lesbian?
@tomandlu:disqus: I don't know about abuse, but I think it's fair to say he's getting blowback because his arguments come off like a would-be-martyr's attempts to prove that BS Dracula, (and for also Robert Altman, for some reason) sucks and you are an idiot if you don't agree with him.
Shit, it's easily the best thing she's ever done.
If only Sonny had an EZ pass.
Two delightful items from the Monarch's list of ways to torture Doctor Venture:
It's weird how the Monarch's epilogue echoed the end of Mad Men.
@facebook-1789012451:disqus Seems like you and I saw two very different movies. Although, my version had the weird sunglasses going on too.
"I can smell your exit visas!"
@avclub-ca6cb47da12090ffd2470daf51f71be1:disqus Just like Biggie said, mo' mummies, mo' problems.
Or did it?
I wouldn't go so far as to call it one of the ten best, but it's certainly one of the most fascinating big releases of the 90s. It's an over the top feast for the eyes that seems more like a Peter Greenaway film than something from the director of the Godfather and Apocalypse Now.
@avclub-41e23e24ee2670c4128cd7e5e5ee42ab:disqus Unless your movie's called Cinderella Man.
I watched Waterfront for the first time shortly after seeing the second season of the Wire, and the show's more nuanced take on mob influence in dock unions kind of ruined the movie for me. It's hard to take the film's "corrupt for corruption's sake" union seriously after watching Frank Sobatka's moral struggle.