"How do you know that?"
"How do you know that?"
It's weird how so many of the great Texan humanists listen to that boob job. Linklater's insistence on putting him in his films drives me batty.
I think it is the episode where Connie has her first period.
I feel that all of the characters, even some of the worst, are in their essence very good people and certainly well intentioned, but they are also very flawed and set in their ways to the extent of them accidentally doing bad things. In this way the show, especially when dealing with the combating personalities of…
I just laughed coffee all over my screen.
Absolutely. And to be frank some of the best things about the show come from the animated nature like the very specific look of the characters (Cotton is a purely animated character) and the expansive nature of the setting wouldn't be possible in live action.
My favorite episode is still the one where Dale falls for another women if just for the line, "An experiment gone horribly right."
Hey man fhsbff dunfrudi. Dignreir.
Yeah, there's a great deliberate pathetic obliviousness which makes his sarcastic asshole much more compelling and frankly funny.
Absolutely. I was watching the first Star Trek recently and I honestly believe it would be regarded as well as Wrath of Khan, perhaps better, if the first hour were cut in half. You just have to look down each individual scene and ask yourself if there is any extra information here that is not to the purpose of the…
I prefer the titles that Kluge has come up with. It's cheating, but my favorite '70s movie title though is Every Revolution is a Throw of Dice.
That would have been better.
Now for that The Intouchables remake with Dustin Hoffman and random black man!
Hat, get out of my house.
I am so glad I have no clue what @avclub-e3f5ab7f02122f95b801e13e2c586d6a:disqus is talking about.
As an in vitro baby I can safely say that HDB speaks the truth. The pepper spray would be out before you could say creepy.
Apology accepted. [puffs away like I Dream of Jeannie]
I have to say mine, also suicide related, passage is Sindbad's Dream where he discusses the process of his death in part because it comes so suddenly since until then he was only discussing a dream that left him feeling worried and nostalgic.
Hey, he's not the only movie guy around here. [goes back to watching
Breakfast (Table Top Dolly) while fondling new Curtis Harrington Blu]
Martin Ritt's first adaptation, The Long Hot Summer, is a masterpiece of the highest order as is the formerly mentioned Tarnished Angels.