There's a really great scene in As Good As It Gets where Helen Hunt's character tears up as she talks about how she gave a loving couple a dirty look because she felt so bitter and alone in her own life.
There's a really great scene in As Good As It Gets where Helen Hunt's character tears up as she talks about how she gave a loving couple a dirty look because she felt so bitter and alone in her own life.
"Rod always was the cooler Belding."
"Yeah…but we got the better Belding."
:'-)
If Kara's "cousin" ever appears on the show, I hope it's Tom Welling. I know it doesn't make sense considering we already met Smallville's Jimmy Olsen…but whatever. It'll be silly fun and that's what the show is about.
Other than Hahnzee figuring things out too easily, I have no complaints.
I hate this episode so so much. The whole thing makes me cringe and groan and…gah! I'm choking on my own rage here.
David Gordon Green blows. He made ONE interesting movie — George Washington — which was only received well because a white guy applied Terrence Malick's aesthetic to poor black kids.
"Why are you dressed like somebody died?"
"Wait."
That was a red flag for me. Unless it's just a glossy rehash of classic bits and running jokes, you really need a real screenwriter. And it's seems like this movie is the former.
You're right, but even the forgettable stuff had a one-of-a-kind voice and a couple of classic scenes (except for a couple of awful ones from the mid-to-late 90s). It's like a subpar episode of Season 1 or 2 Simpsons — there's still nothing like it.
That's what I meant by "Greatest Hits collection." I understand sharing those running jokes with a new generation, but I don't think this movie will have much material for an adult diehard fan to enjoy.
"Zack Morris making some sort of curry joke”
Agree. Apparently, they really worked hard to get it right after some awful looking test footage early on. I still wish they used the digitally enhanced, hand-drawn animation Disney used for their Paperman short, but maybe that technology is proprietary.
Although I love Val Lewton, I think the '60s has to win Best Horror Decade: The Innocents (my personal fave), The Haunting, Rosemary's Baby, Night of the Living Dead, Carnival of Souls and (if you can count these as horror) Psycho, Peeping Tom, Repulsion…
As someone who only loves old fashioned psychological/Gothic horror, The Others is probably my favorite post-2000, straight-up horror movie. There's been a bunch of great post-2000 horror-comedies though (e.g. Shaun of the Dead, Drag Me to Hell, Zombieland, Coraline, What We Do In the Shadows).
For the record, I think the reason Supergirl is getting such positive reviews all around is that Man Of Steel was so oppressively loud, violent and clunky that people are just glad to see a drastic course correction in the opposite direction.
I don't think she's capable of weighing down anything.
I can't escape Lisa, our little walking libary!
"…a cheap joke that robs the characters of their potential."
"BART!!! IS THAT YOU???"
"YES!"
"Take out the garbage."
I give Siamese Dream the edge as well. Mostly because it doesn't contain the phrase "Infinite Sadness" in the title.