"the 20s are pretty formative, you know?"
"the 20s are pretty formative, you know?"
He should do one where he follows the President around for 8 years and sees how drastically they age during their stint in one of the most demanding jobs in the world.
"Being great doesn't make you die young, and dying young doesn't make your work any better in retrospect"
MacGirlver?
It's just the way we take in movies, man. Who gives a shit if the audience is right or wrong.
I get you. I think that Andrew thinks it's worth it, but time and again we're showed how flawed Andrew's thinking is. And yes, Fletcher's teaching was effective to pulling out a musical genius, but does it ultimately matter?
Obviously, that's not what you took away from the movie… but it's what I took away from it. …
TOO LATE! ALREADY MOVED IT UP MY QUEUE!
Also the fact that Oprah produced both those movies. Lee Daniels says she soured her relationship with "Hollywood", but it sounds more like Oprah
masturbate
"Van Gogh put himself through hell, I feel deeply for his suffering. But if Prozac had been available to him, we might not have Starry Night."
This is almost the exact question the movie wants you to ask. It spends virtually the whole running time showing how Fletcher's a monster and Andrew is so single-minded to be…
"And the kid almost does die, and Fletcher's earlier protege did die, as a result of psychological abuse at the hands of a music teacher."
"I'm not racist, I just don't like all those uppity actors from that negro movie"
Hey, who do we think the writer is who was nominated in the last year, thinks the "make-up and hair" on "the tree" from Guardians of the Galaxy was great, called Everything Is Awesome "whack", and voted for the sound categories despite not knowing the difference between sound editing and mixing.
I'll give her one thing though… she's the only person, so far, willing to abstain when she hasn't seen all of the nominees.
I like that she finds the idea of voting for Selma just because black people are in it ridiculous, but thinks Eastwood's age and Arquette's lack of plastic surgery are worthy of consideration.
She also added: Patricia Arquette probably was sorry she agreed to let them film her age over 12 years.
I'm surprised more people aren't giving Selma votes! They gave white people so much credit for being decent at the end!
Whiplash is offensive — it’s a film about abuse and I don’t find that entertaining at all.
*rolls eyes*
Yea, there are much, uh, better ways to verbalize that Selma isn't an exceptional film.
Yea, and they should recruit John Candy and Tupac to join again!