Some of us hate Girls because we did hate Sex and the City, a lot, hoped that the second movie had finally killed the beast, and now find that it's resurrected itself under a new name.
Some of us hate Girls because we did hate Sex and the City, a lot, hoped that the second movie had finally killed the beast, and now find that it's resurrected itself under a new name.
Yeah, I don't want to be a huge jerk here but the very fact that you blithely call Hannah & Co. "everyone" is kind of troubling, and is the reason some critics of Girls seem so enraged and resentful.
Yeah, I don't want to be a huge jerk here but the very fact that you blithely call Hannah & Co. "everyone" is kind of troubling, and is the reason some critics of Girls seem so enraged and resentful.
This can be a decent rule of thumb but it can also lead you wildly astray in the rare case when something is actually really different from the norm artistically and whoever's cutting the trailer therefore has a wildly inaccurate idea of what the "good" parts of the movie are.
This can be a decent rule of thumb but it can also lead you wildly astray in the rare case when something is actually really different from the norm artistically and whoever's cutting the trailer therefore has a wildly inaccurate idea of what the "good" parts of the movie are.
Admittedly if Ghost Dad had actually played the dad's death as a shocking third act reveal it could've gotten credit for that shocking twist years before The Sixth Sense and thus have had slightly more of a reason to exist (other than being a hilarious literal exploration of the metaphorical idea of a negligent father…
Admittedly if Ghost Dad had actually played the dad's death as a shocking third act reveal it could've gotten credit for that shocking twist years before The Sixth Sense and thus have had slightly more of a reason to exist (other than being a hilarious literal exploration of the metaphorical idea of a negligent father…
Uh, dude, the ghost dad in Ghost Dad being literally a ghost dad wasn't a "twist ending" at all. It's the freaking premise of the movie. It literally happens, and is all spelled out for you, within like the first 20 minutes. (We see him die, we see him emerge from the car accident and discover his newly ethereal…
Uh, dude, the ghost dad in Ghost Dad being literally a ghost dad wasn't a "twist ending" at all. It's the freaking premise of the movie. It literally happens, and is all spelled out for you, within like the first 20 minutes. (We see him die, we see him emerge from the car accident and discover his newly ethereal…