avclub-c39fc32a490fea126fe87ad1fcad63e3--disqus
I want what I gotta get
avclub-c39fc32a490fea126fe87ad1fcad63e3--disqus

Joe is very robot like, and I hate listening to his disinterested droning during the games, but I mean the literal "fighting football robots" that are always colliding and exploding and spiking footballs during their promos.

“The best way to gain more yards is advance the ball down the field from the line of scrimmage.”

Football on FOX would be infinitely better if they got rid of those goddamn robots.

You clods. Use cream, not milk.

I've seen it so many times. I mostly watch it for the comedic value at this point.

Oh it certainly is one of their most dark films, to be sure. I haven't seen the movie in awhile but the parts that come to my mind that I remember finding funny were….

To me, the baby wasn't as off-putting as Nick's blue Terminator eye.

I wasn't offended as a fan, it just wasn't funny to me.

From what I've heard, he actually like, ya know, sings in this movie, and it doesn't sound like pop garbage but just like… ya know… regular singing. I know, I can hardly believe it either, but I think he's a fairly talented musician so I'm interested to see if he can pull it off.

Just realized I also forgot "Do the handicapped go to hell?" and "Probably". Damn there's more of these than I remembered.

All of their movies strike me as part comedy. They all have a very dark, sometimes dry sense of humor, but to me Fargo and Miller's Crossing are two of their funniest movies. Even No Country has moments that I find hilarious. Their ability to mix the dramatic so seamlessly with dark comedy is why I love their films so

I'm certainly not very well-traveled, no. I suspected it had European origins, but my first guess would have been that it was an Irish name.

Hall of Fame Inductee - "Sheeeeeeeeeeeeeiiiiiiiiitttt" Senator Clay Davis, The Wire

Of course it occurred to me. Just because it focuses on the T.V. show doesn't make my statement (an opinion, by the way) any less true. I'll be sure to lambaste you sometime for some petty, fairly insignificant detail.

The use of "It's the Same Old Song" throughout the movie, but especially during the final scene right before the credits, is one of my favorite uses of a song in any movie I've seen.

But this isn't that. It's an opinion about a T.V. show. Perhaps I should have been more specific.

I briefly (and foolishly) considered going to school for cinematography based solely on the work of Roger Deakins, specifically the beatiful The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, No Country For Old Men and The Man Who Wasn't There. It's a good thing I didn't because I like to have a roof over my

God this is hard. My rankings could literally change from day to day, but I'll do my best.

Kudos for knowing it was between these two. If you had included The Man Who Wasn't There among their worst I would have taken great issue with that.

Especially considering there's only 18 albums listed.