"Don't Think Twice, It's Alright" is too melancholy, even if the narrator is relatively understanding of the break-up.
"Don't Think Twice, It's Alright" is too melancholy, even if the narrator is relatively understanding of the break-up.
I say the movie is the documentary that they've ostensibly been filming for nearly a decade!
It looks like Cube indeed scared the shit out of Rabin during the interview.
All this talk about the best Western of the '90s and no mention of Dead Man? It's enough to make me want to squish some heads.
So, 20SidedDie, whenever you see a douchebag with a hot chick, you think "wow, I really respect that guy! High-five!"? Because I'm pretty sure that's the opposite of my reaction.
I know the staff's loaded with Springsteen fans, so I figured "State Trooper" was a given. Did y'all figure it's been brought up too often in other Inventories?
I'll admit that the final scenes of A.I. can be a little clunky (particularly the Blue Fairy Mecha of Exposition), but they're what make the film.
I don't know, sex with a Betazoid would be pretty awesome. She'd know exactly what turns you on, and as she arouses you, she gets aroused herself.
In middle school, this kid told me OTP stood for "Off the Pickaninnies." I stopped listening to them after that.
"Judging from the widespread adulation this film recieves, from fans and critics, I hardly think it qualifies as a misfire. More like a direct hit. "
A Birth of a Nation was set about a decade before Deadwood was. Of course, that film has a much different idea of the nation's birth, but still.
I'm with you on In a Lonely Place being the quintessential Bogart, featuring his best performance and the most nuanced reflection of the Bogey persona. However, part of what makes the whole thing work is how the film plays off that persona, reflecting the darkness that was only glimpsed in the likes of Sam Spade and…