That seems like a pretty futile wish; they couldn't even achieve that with any success when Roddenberry was alive to lobby for it.
That seems like a pretty futile wish; they couldn't even achieve that with any success when Roddenberry was alive to lobby for it.
It benefits literally everybody except Sam Rockwell.
No spoilers, but if Interstellar was too "God did it" for you, you should probably avoid Gravity.
I like "The Martian", but there is nothing in "The Martian" half as cinematic as the… no spoilers, so I'll just say the ten or fifteen minute scene in roughly the middle of "The Room". You know what I mean.
She also managed to have extra-good chemistry with Tom Cruise in "That Movie She Was In With Tom Cruise".
Also, Soderbergh was the one who came in and told Gilliam to cut a fifteen minute sequence out of the middle of that movie, because it was too long. His logic was that the sequence made the movie lop-sided; the problem being that, without it, the movie was boring. But, still, he did try.
"Euathlus, however, claimed that if he won, then by the court's decision he would not have to pay Protagoras."
" It's absurd that no-bullshit Claire would have dated him for more than a week anyway."
But they don't even really care about their meeting either! I thought that was pretty funny, the father had made it sound like *his* thing was really important and life-or-death, and the jurors just said "Oh, yeah, we're already voting for you."
I think that most things that widespread in comedy writing nowadays are that way because of their usage on "The Simpsons". I can't swear that "The Simpsons" is the first time anybody did this in a comedic way, but I can swear that they definitely did it, and that almost every working comedy writer today grew up to…
When Olyphant said "n'awlans" I almost died.
Another one:
Yeah, reading about how this should is or even could be great seems like a stretch. It's really cool to have a show that finds a confident voice right out of the gate, but there's not a lot of surprises here. Which, in itself, isn't a surprise; the concept has no legs for a long-form American TV show. But it is a…
I've listened to a chunk of the live stuff. There are a few tracks that I liked, it was cool to hear a live "Desolation Row", nothing that I think would sway you…
I will totally admit that I downloaded them in order to see if they were worth buying, rather than blind-buying the full 18 disc set. There aren't even 2 discs worth of tracks that are genuinely worth listening to, but the actual 2-disc one is (IMO) poorly selected. The 6-disc has everything worth hearing *and* more…
There was a point when Disqus linked with Facebook when it became opt-out, as opposed to opt-in, so I bet that had something to do with it.
I will also say that even if you remove "Infidels" and "Oh Mercy" from the project because they are great albums on their own, the remainder of his '80's albums have enough good songs to make at least a full album, and it would have some pretty great songs like "Every Grain of Sand" and "Dark Eyes".
I'm a superfan, but I'm not one of those *crazies*. I'm only halfway through the 1965 live set, I didn't listen to it beginning to end immediately or anything!
I don't remember it from the movie, but the soundtrack has a song called "Diamond Joe" which is one of my favorite oddball Dylan tracks.
The best thing that I can say about "Mr. Woodcock" is that it's not quite as bad as "School for Scoundrels", so it can't possibly be the worst movie ever made.