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I Will Probably Forget This Qu
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Because it's hard to explain to the people who aren't comic book fans already why "She-Hulk" isn't just "The Hulk but a girl". And, being fair, they really haven't been able to make The Hulk work as a stand-alone property, I'm not surprised they're shy about exploring the (generally) jokier spin-off.

I haven't actually seen the movie, but my impression of what is wrong with it is basically that the writers felt that the joke was "Hugh Jackman has balls on his chin", rather than writing a sketch about a character with balls on his chin.

I think this review answers your question pretty directly; if you don't think it's funny (which most people who see it don't), the fact that it has none of those other things makes it harder to watch (and, thus, "worse") than most other comedies, which at least have the baseline of characters and a story to have some

1 million is enough for 20 actors to get 50,000 each, and a lot of actors will take that for a day's work — the issue is (1) getting the offer to them and (2) having the flexibility to make that day's work fit into your schedule. The Farrelly brothers can definitely handle the first, and it sounds as if their method

Helpful hint for next time: If you are watching a movie this bad, just hook up during it. Don't wait. Especially don't wait because the bad movie will just put you both in a bad mood that it will take longer to overcome (hence the tequila).

This is not the kind of movies agents talk stars *into* doing.

That was "The Love Guru"; "The Guru" is a completely different flop.

I don't remember the second one, but I think it coasts by (mostly successfully) on their chemistry and on Cooper being a fantastic asshole.

In my head, Date Movie is marginally better than the others, but honestly I realize that I haven't seen more than five minutes of any of 'em.

Wow, sincere thank you for that.

After my senior year of high school, a long-time friend and I wound up spending a lot of time that summer watching really bad movies. Afterwards, I realized that it made our remaining summer feel longer than it was in a way, because the movies were painful. I'm talking "Going Overboard" level awful.

There are plenty of bad and also overlooked Coppola movies to dig into, no need to get into a movie which made money and was nominated for Best Picture. Rabin's never even done "The Cotton Club" (has he?).

Fun fact: Until about two weeks before the film was released, Christopher Walken was not in "Annie Hall", his scene had been cut. It sounds as if putting it back was the last decision they made before locking picture, and that it was done very very last minute.

I honestly think this is a better would-be Scorsese movie than "Wolf of Wall Street", and it's about pretty much the same stuff.

I kind of wish he took a balloon from her.

Did you ever notice how the snappy dialogue dries up once a fella starts soilin' his union suit?

I think the key is that Tom isn't sure what he's playing at for most of the movie; I *think* it's the Op who says in one of the earlier Hammett short stories that if you don't know what the smart play is, just get everybody else spinning and see where things settle and then play that.

"For his directorial debut, Blatty wanted to avoid exorcisms entirely"

Whenever a story comes out like that, and both sides unite in their outrage that something that ridiculous could happen, it pretty much always turns out to have been essentially invented by a reporter somewhere.

To cheer you up, I'd point out that Trump's big competition has come from two Latinos, so clearly racism is only selling better to racists, not to the Republican party as a whole.