I found a place in October. I'm moving to Israel in a month.
I found a place in October. I'm moving to Israel in a month.
…Yes.
And are far more likable than the painfully stupid heroes.
Depends on what you mean by "civilized."
Charcoal grey camouflage, for blending in with the dark!
Naming.
Was.
Well, yeah. It almost killed his career, and he had to take on Raiders of the Lost Ark to keep working.
It's a romantic comedy without any romance or comedy, the kind of movie that seems like it's building up to something interesting and fun, but never does. That said, I've never gotten why people hate it quiet as much as they seem to.
The thing about Temple is that the things that don't work ruin the things about it that would have worked.
Do kids like annoying kid characters? I didn't much give a shit about Short Round to my recollection. 9-year-old me had no problem identifying with the adult hero, but there was a big vogue for inserting pointless child characters into family films in the 80s and 90s.
The opening of Temple of Doom is indeed great, but is also one of those things that comes off worse for being in a movie that's so all over the place.
Also, the T-Rex goes from prime-time Downtown SD to the suburbs in the middle of the night with no helicopters or nothing chasing it. Sloppy indeed.
What if he gets knighted, though?
Slice of Lice is the name of my 2002 pop-punk album.
The Dave Matthews Band is what Patrick Bateman would have listened to if he'd worked in the first dot-com bubble.
See: Saturday Night Fever, Miami Vice
Does it count as virtue signalling when you go on long rants about how everyone is less pure than you and are jealous once they get wise to the fact that you were a fraud who claimed to be a war hero and openly supported dictators in your youth but then hid behind the unfair blacklisting of your colleagues to satisfy…
I've heard that Catcher in the Rye has actually been mis-targeted all along simply because it's about a teenager, and is only enjoyable to adults.
It's one of those movies that romanticizes mental illness, but only passively, in contrast to, say, Equus.