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hork
avclub-ecc7c84e8687e5dc6bf74c50d937e771--disqus

No, you are correct, it does mention it.

I'll never understand America's love for Chick-Fil-A. Their chicken sandwich may be the worst thing I've ever eaten.

It's not a stretch at all to call this movie film noir. Film noir is not a genre, it's a style, which this movie very much has.

I remember this scene as the moment in which the movie finally started getting good (I hated it up until then). Sadly, it's like two minutes before it ends.

I don't often agree with the A.V. Club folks about television, but this is spot on. When I saw the title I immediately thought of "The One with the Embryos," and "Dinner Party" is one of my favorite episodes of any show, ever.

Pixie - He's bisexual, so, yes he is.

So if you were grading a movie, you'd just start with "A" and downgrade it a notch with each flaw you spotted?

Is this meant to be ironic? Because this "review" is everything that it accuses "American Idiot" of being. I've never heard of this guy, but he comes off as way more of a pretentious douche than Billie Joe Armstrong could ever be.

The only thing I remember about that movie is the exchange: "I'm not going to like you, am I?"… "Don't be ridiculous, everybody likes me." Only because Sorkin reused it in Sports Night.

"Obviously"?

"I own a mansion and a yacht."

I read the script before I saw the movie, and thought it was mediocre.  Then I saw the movie, and thought it was terrible.  Everyone except Hoffman just looked uncomfortable being in this movie (especially Rebecca Pidgeon, about whom the less said, the better, I suppose).

I'd say all of his movies minus the three "hits" are misses.  Of the ones listed, I've only seen The Isle, but all of his pre-Spring movies are just dreadful. 

Yeah, good luck with that.  I would literally rather watch any movie ever made than sit through Shoah again.  And not because it's emotionally taxing.

Speaking as someone who loves great musical numbers more than anything else in the world, and hates bad or mediocre musical numbers (which is most of them), I actually really like the numbers in this movie, for reasons that I can't remotely articulate.  I think the simplicity works for them.  When I think of the film

Ugh, I hate those Cosby Show dream episodes.  Actually, I pretty much hate all non-David Lynch dream sequences.

I saw this movie two years ago and barely remember it.  Strange that it's suddenly getting a release here.  I doubt anyone was looking forward to it.

In my opinion, it's not just the last great old-school Hollywood musical, it's the greatest adaptation of a Broadway musical ever made.  This scene has always been one of my favorite numbers, although, musically, it seems almost pedestrian compared to, for instance, pretty much any number from In the Heights (I'm

In my opinion, it's not just the last great old-school Hollywood musical, it's the greatest adaptation of a Broadway musical ever made.  This scene has always been one of my favorite numbers, although, musically, it seems almost pedestrian compared to, for instance, pretty much any number from In the Heights (I'm

I love this movie, but it annoys me how steadfastly these guys cling to the delusion that they're making something artistic and groundbreaking, and not simply gay-for-pay porn.