Liked and seconded. Bryan Fuller, I've got some money here that wants a whimsical story about a pie-maker who wakes the dead.
Liked and seconded. Bryan Fuller, I've got some money here that wants a whimsical story about a pie-maker who wakes the dead.
It's absolutely worth mentioning. I had forgotten the major shift in Clift's career/personal life happened around the Judgment at Nuremberg time period.
random story: as a kid I could never watch all of Honey, I Shrunk the Kids because the part with the kids in the bowl of cereal always grossed me out. Like gag-reflex level grossed out. It was something about the kids contaminating the food that just got to me. I still don't think I've ever finished that film.
I like several parts of three but Laurie's prince got a bit annoying and the show really started falling into a set formula (Baldrick's use of "I have a cunning plan" followed by Edmund's insult of Baldrick, for example). Still funny stuff but I felt like I started to see the wheels turn more than enjoying the ride.
Did you explain that the flying monkeys were people in costume? …because no one explained that to me and it created a fairly embarrassing conversation about three years ago.
It's interesting, I do think Gone Baby Gone is Affleck's best film but it's also the only one out of the three that I don't really want to re-watch. That ending totally kills me.
Yeah I have the same exact question about that part of The Master. Once I've made up my mind that it was real (because how else did he know to go to England?) I think of some other aspect that makes me think it was a dream.
This just reminds me that I am super excited to see Hugh Jackman play Houdini on Broadway. I bet if Houdini hadn't drowned all his clones then he would have lived through that guy punching him in his inflamed appendix.
*Zoolander-style walk-off in celebration*
Yeah Prestige is still my favorite Hugh Jackman performance. I think this is the film that convinced me he had a larger future in film.
Without questions: Wolverine. He has super healing, metal on his bones, awesome mutton chops and doesn't even remember his parents enough to have abandonment-crime fighty issues (unless you count Prof. X as his dad in which case you're wrong because Prof. X is the best dad ever.)
Did the reenactors reenact the massive amounts of scurvy, disease, and malnourishment that make reading about Andersonville really, really gross?
The taking the baby out of the building scene is by far my favorite moment in Children of Men. I tear up every. single. time. I watch that part and the fact that everyone goes right back to fighting after they're clear just drives the whole point home.
I am generally a little surprised still when people mention not liking the end of No Country for Old Men. I feel like that ending is what keeps me returning to the film. You're just hoping for Jones' character to put all the pieces together just to find out that not only is he not going to catch the guy, he's so…
I just saw Who Framed Roger Rabbit for the first time last year and I'm so sad I never saw it when it first came out. Child-sized me would have loved the hell out of that movie.
I love Judgment at Nuremberg. One of Spencer Tracey's best and probably my favorite Burt Lancaster film. There's something about how the WWII generation used film as a way to process the whole war that is so fascinating.
Pretty much the only thing I've watched has been Blackadder. I'm on series four and I like it quite a bit so far because it has the return of Tim McInnerny (Percy was my favorite part of series 2) plus Fry and Laurie. I do miss Edmund being bumbling like he was in series one but the show has been increasingly funny…
I thought a little about this subject during this year's Oscar race. In my mind, I couldn't believe that the Academy would pick Sugar Man over How to Survive a Plague. Sugar Man was, obviously, the happiest of the nominated docs this year, but it thrives on interesting story without any sort of wider impact other than…
James Franco's internal voice: This is so classic. They think I'm James Franco pretending to be the Wizard of Oz but really, I'm James Franco pretending to be Michelle Williams' version of James Franco as the Wizard of Oz. I'm such an artist I amaze even myself. And no one will recognize my sheer and utter genius.…
As a fan of alliteration, the Orange Iguanas were always my least favorite team.