brobinso54
BRob
brobinso54

Men and Bodies Bodies Bodies are iconic?  Really?  Didn’t they just come out and also kinda suck?

Don’t have much to add other than The Other Two has made it impossible for me to refer to him as anything other than “Marvel’s Simu Liu.”

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That sucks. She had a hell of a “comeback” song a few years back that I love.

Raise a glass for a those with the courage to fight the real enemies, internal and external.  RIP. 

She was ahead of her time, misunderstood, complex and tortured.

This sucks.

So among the very first SNL’s I remember watching was the Andrew Dice Clay episode where she and Nora Dunn pulled out. I remember the controversy surrounding it, as well as my parents saying, “SNL is still on? But it hasn’t been funny in years.” The more things change, the more they stay the same.

Anyone who hasn’t seen it should immediately go watch the Documentary “Nothing Compares.” I learned so much about her fights, her struggles, and her crusades that took me from simply admiring her as an artist to seeing her as one of the greats and an exceptional human being. There are so many highlights and so many

Aw, how horrible. She was an interesting, deeply troubled artist with an amazing voice, some great collaborations, and lots of burnt bridges. Infuriating, up and down, energetic, all over the place... now the parasites and documentarians waddle in and package that messy life with a nice, neat narrative.

I just love this show. I’m sad it’s ending, but I’m so happy it has existed for 3 seasons.

The episode about the group of Avatar fans is one of the best things I’ve ever seen. While it might be tempting to make fun of them or call them nerds, Wilson just lets you see them as what they really are: a group of outcasts who’ve come together to bond over something they enjoy. And there’s nothing wrong with that.

Me. I loved it.

I watched it in 70mm, and missed a few lines, but no more than I would in any other movie. It wasn’t a problem with the sound mixing, so much as some quick exchanges and me likely having a small auditory processing disorder. It is decidedly not like Tenet, which I watched at home and still had trouble getting the

People can see both, actually. I checked, it’s legal.

From what I’ve read in other reviews, the bombings of Japan aren’t depicted onscreen but are shown to haunt Oppenheimer in the latter part of the film.

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“I overhear a woman at the supermarket say the strangest thing...”

Might be weird but I’m curious as to how this film portrays his brother, Frank. He’s the guy who pioneered the concept of a hands-on science museum that got me (and plenty of others) interested in science.

I haven’t seen one mention of Japan in trailers and interviews. Is it safe to say that the movie at least touches on the massive and terrible human cost that followed all the events you discussed from the film?

Good to hear Oppie isn't shown to be a great guy.  Having read American Prometheus, he really comes off as insufferable at times.  He didn't regret making the bomb he just felt it should have been used once and never built again.  Which is terribly naïve and of course didn't happen.  He also kept going on about blood