“Bruno” is maybe the third best song in that movie. My guess is that everyone attaches to it because of the chorus.
“Bruno” is maybe the third best song in that movie. My guess is that everyone attaches to it because of the chorus.
I don’t remotely get how We Don’t Talk About Bruno became, apparently, an earworm. Nothing at all against the piece, which is a fine exposition song, but I didn't find it musically gripping at all. Surface Pressure is also my favorite from that film, but there are multiple others I also thought were more catchy.
My point wasn’t how big they remained, it was that no matter what they did, even Ford would get questions about Star Wars right up to the present day and it seems like he hated it being brought up more often than not.
Our generations Yellowstone is going to be some cape shit isn’t it?
and when Johnson took over, he thumbed his nose at everything Abrams had apparently set up, to go in his own direction... And then, when Abrams took back the wheel, I equally understand his wanting to take the series back to where he’d initially planned on it going.
It’s entirely possible that people see more than one movie in theaters in a year, right? Like yes, I saw Wakanda Forever in theatres, but I also saw The Menu.
Wait...she’s Scott Ridley’s kid??? No waaayyy!
Eight-year-old me went into the theater excited for robots and spaceships. Eight-year-old me came out of the theater haunted by poor Tony Perkins’s face during that scene.
“especially when European burial grounds, like the Paris catacombs, and accepted religious rituals, like the Pope ingesting symbolic blood and flesh, have the potential to be so much scarier.”
That seems really reductive when talking about a movie like Blood Simple. You don’t find too many filmmakers who arrive on the scene fully formed.
“that was too mean for today’s easily offended viewers”
So, we’re going to cover that. Of course. Because that’s what we do.
The only time I ever got angry at candy was when Skittles changed the flavor of the green one from lime to sour apple.
I mean, wasn’t it obvious that Christopher Lee was a vampire given how many vampires he played? That’s how you can know what an actor is like offscreen — look at who they play. It’s not like acting involves pretending to be different from how you are or anything.
On the spectrum of opinions on opinions, Nanjiani’s opinion that “none of us should have an opinion” (deep breath) falls squarely in the center.
I would say the AVClub is pretty self-aware in stripping everything else from the interview, then framing the out-of-context quote as Kumail rolling up his sleeves and engaging with a controversy.
Everybody is always the same everybody. The You Just Can’t Win Industrial Complex demands it.
Great, because she’s been asking about you...
they’re also, i think, learning the hard way that most people aren’t online and don’t care about this culture war shit.