Just to be clear - its okay to pretend to be British, not okay to pretend to be Indian. I don't care for Myers either way just trying to figure out where the line and why.
Just to be clear - its okay to pretend to be British, not okay to pretend to be Indian. I don't care for Myers either way just trying to figure out where the line and why.
Never liked this show. It seemed to have more in common with In Living Color than Mad Magazine.
In The Company of Men is awesome and I very necessarily recommend it.
Seriously. A voice in Big Hero 6? He co-stars in one of the biggest films of this year. How'd that get overlooked? He was in all the commercials for it too.
They said a stand-alone Electra movie would never work either but look how wrong they were.
Spot on. The world would be a better place if that first Avengers movie line-up featured Ant-Man and Wasp insteada Black Widow and Hawkeye.
Uh-huh.
Why? She's a weak link both as a character and actress. Maybe if it were a prequel where they explain WTF happened to her Russian accent.
Or like all the fucking shit the Karate Kid went through to win that girl and then the next movie he's like 'Huh? What girl? Who?'
The high stakes, the Christmas release, the director of Rocky, the studios and audience expecting the next Animal House.
Yeah, Belushi banging his shoe on the armrest in protest during the screening is my favorite part.
The sections in WIRED that detail the disastrous production of Neighbors are the highlights.
Wow. I had no idea.
Thanks for saying so! I thought it was just me. I laugh every time I re-read that for some reason.
Good point. The original was Jake front and center. This, if it HAD to be made, should have focused on Goodman trying to pull Elwood into the fold instead of the other way around. But I guess that would defeat the point of an Aykroyd-driven vanity project.
At least that would be a somewhat humorous explanation. But knife fight… it's just so gritty and real. Basically the opening image is John Belushi, face down in a jail cell, bleeding to death.
No better way to kick off a comedy than by informing the audience that the beloved character of Jake was 'killed in a knife fight.'
you're right, though I think most people get the impression Aykroyd probably nagged him into it.
Something creepy off-putting about starting things off with "Looking For a Fox", with two over-the-hill Blues Brothers in a strip club, singing about trying to score hot chicks. And they brought a child with them. Dan's delivery of: "Hey Mac, you know something? You can sing, man!" *high five* is really cringey.
But then he played the role during the SNL reunion and immediately fucked up the words to "Everybody Needs Somebody."
That's pretty much what David Spade said of BB2K on a Hollywood Minute during weekend update. Dan and Jim Belushi 'should go back to do what they do best, getting high and just talking about doing things like this.'