No. He plays Furious Styles. There's a scene where he makes them pull over the ship so he can teach them about outer space gentrification. The movie comes to a grinding halt, but it's very informative.
No. He plays Furious Styles. There's a scene where he makes them pull over the ship so he can teach them about outer space gentrification. The movie comes to a grinding halt, but it's very informative.
Bruh. You're thinking of the drawn butter at Red Lobster.
Wow. You went there. One time in the Frosty machine — ONE TIME! — and it follows me around forever.
I worked at Wendy's too, back in 94.
We cleaned the Frosty machine.
Saw this today with my kid.
Dude, I finally watched this movie a coupla nights ago. For the sake of transparency, I'm a Christian. Go to church every week, teach Sunday School, all that stuff and I love me some Jesus.
Yeah, so I'm totally watching this tonight.
I by tonight I mean right now, at my desk at work.
I think it looks good too! I read about it a while ago when they were filming it in Mobile, Alabama. Several survivors and families of survivors visited the set. One of the actors, Matt Lanter, is the grandson of a survivor. Pretty cool! I get the feeling that the story is about the kids more than the captain, but…
"Moore’s case would be more persuasive were counterarguments addressed in depth, rather than swatted down as irrelevant."
Agree. A move has to have impact, but not lasting impact, in my opinion. Only one person makes it to the very end, so if a move changes things for even a day, it's an impactful move for good or bad.
Agree. A move has to have impact, but not lasting impact, in my opinion. Only one person makes it to the very end, so if a move changes things for even a day, it's an impactful move for good or bad.
Yeah, that looked like, "Watch this beautiful dive — eh, fuck it." SMACK.
I read his thing about not calling "Action!" came from working on so many westerns; yelling "Action!" freaked out the horses.
This has always been my feeling as well. I'm convinced Owen Wilson was responsible for the emotional core of Bottle Rocket, Rushmore and The Royal Tenenbaums. It's not that Wes Anderson's movies got bad after that, they just lacked…something.
If I recall correctly — and I haven't read all the comments because, duh, I'm at work — but another difference is that the real life Henry Hill got along much better with his mother-in-law than the Ray Liotta Henry Hill did.
Nope. That's Casino for sure.
Connery's thing in Untouchables was, "They pull a knife, you pull a gun. He sends one of yours to the hospital, you send one of his to the morgue. THAT'S the Chicago way."
I love the bit in Bob Roberts where he tells, um, Bob Roberts that he wishes there was a way he could vote for him a thousand times. Bob says, "Well, there is…" and Jack Black just stares back in giddy disbelief before Bob laughs, "I'm just kidding," prompting WAY TOO MUCH laughter from Jack and his young Republican…
Oh, there's no doubt. I remember thinking, "Who is that and why is she not in every movie ever?"
Mabel Pines is good with one.
I'm not a revisionist who claims that Tokyo Drift is the best in the series, but it does hold a special place in my heart. I was very pleasantly surprised by part one, skipped part two, and had no desire to see Tokyo Drift…