Shit, I'll go see it.
Shit, I'll go see it.
I know I've said this about a lot of different things, but this will finally fill the void in my heart from when my parents divorced. I'm sure of it!
Having read both (grew up Mormon) I can say for sure Under the Banner of Heaven is a much more interesting, accurate, much better written book.
Brewvies is one of the very few things I miss about living in Salt Lake City. I hope this gets resolved quickly, like when someone tried to get them in the same sort of trouble for showing The Hangover Part II. Somewhere there is news footage of me sort of dressed as a vampire and making weird faces in their bar area…
YES. Dalton deserved better. He's everything I've ever wanted in a Bond.
Ooooh Daily Mail is one of my favorite songs they've ever done. I really love Bloom as well.
This is my favorite news of all day.
I also really like Big Daddy, and apparently so does Paul Thomas Anderson, which I use to justify my feelings.
I could listen to six more WTFs with John Lurie, easy.
The logistics of how they're both in the movie but they can only see one set of hands made me crack my whole shit up.
Their failure to understand the games, especially "Riddle Me This," made me super happy. Coincidentally listened to the PFT episode where they again have trouble with "Riddle Me This" right after, which was a lot of fun.
I haven't seen the trailer, but Tom Hanks seems too nice to be the main character based on the little I know about the film.
who is "we?" I like Jason Sudeikis.
Of the Dave Eggers books I have read, it was by a longshot my least favorite, so I'm not that surprised.
He's in a weird class with Sam Rockwell and (for some reason) Ethan Hawke where I'll see their new movie no matter what it is or how good it looks, just because I think they're fun to watch.
I haven't seen that movie in probably 15 years and don't remember if it was actually good, but I remember loving the hell out of him rocking out to the Land of the Lost theme song.
He had the right to do a shitty job interpreting the character, sure. I have the right to say he did a really shitty, boring, incoherent job also. I'm an American too, goddamnit!
Yeah, when I first read it I was 23 and my youngest brother was 8 so it was really easy to get into that headspace. That's a rough 40 pages.
I loved those three as well (might even say AHWoSG is my favorite book, period) but haven't really been able to get into anything else he's written. A Hologram for the King rubbed me the wrong way, for whatever reason.
"He's getting his Joans out!"