I'm sure the Whataburger's counsel will be glad to know they have an expert witness ready to go.
I'm sure the Whataburger's counsel will be glad to know they have an expert witness ready to go.
Their breakfast taquitos are good as hell. I once waited 45 minutes for one and it was worth every second.
Kinda why Blankman didn't work…he took out all the stuff that made Handi-Man funny. Also, Mike Binder directed it for some reason.
He lost me around the time he lost the reverb
Somehow this article is online https://www.questia.com/new…
Oh, they fully explain it but if 5% of the audience fully understood every detail the first time around, I'd be shocked. But like I said, you get enough of it that it doesn't really matter. The audience is never like, "what's happening?" You always understand where it's going, because the goals of the characters are…
Blankman was kind of the more-PC version of Handi-Man, right?
I'm sure a studio would think audiences are far too stupid to understand the ins and outs of the plot of Trading Places. But here's the thing: we were too stupid back then, too! But it didn't matter, cause it was so funny and good.
I feel like he's been threatening to do this since the original Spawn came out.
That's true that he doesn't have his own voice, but neither does Steven Soderbergh really (though some of his films have commonalities like Out of Sight and the Oceans series). I think the problem with DGG is he's not quite accomplished enough to jump from genre to genre. I do think he has a style, but he often buries…
I remember on the audio commentary they said Caleb Deschanel—Zooey's dad and a master cinematographer (Black Stallion, The Natural, The Right Stuff)—was on set that day so they all felt pressure to do a good job.
I think Hill is great but I'm not sure if I'm ready to say he's better than Green yet. Hill does have the advantage of having a strong authorial voice and I think he's getting better, while Green seems to be in a slump. Green seems more interested in being an Altman/Linklater type—an artist in a journeyman's clothing.…
My parents watched that movie and thought it was mildly funny but lost their shit at the Tom Arnold scene (pun intended).
He's very talented but seems to really have some bitterness about the way he was treated by Hollywood, even though he also admits he used to be a dick. He seems very hung up on people who don't like him.
"You asked for more white people ennui content and you got it!" - Reed Hastings
Note that I wrote this hours before news of Roadies cancellation broke
Right? The Broken Lizard thing struck me, too. ATRG also has quite a few sophomoric jokes scattered throughout.
If I had to theorize, I think maybe he wanted to do his own thing and not be known as Green's on-screen surrogate, and there may have been some bad blood with that decision. In an interview I watched on…
Agreed. It was weird to write him out. I think Schneider wasn't really meant for sitcom acting and he knew it. His style is a little too natural and dry, but when everyone else is playing it kinda big, he comes off as stiff.
"Luke, finally got you an audition. You're a shoo-in!"
"What is it?"
"Playing Owen's brother! Can you believe it? Owen's already cast, so you just go in and give em what you got."
"They've got to give it to me, right? I really need this."
I remember him for a couple of years being asked what his top movies of the year were and saying "Foot-Fist Way" and thinking "that movie with the guy who played Bust-Ass? Was that even released?" Couple of years later Danny McBride is a huge star. So weird. I think I was MySpace friends with him in the early '00s…