I know people shorten instagram to "insta" online. Not sure if they do it in real life, bur then I'm 32 and almost never encounter teenagers (read: actively avoid. I'm scared of them).
I know people shorten instagram to "insta" online. Not sure if they do it in real life, bur then I'm 32 and almost never encounter teenagers (read: actively avoid. I'm scared of them).
Yes, unless by "film", darquegk means "Instagram"
True. But then, Herzog seems to thrive on conflict and difficult situations. I'm not sure the same is true of Tim Burton and Ron Howard.
I loved those AT&T "You Will" ads in the '90s. I think Fincher directed them. Many of them actually came true, albeit usually in a different form. And AT&T did NOT bring them to us.
Does he? I've never heard that. He's worked with a few filmmakers multiple times which usually is a good sign that the person at least isn't a *huge* asshole.
I watch this show with my wife occasionally and think it's generally pretty cheesy, but that got me really bad.
Haha, I liked it at the time! I just think it's funny for Pitchfork to have given it a 9.0
I kind of wish there were a Tony Scott and a Tarantino version for all of his early movies to compare and contrast. Scott really seemed to love and respect QT's writing. I also wish there were a version of Natural Born Killers that was closer to his original script. Remake, maybe?
I went through a period of loving '70s gems like that, and I ended up really loving one of the songs mentioned by Wright on the K-Billy broadcast "Heaven on the 7th Floor." So cheesy, but so good.
I still like to bring up that they gave So Much For The Afterglow a 9.0. I think the review was by Schreiber himself.
Gotta go blonde and gain a pot belly. Hope he's ready to go full Raging Bull..
I'd even put True Romance above the last few.
Haha, that's exactly the scene I was thinking about.
Also, forgot to add I just really really love the opening title sequence for Jackie Brown with Across 110th Street. I hear the intro of that song and I instantly see that animated Miramax logo. And of course the uses of "Street Life" and "Didn't I Blow Your Mind This Time?" are amazing. I know Tarantino thinks his…
As far as I can remember, it was always comedians telling the stories. The first couple I saw (when it was still a web series) were Jen Kirkman and J.D. Ryznar. I think it started out as comedians who already knew one part of history really well, but that can only go on for so long before you have to go after people…
Yeah, I guess it's one of those things where you don't really know what lines are going to hit until much later. That said, I'm sure Tarantino thinks A LOT about which lines of his are going to be endlessly quotable (which sometimes makes the dialogue way too self-consciously cool).
I'd definitely put it in a close 4th place, but I find it more difficult to rewatch than the first three (difficult meaning slightly tedious).
Best soundtrack and best movie, in my opinion. The older I get the more I realize his career really breaks up into the first three and everything else for me.
Maybe annoying now, but during that period where the movie was out of theaters and before it had come out on video, it was a fun way to sort of run through the movie in your mind.
Yeah, from what Zwigoff said the Weinsteins gave him final credit in the contract but just ignored that and Zwigoff had a hard time fighting it. Frankly, I think what they came up with was possibly better than what Zwigoff had in mind. That opening monologue is a highlight of the movie and he wanted nothing to do with…