danelectrode
Dan Electrode
danelectrode

Once one of my brothers didn't get hired for an entry-level job because some criminal had used his name as an alias in another state before he was born. He alerted the company to the issue and they said there was nothing they could do because it was their policy (it was Sam's Club).

Maybe it's just me, but for me? I'd rather be in a play where we used props and acting rather than sustaining actual, potentially deadly injuries during a performance.

He also appears as Batman in Suicide Squad, so that would bring his total up to five if his solo screenplay gets made (along with Batman v Superman & Justice League 1 and 2), quickly making him the actor to play Batman in the most films.

He didn't actually say Dave Matthews Band is racist, but that their fanbase is full of latently racist dude-bro types.

That might be the honest answer, but disparaging the movie you're being paid to promote would likely put him in beach of contract and be tantamount to career suicide.

Yeah, it seems like a question more suited to Snyder than to the actors. He could have gotten at the same issue more indirectly by asking them what they thought about Snyder's vision of these characters and how it differs from their "classic" portrayals or something like that, but the way it was asked was totally just

Can't really blame him for disengaging from such a bullshit question. What the fuck did that interviewer expect from "Your movie is getting bad reviews, how does that make you feel?" I wouldn't blame him if he had gotten up and walked out.

Yeah, I'm sure. I'm not trying to be thin-skinned about it, a lot of people do have ridiculous accents around here, especially in the more rural areas.

As a Wisconsin resident, it was kind of infuriating that they did a whole sketch about Wisconsin accents (plenty of hay to be made there) but didn't bother to pronounce the name of the town correctly? Nobody says "Fon-du-lock," as they did on the show, it's pronounced "Fon-du-lack."

The "real twist" is not even a twist at all though, the machine works, which the movie tells you all along. The magic trick is that the movie convinces you there's a twist where there really isn't one.

My favorite thing about The Prestige (which is, for my money, Nolan's best film so far), is the way it basically tells you the twist the entire time, over and over, in multiple ways, and yet people still argue over what happened. The entire opening scene (with Cutter showing the bird trick to the boy who recognizes

Yeah, but you don't work at a sitcom workplace where everyone always goes out together after work and attends each other's birthday parties and weddings and stuff!

So you can buy magical spells and singing cartoon candelabras and all that shit but you would totally lose your suspension of disbelief if there were a couple black people in the mob or tavern scenes?

Not to give them a free pass, but since most of them are set in the middle ages (or are otherwise "period"), it probably would be pretty unlikely for a shopkeeper to be a woman, or for a bunch of women to be hanging out in a tavern, in many of the settings. Not that they shouldn't just do it anyway (see also:

Curious how that will wind up working since Rob Lowe is obviously already on another show on a different network

She's also starring in an upcoming movie with… Tina Fey.

I really don't get the outrage over them calling it a comedy. As Gervais noted during the golden globes, it is easily funnier than Pixels, and I'd argue it's funnier than most of the more traditional comedies that were released in 2015.

I don't know if he had. He probably would have liked that one a lot as well, although there's a chance he would have just preferred to watch the John Wayne version.

My father in law loved O Brother with a passion but I don't think he had ever seen another Coen bros. film. I love their movies, but I think that one in particular is extra approachable because it has an ending, as opposed to the majority of their films which tend to end with kind of a shrug or an overly opaque

Yeah, he says in the movie that it was his first battle.