I'm not sure what you mean by US Theaters. My recollection was that Underground had no US distribution deal until the Anthology Film Archive bought the rights and screened it exclusively for a few weeks in 1997.
Did it play elsewhere as well?
I'm not sure what you mean by US Theaters. My recollection was that Underground had no US distribution deal until the Anthology Film Archive bought the rights and screened it exclusively for a few weeks in 1997.
Did it play elsewhere as well?
What are you, one o' dem anti-conspiracists?
Xifu!
I asked his permission but he ran out of the room crying instead.
This theory keeps coming up and it wouldn't surprise me if the show goes out on a landmark ad campaign. But I don't think it's Don who does it. It's Peggy.
Photo didn't transfer but basically Trudy had payos (hassidic sidelocks).
Uh thanks but I was actually referring to this:
Are we certain that Tammy wasn't rejected from Greenwich Country Day because Trudy has gone hassidic?
Also worth noting that the episode was directed by Lane Pryce. Nice job dead guy!
Jimmy's been watching Peggy's career and Jimmy likes what he sees. Jimmy's gonna get Peggy a sweet new gig!
So the whole thing is based on Me & Bobby McGhee.
It is the exact same movie.
Then yes, more ppl should know about that book.
But seeing Munich was such a strange experience because I kept being like, "Oh yeah, that guy on the park bench is dead." Every beat was already known.
Well, was Stephen Bauer in the book?
Why doesn't ANYBODY talk about the fact that, budget aside, Munich is a near-verbatim remake of the HBO movie the Sword of Gideon?
After hearing so many negative things about this movie, it was nearly revelatory to actually see it and appreciate the philosophical weight outpacing the stunning imagery.
But why isn't it more common knowledge that Munich is a remake of The Sword of Gideon, an HBO movie starring Steven Bauer?
A few others:
1) Both Don and Roger get phone calls from people with foreign names, neither work-related
2) Roger can't go on the new business golf outing b/c of his past relationship with Burt Peterson
3) Megan's sister espousing the grim Quebecois insistence on duty over happiness is a theme flogged in Infinite Jest
4)…
So is Don the father of one of the kids sitting shiva on Rachel Katz's couch?
I thought of that too, but nor was it Campion's debut.
And I think this one has a twist, like it's really Orser who needs deprogramming or something…
Like some of it you want to cherish and some of it is garbage?