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Joes
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More like dudes who like seeing women kissing.

This is bullshit and beyond disheartening. By the same logic, the entire internet should be shut down because trolls. It's ridiculous and completely disregards all the good such a service does. IMDb was an amazing place for film lovers to find each other and discuss literally everything, even the most obscure of

Can't wait until someone makes a one-man film about this guy having a meltdown in his office, a la Robert Altman's "Secret Honor."

Got an Original Song nomination. Anyway, the answer is "Once."

That would be because most people don't agree.

I guess we just don't perceive this the same way. I literally could not answer that question because, as I said, a story and the way it's conveyed visually and aurally on screen are completely indivisible from one another. The story *is* its audiovisual expression. The quote gets trotted out all the time, but Ebert

He's terrific in "Lion," best of the nominees in the category in my opinion.

Please. It sounds fine on the album.

But what about "Moana," the best Disney princess film in ages, or "The Red Turtle" which I haven't seen yet, but is supposedly marvelous.

Me thinks you didn't see "Love & Friendship" (which should have been nominated and won, by the way)!

Except it was.

She's great in Florence Foster Jenkins, though.

It means that movies are more than stories: they're cinematography and movement and mood and affect and mis-en-scene and rhythm etc. etc. A story and the way it's conveyed on screen through the language of cinema are inextricable.

"An odd lack of empathy for male experiences," a phrase that history has rendered completely unusable.

I hate to break it to you, but that guy works for Kimmel and has gone around to Tr*mp's rallies over the past year trolling his supporters.

It should be winning best cinematography.

CAMERAPERSON. Amazed it's not even mentioned here! What's up, guys?

SHINY from "Moana." A psychedelic glam-rock sequence in a freaking Disney kids' movie.

"Pete's Dragon" was cringe-inducing. Awful writing, chock-a-block with Disney cliches.

Wow, D'Angelo is spot-on about "Moonlight." Baffled how it's so universally exalted. I think that its rare subject representation is making people believe it's better than it really is.