Unacceptable. It's my understanding that all actors exclusively play roles within their economic status.
Unacceptable. It's my understanding that all actors exclusively play roles within their economic status.
These days predicting a movie's quality based on preproduction news is beyond my ken.
I had fun reading it. It was not great, but it was a fun book. It baffles me how much ire people have stirred up for something that's about as dense and meaningful as cotton candy.
I'm now realizing every complaint I have against Robot Chicken is the same complain everyone has about Ready Player One. Even stranger, I do not get the RPO backlash; it's not a masterful book by far, but it was a fun read. I seriously feel like I'm in bizarro world whenever I read opinions about either online.
I felt like it took itself a lot less seriously than a lot of people backlashing against it say it does.
"Begun," ha ha ha. I was a couple years late to the game on this book which is lucky because apparently everyone who read it within a year of its release got personally kneed in the junk by Cline based on how sharp the backlash was on this friggin thing.
It's definitely Nolan's best war movie.
He just kept saying "God's not real but you really stuck a knitting needle through your arm!" for a good three minutes before he segued into a commercial.
I'll be curious to see the reappraisal of Interstellar. That movie got so much flak when it came out (even from me; I didn't mind the ending but it was so friggin' long) and I've noticed a lot of people softening their view of it recently.
I thought it was a good follow-up to the previous week's (or the week before it?) episode, about how magicians develop their tricks.
I honestly was more impressed with the weird cut-out spiral holes than any cg cloud of birds you can throw at me.
Eerie, Indiana?
YOU CAN'T CUT BACK ON BIG ED'S GAS FARM YOU WILL REGRET THIS!
I could watch him watch things with incredulity for hours.
Okay, I'm past expecting Winds of Winter to be released anytime soon, if ever. But could the guy write some other books, then? I'm tired of these worldbuilding compendiums where he shows of the sandbox he's tired of playing in.
Crushed fruitcake, anyone?
Don't you mean hell? That he belongs in hell, the most extreme, badass place ever?
I could very well see him doing a cameo which would then be listed on IMDB as "jorts demon."
The horse's name is HBO Now in August.
I read It for the first time earlier this spring, and that scene's reputation definitely precedes it. That said, I definitely got the same impression; it's a strange scene, but it really is crucial to the characters' arcs.