The person who spent 15k on the bet that fueled those Radiohead rumors must be feeling great today.
The person who spent 15k on the bet that fueled those Radiohead rumors must be feeling great today.
I'd love to read a Random Roles interview with that guy.
Better than the Barack HUSSEIN Obama. He wants to destroy our great nation!
"Making these movies must be very rewarding…"
"Yes, the money is good!"
I enjoyed driving to their Cocaine song on GTA V.
I watched the film for the first time a couple of years ago and found it to be as provocative as I'd heard. The last couple of scenes were genuinely shocking in their nihilism. If it had first been produced as a play it'd probably be viewed as a timeless classic.
'Scary as hell' is pushing it, but the first was definitely a lot of fun. I remember nothing of the sequels though.
Daniel, is that you?
So Terence Malick's Knight of Cups isn't coming out this year then?
One of the biggest causalities of the writer's strike. Apparently Craig and the director ended up penning scenes themselves, realized they weren't writers and just added yet another action set peice to fill in the gap. 'What the fuck were we thinking?' Craig probably said afterwards.
Apparently everyone has to hate Skyfall now, but I'll stand by it. I'm fine for SPECTRE to continue in its vein given the likelihood that it's Craig's last and because tonal and narrative continuity remains a novelty for Bond.
One By One? Even Grohl has disowned that…
Goodnight Springdon!
"Cox’s performance is closer to the character as written. His Lecktor, though saddled with a fake-sounding British accent, is believably brilliant and devoid of wit or charm"
I enjoyed the book, almost despite itself. The American Psycho comparisons are impossible to ignore but unlike that novel I don't think it's trying to convey any deep message about its era. The pleasure and paranoia the lead experiences is a lot more vicarious than Bateman's.
It's never explicitly mentioned in the Burton films, and he's on record as not caring much about the character in the first place.
Talk about an easy target. Still, he actually articulates his disdain which is novel for this feature.
Is Brett Ratner available?
Er… yeah.
I don't mind the older, world-weary approach for Batman on paper. It's not great for a long-lasting franchise but it's at least a new thing for him on film (I don't count Keaton's portrayal as being that).