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The Third Man
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There's no depth to the girls in Spring Breakers because their individual characters are besides the point. It's a film capturing (or, at least, attempting to capture, depending on how successful you found it) the youthful exploration of hedonism for better and worse: sex, drugs, partying, crime, the consequences and

That last part doesn't really surprise me, since, weirdly, the movie Spring Breakers most reminds me of is Badlands.

No WAAAAAY! THAT'S GREAT!

2011. But amazing.

And Killer Joe.

How would even remotely adapt Gravity's Rainbow?

Yep, as an Alex that's the first one I thought of.

Images and Words by Dream Theater. Never cared for any of their other albums.

Blood Meridian by Swans.

Not my parents, but:

Au Hasard, Raju?

I still laugh thinking of his wild hand gestures and constant fidgeting in that skit.

Good lord, why would you want to waste Tarantino on a Marvel movie?

Satantango article or GTFO.

Which film? I'm a big Tarr fan, though have yet to see his earliest work. I started with Werckmeister Harmonies, which I'd put only a shade below Sátántangó (see my comments above on that one). Both masterpieces. Damnation and The Turin Horse are also really great. I wasn't so hot on The Man from London, but I'd like

Sátántangó is amazing. I've seen it three times, each time in one go. It's pretty easy to split up if you're so inclined, though, since it consists of 12 chapters. The end of the climactic chapter of the first half, "Comes Unstitched," which ties together all the various plot threads Tarr has weaved to that point,

There's also the episodes where we see Kramer in his indoor hot tub, including the one where he hosts the Japanese businessmen in his Karl Farbman armoire or when he's basting himself in order to keep his buttered skin from drying out. Other than those instances, I can't recall seeing anything besides that one couch

"I thought you were a weed."
"I'm a weed in Hitler's bunker!"

"Now, you two dated for a while. Tell me, what was that like?"

The Merv Griffin Show is arguably the best episode of Seinfeld and the final two seasons were as good as anything else the show ever did.