disqusthm6jf3e3q--disqus
p-dub
disqusthm6jf3e3q--disqus

Poison, Superstar, Velvet Goldmine, Safe, and I'm Not There beg to differ!

DAMN is pretty great. To Pimp A Butterfly was sonically a lot more challenging, a much harder left turn. That album took me months to warm to. Once it did, I really really took to it.

There's really nothing to feel guilty about. His name makes one joke seem funny to people who clearly have never listened to his work. That's really about it.

I think it has one of the strangest opening acts of any horror film.

Yeah, but Safe?

I'd add "Sixteen" with 3000 and Rick Ross. One of the longest raps we've heard from him in some time. Great song too.

Yes. The paid version is 10,000x better. Once you get it, it can/will change the way you listen to music. I've been a subscriber since 2012 and use it throughout the day, everyday.

I was listening to the album today and scrolling through old comments on it. Eight months later and I still throw it on here and there! Surprised? I'm a fan of Adams and most of us seem to agree it's pretty damn good and even better than several of his recent releases, so I have no issue throwing it on. I still listen

Weirdly, it did make his list of best films of the year that year. Unfortunately he died and never did any follow-up writing to explain, but there was definitely some people who believed it must have stayed with him or grew on him in some ways. His review is also clearly mixed and he admits to admiring huge portions

Agree completely. But I also don't think he currently believes that's the best film he's ever made and will ever make in the future.

He's been asked about that quote and he actively winced at it and said it was the product of being young and full of himself.

I just got back from seeing it. Thought it was great. Great interview. That Dunst image is pretty spoiler-y.

How is Deadpool, a movie that has only been out for a month, competing against movies that came out last year? It's MTV, I'm not shocked, but still.