I think so yeah, once in real life, and later in the lucid dream he's in when he's cryogenically frozen. I haven't seen the movie in a while either, I just remember hating the main character so much, and having absolutely no sympathy for him.
I think so yeah, once in real life, and later in the lucid dream he's in when he's cryogenically frozen. I haven't seen the movie in a while either, I just remember hating the main character so much, and having absolutely no sympathy for him.
That's pretty apples and oranges. Check out whichever one you feel like, but make time at some point for the other, cause their both great.
This doesn't count as a romantic comedy, but the main character in Abre Los Ojos (or Vanilla Sky) did not deserve love or any kind of happy ending. Just an irredeemable turd in every way.
I guess I'm thinking more about that awful Pulse remake, just a top shelf example of someone completely failing to understand what made something great.
I like that the original is just a collection of vignettes, showing different characters meeting their deaths. The only thing I didnt care for was the backstory, explaining that its the spirit of a girl who was murdered in that house by her father or something.
Yeah, I don't have big hopes for this. American remakes of Japanese horror never seem to get what makes them great.
He has the look of somebody who's in comedy, that's enough for most people.
It really says something about the standards Nolan sets that people complained about Interstellar. I still think it's great, it's only gotten better on repeated viewings.
I can't imagine anyone asking or saying anything intelligent in that kind of forum. It would just be the kind of inane nonsense that people wrote about the frog creature thing in the comment threads of episode 8, arguing about whether it was Bob or Laura Palmer's spirit and whether the girl it crawled into was…
Well, I for one am liking the second season a lot more than the first, so far.
Well, that's…dumb!
Yeah, I had completely forgotten that detail that he thought Vader killed his father. I agree that Luke is a very well rounded character. Rey is less well-rounded in retrospect, but she's no block of wood, and demonstrated a lot of emotional range in TFA (Daisy Ridley's great performance helped a lot), and I'm still…
I don't know about Luke's motivation being any more clearly defined than Rey's. I never got the sense that he really cared about Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru, and their death was anything more than a convenient excuse to leave. There isn't even anything driving his anger against Vader and the empire later, except maybe…
I don't see why not!
Lactation metaphor. Boobs produce milk, you see.
I really liked Baby and Deborah, I thought they had a lot of chemistry, and I felt genuine tension during the diner scene with Bats. My only issue is that Deb didnt have much of an interior life, she just allowed Baby to drag her around without question.
It just comes off like a bad pun to me. It's like, did Edgar Wright name him 'Shaun' just cause it rhymed with 'Dawn'?
Dumb as it is, at least it stands out. They could have titled it something generic as hell, like "the driver", or "car driver", or just "driver".
On the one hand, everything about this is stupid and wrong and makes me want to punch something. On the other hand, I fucking love marshmallows. I'm completely torn on this.
Sofia Coppola throws good parties. I've always wanted to be at the party from Lost in Translation. Everyone there seemed so accepting, and there's pachinko, weed, apartment dancing, karaoke, Scarlet Johansson in a pink wig.