The actress who played Nikki is named Ambrosia Kelley and she's now 21. I think that's old enough to seek vengeance. She hasn't acted in several years and probably couldn't carry a feature film, though.
The actress who played Nikki is named Ambrosia Kelley and she's now 21. I think that's old enough to seek vengeance. She hasn't acted in several years and probably couldn't carry a feature film, though.
He's made one bad movie, and it's not bad in a conventional way, with several excellent scenes. Django and Basterds were both excellent. I think right about now would be a good time to do Kill Bill Vol.3, since Uma is still just 47 and could perform fight scenes against a younger actress playing Copperhead's…
You don't have to hate him, but he has repeatedly fawned on camera over a murderous, oppressive dictator who is constantly threatening nuclear war. Rodman's visits receive a lot of press coverage, and his public support for the regime is in some small way responsible for sending the message to Americans that the North…
Empirical facts don't matter anymore. It's all about feelings now. Especially among people who like to wear "Fuck Your Feelings" shirts.
I'm hoping the real shoe store didn't have a no-return policy, so Jimmy was probably only out the expense of the shoes in Irene's size. Although even if he was stuck with all those shoes, Jimmy certainly got a good return on his investment.
Yeah, it was already pretty audacious of Lynch to make these episodes with the assumption that the viewer has watched every episode of a 25-year-old show (and remembered important details) — but Lynch goes beyond that, and basically requires the viewer to have seen a movie that grossed under $5 million in 1992.
It's pretty funny that these Nazi snowflakes are trying to make it politically incorrect to say Nazis are bad because it hurts their fee-fees.
I bet if they made another two movies, Lynch would have kept the Cooper-as-Dougie stuff down to merely 3 hours.
I always thought the clones' personalities were too broadly defined — there's a macho clone, a gay clone, and a mentally disabled clone. Keaton does his best with the material, but it's no Birdman.
I get what you're saying, but there's still the issue of screen time, which stands separately from criticism of the story. It reminds me a little of The Force Awakens, where I liked the movie, but I was disappointed we never saw the original three stars on screen together. There were valid story reasons for keeping…
The whole bit with the missing diary pages, which was referenced a lot during the original series, isn't resolved in FWWM (which seems to introduce the idea that Laura's missing diary pages will be key to recovering Dale from the Black Lodge). I think Lynch was originally planning to follow up on this in additional…
According to IMDB, the original series was shot on 35mm film, which has a 3:2 aspect ratio (wider than 4:3 but narrower than 16:9). The DPs would have framed all their shots for 4:3 viewing, because in 1989/1990 there was no anticipation that people would have widescreen TVs in the future.
Yeah, my issue is not with the deliberate pace, but with the reality that there are only 18 episodes (with likely no plan to make more Twin Peaks content in the future), and we're spending a lot of time on weird tangents. We're a third of the way into this, and we still haven't really spent any time with Cooper, and…
The real Dougie only had about 90 seconds of screen time before he was transformed into a marble, but he did seem kind of simple and childlike in the brief scene with Jade where he complains about his arm being tingly.
The movie still would have been awful, but Osment's performance would probably be seen as a bright spot.
When you describe the reality of Polanski's BBQ-less existence that way, it makes a pretty strong case that he's already served a 40-year sentence and should be allowed to return to the U.S.
Gus definitely isn't faking his emotions. Over 20 years after Max's murder, he's still giving out a scholarship in Max's name every year (Gale was a recipient). He keeps the name Los Pollos Hermanos when he moves north of the border, even though nobody in the U.S. knows who Max is. If Gus were a sociopath who saw…
People are going to do meth no matter who is selling it. Gus only sells the very finest, purest meth — just as he only sells the finest fried chicken, which is also deadly.
I thought about that, but we're still about 4 years out from BrBa, right? I think that would be a long time for someone to be a DEA informant without giving them anything (since Hector and Tuco are both free men at the start of the series).
Is Gus really a sociopath? Nearly everyone he kills or tries to kill has it coming. It's never been clear to me that Gus ordered those two street dealers to kill Andrea's brother. Gus only becomes an antagonist during Breaking Bad after Walt and Jesse directly contradict his orders, and begin to threaten his entire…