He says both. It’s “shadows and dust” in the Coliseum scene, and “feathers and dust” in his death scene. I may have them backwards.
He says both. It’s “shadows and dust” in the Coliseum scene, and “feathers and dust” in his death scene. I may have them backwards.
Let’s not forgot Jack Gleeson’s performance of Joffrey on Game of Thrones was inspired by Phoenix’s Commodus. They’re practically identical in mannerisms.
Yeah, when he says his final words before getting killed (“feathers and dust”), you can clearly see they used an alternate take from the Coliseum.
We are no longer the Knights Who Say Ni. We are now the Knights Who Say runrunrunrunrunrunrunrunrunrunrunrunrunPOP-boinggggg-zoom-flip-flip-boom
I’ve been playing Fall Guys obsessively since launch, and I’m nearing the end of what I call “The Grind”. I’ve been tracking my wins from the start and have a goal of 1,000* before August. Well, I’m way ahead of schedule and currently have 973. At my current pace, I’ll hit 1,000 by next weekend.
Anyone else find the faceless minifigs creepy?
I live near a CFA and an In-and-Out. Both have huge lines for the drive-thru. Both taste like fast food. I don’t get the hype.
Clearly it’s the Keeper from RE2. Itchy. Tasty.
Yeah, this is William Fichtner’s best role by far. He’s always specialized in playing creepy dudes, but this film mines it for all the comedy it’s worth.
Let’s not forget Melissa McCarthy, who appears earlier in the segment as the roommate of the guy Jay Mohr and Scott Wolf are cheating on each other with.
I don’t know, I’d love to see Keanu bring in some of the batshit energy he had in Freaked as Ortiz the Dog Boy.
She has one of the most surprising and best moments in season 3 of GLOW.
You know, the only thing I’ve ever seen Efron in is the Neighbors films, and he’s funny as hell in them.
I feel like that’s what the MCU has been doing. It started with Before-We-Knew-He’s-a-Dick Joss Whedon and The Avengers, followed by Shane Black, James Gunn, Taika Waititi, and Ryan Coogler. Plus, we have upcoming films directed by Sam Raimi and Chloe Zhao. Really, the only missed opportunity was not letting us see…
I’ll admit it looks really cool when the wands are throwing a Dragonball-style kamehameha at each other and raw magic splashes off like paint.
We have Cuaron to thank for that. He steered the series into a far better vision that Newell and Yates were happy to roll with.
It’s funny, the first MI bored the hell out of me, and I have zero interest in watching 2 or 3. 4-6, however, are so perfectly ludicrous I can’t help but smile watching them. For me, it’s the scene in Rogue Nation when Tom Cruise has to hold his breath for several minutes. He has a wrist band that tells him exactly…
Sure, the kids who were part of the series from the start were good-to-great, and the adults were a cast of ringers, but for my money, no actor portrayed a character more perfect than Evanna Lynch did as Luna Lovegood.
God, I almost forgot how good he was in that movie.
DH1 just feels needlessly long to me. The only interesting thing that happens in the interminable camping scenes is Harry and Hermione slow dancing to Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, which was bizarre and yet still kinda worked.