ffffefjjj--disqus
Ffffe Fjjj
ffffefjjj--disqus

Humphrey would have won the nomination even if Kennedy had lived. He had the delegates, because the delegates mostly weren't assigned via primary or caucus as you say.

Short and tubby is a challenging setup for a romantic comedy lead. But "Ghost Town" was wonderful.

"The Sure Thing" is great, even if it is a ripoff of "It Happened One Night", elsewhere on this list. Of course, lots of films have ripped off "It Happened One Night" and most of them don't do it that well.

(The real answer is "no", though.)

Dunno about the regret part, but yeah, Crowe asked Wilder to play Jerry's mentor Dickie Fox.

"whom all women idolize and men never think about"

Yeah, she was quite the clotheshorse. Didn't bring a lot else to the table.

You've been convicted of "mansplaining", and thus your opinion has been made irrelevant. See upthread re: "bingo".

Believe this if you will but in actual human discourse, "mansplain" is generally used by a woman to describe a man saying something the woman does not agree with. It is generally used to marginalize and discredit an opinion the speaker does not share based on the identity of the person giving it. Which of course is

Really, "Cabin Fever" was not a very good movie, but Cerina Vincent should have been a bigger star.

This article could easily have been written to say that the number of women in movies is increasing and that Asian and black actresses are represented (among all female parts) in a proportionally accurate manner.

Because people like Jessica Chastain and want to put her in movies.

When is a man's opinion unwelcome?

Do schools not teach the don't-alphabetized-by-"the" rule anymore?

I can't see her as an MPDG, but I've never been a fan. She looked like she weighed 65 pounds and she didn't have very much range as an actress.

Is the chick playing the Cerina Vincent part in this movie as hot and as naked as Cerina Vincent was?

You don't mention that "The Letter" is followed by the 1929 version of…"The Letter", with Jeanne Eagels. The Davis version is good but the Eagels version is better because it doesn't have that tacked-on Hays Code ending.

"Roman Holiday" was not the screen debut of Audrey Hepburn. It was in fact her eighth movie.

I'm sure that the existence of this movie should make a progressive and liberal like myself mad. Not sure why, but it just feels that way.

Oh yeah, this show has been a "women are perfect, men r dum" class since the first episode. Surprised it isn't being pimped harder by all the people who anointed Amy Schumer as Queen.