It's a little known fact that Pulp Fiction is an homage to the talkingbabysploitation genre.
It's a little known fact that Pulp Fiction is an homage to the talkingbabysploitation genre.
Not to mention her performance in the original Arthur. She is an absolute delight in that.
The reboot presumably follows a jetsetting teenage multimillionaire sentenced to slum it with his Bel-Air relatives.
Unfortunately in Gilmore Girls she's a chef so the issue is kind of there in an unspoken way.
I don't know if that's purely weight related. There was a story about her and her father assaulting a girl in an airport and putting her mother in the hospital. I honestly can't think of her now without thinking about that.
"The whole Pink Floyd/The Wizard Of Oz thing only works for a brief portion of the movie"
Technically it was Paulie's robot. It was a gift.
I barely remember Cavalcade but I do remember enjoying it. That may just be my love of time capsule movies talking, though.
God, I wish it ended that. Instead they just pushed the revival to the tween set so the world could be gifted with "Glee," High School Musical, the Hairspray and Fame remakes, et al. Arguably it fizzled out about a year ago.
Chicago has fine performances, and is at least the smoothest, if by no means best, translation of a Fosse work to film.
*Googling Robert Zemeckis's personal life*
The entire movie is awful, but the Sandra Bullock character is just a work of high camp. IIRC, she's a shrill, unlikable woman who falls down a flight of stairs and then has no one to call for sympathy because everyone hates her — except for her housekeeper who is financially obligated to help. This leads to one of…
Never? Eh, I'm going to go out on a limb and count Blast From the Past.
I feel similarly. Plus, I have a lot of nostalgia for the era when it looked like Thora Birch was going to have a career.
I've seen the first 20 minutes. I turned it off because it was just so god damn ugly to look at. That, plus Charlton Heston makes for a grating viewing experience. Lola Montes, which is a nice palette cleanser, did the circus theme exquisitely.
The formula worked for New York Doll (2005), but mostly because the musician, not the band, was obscure and lost to time. Plus it's difficult to overstate the importance of the New York Dolls. The fact that they were getting together for Meltdown helped the film avoid the pitfall of the Death documentary where the…
How is this not already a Michel Gondry film?
Drop Dead Gorgeous is an underrated gem. I'm probably a terrible person for it, but the "Don't Cry Out Loud" scene kills me. It's not perfect, but it certainly has one of the best ensembles of any teen film.
User/comment synergy has never been my strong suit.
Episode I is the only Star Wars movie that holds a place in my heart but that's because I was a little girl at the time and judged it mainly by Queen Amidala's costumes. And the Playstation game was fantastic, I don't care what anyone says.