Punch Drunk Love was not a good movie.
Punch Drunk Love was not a good movie.
Trump would want that. He's terrified of this being called Trump Care.
Leave.
Yeah, I could see him shilling for Subaru.
Wrong genre. I assume you're talking about Chevy trucks which has progressively gotten worse from Bob Seger's "Buy a Truck" to John Mellencamp's crap, to the current Kid Rock screech. I'm not sure who's taking up the next generation but it will be unspeakably awful, butt rock/aggro country.
Father John Misty seems more…
Yeah, he's made a big point of saying this. And seeing as 95% of his audience does smoke weed, I'm inclined to believe him as he'd have nothing to gain by denying.
Well…somebody was popular in High School. Must be nice.
Stranger at a party: So I'm working on an independent movie. It's like an updated, LA version of that movie from the 90's. Argh, I can't remember the name. It's got the guy who-
Me (very drunk): Can't Hardly Wait.
Stranger at a party: …Yes. That's…that's amazing.
Me (very drunk): [Shrugs. Leaves to grab another beer…
I understand the joke behind Starship Troopers, but man, I am never in the mood to watch that movie. I don't care if it's intentionally bad, it's still a really bad movie.
Sounds like Jefferson. Bet Marcy gives him the business sooner or later.
What's Jefferson Darcy getting up to?
Trump is wiretapping. I promise you that scandal is coming out. This man projects. He thinks of all the shit he's done and accuses the other side of doing the same thing, because he has a very limited imagination. And we hear it, and find out later, only we're not shocked because a part of our brain is already…
They're actors. I don't like or dislike them as a couple. I have an inherent aversion to couples who make a big production of being a couple, but I tend to judge them by their work. And for the most part it's been consistently good. Wasn't into Will and Grace though. I don't think a project is guaranteed to be great…
So were the first two people to be judged even real, or were they actors along with the judges, working to set him up so that he ran toward the bardo to unpack whatever hangups he had in his life? So that when he finally embraced the finality of death he wasn't worried about the afterlife?
Did the book ever reference what the Reverend did wrong, and I just missed it? Or is it supposed to be unknowable?
This seemed more like a weird cartoon movie, like you might have seen made in the 70's. A lot of body jumping, strange, surreal looking characters. Very dreamlike. I think animating it would get you closer to the vision. But that's just my take.
Got it.
They're both fiction. One is a musical. The other is a hypothetical in a comedy bit. But I'm not the one reducing this to the binary of "He showed a trans person doing a bad thing, so this is inherently bad."
Dr. Frank N Furter was played by a guy who if he wasn't straight, was not out of the closet gay in Tim Curry,…
Huh?
Undoubtedly. But I don't know if there is a history of studios taking a bath and then coming back with a more streamlined budget for a sequel. Usually if they're making a sequel it's because they're confident that it's going to pay off, and they spend more money, not less.