She specifically mentioned that there were undergrads in the lecture hall. So I think you're right.
She specifically mentioned that there were undergrads in the lecture hall. So I think you're right.
If he can sing “Leaning on the Everlasting Arms,” then yes - that would be fine.
Probably a publicity shot rather than a still from the movie.
I’ve been spending too much time on this site for years now, and only today did I actually notice that Shannon Miller and Liz Shannon Miller are different people.
It’s one of the usage mistakes I’ve seen more and more often on the Internet, like “sneak peak” instead of “sneak peek.” But I’ve never seen people write “brake” when they mean “break” - I’ve never seen somebody complaining about braking a tooth. I don’t get it, and I don’t care for it.
I don’t think the author is the one who writes the headline.
Her efforts to understand American civics/government are fascinating.
It’s exactly how adapted screenplay normally works. Logan is nearly as much of a stand-alone film as Joker, but it was also nominated for best adapted screenplay because it draws on existing movies/characters.
If they’re using Oscar rules (or similar rule) anything that uses an existing character is adapted.
The Smoking Gun went looking for a mugshot to use in an article about him and couldn’t find one. As it turns out, he’d exaggerated or invented most of his criminal history: a story in the book about inciting a riot during a 90-day jail stint turned out to be about five hours of lockup, during which he was described by…
For what little it’s worth: Green Eggs and Ham contains fifty different words. In terms of actual word count, it’s closer to 800.
I mean, some people do. But they’re jerks.
I don’t remember if this is my idea or if I stole it. But I like to say that Blazing Saddles is the better comedy, and Young Frankenstein is the better movie.
Mark Evan Jackson likes to call The Good Place “the smartest dumbest show on TV”; Blazing Saddles and Young Frankenstein work the same way. They’re spot-on satires and, in the case of Saddles, a scathing social commentary. But Brooks never forgets they have to be funny too. So we have a perfect replica of James…
Not the superhero movie - the spy movie based on the 60s British TV show. Starred Ralph Fiennes, Uma Thurman, and Sean Connery, and was legendarily awful.
Here’s a more complete answer: you can see all the AVClub’s reviews at Metacritic, sorted by score:
At least one non-conservative movie has gotten an F:
Singing chanteys*, drinking shandys, sleeping in shantys - the pirate’s life for me.