I always thought that the "kids have the flu" part of Cat's In The Cradle showed that his son was not like him. He actually cares about his children.
I always thought that the "kids have the flu" part of Cat's In The Cradle showed that his son was not like him. He actually cares about his children.
It's not as if he's in denial. When announcing his retirement he did state that when people have asked him over the years when he will stop, he's said:
"Body building and disappointing crowds"
When I first saw Malvo as a dentist out of nowhere, I thought of Andy Dick in NewsRadio being fired and then appearing across the street as a dentist himself. And delivering the line:
I was very relieved when the episode steered away from the awkwardness of kinda asking a girl out to a dance and the painful interactions at said gathering and went in the lighthearted direction of dealing with drug dealers and alienating your family instead.
Actually, it was the "hugging" that isn't included in the quote.
I always thought it was a "Republican Wet Dream" because it showed that anyone can achieve great things regardless of what issues they deal with if they try hard enough.
And most importantly, the ultimate evaluator of quality and influence that is James Lipton thought it was a big deal.
I think the steering wheel being on the right side confused the crew and time lost all meaning.
I think in the finale the climactic scene will involve Lester and Stephen Root in a stapler fight to the death.
After the time jump I desperately wanted someone, anyone, to start yelling,
Hey, some of his best friends have chainsaws.
Yes, it was based on Tim Burton's childhood. The main difference being that he struggled with spatulafeet.
Sling Blade rocks.
That quote would explain that ugly barroom brawl between Ebert and Judy Tenuta back in the day.
They probably aren't, but add the 'savant' and you have someone with unusual mental abilities that far exceed the norm.
I thought Charlie Sheen's portrayal of himself several years ago was completely off the mark.
I loved Larry Drake as Benny on LA Law.
I've heard many actors say that Tom Cruise gave the more important performance in the movie. He drove (literally and figuratively) that film and made it work.
Or the MC sees that and then changes how he introduces him? And then Barry has to correct him which makes for an awful beginning to a set. Well, he could make a joke out of it but it still isn't ideal.