killa-k
Killa K
killa-k

I actually chuckled at the ravioli. It felt like such a silly 30 Rock gag, but I would cut Chef Boyardee, Tom Carvell, and Jack Lalanne out altogether because they really served no purpose other than to pad out the runtime. I did get a laugh out of Kenneth Parcell getting blown up, and Thomas Lennon’s

“But I don’t wanna be a pothead!”

“Gags” are just what practical special effects are called on set.

I live in the States, and I saw it in a movie theater like two months ago. So I think it’s had at least one “select cities” release.

So it’s about a cat that runs away?

Johnson is on a mission to work with actors whose attributes include being the best, brightest, and most interesting, but those qualities ultimately pale in comparison to how recognizable they are. And Hollywood is offering those actors.

I hope he plays a protégé to Benoit Blanc, who spends the entire movie talking about retirement. Then in Knives Out 4: A Knives Out Caper featuring the detective from Knives Out, Daniel Craig is on another case, and Renner’s character is never seen or mentioned again.

Three episodes, according to IMDB. I’ve never seen it, but Jerry has talked about how he found out he was fired when he showed up to a table read one day and he didn’t see his name anywhere.

Looking forward to watching it.

I didn’t love Dead Reckoning, but Jeremy Renner’s absence wasn’t my problem with it. If anything, I think McQuarrie’s entries rely too much on bringing back characters instead of rotating them out and giving us time to miss them.

Down.

Not really. Maybe his character on Benson? I’ve never seen it.

Marijuana comes in different strengths. To my knowledge none of them will make you hallucinate, but some strains are stronger than others, and some people’s tolerance is a lot weaker than others’. 

I think he would agree with you, if he hasn’t said that exact thing already.

Since then, nothing. Absolutely nothing. But “riding coattails” implies he was coasting on other people’s success. NBC approached him to develop a sitcom, and he recruited Larry David to co-write the pilot. He wasn’t the most talented cast member or writer, but he hired people that were better than him. He would also

The ending wrecked me.

I’d argue that being a dick has always been his thing. His humor has relied on sarcasm and a general dismissiveness toward other people’s feelings for a very long time. It just used to be on stage, directed at a straw man breaking the unwritten rules of society, so we tended to agree with him. There was more to it,

I assume he was asked.

I can’t see the images, but I agree with what you said.