DO YOU REALLY WANNA
DO YOU REALLY WANNA
I mean you have to have a long term plan when you’re running a major corporation. I work for a large automaker and because of my role I’m familiar with our future product plans. We have plans for second generations of vehicles coming out in the 2030s where the first generation hasn’t even the market yet and have no…
Tonal risks could definitely make DC more competitive if they let the directors mold the work around themselves, rather than the other way around. That’s not a risk many execs like to take.
I’d like to hear from definitelynotcaseybloysburner23.
Dianne Wiest deserves some credit there as well.
The Departed is marky-markedly inferior to Infernal Affairs.
It’s also an example of how you can make a successful movie with a flamboyantly gay couple at the center - quality story, writing and acting. Who knew? And that was selling to audiences more than 25 years ago. Meanwhile this year you get the director of Bros complaining no one went to see it because they’re all…
And Let the Right One Is is a masterpiece. The remake is ok but completely unnecessary.
I think the problem Let Me In had is that we all saw Let the Right One In a mere two years earlier.
It’s funny watching the non-comic-reading MCU fans become frustrated as the movies increasingly resemble the comic books, while comic fans shrug.
“If you miss one or two, you’re behind, and it isn’t worth watching something new until you’ve caught up, but eventually you’re so far behind that catching up or keeping up feels like a chore.”
Kind of a weird article for a GMG site when your own sites are deleting comments and sending people back to the greys for commenting on quality/topics of articles.
Clearly this article is a hit piece intended to distract from all the hard work being done by the good people at HBO who have been dedicated to making the place for high quality entertainment at low, competitive pricing.
Alright then. Fuck you, pay your artists and employees what they’re worth!
Does this mean the “HBO CEO of Tits” account was a pseudonym for the actual HBO CEO?
As if most corporations haven’t been doing this for many years now. Bizarre how little attention “reputation management” services get.
Now do TV shows:
Because jobs for female executives in Hollywood are probably pretty rare and “reputations” follow you more than for men, and she knew all it would have taken was one bad word from de Niro and she never would have worked in a comparable role again?
Man, if you insist that a band’s background be authentic to its music, I have some bad news for you about the Rolling Stones and the Beatles.