Kevin Reynolds put it best: Costner should always direct himself. That way he can work with his favorite actor and his favorite director.
Kevin Reynolds put it best: Costner should always direct himself. That way he can work with his favorite actor and his favorite director.
Chew didn’t win for ‘Cuckoo’s Next.’ That was the year Verna Fields won for 'Jaws' (and rightly so).
He was married three times. Guessing he lost it in one of the divorces.
It’s definitely cheesy. Also definitely not good.
The original trilogy was shot at Elstree. So were parts of the prequels. Pinewood wasn't used until the Disney era.
Yep. And not just because it opened right after 'Titanic.'
It’s funny that Kevin thinks the success of this series means people will pay to see his 12-hour western.
Yep. One of the early videos would come on the TV in the dining hall and someone would yell out “I know those fuckers!”
The ones with the watermelons.
They played the courtyard of a deli in the town where I went to college back when they were still Mr. Crowe's Garden. Even then they looked ready to throw down at any moment. Was weird seeing them hit it big less than two years later, but also cool because they were locals.
And always has. I’d wager Whitford already looked 40 at birth.
I didn't know the Crowes had patched up their feud with the Crowes.
The one guy in the header pic who doesn’t look like a corpse is the one guy who’s sitting out the tour for health reasons. Huh.
“Without knowing who he’s talking about"? Seems pretty obvious to me.
Boy, Sam Barsanti really wants you think he’s witty.
There's about 10 minutes of new stuff in the DC. Mostly character bits. (I bought an import HD DVD of it back in the olden days.)
If that movie were any more devoid of fun it'd be a Snyder flick.
I don’t have a problem with reusing the time travel bit, but they had almost three decades to realize that said time travel erased the stuff with the guy in the diner. It makes no sense whatsoever for Supes to go back and teach the guy a lesson.
I know the Donner Cut was an artistic compromise, but holy Christ was it still a huge disappointment. How no one caught that huge logic boondoggle at the end is beyond me.
A screenwriter being replaced? In Hollywood? Well now I've heard everything!