Boys, don't ever, but never, make fun of no cripples.
Boys, don't ever, but never, make fun of no cripples.
I freaking love that movie.
Between Mark Hamill and Heath Ledger, I don't really think there needs to be another Joker.
Wilder depicts the world-weariness of the character so well that it never occurred to me that he was too young.
Gene Wilder completely owned Willy Wonka. Johnny Depp completely owned Hunter S. Thompson.
It's funny how much that area has changed now—beyond the venue being demolished.
My wife did.
I do generally enjoy this show, but damn, they sure do love montages—and clichéd "let's get drunk/high and cut loose" montages, in fact. At some point during every episode, you're guaranteed to see some depressed, middle-aged people remembering their inner teenagers and deciding to do something spontaneous or reckless…
More or less had the same conversation with my wife re: that last scene.
Love this show.
I had exactly the same thought.
The Mike Milligan ending was one of the most brilliant and subversive things I've ever seen on TV or in film. Dude goes on a killing spree and it turns out that his sociopathic tendencies make him the ideal candidate for a job in sales.
"They give me no eagle powers! They give me no nutrients!"
Rudolph drunk himself to death. Can't say I didn't see it coming.
Agree 100%.
I also feel like Broad City better captures what it's like to live in New York in your twenties, broad slapstick humor aside. I could never relate to Girls, as it consistently implies that its protagonist comes from a middle or upper-middle class background when only a rich kid could sustain her lifestyle (quitting…
Do the Right Thing and Malcolm X were amazing, but I don't know, man, this movie still looks weak to me.
Inherent Vice was a movie that I loved when it first came out, sort of regretted loving after I bought on video streaming, and have come to appreciate as genuinely hilarious at present.
Dude, for real: all three versions of "Bad Girl" kick so much ass.
You guys should do a write-up on Lee Moses, too. He's another lost soul great whose recordings were re-released.