What a wonder is a gun!
What a versatile invennnntion!
First of all, when you've a gun…
What a wonder is a gun!
What a versatile invennnntion!
First of all, when you've a gun…
I liked Badlands OK. Loved Days of Heaven. Tree of Life I have incredibly mixed feelings about: the whole middle section is amazing (Hunter McCracken and Brad Pitt's performances seriously make me confused when people say the movie lacked humanity; even Jessica Chastain's character had moments which showed her to not…
I'm Gen Y and I'm already sick of my generation's growing nostalgia. Especially depressing that their main association with the Looney Tunes seems to be Space Jam.
based on the novel Push by Sapphire
This episode did have the Pillownomicon.
The names of AMO, BMO, and CMO reminds me an awful lot of Project A-Ko.
That would forgive them for not bringing John Barrowman back for the 50th.
Some good news: it turns out The Host wasn't Ebert's last review. It's To the Wonder.
His performances in Danny Boyle's production of Frankenstein were fantastic. Check them out if National Theater Live decides to bring it back.
Interesting. I found The Master very emotional if still frustrating in parts but didn't feel any connection to Primer whatsoever. Hoping Carruth connects for me this time.
Which was Jack Black first? He's awesome at both.
His last reviewed movie. I hope he watched some old classic he'd already written about after.
Not only did he respond to my comments, he read my review blog (rubikunsreviews.livejournal…) and complimented my writing! Easily one of if not the best compliment I've ever gotten.
Unless of course you're Armond White, in which case that "stage" has gone on a long time.
He did get around to Django on his blog: http://blogs.suntimes.com/e…
Do people in Heaven get to insult the people in Hell?
Of course there's the possibility he had another review or two written and not posted due to embargoes and such. Maybe there's a posthumous review of Upstream Color coming?
@avclub-fbb1d0aa8eb214a2ce4aec289a3c6b6d:disqus He was also one of the biggest advocates for anime in America, particularly Studio Ghibli, which I'm incredibly thankful for.
I pictured him watching 2001 on his last day, possibly reincarnated into some starbaby on his deathbed.
What would you say about Spiderman? Much of the genius of that character was that Stan Lee took the power fantasies that appealed to geeks and gave that power to a character who up until that fateful bite was essentially one of his readers. Of course it's a big leap between Peter Parker and these reality TV guys, but…