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Hello from the future. If "Margin Call" is "Fail Safe", "The Big Short" is "Dr. Strangelove". After watching "The Big Short", I was curious about what it would be like to see a more serious movie covering the same situation and that's basically what I got.

No, you're not the only one. I appreciated creativity and craftsmanship of the stunts, costume/production design, and score. The writing (character development, storytelling, and dialogue) seemed completely empty, and that's what matters to me most in a movie.

I'm surprised too. It was quite memorably menacing. You know how the Oscars have live performances by nominees for best song?

Would be funnier if the typo said she starred in a movie called "Loy". I'd wonder how I missed that Lawrence was in a biopic about William Powell's co-star in the "Thin Man" pictures.

I agree about Coogler. He did a hell of a job, directing those boxing matches so dynamically. I didn't think there were still original ways to approach boxing matches in movies. His style is really exciting.

Sandra Bullock won an Oscar for "The Blind Side" and a Razzie for "All About Steve" in the same year.

I know. My point was that he didn't have an origin until the CADMUS stuff. The first time he appeared and tangled with Justice Lords Superman, he was just some dude who showed up on a rampage.

I liked Doomday's origin in the animated Justice League, where he'd been brainwashed/conditioned to hate Superman by mad scientists of their enemies CADMUS. When Superman questions why this guy he's never met wants to kill him, Doomsday simply says something like, "It's what I am. I don't care why". I assume the movie

A delightful presence in both "The In-Laws" and "All of Me", movies I only first watched in the last two years. Guys who excel at goofy supporting roles tend to not get the recognition of more serious actors, but they're an integral part of many movies, essential to their entertainment value. Thank you, A.V. Club, for

When that won, the first thing I thought of was how unanimously despised it was by A.V. Club's comment community.

Whoa, we posted about this same thing at the exact same time. Amen. And thanks for mentioning the music drowning him out. That makes me feel a little better. Hopefully he gets the Oscar and rectifies his mistake there.

The only award I cared about was best supporting actor in a movie and it went to the person I'd wanted to win. I was disappointed by the speech, though, because Ryan Coogler was never thanked. I know Stallone didn't have much time, but that's a huge oversight, in my opinion. I loved Stallone's performance. I don't

Bill Murray has had such a great career. I'm still catching up with his past movies, and there are a lot of gems. "Mad Dog and Glory" was one of my favourite movies watched for the first time last year, and "Quick Change" may be my favourite of this year.

"Summer of 4 Ft. 2" is your second favourite of the whole run? Mine too! So this is what it feels like when doves cry! What's your first favourite? Mine's "Who Shot Mr. Burns?"…both of them. I can't choose which I like more between the two, so I just think of them as one big awesome episode.

Never underestimate…THE OTHER GUY'S GREED!
Loved him in "Scarface".
Goodbye, Frank…
You never did nothing to nobody…
(You had somebody else do it for you).

Yes, I've tried all the big Kurosawa movies. They just don't do it for me. Some good moments, but I never found one that was enjoyable from start to finish.

Thank you. To me, her 'legacy' is that she robbed Greta Garbo, Barbara Stanwyck, AND Carole Lombard of the chance to win Oscars for their greatest performances.

I think "masterpiece" is a little generous, but having just watched "Caveman" for the first time this past September, I've got lots of affection for it. Silly, campy fun, and Ringo's character is enjoyable, even though (as you say) he's kind of a gross, pathetic perv.

I also think it's a lot classier than most screwball comedy, with some real heart and truth beneath all the goofiness. It makes me laugh a lot, but has some effective social commentary too. Mischa Auer as the pretentious moocher is my favourite comedic element. He's hilarious.

She was great on "Louie" as Louie's mother and date…not in the same episode. And not as the same character. The continuity is pretty loose. I like how C.K. casts people in different roles if he likes their acting.