“Witch” and “man” are already female and male, respectively, so shouldn’t it be “Latina witch” and “Latino man”?
“Witch” and “man” are already female and male, respectively, so shouldn’t it be “Latina witch” and “Latino man”?
It’s the second thing, dude.
That scene from The Strangers 2 is not just the outlier in this list, but has also got to have the best use of a zoom I can remember. I kinda want to see the whole movie now, but I’m afraid it won’t measure up to what IV picked. Damn, that was good.
So... is there any Star Wars character that’s universally loved? Because for such a popular franchise, it sure seems like its fans hate most of it.
Nevermind.
I was thinking about Asskickers, yes. I don’t know why I remember that he burned to death with Jojo.
How is Rex still alive? I thought he died in the fire at Mac and Dennis’ place.
Why has this been suddenly sent into the greys, is beyond me.
Perhaps Trump SHOULD do a much better job of NOT leading people at his rallies in chants of “Lock her up,” relentlessly calling media “the enemy of the people,” praising a congressman who body slammed a reporter for nothing in particular, piling on CNN and the NYT whenever he gets cranky, calling the WaPo a shill for…
I’m sure he does, I’m just saying I never saw it happening.
I had no idea that happened.
Am I missing something here? Who killed her and when? I thought she had just (wisely) blocked Dex.
That’s it for him on S.H.I.E.L.D., and if you liked him in that show, you’re going to love the approximately 14 different parts he plays in the new<i>Twin Peaks</i>.
Wow, you’re still calling it the Collective? It’s the Cooperative, goddamnit.
I wish <i>The Amazing World of Gumball</i> was more popular on this site, because they have consistently great songs:
I don’t disagree, but you’re not the one reviewing the show.
They’re called The Cooperative, jeez.
Yes, the family members are also very important, but it’s still Penn’s subjective perspective that informs the film. It’s still a film about an individual’s life and his memories. The astronauts in 2001 can barely be distinguished from each other and have no past and no background.
The Tree of Life is about ONE human life: that of Sean Penn’s character. That’s the whole fucking point. That’s why the movie opens with that Book of Job quote. It’s about the life of one individual human being juxtaposed against the complexity of creation. That’s all. It’s really not that hard to see. You can…
I have seen both films multiple times. Enough to be able to tell they are different in scope and aim. The Tree of Life is about creation and nature, and is only concerned with life on Earth and its relation to God. 2001 is literally about humanity transcending Earth. It’s why natural life all but disappears after the…