scrunchi2003
Scrunchi2003
scrunchi2003

Norm literally made Frank Stallone into a punchline. On Stallone's Wikipedia page, the section about the joke is longer than his actual career.

What a sackless show. The right thing to do here is to take Norm to task for the shitty things he said. But Fallon is incapable of an interview that involves something other playing air guitar, tousling hair and giggling.

Did any of them mention that this is a fairly obvious ploy for mainstream republicans to try to distance themselves from a historically unpopular president shortly before the midterm election?  I haven’t watched yet.

I would pay a shitload of money to see that.  Hell, I’ll go for a take on Harry Potter by Alejandro Jodorowsky. 

I like his other works, but this was the weakest movie (from one of my favorite books) in the series. They skipped over NECESSARY plot points (like who made the map as Padfoot, Prongs, and whatever). And the long scene with the monster book and the bus. Just...ugh. Too much waste, not enough substance and exploration.

She stood trial, was found guilty, was sentenced, did her time. She was a minor. It wasn’t a pattern of behaviour.

This is where I lament the fact that Charlie Kaufman is not getting enough projects out.  Also, this is really more of a Kaufman movie than a Gondry one...

I don’t know about how that all would affect Joel’s complexity, but I’d fall for Kate Winslet over Ellen Pompeo eight days a week.

How dare you! Texas Chainsaw Massacre is brilliant.

I agree *most* of us are born gay, but what Grey was probably referring to is the fact that for some people sexuality evolves constantly. Like a girl who used to identify as bisexual and now calls herself a lesbian. Or a man in his 30's who discovers that he’s not straight but actually bi. That’s why it’s different

You just did the thing Grey was calling you out for, which is picking out something to be offended by in their comment while ignoring the substance. It’s much more offensive that you think everyone knows whether they’re gay by age 21, frankly. You’re the one discrediting the experiences of thousands of people.

Speaking as someone who grew up in conservative Texas and didn’t come out, or even know for sure what they were until they were in their late 20s.. No, not everybody knows by 21. Nor is everyone who knows, comfortable with letting the world know.

I don’t know. A lot of people at that age aren’t even completely sure what they are yet. I certainly wasn’t. I understand the controversy over crossing racial lines since that is something a person can’t ever change but sexual orientation isn’t always set in stone and may evolve over a lifetime.

Let me help you out: There were a TON of thinkpieces on Isle of Dogs addressing this. Probably more than there were on Lost in Translation, if only because there are way more of those types of pieces now than there were 15 years ago. You may have missed them but I know I read at least half a dozen.

Also, neither of

The Quiet Place was a good horror movie because it was a good movie. This is the same as Logan being a good superhero movie because it was a good movie. Start there first. The Quiet Place had likeable, understandable characters who acted in an intelligent manner against a difficult situation. The only criticism I have

I somehow didn’t realize Bug was his--I really liked that one.

Not gay so maybe my take on this is less than needed but always felt Scott Thompson and Amanda Bearse(Marcy from Married with Children) get short changed in the gay history of television(GHT). They were out way before the late nineties when I seem to remember stars coming out being a big deal.

Yeah, I usually like his books more than the movies that get made out of them (I think A Scanner Darkly is the most accurate adaptation of his work). “We Can Remember It For You Wholesale” is pretty funny and cute, it’s just a different story than Total Recall. It’s a short story so it doesn’t overstay its welcome.

Norm Macdonald eviscerated Bret Easton Ellis when he called Alice Munro overrated. His tweets: “Alice Munro is to literature what Lee Iacocca is to automaking. Bret Easton Ellis is to literature what Lee Iacocca is to literature.” and “It is interesting to see Alice Munro, the writer’s writer, criticized by Bret

The Clark Kent vagina subplot should’ve stayed.