Shh, keep it down.
Shh, keep it down.
There are two kinds of people in this world: people who love Mr. Roboto and people who are wrong.
Ugh, by the time I got to the cat I went from weeping to sobbing. That movie was very, very emotionally exhausting. I love it though.
Now now, the pills are Topamax and Xarelto.
I cried during the episode where they all had their fantasies of saving the day, and Charlie's was an animated fantasy that was an homage to Up.
I've cried at many stupid things. The dumbest, however, was probably Oscar Isaac in Inside Llewyn Davis when he told his sister he was giving everything up to go back into the merchant marines. I was a blubbering mess for some reason.
Coffee and pills.
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is magnificent (and very frustrating.)
I loved Robert so much. His stuff wasn't the best, but he was so funny and interesting. He looked like he wouldn't have been out of place playing a German ambassador in Dr. Strangelove. I love how he named his characters some crazy German word every time, too. He was just interesting. I'd be okay with a Walter win too.
I feel the same way about Rob. Their treatment of him reminds me of the guy a couple seasons ago (I think it was the season when Laura won) where the guy was a great sculptor and fabricator, and often fabricated these huge, elaborate designs, but the finished product sometimes left a bit to be desired. My pick for the…
It's a competition on SyFy where various artists do special effects makeups for a whole season. It's great because the people are nice to each other and the only drama involves who is going home that week.
Yay, season finale of Face Off! I love that series way too much. This season has been a little up and down, but I've still enjoyed it.
I saw him in (gag) Cleveland in 2010 during that tour, and 2012 in Detroit when he extended it. Between the two shows, he actually added a brand new song. It was magnificent and was one of the many times I teared up during the show.
Ah, okay. It was similar to his stuff while having some massive differences. Makes sense that it's my least favorite of the three; it's not even his movie! The other two do fit together quite nicely, though. Both are really beautiful films.
I am so completely jealous that you got to see David Gilmour. I saw Roger Waters twice during his The Wall tour- once in 2010 and once in 2012- but I've never seen Gilmour and have always wanted to. He's such a brilliant guitarist, and added so much soul to Pink Floyd.
Yay for some silent film love! The General is amazing. Keaton and Chaplin were really gods among men when it came to silent film comedy. Those two, along with Fritz Lang and other Weimar directors, have made some of the best films not only of that era, but of all time.
I really enjoyed The Devil's Backbone. It was so creepy and sad. Another Del Toro film like that is El Orfanato. My favorite is Pan's Labyrinth, but The Devil's Backbone is a close second. And what is it with his obsession with orphaned children and the Spanish Civil War?
Watch Ash vs. Evil Dead. You won't regret it.
I like Dune, but I also haven't read the book so that may cloud my opinion some.
I watched M again. My wife hadn't seen it before, so I finally got her to watch it. I find more and more to be impressed by every time I see that film. I love the entire sequence that is shot without sound, when Lorre's character is identified as the killer and followed. I guess that was done to save money, but it…