But, he's the best part of Godzilla, and I say, "Let them fight" often and at unnecessary moments.
But, he's the best part of Godzilla, and I say, "Let them fight" often and at unnecessary moments.
Why don't more people appreciate the greatness of Watanabe? I am still possibly considering seeing Sea of Trees just because he never gives a bad performance!
I haven't seen Flags, but Letters from Iwo Jima was pretty tremendous I thought. It is shocking that Ken Watanabe was not recognized more for his performance.
This has actually been my favorite film of 2016 since I saw it a few months ago, and I cannot imagine anything else usurping its place in the next few months.
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EXACTLY. Craig's pre-film interview where he schooled the reporter about Belluci being an "age-appropriate" love interest that they were beyond lucky to have in their film was a cruel trick to my excitement levels. DON'T GIVE A THROWAWAY MESSAGE ABOUT FELIX LEITER AND NOT GIVE ME JEFFREY WRIGHT POPPING UP AT THE LAST…
Also, I have to say, I haven't discussed James Bond films in any detail with anyone—I think ever. As a millennial feminist woman working for an international nonprofit, I try to keep my love for these often misogynistic, racist, classist, colonialistic, but very stylish films on the down-low. ;-)
You are 100% correct about the James Bond Madlibs. hahaha. Every scene seemed to try and remind you of a different classic Bond film. It was if someone saw all these cool moments from '60s Bond and were like, "BUT WHAT IF DANIEL CRAIG DID IT INSTEAD?!"
The opera scene typifies what Bond can be at its best: interesting and entertaining, but also stylistic and artfully-crafted.
What about $50, an iTunes gift card, and the promise of 10% of gross profit?
I really liked Quantum of Solace too. It has my favorite cinematography of the series, and I love the opera scene. I also appreciate how real and current the villain's scheme of controlling water is.
I'd watch that.
I see bright things in his future. And, I really hope he gets to implement a contingency plan for someone at some point.
The best part of that documentary is the assistant sucking down Jamba Juice and detailing elaborate back-up plans for everything.
I adore Ewan McGregor and watch everything he does.
I understand this exact feeling, and will say that I actually enjoyed Nick Kroll in this.
I don't really think there is a big twist. At least, it didn't come off that way to me when I was watching the film.
I saw this at SIFF, and it was really genuinely funny. Adam Scott walks away with the entire thing. It is also a very humane, empathetic depiction of a person with disabilities. So much tends towards either a saint or completely helpless. This film let Adam Scott's character be a dynamic human—without erasing his…
"It’s the sort of tantalizing enigma that one desperately hopes will end powerfully, rather than just sort of fizzling out."
I normally live by the "watch anything with Ken Watanabe" rule, but this is probably the time to break that rule.