tweeducation--disqus
Tweed
tweeducation--disqus

I have so much sentimentality for Sgt. Pepper, but my heart went right to Pet Sounds.

We get it. You like the movie. No one's trying to take that away from you, but pointing out BS as something everyone missed but you is ridiculous.

You're joking right? (Spoilers I guess)

And it is.

Yeah but in this one, the black underdogs don't need white people to solve their problems for them.

Ok, you know how sometimes these based on a true events stories only focus on the survival aspect of the story, but never the consequences of the actual event? Well, Sully is actually ALL about the aftermath of a fairly typical "crisis movie," which is pretty smart if you ask me and like two other people.

There are no stakes if Sully's self-doubt only manifests within himself. Yes, the NTSB officials are "villains" in the sense that they're conducting an investigation that conflicts with the perspective of the main character. But the movie never sets them out as evil. They have pure motives, in that they want to make

The "two strings" reference in the title is accurate, but it only makes sense after you've watched the climax of the film. I won't spoil it, but that reveal was my favorite story moment.

Dan Ackroyd's voice: "Someone else."

Yeah the animation was definitely fine for what it was. It's at the very bottom of my complaints for this movie, if it's even a complaint at all.

Took them six years to make this movie, actually. But that was more of a script and preproduction thing. You're right that this has NONE of the animated nuance and detail on par with anything from Disney, Pixar, DreamWorks, Illumination, or even Blue Sky.

"Been there, done that."

It's heavily implied that the initial jokes and scenarios were improved, then later "reperformed." Perhaps even rewritten to a degree. So it's only sort of faithful for the sake of still being entertaining and narratively fulfilling (the "well" scene for example).

On the Nerdist, Birbiglia said it was a mix of both. He wrote the improv "scenes," but not every line was scripted.

A middle-aged man confronting the banality of his "success" as a self-help speaker. There's a twist revealed in the first act that I won't spoil, but it's of the sci-fi variety, and it's kind of brilliant.

If you think the computer animation of Sausage Party comes anywhere close to Zootopia or Finding Dory, then you really are a funny baratheon brother.

Just wait for the remake.

And fuck baseball cards.

No but she has a compass with a cliched picture of a dead parent inside, instead of a cliched locket with a cliched picture of a dead parent inside.

There's a lot of "wrong" here, so I don't even know where to start. But I will!