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It's truly a disgusting movie! Just off-key, like the script just followed a template and no one ever noticed their story didn't fit it properly.

In You've Got Mail, Tom Hanks ruthlessly and knowingly puts Meg Ryan out of business and destroys everything that matters in her life. Of course they fall in love!

"I don't think 1971 knew how 1971 it was going to look later on."

I was thinking every word you said. Let's keep hoping in both cases, Neuroticmoose.

"…buoyed along by little more than Atwell’s charisma…"

He's not revieing Lumet, he's reviewing a documentary about him.

Yeah, I really liked Jones in that mediocre Hawking movie, but I've been waiting for her to make something else worth seeing ever since. This is not that.

Was I the only one who thought this episode was excruciating? They took the worst actor on television and paired him with the most stupid and pointless character and made me watch, which I did only because I like everyone else on the show. Ugh.

I really liked it but wouldn't they have had her come to at least one practice with the team?

Sugarpuss O'Shea, of course. Barbara Stanwyck in Ball of Fire. (And Ann Miller in Lovely to Look At plays Bubbles Cassidy.)

I'm assuming it's a musical.

Wasn't The Lobster just the greatest? Every time I think about it, I think of another reason it was brilliant. And I love, love, love Rachel Weisz.

"Thrill as the wicked Salome demands the hat of John The Baptist!"

This was a really well-written review. I usually worry less about whether a critic likes a film than what he or she has to say about it. When you read a good critic often enough, you can tell whether you want to see something or not regardless of positive or negative—they just give you a strong idea of what the

Texas is enormous and has many cities and towns small and large. Nowadays in Houston you can't walk four feet without seeing many people from all over, but when I was growing up there, I went to a public school with like one Chinese kid, a handful of black kids and one or two Latino kids who couldn't speak Spanish.

Wow, sanctimonious AND snide. Yet only you are personally insulting someone, despite obviously not having the slightest idea what the term "first world" even means.

I found The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit fascinating. Such a portrait of its time. And it's one of the rare movies where you have no idea how it's going to end.

I love The Bad Sleep Well. One of my favorite Kurosawas, in fact. I like all of the modern Kurosawas, though, especially that one, Drunken Angel and Stray Dog.

When Night Is Falling is a great movie. Highly recommended.

Movies made in Hollywood are made in the USA, which is a first world country. It shouldn't be considered a FLAW that a Hollywood film—a comedy no less—concerns itself with first world problems, or have to be excused in some way. My problems are also first world problems. I couldn't make them third world problems