weslawson
Wes Lawson
weslawson

Same, and as he mentions in his interview, the racism the movie deals in is pretty universal among white, Eurocentric countries - it's doubtful an American actor would have played the role differently.

Moonlight answered a question I've long had about grills (do you take them out to eat, like a retainer?)

This is remarkably similar to the equally awful poster for I.T.

The long-and-justly-forgotten Diane Lane thriller Untraceable got slammed at the time for the ridiculousness of the scene where the killer hacks into her car. How time marches on.

In a similar, lighter vein, here's Ellen and Tom Hanks talking about Pixar recording sessions.

I have to remind myself that he's not just famous for being famous every time he comes up, and how stupid I have to be to remind myself of that, considering DJ is right there in his name.

And aggregated by a website that's published at least six articles about him in the last 24 hours.

Didn't Mad Men and Breaking Bad get one "fuck" per season? And didn't that constraint work amazingly for both shows?

I dunno, have you watched West Wing lately? Still an overall good show, but chunks of it have not aged well, and its nakedly earnest patriotism can be eye-rolling even outside our current context.

The movie version is one of the only movies Ebert ever walked out of.

The TV spot for this keeps popping up on Hulu, and it's one of those talking head spots of the cast gushing about how moving/beautiful/family friendly/blah blah blah the movie is, and there's almost zero footage from it and zero mention of God.

Rather than making three feature length movies, Smith should have done a Creepshow-style anthology of the Canada stories. There's a reasonably solid 30 minutes in Tusk, and as Rabin said above, there's maybe 10 minutes of good Colleens material. Throw in a 30-40 minute version of Moose Jaws and a framing device, and

For me, Mr. Right wasn't awful so much as it was a complete nothing - a movie that didn't need to be made or seen, with actors too talented to waste their time with it. Which could describe a lot of her post-Perfect projects, come to think of it.

Shonda, Dick Wolf and maybe Norman Lear are the only ones that come close.

I remember really hating Happy Feet, but I can't remember why. I recall being annoyed that it switched from a standard "finding yourself" animated story to ENVIRONMENTALISM! at some point, but surely that wasn't enough to despise it.

He'll have to work hard to top recent AMA revelations like "Denzel Washington alludes to having peed his pants as an adult" and "Channing Tatum admits he didn't know what the fuck was going on with Jupiter Ascending either."

Christmas With The Kranks is one of the worst Christmas movies ever made, but I laughed at the scene where Allen attempts to eat dinner after a Botox injection.

It's a bad idea for anyone who was in Fury Road to take a project where they'll be in a car chase. As Ebert was fond of saying, the last thing you should do is remind the audience of a movie they'd rather be watching.

So Keegan Michael Key is without question playing Ray Nagin in this, right?