One of them, Duel, was the movie that launched Steven Spielberg’s directorial career!
One of them, Duel, was the movie that launched Steven Spielberg’s directorial career!
It’s almost like different people have different opinions of movies despite working for the same company or something. Wild.
Good Flask impression!
This comment’s implicit privileging of plot advancement and character development as the true goals of the novel suggests you have an impoverished relationship with literature, fed on a diet of publishing seminars and webcam criticism that has led to a stunted understanding of the possibilities of the form. Challenge…
As a fan of American authors who write long, sprawling sentences, I approve of Chabon’s decision to slowly turn into Herman Melville.
Which is exactly what Endgame said to Natasha Romanov’s death scene.
E.D.I.S.D.T.P.- Even Dead, I Still Drive The Plot
They do, it’s called “all the episodes of Tidying Up that came out before the store was opened.” Where do you think she got her stock?
Ideally both. Hopefully the booking officer and paramedics get into a slap-fight about whether to load him into the police car or ambulance, causing his stretcher to fall to the ground in all the commotion.
It’s like poetry. It rhymes.
More like Magnolia Origins: Quiz Kid Donnie Smith.
They’re going to do a soft re-introduction with Wreck-It Ralph 3, which will involve Ralph and Vannelope getting stuck in the Disney vault, presided over by Uncle Remus (played by a digital version of James Baskett, getting the Peter-Cushing-in-Rogue-One-style digital resurrection).
Try taking off your sunglasses first.
Streaming Service Forced to Take L.
Noelle? Elle no!
Yes, and it’s interesting how bringing up the political context of the church allowed you to better clarify your aesthetic enjoyment of it, and situating that aesthetic understanding within the history of the building and the various political forces that led to its creation allowed you, in turn, to discover those…
Wow, I can’t believe you felt the need to bring politics into what could have just been an aesthetic analysis of a beautiful church!
The placement of the scene doesn’t really save it, because it doesn’t pay off later on in the film; her force pulling or leaping abilities never come into play again.
No, it’s about upper-class Americans, who by definition are never political.
A direct quote from Return of the Jedi: