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Robert
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Who can resist a show with people folding their arms and gazing thoughtfully into the distance?

pretty much agree; I can't imagine listening to that album and being the same person afterwards..

The late great Jean Shepherd was the best I have ever seen at telling a long, shaggy dog story and finding his way back to the main point in an amusing fashion.

I liked her in everything I have seen her in…. she received an Oscar nomination in Sweet and Lowdown without saying a word.. and deserved it.. and her screaming 'RUUUUUUUNNNN! at Cruise in Minority Report was a welcome shot of adrenalin.

The scene in Nothing in the Dark where the old woman turns around and sees her already dead body is startling yet comforting at the same time…

As I recall, maybe the most interesting part of the Easy Rider trip was the 'flash forward' scene which showed them being shot (sorry if this has already been mentioned)

The bittersweet ending to this film is one of my favorites.  Buck Weaver watching Joe Jackson play in that minor league game and then denying it was him was magnificently filmed and acted.

Brother is great, but no Alligator?

seconded

That's not fair, that's not fair at all!

Hank Greenberg is a textbook example of how to do a 'talking head' documentary properly

It's a great performance and the movie is lots of fun.. the mythic drug dealer with glowing eyes is an all time great scene

This cheery interlude from Regina Spektor's 'Summer in the City'

yes another Long Gone fan..

I do like Bull Durham, but second Eight Men Out.. Sayles accomplishes what he set out to do perfectly.. I also put in a vote for the woefully forgotten and underrated HBO film about minor league baseball 'Long Gone'

The man could write some prose, RIP:

RIP; he will be missed

A piece on True Stories would be appreciated…

This film and Days of Heaven are as perfect as films get..

Ginger's intuitive drumming on 'We're Going Wrong' from the first Cream album was one of my favorite moments in 60s music…