I kind of love Homer running the youth hostel and singing 99 Luftballoons, though. I particularly love the German hostel stayer when he's fleeing: "To Disneyland, where we will heap the scorn on Goofy!"
I kind of love Homer running the youth hostel and singing 99 Luftballoons, though. I particularly love the German hostel stayer when he's fleeing: "To Disneyland, where we will heap the scorn on Goofy!"
I also hear he improvised slitting Brian Cranston's wrists in Drive. Cranston wasn't very happy about all the stitches he had to get, but it's a classic scene now!
Fucking HATED that. Frankly, I think the movie was a lot worse than the actual series around the same time.
The reveal of Scorpio wearing the coat backwards, with that gigantic grin on his face, absolutely slays me.
While Hank Scorpio is obviously the best, I think maybe his second best appearance is in The Heartbroke Kid playing fat camp counselor Tab Spangler. He has a lot of great lines in that one.
The joke was definitely that the economy was doing very well at the time.
They actually dropped the Jane Austen's part before it came out because their testing indicated that their intended audience didn't know who Jane Austen was.
I remember wanting to see Mafia! but getting too mad at it when it dropped the Jane Austen's part of the title before it was released.
Oh, man, it's always fun to look back like that. I might have seen it a week or two before that, because I live in a fairly big city. We're usually about third in line to get rollout movies. On that list, I also had seen The Prince of Egypt, Shakespeare in Love, A Simple Plan, Life Is Beautiful, Star Trek:…
Totally agree. In fact, it was rather perfectly structured. I knew pretty much right away that Korra would not appear until the final couple of minutes of the episode.
Also note that Varrick is working with Kuvira. Bolin's always going to be on the up and up, but Varrick's gotta be doing something fishy.
I have a friend who always calls that animation's equivalent to the final moment in City Lights.
I watched The Umbrellas of Cherbourg a few weeks back and I teared up whenever that music came on - solely because of Jurassic Bark. Umbrellas is a pretty sad movie in itself, but JB kind of owns that music now, IMO.
You would have to be simply an awful, awful person not to cry at Grave of the Fireflies. I don't think I could even trust someone who didn't.
Me, too. I actually think it's a pretty good movie, but that last sequence is simply laughable. I mean, your car runs out of gas and you immediatley blow your heads off. Like, you couldn't wait until you were in any kind of danger? And Thomas Jane's screaming, man, I thought it was so funny.
I don't know, as someone who feels he has missed out on all the best romantic possibilities, Il posto feels like the ultimate film about that subject.
Well then what's your problem with seeing this film?
Probably the only Super Bowl halftime performance in the history of them that's worth a damn.
I recently watched the film and bought the album. The album is awesome. I didn't think the movie was that bad. Hey, Purple Rain - the movie - ain't that good, either.
Exactly how do you expect to see movies then? It is available from Netflix, but the DVD seems to be OOP in the US. There's a Region 2 version available, if you do Region-free. Or, here: https://www.youtube.com/wat…