Is there any character or role in the world that Matt Damon can't pull off.
Bad Taste should've been there.
BEST PICTURE
La La Land
ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE
Ryan Gosling, La La Land
ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE
Natalie Portman, Jackie
ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE
Jeff Bridges, Hell or High Water
ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE
Octavia Spencer, Hidden Figures
ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
Moana
CINEMATOGRAPHY
Moonlight
...
And yet it's still way more realistic than this year's GOP Primary.
The oil crisis in particular is hilarious considering how cheap it's selling now.
For as much drama as the show is throwing at us, I wish it were a bit more dramatic. All this stuff should be told in a batshit way (like I assume Scandal is - I've never watched it). The show seems awfully stolid to me, though what do I know since I watched the whole season in a couple days.
Basically any political even that occurs once in a generation (presidential resignation, assassination attempt, oil crisis) is occurring during Underwood's FIRST TERM!
This show is ridiculous. I love it.
I'm glad to see Pee Wee make his return to the big screen. I wonder what it would've been like if they got Tim Burton to direct it?
I was in 6th grade when that movie hit theaters, so I was just safely at the age where it still scared the crap out of me, but was more funny than traumatizing.
Any chance of this getting a theatrical release so I can see it the way Paul Reubens would?
Loved this episode. It wasn't especially funny, but I give it an A for the concept and execution alone.
Really enjoyed this though it wasn't quite what I expected after having seen him live in London back in 2011, where he didn't say a word the entire performance. But I guess there's no way that could have translated to television, especially as audience interaction was a big part of it. Either way I love his work and really hope this leads to him getting his own series.
view this as what Robin Williams once called stand-up drama: Drama with comedic beats. Definitely has some of that Seventh Sealesque profoundness. I think this episode could be commissioned into a stage play and performed by theatrical departments.
I didn't find it funny. Yes, it was a tricky set up, but who cares when the bits aren't funny. Pity, because Dr. Brown (is he a real doctor?) seems like a funny enough guy.
That was pretty great. Maybe I'm a sucker for high-concept weirdness, but there was something really hilarious about the specific repetition and strangeness in this episode.
I think the takeaway here is something like, "Anti-comedy is a double-edged sword."
I see some very twisted *artistry*, whereas most folks will just be annoyed because these sketches don't make no sense... I would love to see more, but won't expect it.
How come no one is concerned that 2 people were seen strolling out the guns behind Morgan in the last scene!! I'm freaking out!
The only thing that annyoned me was how Rosita treated that guy, she didn't like the way Abraham used/abandoned her, but now she's doing the same thing
Not sure why this is newsworthy. Why would Affleck care either way if a Korean Batman fan were to watch his new movie? I've never heard of Son Too Young; I'm sure he's a fan of other comic book characters, not just Batman.
This was probably my favorite movie featuring Wolverine, all the others are pretty average.