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SW-User
Laughed some during "Sling Blade" although it wasn't a comedy at all...
(Gotta admit felt like crying during some of it as well.)
Excellent movie IMO.
(Gotta admit felt like crying during some of it as well.)
Excellent movie IMO.
TheOneyouwerewarnedabout · 41-45, MVIP
@SW-User he’s just a boy..
Thevy29 · 41-45, M
Robin Hood prince of thieves. It was Alan Rickman's portrayal of the Sherriff of Nottingham. He was hilarious.
@Thevy29 [quote]Alan Sidney Patrick Rickman was an English actor and director. Known for his languid tone and delivery, Rickman's signature sound was the result of a speech impediment developed when he could not move his lower jaw properly as a child. [/quote]
TheOneyouwerewarnedabout · 41-45, MVIP
Death of stalin
GERRI · 51-55, F
@TheOneyouwerewarnedabout but it was supposed to be funny,,, wasn't it?
TheOneyouwerewarnedabout · 41-45, MVIP
@GERRI 🤷♂️ It came on world movies one night.. it had comedians in it .. lolz
Would it have got the yuks without Palin and James Bond? 🤷♂️
I was in stitches but either way 😁
Would it have got the yuks without Palin and James Bond? 🤷♂️
I was in stitches but either way 😁
Rutterman · 46-50, M
Last Tango in Paris
I can see why!
[quote]What a bizarre film it is, capable of delivering some shocks, certainly, but possessing not power exactly, but a fascinating, unevolved clumsiness. Brando confronts the audience like a bull behind the china shop counter, and his extraordinary, old-fashioned charisma is what keeps you watching. That face is hyperreal in its leonine handsomeness. And you don't see it clearly at first. Like Don Corleone receiving petitioners in his inner sanctum or Colonel Kurtz in his cave, this is one of Brando's crepuscular roles, a brooding creature of the shadows, from which the first recognizable thing is the nasal-strangulation of the voice. Later he morphs into Cagney, a premonition of his final top-of-the-world moment in Maria's apartment, and he unleashes a hilarious hammy English accent, whose cadences give him Olivier's camp self-possession.[/quote]
[quote]What a bizarre film it is, capable of delivering some shocks, certainly, but possessing not power exactly, but a fascinating, unevolved clumsiness. Brando confronts the audience like a bull behind the china shop counter, and his extraordinary, old-fashioned charisma is what keeps you watching. That face is hyperreal in its leonine handsomeness. And you don't see it clearly at first. Like Don Corleone receiving petitioners in his inner sanctum or Colonel Kurtz in his cave, this is one of Brando's crepuscular roles, a brooding creature of the shadows, from which the first recognizable thing is the nasal-strangulation of the voice. Later he morphs into Cagney, a premonition of his final top-of-the-world moment in Maria's apartment, and he unleashes a hilarious hammy English accent, whose cadences give him Olivier's camp self-possession.[/quote]
SW-User
Cat's eye... just so dumb
JRVanguard · 26-30, M
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