Re: It's a Kryptic World...dawnybeeMay 24 2015, 20:28:12 UTC
Why was this not a couple of ME?
The disappointment on that couple's faces when they realize he only wanted run lines and not run a train on them.
If you ever come across Mr. Holland again, ask him what he thought of Wolf Hall.
I wanted to ask him everything about Rylance! He is the theater actors king.
Purcell and Wentworth are back together again? Ha! Love it. I had to go look up Legends of Tomorrow.
Yep. And this time Purcell's character seems to wear pullovers so he doesn't have to worry about unbuttoned shirts like stupid Lincoln Burrows and his inability to button up those damn shirts.
It has been a couple of years since I've seen anything on the CW. And it used to be my favorite TV channel.
There's not anything I could even suggest on that network. Though I have a soft spot for "The Originals". I think it's a strong show and not teen-y like The Vampire Diaries.
It's odd how you found Clooney to not be good at the lighter comedy of Tomorrowland. I saw him and Hugh Laurie and Britt Robertson on Graham Norton, and George was the life of the party. He was telling funny stories and being amusing and charming. He overshadowed even Norton and Laurie. Norton couldn't get a joke in edgewise. I suppose his humor doesn't translate well into his screen persona, but I don't recall Clooney dragging down Ocean's Eleven, but then he wasn't supposed to be the comic relief in that either.
Clooney is a really chill guy off-screen, I love his sense of humor. And apologizing for "Batman and Robin" will never get old.. But onscreen he's always the straight guy. And for something like "Tomorrowland" I felt they need someone more overtly comedic. In "O, Brother Where Art Thou" is the only time I felt he got close to broad comedy and I think that's what this film needed of this character. His character was a scientist who created this Rube Goldberg like house so I don't get why there's little to no sense of a character with that mind in the film. It could be argued that he lost all that sense of wonder due to his time with Athena but I would think elements of that would still be there.
Do tell. I guess that I what I do keep up with when it comes to Disney is Disney World. They were always progressive about recognizing gay partnerships for rights to health care and pensions in the past.
There are definite perks to being an employee, but Disney as a whole engages in anti-worker ways by utilizing sweatshops for their merchandise, reducing full-time hours for resort staffers in order to reduce them to part-time employment so that they don't have to give them benefits, engaging in old-school animator owner conduct of proclaiming everything an artist submits as Disney's intellectual property, thus giving up any ownership rights to characters, and they're one of a few animation studios that are being sued for wage-fixing. The lawsuit alleges that Disney, Pixar and DreamWorks relay wage information to each other as way to make sure they pay the same rates so that animators won't jump to the other company and as way to keep them at the current rate of pay.
Hey, and Erin Go Braugh!
Between Ireland's vote and Russia losing Eurovision 2015 gay rights is having a moment! One day, and I hope it's soon, there won't be a need to vote on something that should be ever person's right.
The disappointment on that couple's faces when they realize he only wanted run lines and not run a train on them.
If you ever come across Mr. Holland again, ask him what he thought of Wolf Hall.
I wanted to ask him everything about Rylance! He is the theater actors king.
Purcell and Wentworth are back together again? Ha! Love it. I had to go look up Legends of Tomorrow.
Yep. And this time Purcell's character seems to wear pullovers so he doesn't have to worry about unbuttoned shirts like stupid Lincoln Burrows and his inability to button up those damn shirts.
It has been a couple of years since I've seen anything on the CW. And it used to be my favorite TV channel.
There's not anything I could even suggest on that network. Though I have a soft spot for "The Originals". I think it's a strong show and not teen-y like The Vampire Diaries.
It's odd how you found Clooney to not be good at the lighter comedy of Tomorrowland. I saw him and Hugh Laurie and Britt Robertson on Graham Norton, and George was the life of the party. He was telling funny stories and being amusing and charming. He overshadowed even Norton and Laurie. Norton couldn't get a joke in edgewise. I suppose his humor doesn't translate well into his screen persona, but I don't recall Clooney dragging down Ocean's Eleven, but then he wasn't supposed to be the comic relief in that either.
Clooney is a really chill guy off-screen, I love his sense of humor. And apologizing for "Batman and Robin" will never get old.. But onscreen he's always the straight guy. And for something like "Tomorrowland" I felt they need someone more overtly comedic. In "O, Brother Where Art Thou" is the only time I felt he got close to broad comedy and I think that's what this film needed of this character. His character was a scientist who created this Rube Goldberg like house so I don't get why there's little to no sense of a character with that mind in the film. It could be argued that he lost all that sense of wonder due to his time with Athena but I would think elements of that would still be there.
Do tell. I guess that I what I do keep up with when it comes to Disney is Disney World. They were always progressive about recognizing gay partnerships for rights to health care and pensions in the past.
There are definite perks to being an employee, but Disney as a whole engages in anti-worker ways by utilizing sweatshops for their merchandise, reducing full-time hours for resort staffers in order to reduce them to part-time employment so that they don't have to give them benefits, engaging in old-school animator owner conduct of proclaiming everything an artist submits as Disney's intellectual property, thus giving up any ownership rights to characters, and they're one of a few animation studios that are being sued for wage-fixing. The lawsuit alleges that Disney, Pixar and DreamWorks relay wage information to each other as way to make sure they pay the same rates so that animators won't jump to the other company and as way to keep them at the current rate of pay.
Hey, and Erin Go Braugh!
Between Ireland's vote and Russia losing Eurovision 2015 gay rights is having a moment! One day, and I hope it's soon, there won't be a need to vote on something that should be ever person's right.
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