I’m not sure I can name a more repugnant character in a movie in the last couple of years that would rival Jack Quaid’s.
That, and where are you going to find a funnier Meg Ryan reference in any other film this year.
-Matt
It all comes together, and watching the extended version, never gets old.
The idea that these movies got made in the early 2000s and still hold up to anything that’s been made over two decades later is why this whole trilogy is magic and will be the last great tentpole trilogy we’ll ever see again in any of our lifetimes.
We’ll be telling our grandkids “they don’t make these like they used to” and than if you’re a grandparent will…
Doing a little prep work for "The Invisible Man" i decided to stumble into "Her Smell" and it makes me wonder why I waited so long.
This is top-notch stuff for everyone involved, and you can smell the drugs, booze and violence oozing from the screen.
Elizabeth Moss is too damn good and that's all I have to say about that.
-Matt
There isn't much to say about "Boyhood" that hasn't already been said. It's a gamble that turned into something transcendent, something pure, something honest, something universal. While I understand an audiences' apprehension about the "coming-of-age" genre, "Boyhood" is something else that goes that genre and creates an honest film about growing up. While film's portray growing up as something sensational and how just one life event will determine your entire future and the type of person you WILL become, "Boyhood"…