Someone and 7 others are loving Interview: Dylan O'Brien ('Teen Wolf')
May 22, 2013
Ronald commented on Win A DVD Of The Psychological Thriller 'Side Effects':
“The Silence of the Lambs (1991)! Hannibal Lecter (Anthony Hopkins) and Jodi Foster (Clarice Starling) = great on screen chemistry! And in my opinion, The Silence of the Lambs has to be one of the very best psychological thrillers ever produced! It's my favorite! And this was the film that brought Hannibal Lecter into the mainstream and helped spawn the follow-up films, and I'm sure, must have inspired the new TV series Hannibal!”
Stare At Naked Jennifer Lawrence As 'X-Men's Mystique
I don't care what you're doing, I don't care how NSFW the title of this article sounds: it's an article with Jennifer Lawrence in it, so you should be here regardless, and with the fact that the words "naked" and "X-Men" are involved, I'm not sure why the entirety of the internet aren't viewing this article all at the exact same time. X-Men: Days of Future Past director Bryan Singer tweeted a shot of JLaw on set and the internet should be collectively foaming at the mouth.
Though Rebecca Romijn is known for making the legendary role of Mystique famous, Jennifer Lawrence stepped into the infamous nude blue suit for 2011's X-Men: First Class, and will reprise the role—now that, you know, the Hunger Games lead is bigger than she's ever be...
So we're all pretty mad (still) at George Lucas, right? He's kind of a tool. He made the worst prequels of all time and then continued to f*ck up the original series with ridiculous additions of stupid walking aliens and stuff. Anyway, here's the commentary from the South Park episode "Free Hat" in which Matt Stone and Trey Parker (geniuses) make a comment on George Lucas and Steven Spielberg. It's important and awesome.
Anyway, George Lucas is talking a lot about retiring, which he's talked about before. He wants to go off the grid and live on a ranch or something stupid. What he really means is that he's completely out of ideas so he just goes back into his classics and totally shits on everyone's dreams and memories.
He recently told Empire Magazine:
I'm moving away from the company, I'm moving away from all my businesses, I'm finishing all my obligations and I'm going to retire to my garage with my saw and hammer and build hobby movies. I've always wanted to make movies that were more experimental in nature, and not have to worry about them showing in movie theatres.
Fine, whatever, we're glad you're leaving. Come back when you have something important and don't you dare go all Avatar on us. What exactly does "experimental in nature" mean? Like Harmony Korine stuff? If so, maybe it's not a bad idea that he's "retiring" after all.
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