📽️ Tommy Boy (1995)
This is my favorite Chris Farley movie. It’s classic Chris Farley. The bumbling idiot with a heart of gold ends up figuring everything out and saving the day. It’s basically the same plot as Beverly Hills Ninja and Black Sheep, just with different scenarios and characters. Of all those mentioned though, I think Tommy Boy is the best one. It’s genuinely funny, pretty much from start to finish; but the actual story is good, too. My family and I quote this movie all the time because there are so many great one-liners. It’s definitely worth the watch.
Sex/nudity: 3/10 (some innuendos, woman in bikini, woman skinny dipping at night with a brief flash of frontal nudity)
Language: 2/10 (no f-words, milder strong language throughout)
Violence: 1/10 (punching, hitting, beating up played for laughs)
Overall rating: 8/10
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X-Men '97 S01E10 - Tolerance is Extinction Part 3
[ Real Name: Magnus
A.K.A: Erik Lehnsherr, David Hemblen, Ian M---, Michael F---
Height: 6'2" - Weight: 190 LBS - Species: Mutant
Team Affiliations: Brotherhood of Mutants, Acolytes, X-Men
Marital Status: Widowed
Children: Quicksilver (Son), Scarlet Witch (Daughter), P--- ]
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Jackie Ethel Joan: The Women of Camelot - NBC - March 4-5, 2001
Biographical Drama (2 episodes)
Running Time: 163 Minutes Total
Stars:
Jill Hennessy as Jackie Bouvier Kennedy
Lauren Holly as Ethel Skakel Kennedy
Leslie Stefanson as Joan Bennett Kennedy
Daniel Hugh Kelly as John F. Kennedy
Robert Knepper as Robert F. Kennedy
Matt Letscher as Ted Kennedy
Harve Presnell as Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.
Charmion King as Rose Kennedy
Wayne Best as George Smathers
Walker Boone as Steve Clark
Christopher Britton as Ted's Doctor
Catherine Bruce as Sister Mary Leo
Adam Cabral as John F. Kennedy Jr.
Thom Christopher as Aristotle Onassis
William Colgate as Richard Nixon
Beau Dunker as Ted Kennedy Jr.
David Eisner as Schiff
Greg Ellwand as Peter Wilson
Madison Fitzpatrick as Caroline Kennedy
Richard Fitzpatrick as Frank Peters
Linda Goranson as Lady Bird Johnson
Paul Thomas Gordon as Peter Lawford
Kate Hemblen as Joan's Nanny
Shannon Hile as Elaine Mitchell
Tom Howard as Lyndon B. Johnson
Jeno Huber as Prince Stanisław Albrecht Radziwiłł
Jamie Johnston as Young Patrick Kennedy
Geoff Kahnert as Sargent Shriver
Ray Kahnert Bobby's Priest
Tamsin Kelsey as Eunice Kennedy Shriver
Anne L'Espérance as Cathy
Sarah Lafleur as Marilyn Monroe
Shawn Lawrence as Alex Carter
Gene Mack as Rosey Grier
Louisa Martin as Maude Shaw
Kaya McGregor as Pat Kennedy
Nicole Michaux as Jean Ann Smith
Julia Pagel as Kathleen Kennedy
Rosemary Pate as Kara
Karl Pruner as Clinton Hill
Matt Sadowski as Joseph P. Kennedy II
Jeffrey Smith as Jim Ketchum
Joy Tanner as Lee Bouvier
Bruce Vavrina as Roger Mudd
Jonathan Whittaker as Lem Billings
Brad Wietersen as Stephen Edward Smith
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Q&A Ask Game
thanks to @zishiyao for the tag !!
✅ Last song:
✅ Currently reading:
My nutrional menu, and my free time my next chapter to I will post
✅ Currently watching: Because I don´t remember the facts to see the new series X-men 97, currently in season 4
✅ Last movie watched:
Blade 1
✅Current obsessions: Eredin always🖤
✅Coffee or tea: Green Tea 🍵 for healty
✅Last thing googled: Frida Kahlo Quotes
Tagging: @jorrmund @crazyaboutto @saku-12
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In the upscale Toronto strip club Exotica, dancer Christina is visited nightly by the obsessive Francis, a depressed tax auditor. Her ex-boyfriend, the club’s MC, Eric, still jealously pines for her even as he introduces her onstage, but Eric is having his own relationship problems with the club’s female owner. Thomas, a mysterious pet-shop owner, is about to become unexpectedly involved in their lives.
Credits: TheMovieDb.
Film Cast:
Francis: Bruce Greenwood
Christina: Mia Kirshner
Eric: Elias Koteas
Thomas: Don McKellar
Tracey Brown: Sarah Polley
Zoe: Arsinée Khanjian
Harold: Victor Garber
Inspector: David Hemblen
Customs Officer: Calvin Green
Man in Taxi: Peter Krantz
Scalper: Jack Blum
Man at opera: Billy Merasty
Doorman: Ken McDougall
Man at Opera: Damon D’Oliveira
…: Maury Chaykin
…: C.J. Lusby
…: Nadine Ramkisson
Film Crew:
Screenplay: Atom Egoyan
Editor: Susan Shipton
Producer: Camelia Frieberg
Set Dresser: Linda Del Rosario
Set Dresser: Richard Paris
Costume Design: Linda Muir
Director of Photography: Paul Sarossy
Assistant Director: David Webb
Production Manager: Sandra Cunningham
Assistant Production Manager: Roberta Pazdro
Production Coordinator: Roland Schlimme
Second Assistant Director: Fergus Barnes
Third Assistant Director: Michele Rakich
Other: Simone Urdl
Other: Hussain Amarshi
Assistant Production Coordinator: Carolynne Bell
Extras Casting: Scott Mansfield
Camera Trainee: Joseph Micomonaco
Other: Mark Willis
Focus Puller: Paul Boucher
Steadicam Operator: David Crone
Gaffer: David Owen
Electrician: George Kerr
Script Supervisor: Joanne T. Harwood
Grip: Harper Forbes
Boom Operator: Peter Melnychuk
Set Dresser: Garth Brunt
Makeup Artist: Nicole Demers
Hair Designer: Debra Johnson
Original Music Composer: Mychael Danna
Sound Designer: Steve Munro
Movie Reviews:
badelf: The best psychological drama I’ve seen in a long time. I can’t even remember anything that comes close.
Filipe Manuel Neto: **Something abstract and disconnected, not worth seeing more than once in our life.**
This is one of those films that puts such a huge barrier between the audience and the screen that it seems like we’re not even being taken into consideration by the producers. Despite the attempts, there is not a single sympathetic or palatable character, the script does not help and the feeling that hangs in the air is of a lack of connection and solidity in the final product that can only be explained if we think about the way the director wanted to be. abstract by force.
Everything takes place around a chic striptease club, Exotica, in Toronto. There is a dancer who enchants not only a client who goes to see her every day, but also the presenter, who is her ex-boyfriend and one of the most possessive and unhappy people we can imagine. Add to this an animal trafficker with problems admitting homosexuality who is forced to participate in a revenge plan, and we have a film that we probably won’t want to see more than once.
Atom Egoyan gives us firm direction, but a much less secure and solid script. I like the way it addresses loss, trauma, the feeling of denial of reality and grief. However, to believe that a woman would set up an elegant strip club and her daughter would have the courage to take over the “family business” is to completely ignore the realities of these commercial establishments, where legality and illegality sometimes go hand in hand. A real luxury house would never hold private sessions on tables in the main room for a low price, but in separate rooms for a much higher price, and real strippers don’t usually dance to the same music and use the same stage number constantly. There are also huge holes that the script never explains and that are left hanging. For example, why did Christina decide to become a stripper if it is clear, from the characters’ words, that that is not the place she deserved to be.
Bruce Greenwood is the actor who deserves the most praise for his work here. He is the only one trying to break the ice and reach out to the public in some way, and that deserv...
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Chapter 4: "And the machine was given unto man. The machine was perfect of line, and elegant of form. And the machine said, 'This is my gift to my people, that they might throw off their bonds of flesh'."
—Lord Dread (David Hemblen), Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future, episode 2, "The Abyss"
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Everyone else: Mourned David Hemblen because they knew him either from his deeply distinguished theatre career or because he was Magneto.
Me: Mourns David Hemblen because he voiced a character nobody remembers from a show from 1994 that nobody watched who was one half of my ship that nobody likes.
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