Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill and Steve Martin all crashed James Franco's Saturday Night
Live opening monologue, where the Disaster Artist actor took questions from the audience.
Actor Ryan Gosling poked fun at the popular «Ryan Gosling saved jazz» meme in his Saturday Night
Live opening monologue.
Not exact matches
«We are
living in a watershed moment,» first ever SAG Awards host Kristen Bell said in her
opening monologue, which stayed light.
Trainspotting (Danny Boyle, 1996) The
opening sequence, with Ewan McGregor's scathing «Choose
life» monologue and Iggy Pop's «Lust For Life» accompanying the antics of a group of Scottish heroin junkies, explodes with youthful exuberance unmatched since The Beatles» A Hard Day's Ni
life»
monologue and Iggy Pop's «Lust For
Life» accompanying the antics of a group of Scottish heroin junkies, explodes with youthful exuberance unmatched since The Beatles» A Hard Day's Ni
Life» accompanying the antics of a group of Scottish heroin junkies, explodes with youthful exuberance unmatched since The Beatles» A Hard Day's Night.
From the
opening monologue — where Segel (as title character Jeff) talks about how M. Night Shyamalan's Signs is a philosophical statement of the highest order — it isn't clear whether Jeff, Who
Lives at Home will take a mocking tone towards its inhabitants or a sincere one.
Host Michael Stahan (
Live with Kelly and Michael) struggled a bit with his
opening monologue, but got stronger as the night went on.
Jennifer Lawrence hosted NBC's Saturday Night
Live last night and in her
opening monologue that seemed a bit stiff, Lawrence poked fun at her Best Actress candidates Jessica Chastain, Emmanuelle Riva, Naomi Watts, and Quvenzhane Wallis.
Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill and Steve Martin all crashed James Franco's «Saturday Night
Live»
opening monologue.
The reasons for this are not hard to surmise: Action in Roth's books tends to take place in the mind, where endless internal
monologues of self - justification and loathing battle in equal measure and
open ruptures of feelings on sex, identity,
life and death.