Not exact matches
This also means resisting the urge to
complain (or brag) about how slammed you are, no matter if it's
over Bloody Marys at brunch or in 140
characters on Twitter.
This setting allows Bay and writer Ehren Kruger (who wrote two good movies
over a decade ago — Arlington Road and The Ring — before descending into Hollywood hackdom) the films only flourish of ironic «wit» — the crotchety old gent theatre owner (great
character actor Richard Riehle, wasted here)
complains that all they make sequels and remakes nowadays.
Despite extremely loud gunfire and the echoes that ensue in a such a large, abandoned warehouse, Vern can still be heard
over all of it
complaining about his bullet wounds, as if he's the only one shot, his stupid makeshift cardboard armor and just a mass amount of random grumbling in a hard - to - place accent making him all the more frustrating for the other
characters and even funnier for the audience.
Once the book is published by Smashwords, it contains an ending paragraph with an email address to contact me to point out any typos found in the book, and I'm happy to say that very few are found... but there are quite a few that
complain about
over or under usage of commas — probably as a result of the way that one
character or another in the book chooses to express himself or herself.
Talk about a
character no one expected, and likely even less wanted (Again, before anyone
complains that's not true, who was really hoping for this guy
over any other choice)?