Not exact matches
Dr. Justin Marchegiani: Everyone writing questions, if you can kinda keep the questions
framed towards the
conversation, I mean, you know, you can kinda do a little politician pivot where you're
like, «Hey, dandruff» and then you're on adrenals, right?
: Everyone writing questions, if you can kinda keep the questions
framed towards the
conversation, I mean, you know, you can kinda do a little politician pivot where you're
like, «Hey, dandruff» and then you're on adrenals, right?
This feeling is only heightened by the film's
framing device, the
conversation between FBI agent Wesley Doyle (the late Powers Boothe) and Fenton, the killer's son (played by Matthew McConaughey) who narrates much of the film, with it feeling
like it's going to also double as a serial killer origin story, albeit one with a big twist that we think we can see coming a mile off.
the
frame just sits there, stationary, for what feels
like minutes, as we watch a couple having a
conversation in a cleverly - placed mirror, or Casey pacing around outside, smoking, anxiously rattling off rapid - fire architecture jibber - jabber to herself.
But the whole
conversation is
framed in unreal terms: nuclear power,
like renewables that generate electricity, has almost nothing to do with energy independence.