McDonagh sinks his teeth into every meaty expression of hate, rage, and difficulty, and finds
humor in the unlikeliest places, as he follows Mildred, hell - bent on answers.
Not exact matches
When Calvin Candy's servant explains his role
in maintaining the estate, Django replies that the white man is «almost like a nigger,» a bold remark punctuated with one of several ostentatious zooms lifted from the spaghetti western vernacular — allowing for yet another moment of
unlikely humor.
With solid actors, good writing, vibrant costume work, a terrific score from Coogler - regular Ludwig Goransson (Central Intelligence, Stretch),
humor that's delivered with refreshing subtlety, and Coogler's taut pacing that also takes the time to build up its scenarios, Black Panther succeeds at delivering an
unlikely solo effort
in the superhero genre, and leaves skeptics and those completely unaware of the characters within the comic books hungry for more.
While the
unlikely pairing of these characters provides plenty of opportunities for
humor, parents likely won't be prepared for the intensity of the violent portrayals found
in this Disney - produced movie.
There's plenty of
humor in this lengthy introductory sequence, which plays off the various differences
in the characters» real selves and their
unlikely avatars, as well as the clichés, mechanics, and details of video games.
It's a farce, of sorts, if one's impression of farce is that the
humor comes from dumb people doing
unlikely things
in improbable situations.
The three leading cast members around him are also a good fit: Pegg providing
humor but also deftly handling exposition, Renner continuing his seamless transition from smaller endeavors (just
in time for his summer work
in multiplex fare The Avengers and as the new Bourne series lead), and Patton pulling off the
unlikely task of being eye candy without her spy credentials being questionable.
Dirty Grandpa (R for profanity, drug use, frontal nudity and pervasive crude
humor and sexual content) Robert De Niro plays the title character
in this
unlikely - buddies comedy about a retired Army general who embarks on a raunchy road trip to Florida with his grandson (Zac Efron) for Spring Break.
The low - key, witty
humor Carey imbues
in the narrative, the multitude of quirky characters, and reliance on
unlikely coincidence to further the plot all evoke the iconic author.