«Too
much commentary gets bogged down in stats,» he says.
Not exact matches
Though I try to write the text with simplicity and clarity, without
getting bogged down too
much in the details, it is still a
commentary.
And here, as in last year's I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry, Sandler interestingly attempts to blend genuine social
commentary with copious gross - out humor in
much the same way that Mel Brooks did in Blazing Saddles (a movie that, beyond the beans - around - the - campfire gags, wore its heart so firmly on its sleeve in favor of racial brotherhood that it stopped just short of singing «Kumbaya» to its audience); Sandler, who's admirably never been shy about proudly proclaiming his Jewishness, takes on xenophobia, suggests that Israelis and Palestinians CAN
get along and — most controversially of all, perhaps — makes a case that disco music CAN be enjoyable in the right time and place.
You
get a chatty
commentary track from Corbijn, about five minutes of deleted scenes (none of which add
much of anything to the film), and a pleasant 11 - minute featurette detailing the making of the film.
Audio
commentaries don't
get much better than Fincher's, though, so if you've yet to listen to one of his, do yourself a favor and check one out.
There's a hint that the «let's
get this woman for her money» is merely a guise for a broader
commentary on sex as commodity, but it doesn't bother going
much deeper into that.
Other special mentions must also be given to Yorgos Lanthimos» The Killing of a Sacred Deer (a film I
much preferred to his previous, and equally - divisive output), David Lowery's thoughtful and bravely - constructed A Ghost Story, and finally — perhaps disagreeably so to some of its admirers — Jordan Peele's
Get Out, which I felt was an entertaining yet inferior social
commentary to similar of the past such as The Wicker Man, Funny Games and Kill List.
Sadly, the supplements for Transcendence also fail to deliver, leaving out a
much needed
commentary track in lieu of features you'd
get with any run - of - the - mill Blu - ray release.
A monster named Susan isn't very scary — the irradiated Susan is now 50 feet tall and superstrong — so she
gets a scary new name... which is as
much as bit of crafty
commentary on marketing as it is merely ridiculous on its face.
There may be as
much pomp and circumstance here as anywhere (deservedly so, I suppose), but you still
get the traditional vows, hymns (led by two choirs, an orchestra, and a fanfare ensemble), and readings of Scripture, all of which leave little room or need for
commentary.
We
get the setup to the climactic Big Fight, and of course, we
get the payoff to that setup in an extended, brutal bout that has
much more at stake than the outcome of the fight (It's so effective that even the annoying, on - the - nose
commentary becomes background noise).
As it stands, sites that require difficult login processes don't
get as
much reader feedback, but those that allow basic anonymous commenting
get the «grenade effect» of tossing a
commentary grenade into the room and evacuating.
«This is not likely to be a major change, as the highest quality ABS were
getting financed without too
much difficulty already,» he wrote in
commentary.
So
much of the ad hoc
commentary on forums is anything but — and any insightful comments often end up
getting inadvertently kicked into the digital long grass.
Sound The music that is featured in Undisputed 3 is fairly bland and doesn't do
much to
get you pumped, not to mention the
commentary can
get kind of repetitive.
On the whole Grim Fandango is yet another LucasArts classic and the developer
commentary in the remaster (a
much overlooked feature in games) is a great way of
getting to know how games like this are created through the words of its developers themselves.
Even the awful
commentary may actually
get the
much - needed and long overdue improvements it so desperately needs.
Very
much up - to - date with the latest happening within consumerist culture and the news of the world, she issues
commentary that sometimes
gets adopted as the mantra of the very group it targets, in this case the compulsive shoppers.
The last time I looked at this systematically (meaning I
got paid by a client...) the numbers seemed very
much in line with your
commentary in this post.
Written
commentary shouldn't
get much shorter than 140 characters or longer than a white paper or book.