There's a song
on Pure Comedy called «When the God of Love Returns There'll Be Hell To Pay.»
Not exact matches
From Mark Wahlberg's controlled verbal outbursts to Martin Sheen's earnestness to Alec Baldwin's schizoid vulgarities to Leonardo Di Caprio's compassionate toughness to Ray Winstone's quasi immobile fierceness to Jack Nicholson's beautifully
pure excess, The Departed is indeed an performance - driven, fast - paced
comedy of expertly timed thrills (or comedic thriller, depending
on your point of view) peppered with several instances of acrobatic verbal witticisms, and topped with enough generic clichés and predictable screw - turns to make it palatable for all audiences (yes, even those who paid money to see Ashton Kutcher and Kevin Costner's The Guardian).
While not quite funny enough to cut it as
pure comedy, nor emotionally probing enough to be a great drama, The Players is still a pleasingly frank and, at times, guiltily daft take
on a very sticky subject.
A
comedy and a labor of love, the movie is a takeoff
on 1970s action films that's been stripped of filler to concentrate
on pure visceral thrills.
Pixar's keystone franchise takes
on the tone of its more serious recent films (Wall - E and Up), mixing
comedy, action and emotion in a way that's
pure magic: we end up laughing, frightened and crying tears...
Hopefully there's going to be loads
on the DVD extras, because we did shoot a lot of material, some of which is
pure comedy gold.
Williams does deliver
on energy, but he has never really possessed a true talent for broadly physical
comedy, and as scene after scene roll by, you'll probably find it impossible not to scratch your head and wonder why the man that can ad - lib classic comedic moments
on stage and
on late night talk shows can't seem to inject even one laugh in nearly two hours of
pure comedy that he has worked
on for weeks.
We appear to be in for something of an island romantic
comedy, as the two unlikely allies — rough, masculine, faithless orphan marine Allison and the simple,
pure - hearted Angela — go hunting for a turtle together and consider the possibility that they'll have to survive
on the island's ample natural resources for years to come until a rescue.
From director Trent Haaga, 68 Kill is a lurid black
comedy which will take you
on a murderous road trip;
pure trailer - park trash with a sleazy punk rock edge, and plenty of violent shocks along the way.