Why the hell am I bothering asking serious
questions about a movie so awful?!
Armie Hammer and Timothée Chalamet, stars of Luca Guadagnino's swooning summertime drama, Call Me by Your Name, answer
our questions about movies, romance and what makes a great holiday.
That Awkward Moment will likely leave audiences asking the same
question about the movie they're watching.
And though we haven't talked much, so far, about the stars we lost this year, I thought I'd start there, inspired in part by Amy's continued ruminations on Hollywood stardom and its increasing flirtation with irrelevance and in part by Dana's earlier
questions about movie history and the people, practices, themes, technologies, and so on that define the way we watch movies right now.
The deleted / extended bits are as follows: Andy Samberg (4:12) on Bob Dylan, Aziz Ansari (1:42) on acting and Twitter, alternate Reggie banter (0:39), Medi - Ship complications (1:06), Fabrice Fabrice (4:21) performing a poem on a lost city, Anna Kendrick (1:47) recalling her Tony nomination as a 12 - year - old and eating a cat's liver, Rodney Waber (5:34) dishes more Harrison Ford gossip, dances, and reveals a senior citizen ticket price trick, David Cross (2:49) talks talking animals and white toilets, Senator Dewhurst (3:14) confesses strange sex dreams about his aunt and his plan to drive drunk, Zoe Saldana (2:03) answers
questions about movies and acts out a Jerry Maguire reboot, «Garry Marshall» (1:19) explains why he's done with movies, Gillian Jacobs (1:38) discusses the ghost of Christopher Marlowe and the conflict in Nebraska, Chef Emeril Lugosi (0:34) endures a pun about sun - dried tomatoes, Andy Richter (4:59) delivers a kid - friendly version of «The Aristocrats» joke, pulls a gun after not answering a fart question (a task handled by Andy Samberg on the show itself), and responds to the 1990s TV movie The Shining, Tom Perdy (0:44) shows off a couple of additional cartoons.
«You sit down with some people and they'll ask
you a question about the movie and you go, «Oh my god, I never even considered that.
The ending of Avengers: Infinity War stunned audiences and left fans with countless
questions about the movie's plot, the future, and even the fate of various characters.
In a new video, Peele answers fan
questions about the movie and responds to some Get Out fan theories, including one that wonders whether the entire movie is the delusion of Rod the TSA agent.
He provided generous answers to
our questions about the movie, and below we've excerpted the highlights of our conversation which touched upon on the making of «Fading Gigolo,» working with Woody Allen, the upcoming «Big Lebowski» spinoff and more.
For yet more
questions about the movie, head on over to 6 questions I had after watching Black Panther.
Lastly, a trivia game asks 17 multiple - choice
questions about the movie, and tallies the players score at the end, ranking them from «Pup» to «Wise Owl.»
Ahead of the Star Wars: The Last Jedi premiere on December 14, Mark Hamill, Daisy Ridley and more appeared on WIRED's Autocomplete Interview segment where they answered some of Google's most searched
questions about the movie.
Do you have
any questions about the movie?»
The player can choose to play hide and seek with Francis the ladybug in a tomato patch, which basically consists of a simple trivia game that asks
questions about the movie.
This comprehension quiz contains more than 25 open ended and close ended
questions about the movie.
In the Q&A, Abrams joined director Julius Onah and Cloverfield Paradox stars David Oyelowo and Roger Davies to answer
questions about the movie.
To gear up for the release, we got writer and director Alex Garland (Dredd, 28 Days Later) to hop on the phone and answer a few
questions about the movie, artificial intelligence, and why he thinks Google is going to take over the world.
Do you have
a question about Movies Anywhere that we haven't covered?
A question about movies shows nearby theaters and top new releases.
Not exact matches
Questions about where Mr. Low and the prime minister's stepson — a
movie producer behind films including «The Wolf of Wall Street» — obtained money for the United States properties have helped fuel political unrest in Malaysia, where several political leaders in the opposition and in Mr. Najib's own party have called for the prime minister to step down.
But the
questions about how much of Trevorrow's plot will stay in the
movie will only increase after a new revelation from «Saturday Night Live» alum Bobby Moynihan.
That is the
question everyone is asking
about Zack Snyder's Batman VS. Superman
movie, which could really go either way at this...
I remember getting real cross with my little sister when she told me that she went out to see the
movie The Exorcism of Emily Rose, but when she started asking me
questions about God and all that, I was kind of thinking, «You know Olga, maybe this is a good thing that Hollywood is spending some money on making horror
movies.»
The
movie served to give me a different platform to discuss faith from, not to argue that my belief system is right and someone else's is wrong, but instead to point out that the world is hungry for
questions about the soul and what we don't see right in front of us.
The truth is — whether we're talking
about a
movie with casual attitudes
about sex, a song that uses profane language or a talking head who belittles Christian faith — there is no easy answer to that
question.
The thing I like
about this
movie is that the script struggles with the hard
questions.
And that torrent — combined with social change that has shifted cultural values and technological advances that have given
movies access to our living rooms — has raised, once again,
questions about censorship and freedom.
In an interview with Wired
about his
movie Inception, director Christopher Nolan is
questioned about an ambiguous scene in the film: So, there's no one right answer.Oh no, I've got an answer.You do?!
Whenever I'm struggling with doubts
about God or
questioning my faith, I make sure to avoid my most notorious faith crisis trigger: war
movies.
You might want this
movie, with all of its admirable representation and genuine messaging, to be something that could pervade into the real world, but it only wants to do that with the way it makes you feel, not with any creative ideas or
questions about the present.
It is fitting, I think, that the beginning of the
movie incorporates a court scene where one, Rubin (Rooster) Cogburn, an officer of the court (a «marshall») is
questioned about his killing of a family of bushwhackers and murders out in the «nations».
From Michelle: I was already asking
questions about Hell and who goes there when I watched the
movie Hellbound.
With Stowell, learning quirky and mundane tidbits
about her felt like a refreshing distraction from the elephant in the room: she wrote homework
questions, despite wanting to avoid homework in high school; she was part of a lab group that focused on eating competitions; she had a nail polish collection; she loved watching terrible
movies; she used to play rugby, realized she wasn't good at it, and then switched to ultimate frisbee.
I recently saw the
movie «Her,» and while it isn't the best
movie I've ever seen, it is pretty much at the top when it comes to raising fascinating
questions: what it means to be human, what we mean when we talk
about love and intimacy, what sex is, and yes, how we can be so connected to and dependent on technology — especially technology that responds in loving ways and gives us exactly what we want — that we actually can have a romantic relationship with it.
Resist the temptation to use the screen as an electronic babysitter; instead, sit and watch along with her, posing
questions, talking
about ideas presented in the show or
movie, and finding out what strikes her as most interesting.
I've also talked
about how robots might impact romantic relationships before, too — the
movie Her beautifully asks us to
question, what is a relationship?
And although I meant to ask the
question about how has Sid matured through the
movie releases, Silvia beat me to it.
Kumasi - based
movie actress, Vivian Jill Lawrence, is not the kind of woman who is likely to spend a pesewa on her lover man and she makes that very clear when responding to
questions about her choice of man.
Yet again, while Mr. Cuomo said last week that the Legionnaires» outbreak was like a science fiction
movie, Mr. de Blasio has sought to downplay the risks — growing frustrated with
questions about how many towers had tested positive.
The way in which zombie
movies pose these
questions has changed significantly over time, telling us more
about ourselves, and
about what we most fear, in the process.
Thakur is working to make Google's search engine answer detailed
questions about the world, such as listing all books that have been made into
movies, or all volcanoes that erupted between specific dates.
Nicolas Cage's new
movie knowingly takes on some big
questions about randomness and determinism — and, by extension,
about science and faith
«The high frequency of brand placements in
movies aimed at children and young adolescents raises
questions about the adequacy of alcohol marketing self - regulation,» Cukier said.
Veganism's had major play in the media this year, and many of us have faced pesky
questions from friends, family and acquaintances
about the vegan propaganda
movie Forks Over Knives starring T. Colin Campbell and Caldwell Esselstyn.
Then there is a «fun facts» area allowing you to choose answers to
questions about details in music /
movies, food, looks, season, personality, and so on.
When you download the app, you are asked a series of
questions about preferences relating to music, food, TV, books,
movies, and even pets.
The
movie ends on a grace note that doesn't quite answer the
question, but gives us plenty to think
about as we mosey home afterward.
We walk away with plenty of
questions about what's going in Noble's mind, but one clear conclusion - both halves of her life would and should make compelling
movies in their own right.
It turns out the real
question director Roland Emmerich's
movie raises isn't
about how much this film's pseudo-science teases us, but how much bad drama it's willing to blow our way.
A
movie about sex that depicts what's necessary without being tasteless, this is an examination of various preconceptions, misconceptions and warped perceptions
about sex, and asks the
questions so many people ask themselves and each other.