Not exact matches
I thought it was a place
where I could finally get some answers about all this shadowy, behind the
scenes stuff that apparently has been going on for years.
For the story I'm writing, well - known published writers in our critique group, who were getting their
stuff published in paper by CBA publishers commented, among other things: - «The
scene where Tammy throws her bikini up into the tree would never get published by a CBA publisher.»
I poached the idea of using Japanese panko bread crumbs from someone on the web, and reckoned it would be tasty to mix in some Thanksgivingy Sage and Onion
stuffing mix, because I've always cooked with that
scene from Friends in my head,
where Rachel makes a trifle, and puts bolognese in it by accident, but Joey loves it, because he loves all the flavours.
You know the
scene in the dirty movies, the one
where the girl gets
stuff all over her face?
P.P.S. I'm being featured on Franish today in her «Behind the Blog» series
where you can learn a bit more about why I started blogging and other behind - the -
scenes stuff!
Instead, we get standard
stuff such as a
scene where someone travels through a crawlspace, a rooftop fight, and a standoff in the backyard.
The funniest
stuff comes during the pawn shop
scene,
where Hannibal Burress just shines.
The cast go from room to room discussing
stuff, from location to location looking at
stuff, explaining scenarios to each other, lots of driving around and of course the other obligatory
scene where everyone watches an old educational news film reel about their enemy and how it lives.
While the subject matter is the
stuff that good films are made of, and the quality of the direction and acting are worthy of admiration,
where The East fails is in the contrivances involved in the farfetched plotline and the unevenness in the thriller elements (such as a
scene in which the cell dresses up to the nines to infiltrate a party for pharmaceutical bigwigs that would feel more at home in a Mission Impossible movie) that undermine what could have been a chilling and realistic story of corporations run amok.
Nobody has any confidence in April's cooking, and the
scene where she and Bobby
stuff the turkey is some kind of a classic.
It's what makes
stuff like The Matrix work, the suggestion that there's a reality underlying ours — and in a
scene among pigeons on top of a New York tenement, the film features a Matrix reunion
where Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) greets Neo (Keanu Reeves) with a «been a long time» nod.
I remember there was this one
scene where we were preparing for the opening night, and my character's very silent, and he's like, I'm not doing this
stuff, like trying to get everything organized.
Where Yari Shahidi is absolutely adorable as Olivia, she's
stuffed into the background of the film, giving way to numerous
scenes of Murphy mugging for the camera or developing his pathetic character.
And Morgan Freeman's Allan Trumbull has now been promoted to VP, relegated to
scenes in the Situation Room
where he trades concerned looks and OMG gasps with actors who deserve better (Melissa Leo, Jackie Earle Haley) when
stuff starts blowing up and world leaders are simultaneously assassinated in the British capital.
Or the behind the
scenes day to day business accument wasn't in sync (you know, the gossipy
stuff where you diss the business partner or are touting your worth far above what you actually accomplish in a day, a month, a year, etc.).
There's a
scene in this 2011 rom - com
where two of the characters, Rachel and Marcus, are sitting on a bench in the middle of a park, and Marcus is discussing some
stuff that... probably shouldn't be discussed on a bench in the middle of a park.
The
scene has kind of matured and grown up to a point
where we can do things [like the Capcom Cup], but the roots of this
stuff was very much in the arcades.
I'd pay for a GOOD sequel to The Crystal Bearers,
where they take all of the promise the concept of an action rpg with a character who has telekinesis HAD on paper (and in the awesome cut
scenes), and then actually live up to that potential by letting you DO awesome
stuff with TK powers (instead of just levitating enemies, and throwing them at other enemies, ad infinitum).
And the Telltale games actually have some really imaginative puzzle design when they're at their best —
stuff like trying to act out a
scene in a sitcom with room for the advertising break, or A Christmas Carol - ing Santa Claus himself, or the brilliant time - jumping mystery on the Disorient Express,
where you have to play the story out of order in order to get clues for the present from the past and future.
If you are wondering how consumption became our way of life and why we are throwing so much
stuff away all the time, this documentary looks behind the
scenes of things and shows the shocking truth about why we have become a throw - away culture and
where obsolete objects end up at.
It would be interesting to know what is going on behind the
scenes,
where the sometimes bizzare
stuff happens.