tape the paper to your tv and haver the most annoying person in the world read
the script you banged on ur keyboard and u have an Oscar worthy film if an Oscar judge just walked out of disaster movie.
Not exact matches
Early
on in «The Equalizer,» directed by Antoine «Training Day» Fuqua from Richard Wenk's
script, Washington's Robert McCall murders five Russian goons in a bar, bing,
bang, boom, splurch and done.
I reckon that if the
script was
bang on, there would be no doubt for an ensemble comeback.
His
script is also pretty much
bang -
on with every aspect.
Never what I thought it would be, the film plays
on convention and expectation, flipping the
script and dropping the mic, going out with a
bang that echoes with nothing less than greatness.
On top of that, this film also keeps
banging you over the head with the message that the royal family are just like you and I, despite the extravagant wealth, fame etc., and to that end the screenplay, easily the film's biggest weakness, keeps contriving things for Jack and Elizabeth to have in common in an attempt to have a «star - crossed lovers» element to the story — which brings me to my biggest criticism of this film, the
script.
Thirty - something years ago, when I
banged my comic book
scripts out
on an Apple][+, printed them
on a dot - matrix printer without true descending letters, and printed the comic books in black and white because color was too expensive, I remember thinking how easy color comics would be if I could just find a way to display them
on the computer and skip all of the expense of printing.
The fact that so many Realtors need to be reminded of this kind of advice as well as of other commons sense - based information is a testament to the sad state of affairs that Organized Real Estate finds itself in as it continues to populate its ranks with charismatic know - nothings (beyond answering some questions correctly — well, at least 80 % of them anyway —
on three exams) paying for whiz -
bang websites and
script - ready manipulative speeches designed to make consumers think that they are the cat's ass when it comes to who will best represent their fiduciary interests (read... get them the most money for a sale or the most house for the money).