Hitting limited cinemas on December 1 and cinemas nationwide from December 6, The Disaster Artist tells the story of wannabe actor Tommy Wiseau,
who sank eye - watering sums of money into making 2003's The Room.
Not exact matches
After a barrage of bad press over his position on Trident and his flip - flop over the so - called «shoot - to - kill» policy for armed terrorists, you'd expect Jeremy Corbyn's stock to be
sinking fast, even among the most starry
eyed of the «Jez - we - can» supporters
who voted him in as leader of the Labour party in September.
«The senator
who had been in the
eye of the storm recently for his below par performance in and out of the senate, cited the division at the national level of the party as his reason for defecting adding that «any politician worth his salt will not stay back in a party that is
sinking like the PDP,»» he said.
The depths to which he
sinks are extraordinary, yet Cage — in a welcome return to the bug -
eyed insanity of his mid -»90s work — keeps the character sympathetic, while Herzog directs with all the crazed energy of a man
who once actually ate his own shoe.
At the forefront is Jake Gyllenhaal,
who deeply
sinks his teeth into anti-hero, Louis Bloom, the wide -
eyed entrepreneur with the firm belief that success is available to those
who are willing to put in hard work.
Bloom, with his
sunken eyes and eerily computer - like tone of voice, is ambition personified — a manipulative, predatory bottom feeder
who will do whatever it takes to accomplish his goals and climb the ladder of TV journalism.