Word: eyed
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...stein clubs, formals, charities, plays, etc.” Friedman even told The Crimson that he wanted to get the airline involved in the Harvard-Yale football game. Think Judge Doom at the end of “Roger Rabbit”—eyes were wide with the possibilities for promotion, commerce, and advertising.Unfortunately for Friedman and Vandenberg, though, the College administration wasn’t happy when it caught wind of their big ideas. After just one promotional event, University Hall declared the Harvard campus a no-fly-zone for the airline, reminding student groups...
...film’s only innovation is the weirdness of the characters and casting: Robert Downey Jr. plays Harry, a dim-witted thief, while Val Kilmer plays his foil: mean, burly private eye “Gay” Perry, whose handle doesn’t spring from his constant happiness...
...these sorts of connections as they explore the exhibit, on display at the Sackler Museum now through Nov. 27. Unlike Wolohojian, who currently teaches History of Art and Architecture 171w: “Edgar Degas,” I don’t have an expert’s eye for detail, and I’m not used to making that kind of aesthetic leap. But a private tour of the Degas collection with Wolohojian himself taught me how to begin looking at Degas —and the lessons I learned could inform anyone going into the exhibit...
...character’s idiosyncrasies. Perhaps the film’s most underused resource is Naomi Watts. Watts plays Lila, Dr. Foster’s once suicidal painter-girlfriend. However, her character adds so little to the storyline, one wonders if her only purpose is to serve as eye candy for the testosterone-charged twenty-something viewer. Her subplot—Dr. Foster discovers that Lila is no longer taking her Klonopin pills because she claims she can’t truly paint when she’s on the medication—unfortunately, fizzles out with pedantic apologetic dialogue...
...today, when we no longer play eye-to-eye at all, when we click-and-drag hands instead of shaking them, and when we worry more about computer hackers than card Houdinis, what then happens to the poker face...