Word: generationã
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...that these thirtysomething acting icons would admit to this kind of fear or hesitation. But when considering the pedigrees of director Martin Scorsese and co-star Nicholson, and the hype surrounding this gangster thriller—which might just be “The Godfather” of this generation??the viewer might sympathize with their anxieties...
...same coin. Though they never meet until the film’s climax, it’s well worth the wait. Seeing two of today’s most accomplished and talented actors together on the silver screen will take your breath away. It’s our generation??s equivalent of “Heat”’s Pacino and De Niro explosive match-up.From the script to the cast to the film’s soundtrack, which features the Stones’ “Gimme Shelter” and rocked-out Irish tunes...
...still make a sound? This is the kind of question that might provoke a grimace from filmmaker Andrew J. Bujalski ’98; indeed, this prompt is exactly the sort of empty cliché his films refuse to embrace. Further, the “voice of a generation?? is a label Bujalski refuses to accept: “Go out and poll my generation and see how many of them feel like I embody their voice,” he says in a telephone interview with The Crimson.But despite the well-deserved critical accolades heaped upon Bujalski...
...indecisive post-collegiate wanderers in "Mutual Appreciation"-combined with Bujalski's great talent-make the “voice of a generation?? label only too easy to throw about. But self-proclaimed generational spokesman-cum-indie-pop guru Zach Braff has the one thing Bujalski lacks: omnipresent marketing...
...June 20, Paris somehow climbed the Billboard charts to #18. This is the person who in the same summer said that she cries when she hears her music, told British GQ that she will not have sex for a year, and proclaimed herself to be this generation??s iconic blonde à la Marilyn Monroe. —Staff writer Emily G.W. Chau can be reached at egchau@fas.harvard.edu...