Word: hopkinsã
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Dates: during 2001-2001
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...Hilary, who lived together freshman year. Suzanne thought her claim to fame (or notoriety) was kissing Anthony Hopkins on stage. She drank at the dinner, but all FM’s crack staff could not find out if she was enjoying a nice chianti. (This is an allusion to Hopkins??€™ famous portrayal of Hannibal Lecter in Silence of the Lambs. Funny...
...denying that Nixon also benefits from the directorial artistry of Stone and some stunning supporting roles (like Joan Allen’s Oscar-nominated performance as Buddy Nixon and James Woods’ portrayal of Bob Haldeman), but in the end, Nixon, is a great movie because of Hopkins??€™ transcendent brilliance and Stone’s always intriguing take on American history...
...scenes that have an almost Technicolor glory to them, quite appropriate for the film’s 1950s spy drama atmosphere. Hopkins seems built for the part of Braughtigan, the enigmatic but elegant friend to Bobby. The unquenchable curiosity of Anton Yelchin’s Bobby plays perfectly against Hopkins??€™ mystique. It is this mystique that makes the film so magnetic and engrossing—the mystique of youth against the mystique...
...thought about all the other things she could talk about. Gerard Manley Hopkins??€™ influence on her own work. The romanticism of poverty in American literature. Her personal views on teaching and writing...