Word: kissã
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...half-baked subplot involving child sexual abuse. In an interview with The Harvard Crimson, Kilmer and Black—either from jet-lag or sheer fatigue of the press junket circuit—dismissively respond to questions about their equally insipid film. The Harvard Crimson: “Kiss Kiss?? takes an incredibly cynical view of Los Angeles and Hollywood. Do you think it was an accurate depiction of show business? Black: It’s entirely accurate. It’s like…every day a bus arrives in L.A., and the bus driver says...
...very successful; it achieves a level of human emotion that the rest of the film lacks. There are no specific scenes that truly encapsulate this tone; rather, the brief touches of subtle emotion—furtive glances across the playground, an awkward conversation overlooking Central Park, a first kiss??are what make this small portion of the film so good. Duchovny’s camera captures these brief encounters as quick snapshots of isolated emotion that, strung together, approach the sublime...
...Confessions of A.D.D.D.” I guess this is their tribute to jam-rock; unfortunately, the band members are in no position to improvise. The result is a two-minute guitar solo based entirely on five notes. “Liezah” and “Secret Kiss?? present some more memorable, if bland, tunes evoking the Byrds, but they don’t quite get close enough...
...audience gets to see the natural homoerotic subtext played out with an audience-pleasing lesbian kiss at the end of the first act. Unfortunately, Carmichael backs off of any of the kiss??s implications in a very “Jessica Stein” way, returning us to their prior platonic friendship immediately afterwards...
...final two “contributions” listed are not ridiculous. They are absurd. I’ll begin with the last one: “KISS??s legendary band member, Gene Simmons, is a native Israeli, born Chaim Witz...