Word: singlied
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...intimate discussion. And Dan's mom (Dianne Wiest), it's clear, has been nagging him all his life. "Get lost for a while," she tells him one morning. "No, get lost - it's not a request." Wiest passes along this command with a painted-on smile, a sing-song voice and the suggestion that only good manners keeps her from screaming; it's as if she's spent a long day conversing with four-year-olds...
...trial, was under-praised and under-attended; I hope the same fate does not overtake Devil. It is, like quite a few Lumet pictures, rather small in scale, easy to overlook. But I think it is time to gather around a director who has embraced his octogenarian bleakness and sing his praises. Ultimately, I think you'll laugh a lot at what he has wrought here - but only well after the movie is over and the full scale of its perversity settles into your bones...
...it’s October, or break out the Peppermint Schnapps if it’s December... TAKE A SHOT... 1. Every time the creatures of Halloween Town break into song, and you are suddenly reminded of how truly eccentric Tim Burton is. Extra points if you can sing along. 2. Every time you’re reminded of a costume from Currier’s “Heaven ‘n’ Hell” party. 3. Every time the scientist makes inappropriate sexual advances towards Sally. 4. Every time the mayor changes from his happy...
...able to be performed in all different places. Theatres of course—but also people’s homes, art galleries, museums,” says Porter. “I just noticed that dance at the time was limited to theatres, but if a singer can sing anywhere, why can’t a dancer dance anywhere?” Her curiosity and why-not attitude are two of Porter’s signature characteristics. Even her dog has become subject to Porter’s artistic experimentation, when she attempted to choreograph a routine...
...needed to be more serious, so she invented another personality named ‘Dr. Rossel,’ who was this very serious PhD,” Matskevich said. “Her other personality was ‘Ms. Stine,’ who loved to dance, sing, and was very irresponsible.”“Every morning, she’d decide who to be that day, but no matter who she was, she always made everyone laugh.” Matskevich said.To many in Harvard’s anthropology department, Rossel?...