Word: tu
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Roger Ebert has taken perhaps a less esteemed path, but has no doubt played an elemental role in the success of some of the greater films of the past few years; his ardent advocacy of City of God, Lost in Translation and Y Tu Mamá También helped elevate what might have been six-figure art-house bombs to veritable box office successes. He often recommends ultra-mainstream spectacles as well, but that is a necessary burden that accompanies the position of head critic at a heavily circulated newspaper. The important point is not that he gave Ella...
...gets at least three and a half stars, even if it’s short on the third element (usually plot). Hence, poor Roger spends his days showering praise on dragging, decently acted message movies like Monster and The Insider (and, dare I say, Lost in Translation and Y Tu Mamá También), turning their lack of momentum into a virtue with a line like “this movie is reminiscent of a great novel”–—faint praise, given that I’ve read few “great?...
...since Julius Caesar have I seen such a blatant stab in the back?Et tu, Mr. O'Neill?" Mark Foley, U.S. Republican Congressman, in response to The Price of Loyalty, a book by Ron Suskind in which former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill criticizes the Bush Administration...
Public skating: Su 10 a.m.-9 p.m, M 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Tu...
Public skating: Tu...