Congratulations to Colin Farrell on winning Best Actor at the 79th Venice Film Festival. 🎉🎉🎉
Congratulations to THE BANSHEES OF INISHERIN’S Martin McDonagh for winning the Award for Best Screenplay at the 79th Venice Film Festival. 🎉🎉🎉
Colin Farrell: "Martin created a script that is about all the things that we all struggle with every day: our desire to be loved, our need to love, our need for friendship, a sense of belonging, our fear of death, our desire to create and leave art behind so that our present on this planet can be recognized.
knowing Brendan and loving Brendan, having his friendship has changed my life.
His tenacity, his honesty, his desire to dig to the center things and locate the truth to share that through his work is something that's not only inspiring to me as an actor, but also ultimately and more importantly inspiring to me as a man.
The Banshees of Inisherin won Best Actor and Best Screenplay at the Golden Globe awards 2023. Congratulations to Colin Farrell, Martin McDonagh and the whole Banshees cast and crew. Photography by Greg Williams.
"I just want to thank the Academy for not being mortally offended by the words ‘Women’ and ‘Talking’ so close together like that.
Miriam Toews wrote an essential novel about a radical act of democracy in which people who don’t agree on every single issue manage to sit together in a room and carve out a way forward together free of violence. They do so not just by talking but also by listening.
The last line of our film is delivered by a young woman to a new baby and she says your story will be different from ours.
It’s a promise and a commitment and an anchor and it’s what i’d like to say with all of my might to my three incredible kids, Eve, Isla and Amy as they make their way through this beautiful world."
Sarah Polley, as she won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay last Sunday.
In 'The Muppet Christmas Carol' by Charles Dickens, The Great Gonzo, a Mary Sue for the author themself, states that Tiny Tim “didn't die”. Canonically then, Tiny Tim is immortal, doomed to stumble the Earth eternally, wracked with pain and sickness, cursing his creator, yearning for a death which does not come, which cannot come. Was Scrooge's redemption worth the cost?
<<Alt text: Tiny Tim from the film 'A Muppet Christmas Carol', gazing wide-eyed at the burden of existence.>>
The following review was written by Ultimate Rabbit correspondent, Tony Farinella.
When it comes to filmmaking, Martin Scorsese is not known for his brevity. His films are lengthy and complex. However, because there are so many moving parts that are interesting and layered, it rarely feels like a slog to sit through them. He also makes sure to assemble an all-star cast of some of the best…
every day that i log into this website and no one is talking about this man stabbing another man in the throat and licking the blood off the knife and his fingernail polish changing with his murder outfits and his murder outfits being rotating unbuttoned silk shirts, wide linen pants, and crocodile shoes, and flirty fun hairstyles and too many accessories, and he color coordinates his soft gothcore color palettes with the pimp cars that he drives, and he only has a boner for (1) murder and (2) a six-something hyper masc baby boy on a cliff he blows kisses to when baby boy shoots his enemy off a giant dam with a rocket launcher, like???
sorry but there's no real difference between pissing and whining about spiderverse's lack of nominations and pissing and whining about any other marvel movie's lack of nominations.