There aren't any good guys. You realize that, don't you? I mean, you realize there aren't evil guys and innocent guys. It's just...It's just a bunch of guys!
[image ID: first image is a manga panel depicting Itakura Akira, a young man with dark hair and freckles, glaring at the viewer. someone off screen says, "Your name is Itakura, right?" the second image is of Daryl Zero, a blond, stubbled white man wearing a dark colored dressing robe with light colored leaf print. end ID]
Itakura Akira
My guy cannot lie. Like. At all. He literally incriminates himself for a crime he didn’t commit because someone says “it would have been physically impossible for Akira to commit the crime!”, and he goes “no actually I could have done it really easily” and then describes how he would have done it. And it wasn’t to show off how smart he is— he himself doesn’t want to be saying this stuff either! He just. Cannot lie.
Daryl Zero
Modern Sherlock Holmes knockoff who has 500 locks on his door because he's paranoid, plays guitar and writes his own (terrible) music, and has, in his own words, "mastered the fine art of detachment". Played by Bill Pullman in all his 1990s-era glory.
only slept 3 hours a day for the last like 5 days. can i fucking live please. i even had one of those little insanity brownies that are every herbal supplement imaginable except pot, and nothing happened. like literally nothing. cant take a xan cause i gotta do shit tomorrow. bitchie i would like to rest
Actor Ryan O'Neal has died at 82. He was nominated for an Oscar for Love Story. But for me, his biggest movie was the title role in Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon. As much as I love Kubrick, this is not a perfect film and it got a very mixed response and many felt that O'Neal was highly miscast as the Irish rogue in 18th century England. You couldn't help but dislike him throughout the film. But as with all of Kubrick's films, it definitely had its moments. He even appeared as a featured interviewee in the documentary Filmworker. Read my review of that doc here.
O'Neal and Kubrick
Other notable performances include an episode of The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, What's Up, Doc? (one of several Peter Bogdanovich films he starred in), Nickelodeon (a buried treasure Bogdanovich did about the early silent film era), Irreconcilable Differences, and Jake Kasdan's debut Zero Effect.
The link above is the obit from Hollywood Reporter.