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The website's consensus reads: "There are good things and there are Bad Things, and while the film may not rise above its potential -- or source of inspiration -- it delivers a memorable experience." [6] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 53 out of 100, based on 5 critics, indicating "mixed or average ...
“One of the joys of playing a part like this,” he tells PEOPLE, “is you are putting the audience in an uncomfortable position where they know you're going to do some bad stuff.”
Despite having a cast that includes Judi Dench, Ian McKellen, and Taylor Swift, it seems as though extra effort went into making sure nobody would enjoy this movie, even people who saw the ...
When we were at the point of getting the film financed, we had a lawyer look over the script and the film to make sure there weren't too many similarities. I mean, there were things we had to change; for example, one of the characters in the movie was a baker, and there was also a baker in our script, so we had to change some very minor things.
Good people can do bad things, bad people can do good things, and there's more to human beings than the binary poles of righteous and wicked." [ 14 ] Lia Beck from Bustle , on the other hand, closely examined the possibility of JFK being the person on the tape, as he had been rumored to have had an affair with Marilyn Monroe in the 1960s, who ...
With her bouffant and 1950s-style clothing, Peg Bundy of “Married With Children” looks like a Tradwife, but she’s no regular stay-at-home mom.. Peg (played by Katey Sagal) takes pride in her ...
The poster features the quote L'un des 10 meilleurs Films du Monde ("One of the 10 Best Movies in the World"). At the end of Coming Soon (1982) there is a series of clips from recent Universal Studios film trailers with the final being watercolor poster art for See You Next Wednesday , followed by Jamie Lee Curtis giggling at the inside joke.
This list of film spoofs in Mad includes films spoofed by the American comic magazine Mad. Usually, an issue of Mad features a spoof of at least one feature film or television program . The works selected by the staff of Mad are typically from cinema and television in the United States .