Tabbycat's Replies


You can say THAT again. Agreed. I would give both Berry and her catsuit a big MEOW. Yes. That’s a great question I’d like to post somewhere on this forum: The 1970’s — Greatest Film Decade? Definitely one of the funniest movies ever, but didn’t make it to classic status despite several Oscar nominations and one notable win for 80-year-old George Burns. It’s pretty much a forgotten film today, possibly because of limited availability over the years on home video. And he’s right. He may be a lunatic, but he knows comedy and explains which letters and sounds are funny. He’s mad that no one asks his opinion or seems to value his comedic talent, hence why he explains it to the nephew. Right or not, no one’d changing a major brand name because some ancient comedian thinks they should. Everyone in show biz knows the reality: you rarely get to do things your way if they’re paying. Instead of accepting this primary fact of life, he’s childishly passive-aggressive, pretending to forget the name. I think at one point Willie’s frustrated nephew asks, “Do you want to work or not?” By film’s end, we get a clear answer: Not as much as he wants to be right. It’s actually “Whatsa matta con you.” Go down and tell the Spanish kid! “Sends me to a garage.” 😸 Ouch. 😸 You had nothing to say, and still don’t. I’ve had that experience too. Spent $30 on the recent “Defending Your Life” Blu-Ray — bloody awful. Instead of joy in sharing one of my favorites with a gf I just felt embarrassed. What does any of that have to do with your empty eight-word post? Friend? Men and women cannot be friends, especially when the woman is as attractive as Marie. They had an affair, likely a long-running one. And the intelligent ones actually supported their opinions with enough detail that we might care. Without that forum posts just become votes for an election nobody held. ‘Is being "happier" to you more important than being right?‘ Yes. Strangely, because I am known for stressing the importance of being right. If you let enough decades pass, your mind can change. As an adolescent I found Altman synonymous with “boring” but after rewatching “The Long Goodbye” and “California Split” years later I came to admire both. It’s hard to grasp some ideas when young, and back then I just didn’t get Altman at all. Eating that rotted pig would have killed them both. I thought “X” was a huge nothing, yet the poster for this is a virtual Xerox of that one. Seriously curious why any of you would think we care. - Goth’s performance getting us to actually feel empathy for an axe murderer.