Voto:
I know it's not your "thing," Poletti, but there's a really nice one from the '90s where the protagonist at one point says: "I can't remember if my wife left me because I was drinking, or I started drinking because my wife left me."
Voto:
...you understand many nice little things, also that it’s late and I’m sleepy...
Voto:
Ladies and gentlemen, I beg your pardon, but I see Fripp mentioned, and the reviewer even talks about unique and inimitable music, yet nobody mentions the name of Frank Zappa? After all, just a casual knowledge of Uncle Frankie is enough, and then listening to Tonto will help you understand so many beautiful little things.
Voto:
...you drop it like metal, as if you were John Holmes or Ron Jeremy... at most you can tie a knot with your pinky, ahahaha
Voto:
Bjorky digs, but this Coppola makes a great alternative radical chic lounge type.
(In parentheses, I haven't seen the film; on the other hand, I was satisfied with that mess of "Lost in Translation" with the boiled fish Murray trying to be the bitter Lemmon to Wilder’s charm, which, on the other hand, my girlfriend at the time loved very much.)
Voto:
But this sensitivity shouldn't just be expected from the editors. Even I had a review of a nice book ready to share in the past days, but due to the blockage, I didn't send it. Meanwhile, it seems to me that quite a few (just look at the submission dates) couldn't care less and continued to submit into the void. It was clear that everything would pile up.
Voto:
you should not be staging this protest, dear mien, didn’t you say that sending a review a day isn’t a bad thing? Think about it, if everyone behaved according to your theory, the front page would be a continuous flush. But why don’t you take a moment to think before you write?
Voto:
This is Wilder's first "strange" comedy, meaning that you don't have to dig too deep to grasp the social critique. After all, by the end of the film, did you feel the typical joy of a comedy or rather a sense of bitterness? For example, the previous "Some Like It Hot" left you amused, this one did not.
Voto:
Well, Colaiuta had been with Zappa since 1978, while it's true that Steve Vai was featured in the concerts of '80 that are now on Buffalo, although his first album, chronologically speaking, with Zappa should be Tinsel Town Rebellion released in 1981.
Voto:
And then he had to call Billy for the cameo of "she didn't understand anything about my work" in "Annie Hall."