Voto:
Fuck guys, that’s why I love Debaser, because you learn a lot of new things... for example, I was always raised in the cult of the Doors and the Stooges and I always knew, also thanks to interviews that I now discover, thanks to vortex, have been forged by the KGB, that Iggy was honored to work in the same studios as the Doors, those of Elektra, and listening to Jim he decided to leave the drums to start singing as well as to be inspired by his way of being on stage, dominating the scene by pulling his dick out.
Voto:
...you offend me, Nick... does anyone know this movie well? And what's the reviewer here for? There's practically no explanation for mook (and it remains mook even in the Italian version). The screenplay is a collaboration between Scorsese and his friend Mardik; basically, one told the stories of everyday life in Little Italy while the other put them on paper. So in the pool hall scene, there was a guy who would go ballistic when he was teased with this term, even though no one knew what it meant, and it made all the patrons smile. It even made Mardik smile, who added this piece of real life to the fight scene in Joey's pool hall. That's all. Out of gratitude, I'll send you my address in a private message...
Voto:
If Ole allows, I will respond to comment 101 from mistergigi: Twenty sixty six and ten.
Voto:
my ranking of the greatest comedians of all time: 1) Daft85 2) Totò 3) Franco Franchi without Ciccio Ingrassia 4) Franco Franchi with Ciccio Ingrassia
Voto:
my pockets are empty, if I put something in them after two seconds they're already empty, and then you have to be good ALWAYS, not just at Christmas...
Voto:
It's not the entire concert because it was originally a 4 CD box set released in 1994 that gathered two nights, March 7 and March 10, at the small Matrix Club in San Francisco. The first Doors album was yet to be released, and the audience must have been really small, this is history... to hell with quality! Long live the Doors!!! Down with Genesis!!!
Voto:
And precisely because absolute truth does not exist, it seems foolish to interpret the statements of others as such...
Voto:
@dear big baby, you’re right to prefer "Firth of Fifth," thank God we’re not all the same. Personally, I find it beautiful but extremely redundant and pompous, both in the music (with a great piano intro and guitar solo, though) and in the lyrics, making it far from my "strings." Instead, "House with No Door," of which I hope you've read the lyrics that talk about schizophrenia (There's a house without a bell/so no one calls/sometimes it's hard for me to believe/that there are other living souls outside) and appreciated Hammill's interpretation, still shakes me to this day. Especially when I listen to the bootleg of Hammill recorded in a church in 1979 with just his voice and the piano. It gives me chills, at least as much as the drunk Mark Lanegan in "Whiskey for the Holy Ghost."
Voto:
You're welcome, at least I found another person who doesn't give this movie a 2....
Voto:
Well, the cold, in my review from last week, for having told just a third of the plot compared to you, the user andrea/london has been hammering my balls...get ready to be castrated...