I watch Rushmore and think, in 10 years, that kid will be a grownup worth knowing. But I'm not sure I want to know him while he's a teenager.
I watch it and think "in 10 years, that kid will grow up to be Ross Geller. Kill him now."
Anya ,'Get It Done'
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I watch Rushmore and think, in 10 years, that kid will be a grownup worth knowing. But I'm not sure I want to know him while he's a teenager.
I watch it and think "in 10 years, that kid will grow up to be Ross Geller. Kill him now."
Yeah, I liked Hawke too--they both gave really nuanced performances I thought. I just thought he looked ill.
I thought perhaps the looking ill was part of the desperateness of his character. Plus, he was just finishing a whirlwind European book tour. I'm hoping it was an intentional paart of his character and he's not really ill or something.
Maybe Uma Thurman's family has put a hurtin' on him?
I saw him on Letterman last week and he looked okay.
Good to hear, Maysa.
Dustin Hoffman's character in the Graduate annoys me, for instance, even though a lot of people relate to him
No, I can go with that. I mean, I love the movie, LOVE IT, but his character is just so aimless and clueless . . . .
his character is just so aimless and clueless . . . .His own fault, for failing to appreciate plastics.
His own fault, for failing to appreciate plastics.
I really don't get why that line is so famous. I finally saw the movie a couple months ago, and I thought it would be a big deal, but it's just this random throwaway line that's never followed up on. I don't get it.
It's, like, all symbolic of the artificiality of corporate culture and of our society as a whole 'n' stuff....
I think that "plastic" had more of a negative connotation then.