I'll check it out -- TCM has a salute to Mexican cinema next month.
It is - in my opinion - the greatest melodrama of all time. It's in an interesting Mexican-only subgenre known as Cabaretnera - a sort of soap/noir/musical thingie. Great musical numbers, outrageous plot twists, and lots of shadowy atmosphere and criminal doings.
Hec, TCM is showing Aventurera 5/19 at 11:15 p.m. Unfortunately, TCM's site won't let me link the search results.
Some of that Bow stuff=lies, right?
She didn't really do a football team, did she?
(My God, the stuff I know...daytime cable used to be my drug, man.)
She didn't really do a football team, did she?
I think that one's been debunked. Though the CW is that gossip about her love/sex life was a big factor in destroying her career.
That sucks.
I'd make it worse. "I don't even *like* football, you guys...now if it was a poetry slam or something..." would quickly become Actress Confesses Poetic Gangbang.
While I don't approve of the cheating on/dumping of spouses that I see in Hollywood, I think it's pretty silly to trash a single actress' career for promiscuity. A big factor of how someone becomes a celebrity is how many people would like to sleep with them—we can hardly blame them for taking us up on the opportunity.
I saw the movie
Crash
last night. It was great. It was what Magnolia wanted to be. Lots of really, really awesome character stuff, and very satisfying interweaving of plot points. It also has an extraordinarily pretty cast, with Sandra Bullock, Brendan Fraser, Ryan Phillippe, Don Cheadle, Jennifer Esposito, Thandie Newton, Matt Dillon, Terrence Howard, Larenz Tate, and the surprisingly decent Ludacris. I liked it a lot. There was a certain theme that I got a little bit tired of after a bit, but the entire movie was just extremely well done. There were some really intense moments that were just knocked out of the ball park.
I recommend it. It comes out May 6th.
A big factor of how someone becomes a celebrity is how many people would like to sleep with them—we can hardly blame them for taking us up on the opportunity.
If DB ever wants to become a bigger celebrity than he is now, Matt and I are willing to help in that regard.
While I don't approve of the cheating on/dumping of spouses that I see in Hollywood, I think it's pretty silly to trash a single actress' career for promiscuity.
We are talking about the 1920s and 1930s here. Not the world's most sex-positive culture; the Hay Code had just been put into place, there were morals clauses in contracts, and the official expectation was that everybody was straight and you slept only with people you were married to.