And, I love You Can Count On Me.
Of course, that also has the virtue of Laura Linney.
Ahhh, I'm having a pleasant Tales of the City flashback. Probably should go back and rewatch that first series.
Dawn ,'Never Leave Me'
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And, I love You Can Count On Me.
Of course, that also has the virtue of Laura Linney.
Ahhh, I'm having a pleasant Tales of the City flashback. Probably should go back and rewatch that first series.
Rewatch Colin's bit too!
(and that's not a multiple entendre, let's be clear)
Rewatch Colin's bit too!
I'm sure it's more than a bit. /nudge nudge
(and that's not a multiple entendre, let's be clear)
Oh.
Colin was fun in that, but nothing could make up for the loss of Original!Mouse and Original!Mona.
Okay, this is awesome: a lengthy discussion of the never-made Black Widow origin screenplay. [link]
For those people who hadn't like Mark Ruffalo in much before "The Avengers", I do recommend "You Can Count On Me" and "The Brothers Bloom."
Speaking as a serious, long-time Mark Ruffalo fan (ever since You Can Count on Me--which is basically a flawless film) In the Cut, Zodiac, 13 Going on 30, and We Don't Live Here Anymore are pretty good, too. Avoid Just Like Heaven at all costs. I saw that in the theater and it dampened even my crush on him for awhile.
Plus Zodiac gives bonues interactions with RDJ.
Any film where Mark Ruffalo is supposed to be charming and appealing instead of vaguely unnerving is going to be pushing very hard against my suspension of disbelief. He works for me as the Hulk because the film acknowledges there is something just wrong about him.
My first awareness of Ruffalo was a Spanish/Canadian indie My Life Without Me, in which he and everyone else were excellent. Though he appears to have been hidden in things I'd seen way before, like There Goes My Baby, 54, and an episode of Due South.
I feel kinda bad about not responding well to Ruffalo (as opposed to Renner--he's just weird), because nothing *seems* to be wrong with him. Yet my hairs still stand on end.