To call “A Lot like Love” dead in the water is an insult to water.
via A Lot Like Love :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews.
I’ll miss Roger Ebert. There’s never enough good wit in the world, and now there is even less.
I am in here.
To call “A Lot like Love” dead in the water is an insult to water.
via A Lot Like Love :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews.
I’ll miss Roger Ebert. There’s never enough good wit in the world, and now there is even less.
Being a woman is of special interest only to aspiring male transsexuals. To actual women, it is simply a good excuse not to play football.

It doesn’t seem to me that this fantastically marvelous universe, this tremendous range of time and space and different kinds of animals, and all the different planets, and all these atoms with all their motions, and so on, all this complicated thing can merely be a stage so that God can watch human beings struggle for good and evil — which is the view that religion has. The stage is too big for the drama.

If I were to suggest that between the Earth and Mars there is a china teapot revolving about the sun in an elliptical orbit, nobody would be able to disprove my assertion provided I were careful to add that the teapot is too small to be revealed even by our most powerful telescopes. But if I were to go on to say that, since my assertion cannot be disproved, it is an intolerable presumption on the part of human reason to doubt it, I should rightly be thought to be talking nonsense. If, however, the existence of such a teapot were affirmed in ancient books, taught as the sacred truth every Sunday, and instilled into the minds of children at school, hesitation to believe in its existence would become a mark of eccentricity and entitle the doubter to the attentions of the psychiatrist in an enlightened age or of the Inquisitor in an earlier time.