If they are THAT sensitive, then they are not good critics. A good critic can objectively judge a piece of art, without projecting themselves in the art.
@@badreality2 art isn't really something that is assessed objectively. It's more like making observations made on evidence to come to a subjective conclusion (but even the interpretation of the evidence can be incorrect). I agree with the other stuff though.
This scene is from David Mitchell's book, although this is a poor imitation of what he wrote, and Hanks is woefully miscast. The point here is that no one gave a damn about the book Knuckle Sandwich until its author threw a critic off a rooftop bar. It was the murder, the trial and the scandal that drove the book sales, and the book went from crappy self-published vanity work to "brilliant novel" overnight, without a word changing in the text. Context is everything. Really this whole thing is a set-up to Cavendish's imprisonment at a retirement home, but Mitchell doesn't let a scene go to waste without using it to say something.
I like how Hank's characters evolved from one of the main villains to the heroes, as he had redeemed himself. Hugo Weaving's characters got worse and worse until he literally became the devil (if he wasn't in Zach's mind) and Hugh Grant played a bunch of asses who had chances to improve the lives of others but instead made their own livelihoods better.
Yep, the transcendence of time and the importance of experience in ones growth and development. One of my favorite parts of the film that still I still keep with me today.
I'm open to the idea of reincarnation. I like the way Hank's and Halle Berry's characters in this scene look at each other with a "Where have I seen you before?" expression. However, if I were a sensitive nuclear scientist and somebody told me I was going to come back as a violent Tequila-drinking Gypsy writer, I wouldn't fly in a plane until I was as old as possible.
Something I only realized today... Until today, I assumed that Hanks' characters represented how we can choose to be good or bad, or how a bad person can become good over time. But I don't think that's it. Aside from Neo-Seoul (where's he just the actor playing Cavendish), Hanks' characters seem to descend into greed, fear, and violence until he meets Halle Berry's characters. Their relationship determines whether he becomes a hero or villain. Ewing story: They never interact. He's a doctor killing Ewing out of greed, and perhaps even his own pleasure. Frobisher story: Again, they never meet. He's a hotel manager that bribes Frobisher of everything he had, and deceives law enforcement. So he's still pretty dodgy. Luisa Rey story: He was a scientist working on a project he knew to be dangerous. He was working there without reporting its dangers, either out of greed or fear (of reprisal). It's only upon meeting Luisa that he changes his mind and decides to do the right thing. He doesn't even really understand why, but 'something has happened' and he's 'fallen in love with Luisa Rey'. So here he was bad and turns good. Cavendish story: As we see here, he's an angry violent gangster. For the few seconds he exchanges glances with Halle's indian woman, he relaxes and lets go of his anger until he snaps back to Cavendish. And since he murders Finch just a few moments later, he never got to speak to Halle's character, thus keeping him on the negative path. But he was close... If he just resisted the impulse to murder Finch and talked to her, he would have had a very different life. Zachry story: He's still greedy, selfish, and is highly susceptible to fear. Again, seeing Meronym in his home seems to help him relax and release these negative influences, even though he still doesn't trust her. You see this again when he violently confronts her at the signal station and she responds by looking right at him and gently placing her hands on his. That contact - that connection where she becomes completely honest with him - again relaxes him and releases his anger. The only other time he acts violently (excluding self-defense) is when he slashes the kona chief's throat... And that's because he abandoned Meronym to run home to the village. She wasn't there and his fear and anger got the better of him. Ultimately, Tom Hanks' characters are restless souls that get lost down negative paths unless they experience true love and connection from his soulmate in Halle Berry.
@@axelfoley133 Good analysis. Like some of the other characters, he has subconscious memories of his past identities. When he looked at Halle Berry's character in the 2021 story he had a "Where have I seen you before?" expression. (That sort of thing has happened to me, BTW)
Its better than most the crap thats been put out in the last decade ... but its really not all that. I think because it tries to hard weaving a web of complexity , when it really doesn't have much under the hood so to speak.
Mk101T Possibly the single most incorrect and ignorant comment on the internet. One of the most important conceptual pieces of fiction is written, and you're the goose who said this.
Savarooni Ahhh whats the matter , did I burst your bubble of warm fuzzy intellectual superiority? I guess I can see how this movie might give some one that sense once they finally put the pieces together and get the rather simple concept its trying to say. It has its rather bias fans , just like the twilight movies. But remember I said it was better than alot of movies put out in the last decade , which makes it ahead of a long list. And its worth a watch or 2 till you can put the peices together. But once your there ... its like , Meh ... Next.
The Observant Servant I don’t think it is. A man falling from a six story building will fall and bleed from the following concussion but probably won’t bleed from anywhere else. Judging from the windows he passed it would be 8 or 9 stories. That’s 2-3 stories more so maybe he would have had a bigger “splat” but I don’t think it would be that quentin tarantino amount where it covers the nearby car and wall. It might just remain flat on the pavement.
@@52BLUE it was supposed to be Irish but it sounds like a mix of his real accent trying to do an Irish accent (not naturally at all) mixed with some other English accent twangs thrown in there as if they replace a word he didn't know how to say as an Irish. It is a hard accent so it's understandable but yes that's what the accent was supposed to be.
I can't blame Mr. Hanks saying this is his favorite scene in the film...Maybe if Mr. Melville did this, Moby Dick would have been a best seller in its time too!
This movie is so nice, so serious. My mother and father, who sat next to me, were very silent. But when Cavendish story begins, we were looking forward every minute to see more of it after this scene, because we laughed our ass of!
"Now THAT'S an ending that is flat and inane beyond belief." If only he could have expended the same level of wit in his writing as he does in throwing his critic off a cliff we wouldn't be here in the first place.
Finch really was too dumb to live. Granted, Hoggins shouldn't have killed him, but insulting a known criminal to his face when you've already made him mad? Not a smart idea.
Finch thought he was untouchable. But never insult your enemy on a roof garden without a fence. Never underestimate a gangster. And never assume someone won't throw you off a roof.
You interpreted it similar to how I did. Hanks began a villain but through more and more exposure to Berry's soul, his soul evolved into a hero. Weaving was true evil, whether he's representing systems of oppression, corruption, violence, abuse. I saw him as the darkness in the human soul in Zach's story. And Hugh Grant represented the opportunist. Not evil per say, but completely willing to use the corruption and evil in the system to further his own means.
I think the sad thing about this not being adored by the public is that they were expecting another Matrix from the Wachowskis which probably explained the negativity with this, Speed Racer and Jupter Ascending. I'm the kind of guy who expects some originality in movies sometimes too and this is one of them.
I thought Tom Hanks accent was jarring when I first saw this movie. Later, I had it on while doing other things and heard him before I saw Tom Hanks' face and forgot it was him in the role. I realized then that his accent was pretty spot-on.
Cloud Atlas: Teaching about reincarnation and the connectivity within the universe. Watch how Tom Hanks plays a character who does vile things in the beginning, but finds salvation as he gradually sees the merit in good deeds (Buddhism). Watch how people who are already saved (Christ born/ Bodhisattva) come back to instill goodness in this world. Study your reality, there is more to save outside the thickness of your wallets.
Amen! Not many see the importance of soul groups in this movie and how educational it is about not just being part of a source flow but how souls evolve and devolve throughout all their life cycles.
2:41, the look on Tom Hanks' face is hilarious and frightening at the same time. Mr. Finch, note to self: Insulting a crime boss's writing as a critic is one thing. Insulting him in person...you might want to rethink that.
I'm not entirely sure, just, what Cloud Atlas is about. However hearing the 'professional nice guy actor' Tom Hanks use the word 'cunt' in a movie scene is well worth watching because of it. :)
Also: We can't have it all, I get that, and I sincerely thank you for uploading this in the first place, buttt...it does feel a bit strange without "...Tequila....a couplea fingers..." as Dermot sits at the bar to end the scene. That's probably my favorite part, lol
just as described in the book, the jazz band is a sextet, and are playing a jazz version of the cloud atlas sextet. If you listen carefully you can hear it.
Really! Didn't notice that, normally my ears are on alert when it comes to good movie soundtracks so well done for spotting that! They've been impressively clever with this movie, lots of little easter eggs hidden here and there making the connections between the stories even stronger :)
It's the "Cloud Atlas Sextet", composed by Robert Frobisher in the 1936 story (and which the composer he's working for attempts to steal credit for)--really cool how they wove it throughout the movie as another echo
Criticism refers to any kind of analyzation of a work. Good reviews are written by critics more often than bad reviews, it's simply that the bad reviews are spotlighted.
He was MEANT to be. We're watching an exaggerated re-telling by cavandish who saw dermot as a cartoonish irish mobster. It's not meant to be a realistic portrayal.
I brought this one chick for this movie and she couldn't understand it and wanted to leave. I said catch an Uber than. Glad I stayed! Was not disappointed in this movie at all! Getting a little high right before the movie made it even more spectacular!
An excellent way to get mixed reviews on your movie is to show a scene depicting a critic being murdered by a writer.
If they are THAT sensitive, then they are not good critics. A good critic can objectively judge a piece of art, without projecting themselves in the art.
@@badreality2 art isn't really something that is assessed objectively. It's more like making observations made on evidence to come to a subjective conclusion (but even the interpretation of the evidence can be incorrect).
I agree with the other stuff though.
That line is in the book though
This scene is from David Mitchell's book, although this is a poor imitation of what he wrote, and Hanks is woefully miscast. The point here is that no one gave a damn about the book Knuckle Sandwich until its author threw a critic off a rooftop bar. It was the murder, the trial and the scandal that drove the book sales, and the book went from crappy self-published vanity work to "brilliant novel" overnight, without a word changing in the text. Context is everything. Really this whole thing is a set-up to Cavendish's imprisonment at a retirement home, but Mitchell doesn't let a scene go to waste without using it to say something.
Scenes depicting murdered critics was the least of this movie’s worries.
I like how Hank's characters evolved from one of the main villains to the heroes, as he had redeemed himself.
Hugo Weaving's characters got worse and worse until he literally became the devil (if he wasn't in Zach's mind) and Hugh Grant played a bunch of asses who had chances to improve the lives of others but instead made their own livelihoods better.
Yep, the transcendence of time and the importance of experience in ones growth and development. One of my favorite parts of the film that still I still keep with me today.
I'm open to the idea of reincarnation. I like the way Hank's and Halle Berry's characters in this scene look at each other with a "Where have I seen you before?" expression. However, if I were a sensitive nuclear scientist and somebody told me I was going to come back as a violent Tequila-drinking Gypsy writer, I wouldn't fly in a plane until I was as old as possible.
Something I only realized today... Until today, I assumed that Hanks' characters represented how we can choose to be good or bad, or how a bad person can become good over time. But I don't think that's it.
Aside from Neo-Seoul (where's he just the actor playing Cavendish), Hanks' characters seem to descend into greed, fear, and violence until he meets Halle Berry's characters. Their relationship determines whether he becomes a hero or villain.
Ewing story: They never interact. He's a doctor killing Ewing out of greed, and perhaps even his own pleasure.
Frobisher story: Again, they never meet. He's a hotel manager that bribes Frobisher of everything he had, and deceives law enforcement. So he's still pretty dodgy.
Luisa Rey story: He was a scientist working on a project he knew to be dangerous. He was working there without reporting its dangers, either out of greed or fear (of reprisal). It's only upon meeting Luisa that he changes his mind and decides to do the right thing. He doesn't even really understand why, but 'something has happened' and he's 'fallen in love with Luisa Rey'. So here he was bad and turns good.
Cavendish story: As we see here, he's an angry violent gangster. For the few seconds he exchanges glances with Halle's indian woman, he relaxes and lets go of his anger until he snaps back to Cavendish. And since he murders Finch just a few moments later, he never got to speak to Halle's character, thus keeping him on the negative path. But he was close... If he just resisted the impulse to murder Finch and talked to her, he would have had a very different life.
Zachry story: He's still greedy, selfish, and is highly susceptible to fear. Again, seeing Meronym in his home seems to help him relax and release these negative influences, even though he still doesn't trust her. You see this again when he violently confronts her at the signal station and she responds by looking right at him and gently placing her hands on his. That contact - that connection where she becomes completely honest with him - again relaxes him and releases his anger. The only other time he acts violently (excluding self-defense) is when he slashes the kona chief's throat... And that's because he abandoned Meronym to run home to the village. She wasn't there and his fear and anger got the better of him.
Ultimately, Tom Hanks' characters are restless souls that get lost down negative paths unless they experience true love and connection from his soulmate in Halle Berry.
@@axelfoley133 Good analysis. Like some of the other characters, he has subconscious memories of his past identities. When he looked at Halle Berry's character in the 2021 story he had a "Where have I seen you before?" expression. (That sort of thing has happened to me, BTW)
Very good comment. I agree :)
Tom Hanks as you've never seen him before
Considering how successful the book became after that, nobody liked or missed that critic.
So if you want to be a successful writer you only need to kill your critics on a very public and violent way?
Thanks to the publicity created from this incident, Knuckle Sandwich finally connected with its audience.
@@furter189 Yes please.
@@furter189 I hope it works on game journalists
@@furter189 you just activated the sleeper agents, shut it down!
How did this film not do better at the box office? Oh right, because people want nothing but sequels, reboots, and Madea movies.
Because it wasn't all that good, though I must say I enjoyed this guy and Sonmi-451's story. The rest not so much.
Because this is a dificult film, given to people living in an age of stupidity.
Its better than most the crap thats been put out in the last decade ... but its really not all that. I think because it tries to hard weaving a web of complexity , when it really doesn't have much under the hood so to speak.
Mk101T Possibly the single most incorrect and ignorant comment on the internet. One of the most important conceptual pieces of fiction is written, and you're the goose who said this.
Savarooni
Ahhh whats the matter , did I burst your bubble of warm fuzzy intellectual superiority?
I guess I can see how this movie might give some one that sense once they finally put the pieces together and get the rather simple concept its trying to say. It has its rather bias fans , just like the twilight movies.
But remember I said it was better than alot of movies put out in the last decade , which makes it ahead of a long list. And its worth a watch or 2 till you can put the peices together.
But once your there ... its like , Meh ... Next.
Tom Hanks is legendary, and i'm glad the Wachowskis portrayed what really happens when a person falls from a building.
The Observant Servant I don’t think it is. A man falling from a six story building will fall and bleed from the following concussion but probably won’t bleed from anywhere else. Judging from the windows he passed it would be 8 or 9 stories. That’s 2-3 stories more so maybe he would have had a bigger “splat” but I don’t think it would be that quentin tarantino amount where it covers the nearby car and wall. It might just remain flat on the pavement.
There's too much blood for a fall like that.
How would you know?
Except that Tom Tykwer did
@@da96103 it makes the brutality of it comic and thus bearable due to exaggeration.
Tom hanks was great in this movie he deserved an oscar nomination to say the least as in captain philips
Far better than that yawn Philadelphia. That was a politically correct awarded Oscar.
His accent was terrible though
@@francisgregory100 what was his accent? Just curious.
@@52BLUE Exactly.
@@52BLUE it was supposed to be Irish but it sounds like a mix of his real accent trying to do an Irish accent (not naturally at all) mixed with some other English accent twangs thrown in there as if they replace a word he didn't know how to say as an Irish. It is a hard accent so it's understandable but yes that's what the accent was supposed to be.
Tom Hanks. Murder with a crowd of witnesses and his only crime is a bad accent.
+Abel Villa (The Cynic) - Oh, you're welcome to try. ;)
Do you think this is the best video to be a critic about? Seriously?
@@jon8004 Is bad...
The jazz band is playing the Cloud Atlas Sextet, at least a jazzy version of it! Mindblowing!
I’ve worked as a critic, and I approve this scene! 😘
The Law? What'd the Law do for Felix FOOKIN Finch?!
Ethanride mhm
I can't blame Mr. Hanks saying this is his favorite scene in the film...Maybe if Mr. Melville did this, Moby Dick would have been a best seller in its time too!
William Sanders when he gets insulted you can see Hanks eyes go full psychopathic
This movie is so nice, so serious. My mother and father, who sat next to me, were very silent. But when Cavendish story begins, we were looking forward every minute to see more of it after this scene, because we laughed our ass of!
+Jisk van der Veen - Bravo!
It took me a while to even notice who it was. I had no idea Tom could do a Cockney accent, or that he could play a violent sociopath.
+Chris Wright Actually, your comment just demonstrates how bad his accent is... it's supposed to be Irish XD
A tiny moment that crystallizes the main idea of the movie: the ways in which the written word come to life can be unexpected and devastating.
"Now THAT'S an ending that is flat and inane beyond belief."
If only he could have expended the same level of wit in his writing as he does in throwing his critic off a cliff we wouldn't be here in the first place.
He did have that level of wit in his writing your dumbass idiot, that critic was a stuck up sack of shit that deserved what he got.
0:36 fuck I still can't believe that's Tom Hanks!
he's very good
Best scene in the film by far. In fact, this clip might lead those who haven't yet seen it to believe that the entire movie is this good.
Tony Stark He played seven roles in this movie, including Dermot Hoggins in this scene.
Best part is when he orders a “couple o’ fingers” of tequila after throwing Finch over the balcony.
Finch really was too dumb to live. Granted, Hoggins shouldn't have killed him, but insulting a known criminal to his face when you've already made him mad? Not a smart idea.
It's not that stupid. He wasn't anticipating Hoggins to be that stupid.
Finch thought he was untouchable. But never insult your enemy on a roof garden without a fence. Never underestimate a gangster. And never assume someone won't throw you off a roof.
@@VOLKHVORONOVICH and never assume you won't be used as the fall guy in a fatal marketing stunt... 😅
thought his words were enough to protect him from actions. He hid behind them until somebody came along who proved he couldn't.
I love how his scarf falls silently behind him after he splatts. Phat lol.
You interpreted it similar to how I did. Hanks began a villain but through more and more exposure to Berry's soul, his soul evolved into a hero. Weaving was true evil, whether he's representing systems of oppression, corruption, violence, abuse. I saw him as the darkness in the human soul in Zach's story. And Hugh Grant represented the opportunist. Not evil per say, but completely willing to use the corruption and evil in the system to further his own means.
While this without question is a display of Tom Hanks’ talent as an actor, let us not overlook the contribution of the critic’s scarf.
You left out when he does tequila shots after this. Much more funnier :D
Exactly what I though! Gotta top it off with the tequila!!!
Ha, would've been ironic if that critic from Time magazine got thrown off a balcony by the Wachowskis...
Actually Tom Tykwer wrote and directed this chapter
Notice how the band at the beginning are playing a jazz version of the Cloud Atlas sextet.
This scene is my favourite scene in the movie, maybe even of any movie. It is just somehow done so, so well.
Felix Fookin' Finch!! LOL!
And just what did the law do for him?
saiyamanGXT . Whadalaado fer felix fookin finch?!
Kai Hendriks
Fine, you caught me with my cacks down!
gotta listen brother xD
'Plopper in the face'
TEQUILA, COUPLE FINGERS
Shortest but best character Tom Hanks ever played :D
I think the sad thing about this not being adored by the public is that they were expecting another Matrix from the Wachowskis which probably explained the negativity with this, Speed Racer and Jupter Ascending. I'm the kind of guy who expects some originality in movies sometimes too and this is one of them.
We did get " another Matrix"
I thought Tom Hanks accent was jarring when I first saw this movie. Later, I had it on while doing other things and heard him before I saw Tom Hanks' face and forgot it was him in the role. I realized then that his accent was pretty spot-on.
I have a feeling that we will drive Shamaylan to be this guy.
I laughed.
I think the reviews for his latest film have saved the lives of several critics.
I always liked when Tom Hanks and Halle Berry eyeball each knowing that they’ll be a couple in another life.
Cloud Atlas:
Teaching about reincarnation and the connectivity within the universe.
Watch how Tom Hanks plays a character who does vile things in the beginning, but finds salvation as he gradually sees the merit in good deeds (Buddhism). Watch how people who are already saved (Christ born/ Bodhisattva) come back to instill goodness in this world.
Study your reality, there is more to save outside the thickness of your wallets.
Amen! Not many see the importance of soul groups in this movie and how educational it is about not just being part of a source flow but how souls evolve and devolve throughout all their life cycles.
Serge Magnavox
It sure is something to think about.
Then there are characters like Hugo Weaving who continue to be antagonists because they fail to learn any kind of lesson.
The Matrix all over again haha.
Erica Martinen = Old Georgie in the making.
Great movie!
10/10
It didn't show him ordering the tequila, this scene feels incomplete
Best part of the entire film.
2:41, the look on Tom Hanks' face is hilarious and frightening at the same time. Mr. Finch, note to self: Insulting a crime boss's writing as a critic is one thing. Insulting him in person...you might want to rethink that.
"I *tink* You gonna love this one."
"I think you're gonna love this one"
that splat and car alarm always cracks me the fk up - great scene.
I bet this is Michael Bay and Uwe Boll's everyday fantasy.
Uwe Boll's perhaps. But Bay despite his films beings a few hits and a majority of misses he just lets the critics say what they want and move on.
Wohh!! The guy in the background is singing the Cloud Atlas Sextet!
Wow dude you're right!! This movie is brilliant!!
I think the funniest part of this scene is how mad he gets before confronting Felix lol
Tom Hanks pulling off his best Ice-T cosplay
all the critics for this movie gave this movie good reviews after seeing this scene.
I'm not entirely sure, just, what Cloud Atlas is about. However hearing the 'professional nice guy actor' Tom Hanks use the word 'cunt' in a movie scene is well worth watching because of it.
:)
Well... that escalated quickly... :P
Do you not mean "plummeted"?
I'm sure a lot of authors out there who have had similar encounters with arrogant critics loved this scene.
Felix *FUCKING* Finch XD I crack evertim
'Knuckle Sandwich' is definitely worth a read!
Two brilliant actors, and two brilliant performances!
Also: We can't have it all, I get that, and I sincerely thank you for uploading this in the first place, buttt...it does feel a bit strange without "...Tequila....a couplea fingers..." as Dermot sits at the bar to end the scene. That's probably my favorite part, lol
I didn't know till after the movie that Dermot is played by Tom Hanks. His most diverse acting so far!
I wish they would create an entire movie for Tom Hanks based on this role - it's his best role ever!!
best tom hanks scene ever...awesome
Seriously. this movie has such great acting its crazy it dident get more attention
His Len Grossman moment! Well done.
just as described in the book, the jazz band is a sextet, and are playing a jazz version of the cloud atlas sextet. If you listen carefully you can hear it.
Really! Didn't notice that, normally my ears are on alert when it comes to good movie soundtracks so well done for spotting that! They've been impressively clever with this movie, lots of little easter eggs hidden here and there making the connections between the stories even stronger :)
The critics death scene was quite unexpected
My favorite scene in Cloud Atlas
Can anybody else hear the Cloud Atlas melody in the song the band is singing? That melody is all over the movie
It's the "Cloud Atlas Sextet", composed by Robert Frobisher in the 1936 story (and which the composer he's working for attempts to steal credit for)--really cool how they wove it throughout the movie as another echo
Never noticed this before, but the car alarm chirps off at the end, implying somebody casually silenced it.😂
Well, that ended flat beyond belief...
Still a better love story than twilight.
Tom Hanks' best performance in the film.
"Ladies and gentlemen! We are tonight's entertainment!"
I just realized that the band plays the theme of the movie xD
fantastic cast, thy were so awesome
I always thought the the critic's death scene was pretty disturbing. It just comes out of nowhere.
Guigley you mean it wasn’t flat or inane beyond belief?
Criticism refers to any kind of analyzation of a work. Good reviews are written by critics more often than bad reviews, it's simply that the bad reviews are spotlighted.
My thoughts if I'm honest I admit that the obvious emotions like shock and horror flew as Finch did, here and gone.
0:05 I didn't know Gordon Ramsey had a cameo part in this :D
"My thoughts? If I'm honest I have to admit that my initial approach like shock and horror flew as Finch did. Here and gone."
He was MEANT to be. We're watching an exaggerated re-telling by cavandish who saw dermot as a cartoonish irish mobster. It's not meant to be a realistic portrayal.
I'm surprised Tom Hanks was playing this character. lol
Felix Finch's last book:Flat And Beyond Belief,an Afterwords By:AAAAAAAAaaaaaaaaaa Splat.
Lol that guy wasnt bluffing at all. Didnt expect that when I saw the movie. He wont be critiquing anything else!
disgustingly glorious
This movie is fucking art.
Tom Hanks clearly went to the same accent tutor as Dick Van Dyke.
Hey this clip leaves off the last part of the scene which completes it??!?
Felix (beg-pardon Fookin') Finch, the arrogant weasel, gets flattened by an inane Tom Hanks (beyond belief).
Meaby one of the best scenes Tom Hanks ever played. It's so much nót him.
I wanna get a recording of that band playing the cloud atlas sextet. It was so awesome when I noticed they were playing that.
Saw this film once. Never wanna see it again.
Focking Awesome ! 😂
Tequila. Two fingers.
PierreLeBeau ''Tequila. Couple o' fingers.'' ;)
Jeez. So this is what Tom Hanks does to the people who hated Forrest Gump!
Irish Tom Hanks 😂😂 great film . 🍀☘️👌
I had no idea that was Tom Hanks when I first watched this.
well that's one way to get your book immortalised
FLAT ENDING, HAA HAA. You get it, Mr Finch's ending sure was flat, haa
Here’s what I would have said:
“That may have been flat, but it sure wasn’t inane.”
Sometimes you just gotta toss your critics off the ledge. Sometimes
Guy went from super smug to super splat in 6 seconds.
his personaly ego had him reincarnating
Literally where are future is heading is what this film is
So that’s why happened to that general guy from Rogue One
I brought this one chick for this movie and she couldn't understand it and wanted to leave. I said catch an Uber than. Glad I stayed! Was not disappointed in this movie at all! Getting a little high right before the movie made it even more spectacular!