The important thing is he’s found a way to feel superior to everyone involved.
Past his best-before-date middle-aged white guy sez what?
He had a best?
Good point!
Well, a personal best. Everyone has one of those.
He’s like that tin of tuna you find at the back of an elderly relative’s food cupboard.
I’ve never heard anything to suggest Bill Maher wasn’t a perfectly respectable baby. I assume things went wrong some time after that.
He peaked with Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death (1989) where he played a stupid, misogynistic clown very convincingly.
I thought you were kidding; but it’s real.
Someone is trying to set this murderous dipshit up for a god damn pardon…
No thank you!
I remember a news story from the '90s, of a family who saw a bear in a park (I want to say Yosemite, but it was some large park where bears had become dangerously accustomed to people), who not only went right up to the bear, but put their small child on the bear’s back. Or at least attempted to do so. Unsurprisingly, a mauling ensued, but surprisingly my recollection is that everyone survived. So yeah, it could have been worse.
More like a “least worst”.
Reminder that there are a lot of copycats of this guy.
Sorry for the late reply, but I was thinking about directors who do shit like this. Tarantino is another one. It shows an incredible distrust and disrespect for actors. They’re basically telling the actor “I don’t think you’re skilled enough to convincingly act this emotion so I need to make you feel it for real.” It’s essentially saying “I don’t think you can act.” And it’s usually women they do this to, although I’ve heard of some directors doing it to the entire cast.
Stanley Kubrick and Shelley Duvall in the Shining.
John McTiernan to Alan Rickman in Die Hard.
Of all actors, Alan Rickman!