True Detective: Season 2 stars named

If the two leads were female, I could trust the writer Nic to make it happen. The hard part is replacing the director Cary Fukunaga. Good writing is nothing without great vision and direction.
 
You know who would be good? Rob Zombie.

Devil's Rejects is one of my favorite movies of all time. I was about to fall asleep at 1:30 am the other night, and saw Devil's Rejects was on Showtime... couldn't pass it up.

I'm kind of meh on House of 1000, it was scary for sure but I loved the tone of DR.

Haven't seen Salem Witches yet, bought it but haven't gone around to it.
 
Devil's Rejects is one of my favorite movies of all time. I was about to fall asleep at 1:30 am the other night, and saw Devil's Rejects was on Showtime... couldn't pass it up.

I'm kind of meh on House of 1000, it was scary for sure but I loved the tone of DR.

Haven't seen Salem Witches yet, bought it but haven't gone around to it.

I just think he's a natural at the psychological guessing game type of stuff. Was Devils Reject the one where 'Freebird' played in the background of a car scene and all hell broke loose?
 
Good screenwriting is nothing without great vision and direction.

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You know who'd be perfect, if they don't go with two female leads?

Nicolas Cage.
 
I can't take Nic Cage seriously since about the late 80's.

Cage has become a caricature, but he's getting a lot of positive buzz about his latest movie, "Joe," that is being released nationwide this coming weekend. I read the book and I'm interested in seeing the movie.

The re-make of "Bad Lieutenant" starring Cage was one of the worst movies I've seen. Thank heavens it was relatively low cost because of my Netflix subscription.
 
The re-make of "Bad Lieutenant" starring Cage was one of the worst movies I've seen.

I really liked it—but I'm a huge Werner Herzog fan, so there you go.

I've also come around to Roger Ebert's views on Nicolas Cage, and after some study of his films count myself a modest advocate of his work. If Cage has become a caricature, it's because he takes and takes seriously roles that a "good actor"—as we conceive such an entity—shouldn't.
 
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