>Goose
>Hal
>Joan
>Carey
>Oscar Issac
>Hank Scorpio
Is this the most /tv/-friendly ensemble of all-time? What are some films with great ensemble casts?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DSVDcw6iW8
>not mentioning fallout hellboy bikeman
but yes you are correct
>>64130271
Who's Carey or Hank Scorpio?
>>64130271
Albert Brooks wasn't in Drive.
>>64130819
The guy who played the main villain voiced Hank Scorpio.
>>64130271
Was this shot even in the final cut?
>>64130898
yes
>>64130925
when?
>>64130938
the scene
yes let's not forget
>autistic aryan main character
>in love with race mixing white girl
>doesn't smoke or drink
>enemy is dirty jews
>not mentioning goofy 3d glasses psychologist from twin peaks that shows up for like 1 scene
>>64130565
>not mentioning Albert "Was literally in Taxi Driver" Brooks
smdhtbh
>>64131150
or not
nevermind
>>64131150
>doesn't read the first post in the thread or doesn't know albert brooks voiced scorpio
choose one and only one, embarassing either way
>Walter White and a load of C-List trash
No thanks.
Pic related is a better choice.
>Russell seems aware how recent pop cultural developments (GoodFellas, The Sopranos) misrepresented American ambition. He pays homage to those films but also corrects their emphasis on glorifying violence. American Hustle is GoodFellas, The Sopranos and Boogie Nights done right. It helps that Russell’s emotional amplitude includes female ambivalence rather than machismo. Adam’s Sydney says “My dream is to become anyone else than who I was” which is a confession Scorsese’s thugs could never admit–much less realize. The realization takes American Hustle past Scorsese’s superficial ethnic fantasy. Russell’s social acuity and funny profane language confronts a disturbing reality: “Maybe all you’ve got in life are fucked-up, poisonous choices.” Adams discloses this thought directly–as the most vulnerable idea any actor has had the privilege to emote in the past quarter-century. The same complexity is apparent in the subplot farce of Richie’s dealing with his boss (Louis CK) and Alessandro Nivola doing a Christopher Walken-voiced FBI agent. Russell knows how innocent-seedy American patriotism can be.
Even the director is famous.