Intellectual films can really satisfy one’s human experience. Provide deep insight into current events, or even reveal deep seeded emotional ties that have not yet been explored.
If you’re like most of the staff here at Joe's Daily, you like to go to Vegas. Why? Why not. Gambling, women in bikinis, endless buffets and the idea that you could get rich are all the ingredients of the true American Dream.
3D is typically not something I’m a big fan of. Occasionally however, there are certain films that call for these types of experiences. Gravity, I think, is certainly one of them.
Have you ever loved a movie so much that you watched it over and over and over again wishing there was more you could learn about it? Now you can when you watch movies on YEAH!.
So Joseph Gordon-Levitt decided to write, direct and star in a film. Do you need to know anything else? I don’t, but just in case you do, I guess I’ll have to indulge... Don Jon (Levitt) is a typical Jersey kind of guy.
Harry Potter? What are you doing speaking in American, writing, and listening to Jazz in circa 1940’s New York? It turns out you’re playing one Allen Ginsberg...
Most sports being by the measure of a man, a real man) have a fairly high risk component. Basically you could die. This includes but is not limited to, football (the real kind), fencing (the real kind), dueling, bear wrestling (the animal, not the state of undress) and of course racing.
Sometimes having a kid seems like a good idea. A lot of people are doing it, and for the most part, they seem pretty happy. Their lives are focused, and seemingly simple.
Luc Besson is known for some killer films, namely The Fifth Element, The Professional, and the Transporter series (I have deliberately not sited Taken...).
Directed by Vlad Yudin, GENERATION IRON is narrated by Mickey Rourke and features appearances by Arnold Schwarzenegger, Lou Ferrigno, Jay Cutler, and bodybuilders Phil Heath, Kai Greene, Branch Warren and Dennis Wolf.