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Oscar replies that he’s in love with someone else, and hopes to tell her so over Thanksgiving break.
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The aforementioned teen hottie passes the duo going down the aisle and talks to Oscar, which makes Charlie comment behind her back that she’s hot for Oscar’s bod. Charlie thinks he’s insane, as one is when you’re a 15-year old boy and obsessing about old women’s hands. Oscar believes that Miranda’s are too young, that they haven’t seen enough life. Oscar and his sidekick Charlie are talking about a girl in their class named Miranda, more specifically her hands. I got all of them written down, but I’ll only include them in the review if I think they’re funny-which many of them were not. One thing that’s weird about this movie is that scenes are opened and closed with relevant quotes from Voltaire. Which makes Oscar’s constant quoting and adoration of Jean Voltaire all the more weird. But his character’s name is Oscar-an obvious nod to that faboo wit Oscar Wilde. The star of our picture is Aaron Stanford, who I just learned is also Pyro from the second X-Men movie. Damn you, Jerry Seinfeld! We open on a scene of young “teens” on a train from upstate New York heading into the City for Thanksgiving break.
#TADPOLE MOVIE HOT SCENE SERIES#
The credits roll, and it’s an honest to goodness actual “credit roll” instead of the brief opening titles and rush into action that we get from so many movies and TV series these days. I kinda miss the days when trailers were made like this. That is, I think that this link goes to the right movie, because there are no lines from the movie at all in the trailer, just music. The last trailer was for a multiple film festival award winner and nominee, by a director I’d never heard of named Time Out. The best part is that one of the actors looks very much like Shawn Ashmore of X-Men fame, which makes imagining him in a torrid threesome that much more possible. Next up was Tangled, which sounds like something I might actually see on a Dumb Movie Night because it features a slashtastic, creepy threesome of alluring late-twenty-somethings playing younger and “how their friendship went wrong”. Except, I couldn’t tell that it was set in Ireland until I went to the IMDB to get the link for it. First up was a trailer for Ordinary Decent Criminal, which I can best describe as “Keyser Soze Meets Lester Burnham in Ireland”. As this movie was released by Miramax, I was expecting to see trailers for movies I’d never seen before and will not likely ever see again, and I was right. Rating: PG-13 for sexual content, mature thematic elements and languageįor my review, I first went through the previews on the Tadpole DVD.
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Starring: Aaron Stanford, Bebe Neuwirth, Sigourney Weaver, John Ritter I’ve cleaned it up since then, but for the most part, I have not looked at this since I first wrote it in 2004. That’s how I got a hold of a review copy of Tadpoleand that’s when I decided to write a DVD review. These copies got passed around the office and housed somewhere until the day someone got sick of seeing them in their cubicle and put them in the breakroom for anyone to take. This also means that from time to time, they would send us screener copies of movies that are about to come out on DVD and/or VHS. You remember record stores… right?Īnyway, naturally, this meant that the company I was working for had a pretty close relationship with both the major and the minor video distributors and studios. See, back when I was in my early 20s in New York City, I had a day job where I entered DVD and VHS release information into a database that then got sold to companies who needed databases of information like this, like Tower Records. Before I dig into this retro (!) review, let me first explain something.