Kurt W
Entrou em set. de 1999
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Selos2
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Avaliações4
Classificação de Kurt W
...sorry, maybe it was Coca-Cola.
Back closer to when this film was released I read a review from Roger Ebert saying how much he appreciated that the gang violence depicted wasn't stylized or glorified - the earlier scenes, particularly the drive-by shooting and the dizzying pace of its aftermath, certainly felt realistic.
I do have to agree that my favorite moment with Sean Penn, his pillow case, the canned soft drinks and the two scuzbags was contrived but still satisfying. Who cares whether or not kids at the Illinois reformatory actually have pre-lockup access to the soda machine, or how Penn's character actually had to money to buy all those Pepsis? (Well, the answer might not be hard for that one).
Still, when I had started on my first post-graduate school job, a bunch of us out-of-towners were housed for a week in a Brentwood, TN motel during training for account executives. After a day's worth of training, five or six of us gathered in the room of one of our fellow newbies prior to dinner - this fellow happened to be watching "Bad Boys" on cable when we went to pick him up...with enough time prior to this scene for me to say "Hey, watch this, guys!" (I still marvel at my early-20s immaturity.) As I recall, my fellow account executives got as much of a chortle out of it as I.
By the way, did you notice on this site that the actor who played the little mad bomber gave up his career as a thespian and is now a venture capitalist? Why am I not surprised?
Back closer to when this film was released I read a review from Roger Ebert saying how much he appreciated that the gang violence depicted wasn't stylized or glorified - the earlier scenes, particularly the drive-by shooting and the dizzying pace of its aftermath, certainly felt realistic.
I do have to agree that my favorite moment with Sean Penn, his pillow case, the canned soft drinks and the two scuzbags was contrived but still satisfying. Who cares whether or not kids at the Illinois reformatory actually have pre-lockup access to the soda machine, or how Penn's character actually had to money to buy all those Pepsis? (Well, the answer might not be hard for that one).
Still, when I had started on my first post-graduate school job, a bunch of us out-of-towners were housed for a week in a Brentwood, TN motel during training for account executives. After a day's worth of training, five or six of us gathered in the room of one of our fellow newbies prior to dinner - this fellow happened to be watching "Bad Boys" on cable when we went to pick him up...with enough time prior to this scene for me to say "Hey, watch this, guys!" (I still marvel at my early-20s immaturity.) As I recall, my fellow account executives got as much of a chortle out of it as I.
By the way, did you notice on this site that the actor who played the little mad bomber gave up his career as a thespian and is now a venture capitalist? Why am I not surprised?