WHO INVITED UNCLE AL TO THANKSGIVING? -- MASTERCLASS OF '92.
PIC INFO: Spotlight on a film still of American screen actor Al Pacino (as Lieutenant Colonel Frank Slade) seated for Thanksgiving dinner in 1992's "Scent of a Woman," directed by Martin Brest, and what has to be one of the most awkward holiday moments in cinematic history.
LT. COL. FRANK SLADE: "Haven't you heard? Conscience is dead."
CHARLIE SIMMS: "No, I haven't heard."
FRANK SLADE: "Well, then, take the fuckin' wax outta your ears! Grow up! It's fuck your buddy, cheat on your wife, call your mother on Mother's Day! Charlie, it's all shit."
Demi Moore: A Decade Of Stardom - Top '90s Movies You Must Watch
Demi Moore was one of the most sought-after and highest-paid actresses of the 1990s, captivating audiences with her beauty, talent, and screen presence. She expertly tackled everything from romantic dramas to action thrillers during her meteoric rise. Moore's bold choices and memorable performances made her an icon of the decade.
We look back at Demi Moore's phenomenal '90s filmography spanning smash hits, zeitgeist-defining roles, and underrated gems. Experience the movies that cemented Moore as a legendary star.
All Demi Moore 90's Movies
Before going into details of each movie separately, we have compiled all of Demi Moore '90s movies in the following table. You can jump to any song details by clicking its name from the following table.
Read Full Article: Demi Moore: A Decade Of Stardom - Top '90s Movies You Must Watch
"It didn't matter in the end how old they had been, or that they were girls, but only that we loved them, and that they hadn't heard us calling, still do not hear us calling them from out of those rooms, where they were meant to be alone for all time, and where we will never find the pieces to put them back together."
""SUBURBIA" IS ONE OF LINKLATER'S LEAST-LOVED FILMS, CONSISTENTLY RANKED NEAR THE BOTTOM IN INTERNET LISTICLES..."
NOTE: A film such as this would be mercilessly slammed today as there are virtually zero non-white actors in the primary cast. Furthermore, a film such as this would more than likely bomb even worse today than it did in '97.
"There is something particularly forlorn about the Texas suburb. In the opening frames of Richard Linklater’s SubUrbia, released 25 years ago this month, the camera drifts slowly past subdivisions and superstores plopped dispassionately onto the rolling Texas expanse. This erstwhile frontier, where mavericks and rebels came to wrest their fortunes out of the ground, is a blur of McDonalds drive-throughs and beige, boxy McMansions. It is uniquely dispiriting.
SubUrbia is one of Linklater’s least-loved films, consistently ranked near the bottom in Internet listicles appraising the Austin director’s career. And at least some of that is because it’s kind of a drag. Compared with the rest of what Linklater would, in 1997, call his “hangin’ out quintet” — an oeuvre that included "Slacker," "Dazed and Confused," "Before Sunrise," and his micro-budget debut, "It’s Impossible to Learn to Plow by Reading Books" — "SubUrbia" is certainly less romantic or nostalgic about the dreamy idleness of youth. At the time, Linklater even told the Austin Chronicle that "SubUrbia" marked “the nail in the coffin” for those kinds of stories. It was a bold statement that, thankfully, didn’t prove to be true."
-- TEXAS MONTHLY, "A Reconsideration of "SubUrbia," One of Richard Linklater’s Least-Loved Films," by Sean O'Neal, February 2022