A: Hank, if Exterminator! by Burroughs came out in 1973, Nashville by Altman in 1975, and Looking for Mr. Goodbar in 1977, would you have wanted to be in the 70s
D: duhhhh i've been saying the 70s was the best decade for ages now. it had to be destroyed because it was high energy, danceable, urban, black, gay, weird, punk, drug-using --
Stay Puft HATES those 8 things
Stay Puft will crush you for being
1 ) high energy
2 ) danceable
3 ) urban
4 ) black
5 ) gay
6 ) weird
7 ) punk
8 ) drug-using
prob many other reasons Stay Puft had to crush it, but I don't want to get into it all right now.
I'm so sick of conservatives talking about the end of civilisation. The end of good music, agreed -- but I mean, look how people were behaving in America in 1979. Naughty, naughty..
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Play Movie ▶ Looking For Mr. Goodbar (1977)
Trivia: Tom Berenger admitted in an interview that he had nightmares after he was finished shooting all of his scenes as Gary.
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63. Looking for Mr. Goodbar (Richard Brooks, 1977)
A freewheeling portrait of a young woman staking claim of her sexual agency from a culture that won’t give it to her, making it look tantalizingly possible for Keaton’s Theresa to live her life on her own terms until it abruptly, devastatingly isn’t.
Rating: 9.3/10
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Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977)
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William Atherton as James in Looking for Mr. Goodbar.
c. 1977
(various sources)
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Happy birthday Diane Keaton! Here's some Looking for Mr. Goodbar art to mark the occasion!
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look what i found, kids, and just in time, as I was about to stroke out in something akin to America-induced epilepsy. forgive the illness as metaphor -- but this cuntry does make me sick.
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