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2007-05-16 03:13:00 · 13 answers · asked by PhoeniXoXoXoX 6 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

13 answers

the kinda love you see on Cops

2007-05-16 03:27:09 · answer #1 · answered by ? 3 · 2 0

Getting punched by a drunk whom you love?

2007-05-16 03:15:14 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Roger Ebert has a solid evaluation of the action picture on his internet site, listed under are some excerpts: "Punch-inebriated Love" is in general a portrait of a character style. Barry Egan has been broken, perhaps previous fix, with the aid of what he sees simply by fact the depredations of his domineering sisters. It drives him loopy while people nostril into his business enterprise. He can't stand to be trifled with. His international is entered with the aid of alarming omens and stipulations that baffle him. the character is vividly seen and the action picture sympathizes with him in his extremity." perhaps the best remark Ebert makes is that PT Anderson substitute into attempting to complicated on the hostility that looks to exist in all Sandlers characters, the place does the trend come from? How does it appear itself? From the item: "a thank you to criticize a action picture, Godard famously stated, is to make yet another action picture. In that experience "Punch-inebriated Love" is action picture grievance. Paul Thomas Anderson says he loves Sandler's comedies--they cheer him up on lonely Saturday nights--yet simply by fact the director of "Boogie Nights" and "Magnolia" he ought to have been waiting to experience something lacking in them, some unexpressed want. The Sandler characters are merely approximately oppressively incredible, like needy domestic canines, and yet they cover a masked hostility to society, a passive-aggressive ought to bypass against the flow, a modern-day for offending others jointly as in the very technique of being ingratiating."

2016-11-23 17:21:15 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Adam Sandler's worst attempt at a romantic film

2007-05-16 03:16:34 · answer #4 · answered by dreamsncrystalvisions 4 · 3 0

A really bad movie .

2007-05-16 03:15:16 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

A good movie.

2007-05-16 03:15:59 · answer #6 · answered by Holy Macaroni! 6 · 0 0

it involves something called "the donkey punch" sweetie

2007-05-16 03:19:55 · answer #7 · answered by Uncle B2 7 · 1 1

It's a really bad Adam Sandler movie and Drew Barrymore is not in it.
Barry Egan (Sandler) owns a company that markets themed toilet plungers ("fungers") and other novelty items. He has seven overbearing sisters who ridicule him regularly, and leads a very lonely life punctuated by fits of rage. In the span of one morning, he witnesses a bizarre car accident, picks up an abandoned harmonium from the street, and encounters Lena Leonard (Watson), who he later learns orchestrated the meeting after seeing him in a family picture belonging to his sister Elizabeth (Mary Lynn Rajskub), a co-worker of Lena's.

Barry tries to find solace by calling a phone sex hotline for conversation, but the operator then attempts to extort money from him and sends her four henchmen brothers after him. This complicates his budding relationship with Lena, as well as his plan to exploit a loophole in a Healthy Choice promotion and amass a million frequent flyer miles by buying large quantities of pudding (based on the true story of David Phillips). After Lena leaves for Hawaii on a business trip, Barry decides to follow her. He arrives and calls one of his manipulative sisters on a payphone to ask what hotel Lena is staying in. She begins to belittle and question him but finds herself the receiving end of a nasty verbal tirade from Barry. She gives Barry the name of the hotel and he eventually finds where she is staying. At first, Barry explains that he is in Hawaii on a business trip by coincidence, but he soon admits to her that he came to pursue a romantic relationship.

After they return home, while Barry is driving with Lena, the four brothers ram their car into Barry's, leaving Lena mildly injured. An outraged Barry attacks the four henchmen brothers with a tire iron before taking Lena to the hospital. Frantically, he leaves her at the hospital and tries to end the harassment from the brothers by calling the phone-sex line and speaking to the "manager", who is in reality Dean Trumbell (Hoffman), an owner of a mattress store. Barry then drives to Provo, Utah to confront him in person. Surprised at his visit, Trumbell shows his true colors when, after Barry angrily tells him to leave him and Lena alone, he goes scampering for his office to hide.

When Barry returns, he tells Lena his story and asks for her forgiveness, pledging that he'll use his frequent-flier miles to accompany her on all her future trips. The final shot of the movie shows Lena approaching Barry in his office while he plays the harmonium. She puts his arms around him and says, "Well, here we go."

2007-05-16 03:15:48 · answer #8 · answered by *Suzy-Q* 4 · 1 1

a good movie

2007-05-16 03:16:38 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think it is a movie that starred Drew Barrymore!

:-)

2007-05-16 03:15:48 · answer #10 · answered by Tony M 7 · 0 1

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