Some movies endure as a treasured soundtrack to which the film itself becomes a mere footnote. That seems likely to prove the case with “Creation Stories,” a biopic of Creation Records’ founder Alan McGee that duly draws sonic fuel from the stellar array of Britpop bands he was involved with. But as directed by Nick Moran in obvious imitation of executive producer Danny Boyle’s most hyperbolic style, scripted by Irvine Welsh and Dean Cavanagh, this apparently loose interpretation of the subject’s memoir becomes a hyperventilating “Behind the Music” caricature, all familiar flash and precious little substance. Rlj Entertainment is releasing on demand and digital platforms in the U.S. on Feb. 25, following openings in most other territories.
McGee’s 2013 same-titled tome is a breezy yet cogent chronicle of a whirlwind career, written in the clear-eyed retrospect of sobriety after years of chemical excess. But the film immediately lunges...
McGee’s 2013 same-titled tome is a breezy yet cogent chronicle of a whirlwind career, written in the clear-eyed retrospect of sobriety after years of chemical excess. But the film immediately lunges...
- 2/24/2022
- by Dennis Harvey
- Variety Film + TV
Annette Bening has been nominated for an Oscar four times, but has yet to put one on the shelf. But that could change this year thanks to “Film Stars Don’t Die In Liverpool,” which is already earning awards season buzz, not just for Bening’s turn, but for the performance of her co-star Jamie Bell as well.
Read More: Annette Bening Shines In ‘Film Stars Don’t Die In Liverpool’ [Telluride Review]
Directed by Paul McGuigan (“The Acid House,” “Gangster No.
Continue reading ‘Film Stars Don’t Die In Liverpool’ Trailer: Annette Bening & Jamie Bell Fall In Love at The Playlist.
Read More: Annette Bening Shines In ‘Film Stars Don’t Die In Liverpool’ [Telluride Review]
Directed by Paul McGuigan (“The Acid House,” “Gangster No.
Continue reading ‘Film Stars Don’t Die In Liverpool’ Trailer: Annette Bening & Jamie Bell Fall In Love at The Playlist.
- 9/4/2017
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
This weekend marks the limited and VOD release of God Help the Girl, a musical from Stuart Murdoch, best known as the lead singer of Belle and Sebastian. God Help the Girl, which emerged out of a musical side project for Murdoch, follows three friends who start a band during a summer in Glasgow. It has, yes, been described as “twee,” a word now practically synonymous with Belle and Sebastian.
Belle and Sebastian’s music—cheery melodies paired with vivid, often melancholy lyrics—often feels cinematic, thanks to the band’s knack for weaving intricate mini-stories. In that way, it...
Belle and Sebastian’s music—cheery melodies paired with vivid, often melancholy lyrics—often feels cinematic, thanks to the band’s knack for weaving intricate mini-stories. In that way, it...
- 9/5/2014
- by Esther Zuckerman
- EW - Inside Movies
Doctor Who
Michelle Gomez ("Bad Education," "The Acid House") has joined the cast of "Doctor Who". The actress plays a character known as the Gatekeeper of the Nethersphere.
A photo from the set has been released showcasing Gomez in Victorian-era costume with The Doctor (Peter Capaldi) and the Cybermen. You can see that photo below. [Source: BBC1]
Crater Lake
Atlantique Productions ("Transporter: The Series," "Borgia") will team with Keshet UK to develop the eight-part drama series "Crater Lake".
The series is described as a "life-affirming, character-driven show about death". "Beaufort" novelist and "Allegiance" producer Ron Leshem created the series. [Source: Deadline]
Zapped
Families tuned in to the Disney Channel on Friday night where the network's original telemovie "Zapped" and the premiere of comedy series "Girl Meets World" both drew big ratings.
"Zapped" nabbed 5.7 million viewers, whilst "Girl Meets World" drew 5.2 million viewers. They ranked as the No. 1 cable TV telecast of 2014 and the No.
Michelle Gomez ("Bad Education," "The Acid House") has joined the cast of "Doctor Who". The actress plays a character known as the Gatekeeper of the Nethersphere.
A photo from the set has been released showcasing Gomez in Victorian-era costume with The Doctor (Peter Capaldi) and the Cybermen. You can see that photo below. [Source: BBC1]
Crater Lake
Atlantique Productions ("Transporter: The Series," "Borgia") will team with Keshet UK to develop the eight-part drama series "Crater Lake".
The series is described as a "life-affirming, character-driven show about death". "Beaufort" novelist and "Allegiance" producer Ron Leshem created the series. [Source: Deadline]
Zapped
Families tuned in to the Disney Channel on Friday night where the network's original telemovie "Zapped" and the premiere of comedy series "Girl Meets World" both drew big ratings.
"Zapped" nabbed 5.7 million viewers, whilst "Girl Meets World" drew 5.2 million viewers. They ranked as the No. 1 cable TV telecast of 2014 and the No.
- 6/30/2014
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
Actor Robert Carlyle is making his directorial debut on the new horror comedy The Legend of Barney Thomson (formerly The Long Midnight of Barney Thomson), and we have the first image from the set for you. Check it out!
Myriad Pictures announced Tuesday that principal photography has begun in the UK on the darkly humorous film which will star two-time Academy Award winner Emma Thompson (Saving Mr. Banks, Sense and Sensibility), Ray Winstone (Snow White and the Huntsman, The Departed, Hugo), and Carlyle, who will also play the title role.
The script is based on a widely popular series of novels by Douglas Lindsay and was adapted for the screen by BAFTA award-winner Colin McLaren (Donkeys) and Richard Cowan. Myriad Pictures is handling worldwide sales on the film.
In The Legend of Barney Thomson, Carlyle plays the title character, a downtrodden Glaswegian barber who inadvertently stumbles into serial murder, with both absurd and macabre consequences.
Myriad Pictures announced Tuesday that principal photography has begun in the UK on the darkly humorous film which will star two-time Academy Award winner Emma Thompson (Saving Mr. Banks, Sense and Sensibility), Ray Winstone (Snow White and the Huntsman, The Departed, Hugo), and Carlyle, who will also play the title role.
The script is based on a widely popular series of novels by Douglas Lindsay and was adapted for the screen by BAFTA award-winner Colin McLaren (Donkeys) and Richard Cowan. Myriad Pictures is handling worldwide sales on the film.
In The Legend of Barney Thomson, Carlyle plays the title character, a downtrodden Glaswegian barber who inadvertently stumbles into serial murder, with both absurd and macabre consequences.
- 6/10/2014
- by Steve Barton
- DreadCentral.com
One thing we resolved early on, having read around on the subject a little: to try, try, try to get through just the first sentence of our review of “Filth,” the Jon S. Baird-directed adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s novel, without mentioning “Trainspotting.” So, obviously, we’re pretty disappointed with ourselves. But disappointment is somewhat the order of the day, unfortunately, as it’s a comparison that occurred to us, not often to the benefit of "Filth," throughout our viewing of the film. However, Danny Boyle’s modern classic doth bestride the world of the Irvine Welsh adaptation like a colossus, its shadow seemingly impossible to escape from, so there is a glass-half-full way of looking at it: “Filth” is undoubtedly better than also-rans “The Acid House” and “Ecstasy.” In fact, when it comes to capturing some of the gonzo, amoral, substance-fueled verve that Welsh’s novels can display,...
- 5/27/2014
- by Jessica Kiang
- The Playlist
After a successful release in its native U.K., art-house distributor Magnolia Pictures acquired U.S. distribution rights to Filth, an adaptation of the Irvine Welsh novel of the same name. Welsh remained best known to U.S. audiences as the writer of the book Trainspotting, which was adapted into a 1996 movie, and the writer and screenwriter of The Acid House. The Hollywood Reporter confirmed that Magnolia planned a spring 2014 release for the movie starring James McAvoy as Detective Sergeant Bruce Robinson, a corrupt cop who spends more time chasing drugs, booze and women than working.
- 11/26/2013
- Upcoming-Movies.com
One thing we resolved early on, having read around on the subject a little: to try, try, try to get through just the first sentence of our review of “Filth,” the Jon S. Baird-directed adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s novel, without mentioning “Trainspotting.” So, obviously, we’re pretty disappointed with ourselves. But disappointment is somewhat the order of the day, unfortunately, as it’s a comparison that occurred to us, not often to the benefit of "Filth," throughout our viewing of the film. However, Danny Boyle’s modern classic doth bestride the world of the Irvine Welsh adaptation like a colossus, its shadow seemingly impossible to escape from, so there is a glass-half-full way of looking at it: “Filth” is undoubtedly better than also-rans “The Acid House” and “Ecstasy.” In fact, when it comes to capturing some of the gonzo, amoral, substance-fueled verve that Welsh’s novels can display,...
- 10/21/2013
- by Jessica Kiang
- The Playlist
It's hard not to warm to the Proclaimers' answer to Mamma Mia!. And James McAvoy impresses in a dark, exhausting Irvine Welsh adaptation
The great Scottish film-maker Bill Forsyth memorably described his timeless gem Local Hero as "Brigadoon meets Apocalypse Now". There's an echo of that dichotomy in the simultaneous opening of two new movies offering opposing views of life north of the border – both fantastical in their own way. In one, we find ourselves in a land of star-crossed lovers who burst into spontaneous song and dance at every opportunity; in the other, we descend into an ever-deepening abyss of squalor, swearing, racism and homophobia, where foul deeds and drug-addled pestilence lurk at each turn.
Let's start on the sunny side. Dexter Fletcher's Sunshine on Leith is a sprightly and unabashed adaptation of the Dundee Rep's much-loved stage show, spinning a Mamma Mia!-style narrative around the songs of the Proclaimers.
The great Scottish film-maker Bill Forsyth memorably described his timeless gem Local Hero as "Brigadoon meets Apocalypse Now". There's an echo of that dichotomy in the simultaneous opening of two new movies offering opposing views of life north of the border – both fantastical in their own way. In one, we find ourselves in a land of star-crossed lovers who burst into spontaneous song and dance at every opportunity; in the other, we descend into an ever-deepening abyss of squalor, swearing, racism and homophobia, where foul deeds and drug-addled pestilence lurk at each turn.
Let's start on the sunny side. Dexter Fletcher's Sunshine on Leith is a sprightly and unabashed adaptation of the Dundee Rep's much-loved stage show, spinning a Mamma Mia!-style narrative around the songs of the Proclaimers.
- 10/5/2013
- by Mark Kermode
- The Guardian - Film News
Tiff’s Midnight Madness program turned 25 this year, and for two and half decades, the hardworking programers have gathered some of the strangest, most terrifying, wild, intriguing and downright entertaining films from around the world. From dark comedies to Japanese gore-fests and indie horror gems, the Midnight Madness program hasn’t lost its edge as one the leading showcases of genre cinema. In its 25-year history, Midnight Madness has introduced adventurous late-night moviegoers to such cult faves as Richard Linklater’s Dazed and Confused and Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs. But what separates Midnight Madness from, say, Montreal’s three and half week long genre festival Fantasia, is that Tiff selects only ten films to make the cut. In other words, these programmers don’t mess around. Last week I decided that I would post reviews of my personal favourite films that screened in past years. And just like the Tiff programmers,...
- 9/18/2013
- by Ricky
- SoundOnSight
What do you get when you cross James McAvoy, hallucinogenic drugs and a rampant sex addiction wrapped up in another Irvine Welsh novel? The answer is something that looks like one helluva good time. Filth is McAvoy’s second time starring in a Welsh adaptation (Trainspotting) has him playing corrupt Scottish copper Bruce Robertson, a man who really used to be a good person, if you can believe it. As his status as a detective climbs, Robertson dives deeper and deeper into a seedy world of sexual favors, violence and cocaine. Mountains of cocaine. But like any good officer of the law, Robertson is still vying for that long sought-after promotion, despite all the drugs and sex in the way. Rounding out the cast are Jamie Bell, Imogen Poots, Jim Broadbent and Eddie Marsan. Filth, along with Trainspotting, The Acid House and Ecstasy, will be the fourth Irvine Welsh novel to make it to the big screen...
- 7/11/2013
- by Samantha Wilson
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
A new international trailer for director Jon S. Baird’ adaptation of the Irvine Welsh crime novel Filth has been released online. This is the fourth adaptation of a Welsh novel, the other three being Trainspotting (1996), The Acid House (1998) and Ecstasy. Anyone who is familiar with the author knows they can expect a lot of of rough sex, drugs and violence and the film’s first red-band trailer made a point that Baird isn’t holding back from the sheer madness of the novel. Filth stars James McAvoy, Jaimei Bell, Eddie Marsan, Jim Broadbent, Joanne Froggatt, Shirley Henderson, Kate Dickie and Imogen Poots and is due out in September.
Scheming Bruce Robertson (James McAvoy), a bigoted and corrupt policeman, is in line for a promotion and will stop at nothing to get what he wants. Enlisted to solve a brutal murder and threatened by the aspirations of his colleagues, including Ray...
Scheming Bruce Robertson (James McAvoy), a bigoted and corrupt policeman, is in line for a promotion and will stop at nothing to get what he wants. Enlisted to solve a brutal murder and threatened by the aspirations of his colleagues, including Ray...
- 6/7/2013
- by Ricky
- SoundOnSight
"Trainspotting" was the first Irvine Welsh book to make it to the big screen, and still the best. "The Acid House" has faded into memory, while the forthcoming "Ecstasy" hasn't raised much heat on the festival circuit. And while we patiently await the "Trainspotting" sequel Danny Boyle hopes to make in 2016, "Filth" could be the Welsh movie fans have been waiting for since 1996. This spring, a red band trailer dropped for the James McAvoy-starring flick, and now a longer, unrated promo is here and it definitely is pushing itself right to the edges of decency. As it should. McAvoy leads the picture -- in a role unlike anything we've seen him in before -- as Bruce Robertson, a sex-obsessed, cocaine-addicted, bigoted Scottish police officer who is supposed to be investigating a murder but gets sidetracked by his own various vices. Sex, drugs, booze and more all feature prominently (again,...
- 6/7/2013
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
Marking the latest big screen adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s work, Filth sees James McAvoy leading a stellar cast for writer-director Jon S. Baird’s sophomore feature.
With the film set to be released on our shores later this year, Lionsgate have debuted the first trailer, and it’s just as red-band and unsuitable for work as you’d expect from an adaptation of Welsh’s work.
A bipolar, bigoted, junkie cop manipulates and hallucinates his way through the festive period, until he finally meets his match… himself.
Scheming Bruce Robertson (James McAvoy), a bigoted and corrupt policeman, is in line for a promotion and will stop at nothing to get what he wants. Enlisted to solve a brutal murder and threatened by the aspirations of his colleagues, including Ray Lennox (Jamie Bell), Bruce sets about ensuring their ruin, right under the nose of unwitting Chief Inspector Toal. As he...
With the film set to be released on our shores later this year, Lionsgate have debuted the first trailer, and it’s just as red-band and unsuitable for work as you’d expect from an adaptation of Welsh’s work.
A bipolar, bigoted, junkie cop manipulates and hallucinates his way through the festive period, until he finally meets his match… himself.
Scheming Bruce Robertson (James McAvoy), a bigoted and corrupt policeman, is in line for a promotion and will stop at nothing to get what he wants. Enlisted to solve a brutal murder and threatened by the aspirations of his colleagues, including Ray Lennox (Jamie Bell), Bruce sets about ensuring their ruin, right under the nose of unwitting Chief Inspector Toal. As he...
- 4/11/2013
- by Kenji Lloyd
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Irvine Welsh is the mastermind behind the iconic book "Trainspotting," later made into the iconic movie of the same title, the poster of which was most certainly on your university roommate's wall. The prolific author is back on the scene with his new book "Skagboys," a prequel to "Trainspotting," almost 19 years after the original was published.
Moviefone caught up with Welsh to talk about movies vs. books, the strangeness of seeing your characters come to life before your eyes and that damn creepy baby crawling on the ceiling that haunted us all.
Do you ever write books thinking they're going to make great movies?
No, you can't really do that. You've got to keep your eye on the ball. They're two very different mediums so you can't start thinking cinematically when you're writing a book. I just don't think it's going to work out.
But for "Skagboys," having written it after Trainspotting was so popular,...
Moviefone caught up with Welsh to talk about movies vs. books, the strangeness of seeing your characters come to life before your eyes and that damn creepy baby crawling on the ceiling that haunted us all.
Do you ever write books thinking they're going to make great movies?
No, you can't really do that. You've got to keep your eye on the ball. They're two very different mediums so you can't start thinking cinematically when you're writing a book. I just don't think it's going to work out.
But for "Skagboys," having written it after Trainspotting was so popular,...
- 6/29/2012
- by Devon Murphy
- Huffington Post
"Snow Piercer," the English-language debut of Korean auteur Bong Joon-Ho, got a pretty neat little boost last night when one of its previously-announced cast members, Octavia Spencer, only went and won herself a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her performance in "The Help." The award was widely expected, but nevertheless, having the actress on board can only help to raise the profile of the project.
Not that it necessarily needed it: the film, an adaptation of the French graphic novel "Le Transperceneige," about a train carrying the only survivors of a post-apocalyptic future, already has an extremely promising cast on board with Chris Evans, Jamie Bell, Tilda Swinton, Song Kang-Ho and John Hurt all signed up alongside Spencer. And it just got some more good news this morning, with Variety reporting that Scottish actor Ewan Bremner has boarded the project.
Bremner broke through as Spud in "Trainspotting," and has gone...
Not that it necessarily needed it: the film, an adaptation of the French graphic novel "Le Transperceneige," about a train carrying the only survivors of a post-apocalyptic future, already has an extremely promising cast on board with Chris Evans, Jamie Bell, Tilda Swinton, Song Kang-Ho and John Hurt all signed up alongside Spencer. And it just got some more good news this morning, with Variety reporting that Scottish actor Ewan Bremner has boarded the project.
Bremner broke through as Spud in "Trainspotting," and has gone...
- 2/27/2012
- by Oliver Lyttelton
- The Playlist
Irvine Welsh & Director Rob Heydon Talk About Bringing The Adaptation To Life When Danny Boyle delivered the groundbreaking "Trainspotting" it proved that the unique language, tenor and prose of Scottish writer Irvine Welsh could be brought to the big screen with both style and substance. An adaptation of "The Acid House" soon followed and "Filth" is gearing up to shoot next year, and the next Welsh story to hit the big screen will be "Ecstasy." But it was no easy journey. The project has been in development for more than a decade, with financing coming and going before it…...
- 8/26/2011
- The Playlist
It's a long while since one of Irvine Welsh's scurrilous works has made it to the screen (the last one was The Acid House in 1998, only two years after Trainspotting), but that's about to change. Rob Heydon's version of Ecstacy is in post-production, and Welsh has just revealed that Filth is next, boasting a rock solid cast that includes James McAvoy, Jamie Bell and Alan Cumming.Like an Edinburgh version of Bad Lieutenant, Filth (first published in 1998) is about the monstrous copper Bruce Robertson, nominally investigating a race-related murder, angling for promotion and lots of overtime, steaming through a drug-fuelled week in Amsterdam, making sexually harrassing phonecalls to his friend's wife in the voice of Frank Sidebottom, and afflicted by a tapeworm that acts as his conscience. He's like Begbie, if Begbie was in the "polis". And like Begbie, the weird thing is that you sort of like him in spite of everything.
- 8/8/2011
- EmpireOnline
The BBC Press Office has announced that their new Sherlock Holmes re-imagining from Doctor Who showrunner Steven Moffat and Who writer Mark Gatiss is to air some time during Week 30, 24-30 July 2010. The currently "unplaced" 3-part drama, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Dr. John Watson, has been given a contemporary update to "ground the forthcoming tales in reality, and appease ardent fans of the classic tales". Each episode is 90 minutes long, and have been written by Steven Moffat (Doctor Who, Coupling), Mark Gatiss (The League Of Gentlemen, Doctor Who, Crooked House), and Stephen Thompson (Whipping It Up, Mutual Friends), and directed by Paul McGuigan (Lucky Number Slevin, Gangster No 1, The Acid House) and Euros Lyn (Doctor Who, Torchwood).
Look, press release!
The world's favourite detective has emerged from the fog. With sparkling scripts and unforgettable performances from the two leads, Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock) and Martin Freeman...
Look, press release!
The world's favourite detective has emerged from the fog. With sparkling scripts and unforgettable performances from the two leads, Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock) and Martin Freeman...
- 7/8/2010
- by JT Vaughn
- TVovermind.com
(Paul Bettany in Gangster No. 1, above.)
[I did this interview with Paul Bettany in 2002 and it originally appeared in Venice Magazine, This was one of the earlier long-form interviews he did in the States. Other than as the "Naked Guy" in A Knight's Tale and the imaginary roommate in A Beautiful Mind, he was unknown to the American public at the time. But Gangster No. 1, while not a perfect film (largely due to the difficulty in believing that Bettany grew into Malcolm McDowell as an older man), showcased an actor in Bettany who had screen presence and intensity that was impossible to look away from.
Bettany is currently starring in the film Legion, set to open this month. Here's a look back at the period in his life when he was just about to become famous.]
The Contender
With Gangster No. 1, Paul Bettany reveals himself, all hype aside, as one of the most promising actors of his generation.
by Terry Keefe
The Silent Scream. As delivered by Paul Bettany in his new film Gangster No. 1, it's one of the most bone-chilling moments you'll see on screen this year, or any other year, for that matter. And there isn't a CGI effect in sight. Bettany simply closes his eyes, kicks back his head, and unleashes a blood-curdling scream as the sound drops out completely. This amazingly effective moment is designed to symbolize the unrelenting evil which lurks within Bettany's character, known only as Young Gangster, as he...
[I did this interview with Paul Bettany in 2002 and it originally appeared in Venice Magazine, This was one of the earlier long-form interviews he did in the States. Other than as the "Naked Guy" in A Knight's Tale and the imaginary roommate in A Beautiful Mind, he was unknown to the American public at the time. But Gangster No. 1, while not a perfect film (largely due to the difficulty in believing that Bettany grew into Malcolm McDowell as an older man), showcased an actor in Bettany who had screen presence and intensity that was impossible to look away from.
Bettany is currently starring in the film Legion, set to open this month. Here's a look back at the period in his life when he was just about to become famous.]
The Contender
With Gangster No. 1, Paul Bettany reveals himself, all hype aside, as one of the most promising actors of his generation.
by Terry Keefe
The Silent Scream. As delivered by Paul Bettany in his new film Gangster No. 1, it's one of the most bone-chilling moments you'll see on screen this year, or any other year, for that matter. And there isn't a CGI effect in sight. Bettany simply closes his eyes, kicks back his head, and unleashes a blood-curdling scream as the sound drops out completely. This amazingly effective moment is designed to symbolize the unrelenting evil which lurks within Bettany's character, known only as Young Gangster, as he...
- 1/13/2010
- by The Hollywood Interview.com
- The Hollywood Interview
Year: 2009
Directors: Justin Molotnikov
Writers: Justin Molotnikov
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: projectcyclops
Rating: 8 out of 10
An intense dark comedy set in my home town of Edinburgh, Scotland, Crying with Laughter is the brainchild of writer/director Justin Molotnikov and stars Stephen McCole (The Acid House) as a cocaine snorting stand-up comedian on the verge of his first big break. The film opens with his character, Joey Frisk, practicing his routine on Portobello Beach, belting booze and shouting at the waves as if they were a rowdy comedy-club crowd. His act is a hit, with wry humour and jabs at a willing audience, but after he bumps into an old school friend while kicking back in a sauna, things start to get creepy.
Frank, played to the hilt by Malcolm Shields, spots Joey and introduces himself with enthusiasm, reminding him of the time Joey drunkenly burnt down a schoolmaster...
Directors: Justin Molotnikov
Writers: Justin Molotnikov
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: projectcyclops
Rating: 8 out of 10
An intense dark comedy set in my home town of Edinburgh, Scotland, Crying with Laughter is the brainchild of writer/director Justin Molotnikov and stars Stephen McCole (The Acid House) as a cocaine snorting stand-up comedian on the verge of his first big break. The film opens with his character, Joey Frisk, practicing his routine on Portobello Beach, belting booze and shouting at the waves as if they were a rowdy comedy-club crowd. His act is a hit, with wry humour and jabs at a willing audience, but after he bumps into an old school friend while kicking back in a sauna, things start to get creepy.
Frank, played to the hilt by Malcolm Shields, spots Joey and introduces himself with enthusiasm, reminding him of the time Joey drunkenly burnt down a schoolmaster...
- 6/21/2009
- QuietEarth.us
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