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If you love (real) football ...
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To
12/12/2008 23:00:46
General information
Forum:
Sports
Category:
Football
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01366869
Message ID:
01367151
Views:
7
>>>>>>>>In his professional career he scored 2,544 points - which I believe is more than have been scored in the entire history of soccer ;-)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>How many points is counted each time some of those gladiators jumps head-first into the mudd by the end line?
>>>>>>>9 points ? But then when they actually score, (pass it through 6 times bigger goal) they count it much less.
>>>>>>>Go figure.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>I just never got it. Guy runs as if he just stollen loaf of brown bread, and now whole willage is after him.
>>>>>>>Then he nails it behind aut line. What is so interesting about that ??
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Real footbal (I mean played by foot) is artform comparing to that {vbg}
>>>>>>
>>>>>>One of the things I haven't figured out about real football, a.k.a. soccer, is why the guy who just scored a goal runs away from his teammates.
>>>>>
>>>>>Well, since they can't congratulate him by patting him on the ass - as in real, manly, American football - he might fear the kicks ...
>>>>
>>>>Famous photo of English footballer Vinnie Jones, who later went into acting:
>>>>
>>>>http://weirdpicturearchive.com/pics/vinniejones.php
>>>
>>>I assume the outrage was because he used his hands ;-)
>>>
>>>Just checked him out in IMDB and see he has had quite the film career as well, including The Midnight Meat Train (gay porn?) and Garfield: a Tale of Two Kitties.
>>
>>Opinion is divided on this one but personally I liked "Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels" a lot.
>
>I really liked that movie. Odd, but kind of fun. Guy Ritchie, no?

Yes, Guy Ritchie. It was the first movie that gained him attention in the U.S.

I have watched it 10 times or more and it still never fails to perk me up. It has terrific visual style, which Ritchie's critics dismiss as an artifact of his background as a music video director. Personally I like the splashy visual shots like the no-nonsense poker dealer dealing cards in an early shot. But there's more to it than that. Every time I watch it the characters reappear as fondly remembered relatives who are part of your extended, occasionally chaotic, family. Vinnie plays a character named Big Chris, an enforcer for a minor London racket boss named Hatchet Harry. The interaction between Big Chris and Little Chris -- "his son and heir" according to the sardonic narrator -- is priceless.

Here's another movie recommendation I would make to anyone, not just you: "Chungking Express". It has just been rereleased by Criterion.
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