My favourite scene from Annie Hall. Dwayne (Christopher Walken) confesses to Alvy (Woody Allen) a dark secret. This is practically the only scene with Walken in, and he steals the film for me.
My favourite scene from Annie Hall. Dwayne (Christopher Walken) confesses to Alvy (Woody Allen) a dark secret. This is practically the only scene with Walken in, and he steals the film for me.
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With Woody's dialog, Walken's staccato and haltingly pained delivery, entirely in-that-moment-with-us-all, deftly and knowingly manipulates our communal sense of timing -- on his wink-and-a-nod whim -- to great affect. It adds a thread of complexity to Allen's already dense-yet-accessible watershed creation.
More cowbell, more cowbell indeed, my great and powerful friend. Peace.
Fixing part of the video description for you: "This is practically the only scene with Walken in IT, and he steals the film for me."
See? You left out the word "it". I have noticed that this practice has pretty much become the norm in the UK, but it is incorrect. First of all, it just sounds wrong, and secondly you never end a sentence with a preposition. You're English, learn to properly use your own language please.
Judging by your comment you seem to have enjoyed my first tip, so here's another.
The other commonly accepted mistake in England is where you leave the word "of" out of sentences. For example, "I took my keys out my pocket" is incorrect. You should say "I took my keys out OF my pocket." If you run "out the door", that's fine, as you aren't inside the door itself. But you don't take keys "out your pocket". You take them out OF your pocket. Then you go see a film with Christopher Walken in IT.
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TV, you have lied to me!
With Woody's dialog, Walken's staccato and haltingly pained delivery, entirely in-that-moment-with-us-all, deftly and knowingly manipulates our communal sense of timing -- on his wink-and-a-nod whim -- to great affect. It adds a thread of complexity to Allen's already dense-yet-accessible watershed creation.
More cowbell, more cowbell indeed, my great and powerful friend. Peace.
"This is practically the only scene with Walken in IT, and he steals the film for me."
See? You left out the word "it". I have noticed that this practice has pretty much become the norm in the UK, but it is incorrect. First of all, it just sounds wrong, and secondly you never end a sentence with a preposition.
You're English, learn to properly use your own language please.
SO WHAT?
The important thing is the video.
Learn the grammar yourself, you massive idiot.
The other commonly accepted mistake in England is where you leave the word "of" out of sentences.
For example, "I took my keys out my pocket" is incorrect. You should say "I took my keys out OF my pocket."
If you run "out the door", that's fine, as you aren't inside the door itself. But you don't take keys "out your pocket". You take them out OF your pocket. Then you go see a film with Christopher Walken in IT.