2 I started laughing until I saw the dwarf telling Daniel they were messing around. Who is that picture on the wall? It looks like Byron, but Byron doesn't mess with it.
3 Why is there always a 250 with four white eyes and a pointed nose and no chin in every British film, and he still giggles all the time.
4 The only movie that makes me laugh seems to be South Park. Rarely watch comedy, if two smoking guns count as comedy. Are British films all this cheap and tied together by a bunch of silly coincidences, with everyone in the story acting like a paranoid lunatic?
5 The last twenty minutes were really funny, albeit a bit messy. But this kind of messy comedy lifestyle is really enviable, I mean if it's really possible to live with that attitude.
6 I like what Martha said to her dad later, "It's my life, it's my choice, I'm sorry if you don't like him, and if you don't change your attitude then you'll be alone for the rest of your life." not good? If each of us can respect the choices of others. But I think of the news I saw during the recent riots in the UK, parents in the UK complained that the law made it impossible for them to educate their children, so that young people were acting wildly. I also remember my friends in Australia many years ago saying that the white kids there were assholes and very pampered and lawless. I don't know what the truth is, I haven't seen it with my own eyes. Is it right to have dutiful sons under the stick? Pull away.
7 The dwarf in the coffin is really funny, but it's easy to guess he's not dead.
8 The dialogue between the brothers at the end once again made me envious of a life with brothers and sisters. I wish I wasn't the only child of my parents. Without such a relationship, I may never understand how it feels. How I wish I could have an older brother or younger sibling, not too different in age, (well, I don't want a sister) he or she would support me, listen to my thoughts, and be with me forever.
9 Everything is so fucking green
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