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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Movie: Burn After Reading



CIA agent Osbourne Cox (John Malcovich) just got fired from the CIA and is writing his memoirs. The disc containing the memoirs is found in the female locker room at the gym, where it was left by mistake.

Assuming that the disc contains vital classified information, gym employee Linda Litzke (Frances McDormand), and her co-worker Chad Feldheimer, played a convincingly dorky Brad Pitt. decide to sell the info to the highest bidder. Linda needs the money for a series of expensive plastic surgeries but her quest for beauty sets in motion an unanticipated string of deadly, comical disasters, as the two try to blackmail the ex-CIA agent for money.

Cast includes:

George Clooney
Brad Pitt
Tilda Swinton
Frances McDormand
John Malkovich
Richard Jenkins


Hig res previews can be seen here
Or for a full list containing various players types go here

From the masterminds of the Cohen Brothers (O Brother, Where Art Thou?, Raising Arizona, The Hudsucker Proxy,No Country For Old Men, etc)in associations with Focus pictures. a combination that leaves me anticipating this movie with extreme excitement. I will give a full review as soon as i get my greedy little hands on some advance screening passes.

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About This Blog

My small contribution to wide world of sharing useless, random, pointless, yet interesting information across the web. A shameless plug for my awesomeness. A collection of random and amazing things.

I write reviews, I write stories, I write about my daily occurences, I complain about everything. I have a few blogs throughout the world, but this one is my favorite, mostly because it's mine.

Feel free to Email The Monster

Words Of Wisdom

Both reading and writing are acts of supreme faith. They are both, in essence, a call to grace, a belief in the miraculous - that we might come to see through stories what we had not previously seen, that we might come to understand what had, before that moment, remained uncertain, undefined. The mask of fiction, of writing and reading stories, does not, in the end, disguise our faces but instead reveals who we really are. In the, stories acknowledge life's difficulty and sadness but insist that we go on anyway, that we always hold to our faith, to our belief in grace.

- John Gregory Brown

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