Sin City 2

This article is from the archive of our partner. After the box-office disappointment of last week, another action film heavy with aging Hollywood stars is hitting our screens Friday in Sin City: A Dame to Kill For.

Like its predecessor, A Dame to Kill For is based on a few lightly entangled tales from Miller’s Sin City canon, this time with a couple of new stories thrown in.

Yes, it's another film whose trailer leans on the giant cast list it throws on-screen at the end. All of these people are in this movie! Even if some of them are only making glorified cameos, surely that’s enough to get you to see it!? Well, even if not, the opportunity seemed ripe for arbitrary gathering of rankings, pitting the old (Bruce Willis) against the very old (Stacy Keach), and the leather-skinned (Mickey Rourke) against the alabaster (Eva Green).

Sin City 2

Who shall triumph? Golden Globe Nominations: Invision • Jeremy Piven: 6 (with 1 win) • Bruce Willis: 4 (with 1 win) • Stacy Keach: 2 (with 1 win) • Joseph Gordon-Levitt: 2 • Mickey Rourke: 1 (with 1 win) • Jessica Alba: 1 • Dennis Haysbert: 1 • Ray Liotta: 1 • Everyone Else: 0 Thank the lord Entourage isn't still around to clog up the Supporting Actor category every year. Burma Hd Video Songs Free Download.

Jessica Alba's nomination was for Dark Angel, for everyone who's asking. Places of Birth by Coolness Factor: • Eva Green: Paris, France • Rosario Dawson and Jeremy Piven: New York, New York • Bruce Willis: Idar-Oberstein, Rhineland Palatinate, West Germany • Stacy Keach: Savannah, Georgia • Ray Liotta: Newark, New Jersey • Mickey Rourke: Schenectady, New York • Jaime King: Omaha, Nebraska • Powers Boothe: Snyder, Texas • Josh Brolin: Santa Monica, California • Dennis Haysbert: San Mateo, California • Jessica Alba: Pomona, California • Joseph Gordon-Levitt: Los Angeles, California All the actors from California: get more original next time. Of course, Eva Green is from Paris, but some things are cool no matter how obvious. Number of Robert Rodriguez Films Appeared In: • Jessica Alba: 5 • Bruce Willis: 4 (although he is not in the Rodriguez-directed segment of Four Rooms) • Josh Brolin, Rosario Dawson, Powers Boothe, Jeremy Piven, Jamie King: 2 • Everyone Else: First time! I forgot Josh Brolin was in Planet Terror.

He's funny in that one. Number of Appearances on The Tonight Show: • Jessica Alba: 13 • Rosario Dawson: 9 • Josh Brolin: 7 • Jeremy Piven: 6 • Mickey Rourke: 5 • Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ray Liotta, Jaime King: 3 • Bruce Willis, Powers Boothe: 1 • Eva Green, Dennis Haysbert, Stacy Keach: 0 Yes, you read that right: Jessica Alba has been on The Tonight Show 12 more times than Bruce Willis. Number of Appearances on The Late Show with David Letterman: • Bruce Willis: 27 • Jeremy Piven: 5 • Jessica Alba: 4 • Mickey Rourke, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ray Liotta: 3 • Josh Brolin: 2 • Rosario Dawson, Dennis Haysbert: 1 • Eva Green, Powers Boothe, Jaime King, Stacy Keach: 0 Bruce, long-time Letterman buddy, obviously favors CBS. Mas Que Nada Satb Pdf To Excel.

But here's my question: why doesn't anyone want Eva Green on their talk show? Updated on December 20 at 2:05 p.m. ET President Trump has spent months exhorting Republican lawmakers to send him a tax-cut bill in time for Christmas—a $1.5 trillion stocking-stuffer for businesses and families. And on Wednesday afternoon, Congress delivered, as the House approved final passage of the GOP’s top legislative priority. But despite Trump’s impatience for tax cuts, he might not actually sign the landmark bill into law right away, White House advisers said. In fact, Trump might wait until the new year, pushing the outer boundary of the 10 days the Constitution gives the president to affix his signature to legislation passed by Congress.

The reason for the possible delay involves a complicated bit of legislative gamesmanship. Under a 2010 “pay-as-you-go” law requiring Congress to offset any new spending or lower taxes, the $1.5 trillion bill would trigger automatic cuts to Medicare and other programs—across-the-board reductions that Republicans don’t want to be responsible for letting take effect. By waiting until the calendar turns to 2018 to formally enact the tax bill, Trump would push the automatic spending cuts to 2019 and buy Congress another year to waive them. In the early hours of Labor Day, Brooklynites woke up to the sound of steel-pan bands drumming along Flatbush Avenue, as hundreds of thousands of people gathered to celebrate J’ouvert, a roisterous Caribbean festival that commemorates emancipation from slavery. But having been marred by gang violence in recent years, this J’ouvert was markedly different, as The New York Times. The event, which derives its name from a Creole term for “daybreak,” was heavily staffed by the New York City Police Department. Floodlights and security checkpoints were scattered along the parade route, and many revelers were piqued by what they saw as excessive police presence—an overwhelming show of force in response to a comparatively small number of bad actors.

Updated on December 20 at 1:19 p.m. ET As Speaker Paul Ryan brought the gavel down on House passage of a $1.5 trillion tax cut on Tuesday, a raucous cheer went up among the 227 Republicans who voted for it. It was an outburst of celebration, and of defiance—of the economists who disputed their fiscal claims, of the Democrats who assailed their morality, and of the polls suggesting that Republicans had just voted themselves back into the political abyss. The Senate followed suit on a 51-48, party-line vote after midnight on Wednesday.

Because a few provisions were removed at the last minute, the House voted again on the legislation early Wednesday afternoon, sending it to President Trump for his signature. With that final vote, GOP made good on one of its central promises, delivering a steep reduction in taxes for corporations and small business owners, and a more modest one to millions of individuals and families. The law will nearly double the standard deduction and the child tax credit, and in an unexpected digression into health-care policy, it will eliminate the Affordable Care Act’s individual insurance mandate. But if this bill is Trump’s $1.5 trillion Christmas gift to America, it’s a present the public does not appear to want. On Monday morning the conservative-media world woke up to in National Review on the Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin.

The outburst might seem a textbook case of the narcissism of petty differences within the conservative world. Both the author of the denunciation, Charles C. Cooke, and its target, Rubin, are right-leaning skeptics of Donald Trump. What on earth could they be arguing about?

And does it matter? I think it does—a lot. Cooke criticizes Rubin—a friend of mine, but one with whom I’ve from time to time —for taking her opposition to Trump too far. “If Trump likes something, Rubin doesn’t.

If he does something, she opposes it. If his agenda flits into alignment with hers—as anyone’s is wont to do from time to time—she either ignores it, or finds a way to downplay it. The result is farcical and sad.”.

President Trump and congressional Republicans have just taken the same leap of faith that Democrats did when they passed the Affordable Care Act. When then-President Obama and the Democratic House and Senate majorities muscled through the ACA in 2010, the bill represented a big policy victory, but an even bigger political gamble. Though Obamacare fulfilled the party’s decades-long goal of providing (nearly) universal health care, the immediate backlash in the 2010 election helped propel Republicans to the biggest midterm gain in the House for either party since 1938 and gave them a majority in the chamber they still haven’t relinquished. Republicans could face a similar equation of costs and benefits from the tax bill they just passed.

The legislation will advance the preeminent GOP goal of cutting taxes, particularly on high earners and businesses. But it could represent an even greater bet than the ACA because polls show it faces substantially more public opposition. Updated on December 20, 2017, at 2:31 p.m. After winning the Virginia governor’s race and flipping more than a dozen seats in the House of Delegates from red to blue last month, Democrats are hoping for one more reason to celebrate—but that may come down to a random draw.

On Tuesday, a recount appeared to show Democrat Democrat Shelly Simonds defeating Republican incumbent David Yancey by a single vote—11,608 to 11,607. That would have cost Republicans their majority in the House of Delegates, creating a tie for control of the lower chamber of the state legislature. Then Yancey’s campaign decided to contest the recount on the basis that one ballot was not properly counted. And on Wednesday afternoon, a judicial panel awarded an additional vote to Yancey, producing a tie. The decision will first have to be certified by the state’s board of elections, and then both candidates will have to decide whether to pursue further legal appeals. Virginia law stipulates that the state board of elections to determine who wins in the event of a tie.

It has been a tumultuous year for Donald Trump, brimming with legal scandals and high-profile White House departures. But the president should give thanks this holiday season, because he is the recipient of an extraordinary present—an economy gift-wrapped and tied with bow. After a terrible recession and a slow recuperation, America’s economy is in a record-setting mood these days. The Dow has set an all-time high in 2017—once every five days—while the unemployment rate has neared an all-century low. Manufacturing confidence is, and confidence among home builders has matched an. A yuletide glow illuminates even some of the darkest of corners of the economy: After a rough year for traditional retailers, holiday sales are projected to hit their highest level in. Updated on December 20 at 3 p.m.

Before Alex Kozinski, before Harvey Weinstein, before Bill Clinton, there was Clarence Thomas. The 1991 hearings for Thomas’s confirmation to the Supreme Court became the first major moment of national attention on sexual harassment in the workplace, after allegations of past harassment lodged by Anita Hill, a former colleague, were leaked to the press. Thomas was ultimately confirmed, narrowly, but it’s difficult to imagine his nomination surviving the same accusations today. As allegations of harassment and abuse bring down powerful men in media, entertainment, and politics, Thomas has also been curiously immune to fresh scrutiny, despite the multiple, detailed accusations against him.

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