All are welcome to join in and contribute here, so long as edits are constructive, discussions are positive, and both are relevant to the film industry.
Aspiring politicians and bloggers majorly from the ODM political faction also attended the flashy wedding. Our goal is to collaborate with other fans in order to build a reliable, accurate resource with as much detailed information as possible about current movies, as well as those of the past and those that are planned or in production. If nothing else watch for Chopra's performance, which is both the cutest and creepiest example of a child actor latching to the material I have ever seen. Babu Owino, Bobi Wine, Other Celebrities Who Attended Silas Jakakimbas Flashy Wedding. While this film received mixed reviews, I would recommend it to anyone who likes dark, off-color comedies. You learn about the power of words, the competition involved in spelling bees, and how piteous hateful people truly are. This is a troubled little gem of a film, but it is duly enjoyable and educational. In the ending scenes I felt something for Guy Trilby, though Bateman did a great job of making him the least likable character of the entire film. The question isn't whether this goes too far, or course, but if it does a good job of showing character development and is genuinely funny and it is and does. I can only imagine what that means, since there's already course language, feces being plopped on a hotel clerk's desk, and a child meeting his first prostitute. Reportedly Bateman and Dodge worked on the screenplay extensively because it sometimes went too far. Though the dark humor is great, occasionally it feels too forced. Between his wide, glassy eyed stare, his squeaky, cute voice, and his adept delivery of each punchline, he is the perfect comedic sidekick to Bateman's antics. The premise is obviously great for laughs, but the real star of the film is sweet little Rohan Chand as Chaitanya Chopra, a precocious nine year old who just wants to be a friend to this middle aged man, who he is competing against.
He says horrible things to his reporter comrade Jenny (Hahn), other contestants (who are all children), women, passerby, and even the head of the spelling bee he is competing in. It's easy to see why when you meet the lead character, Guy, who is the ultimate definition of a curmudgeon. The script comes from Andrew Dodge, and was featured on the Hollywood Blacklist of 2011. Since Bateman's fame has grown with the cult following of "Arrested Development", and his turns in commercially viable faire like "Horrible Bosses" and "Couples Retreat." Still, he's not the one you go to, to head a giant comedy blockbuster like you would with Rogen, Hill, or the gals from "Bridesmaids." Lately he has been making films that are genuinely dark and grotesque, and sometimes they have a feeling of being an indie without actually being one. Bateman's directorial debut didn't have too much fanfare attached, but that's been the case for the comedic actor, lately.