Here are some photos of Sally Field talking while Naomi Watts thinks about how she’s going to word her text message to Nicole Kidman about Sally Field talking.
Here are some photos of Sally Field talking while Marion Cotillard sings “la Marseillaise” in her head.
I was trying to figure out a cool way to use the new photo layout and decided on showing the reactions to Mrs. Doubtfire’s unmasking during the classic (“classic”) scene at Bridges Restaurant and this is officially the stupidest thing I’ve ever posted.
- Still upset that Soapdish is being remade.
- Still think Sally Field should do more comedy.
THIS. ALL THE TIME.
What it feels like for a girl.
(Maybe I’ll stop tumbling about Eye for an Eye soon. Maybe I won’t. Sorry. No I’m not.)
Beverly D’Angelo smoking and drinking wine in some kind of Tron meets Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead blazer makes every awful movie you forgot you used to watch on USA all the time in the early 2000’s so much better.
This movie rules.
Look at her, freaking out as her daughter is being murdered on the phone - perfectly unaware of how horrible, yet entirely engaging, the thriller she’s in is.
I love detestable mid-90s revenge dramas. Roger Ebert gave Eye For An Eye one star. I give it “Sally Field kills Kiefer Sutherland” and that’s not even a number of stars.
Sometimes I catch myself thinking about Punchline, the 1988 dramedy starring Sally Field and Tom Hanks as two comedians who form a platonic relationship based on their shared interest in stand-up. Field is a stay at home mother of two - one of whom is Donna Joe Tanner - who’s bored with her life, and Hanks is a brilliant med student who prefers comedy to following in his father’s M.D. footsteps. See? That’s hilarious, but you’ll laugh more at Hanks having some kind of pseudo-breakdown in the rain than watching either of them telling jokes on stage. Punchline is funny for many reasons, but none of them are related to stand up comedy.
That being said, add to your queue.






