In film schools of the future, professors will teach 'Tammy' as an object lesson in Making Everything Go Wrong.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
'Tammy,' the new movie starring, produced, and co-written by Melissa McCarthy, could be an artifact from some alternate universe: the creatures there resemble Earthlings but have an entirely different and debased idea of what's funny.
The real trouble with film school is that the people teaching are so far out of the industry that they don't give the students an idea of what's happening.
All the lessons you learn in film school from the people you hate are always the ones that are important. The lessons you think are great and thankful for never end up meaning anything to you.
I'm a believer in film school.
If only Tammy knew how much I really cared about her. She has nothing to do with any of this mess.
The thing is, making movies as an actress, you learn so many things. Like when you're making a movie with Quentin Tarantino you're just at the best cinema school ever.
As a master of graphic creation, as teacher, historian, and roving ambassador of comics, Jerry Robinson has ensured that future generations of talented kids will continue to imagine and then put marks on paper.
The biggest mistake in student films is that they are usually cast so badly, with friends and people the directors know. Actually you can cover a lot of bad direction with good acting.
The film-school mantra is that if you don't tell your own stories, nobody will.
It's the thing they don't teach you in film school - what happens after you finish your movie.