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" ... If you think that’s nitpicky, blame Visual Concepts for their stellar halftime show in NFL 2K5. That was two console generations ago, but no other sports game has been able to nail the halftime show quite like that. ... "
" ... LF: You have to keep in mind, at this point we were operating in the standard agreement structure. We’re talking about little nitpicky things: we want to send beer to our taprooms without going through you. Or, there’s this thing called a “marketing budget.” Basically, it’s like a dollar or two a case. We said we want that money to go into a bank account that we controlled because our branding wasn’t going to be posters; we wanted to buy experimental ingredients or fly in a brewer. That’s our marketing. That’s what we agreed on, but when they sent the contract back, it was right back to boilerplate. It was everything a distributor would want for every little leverage. I was like, screw you guys. I’ll self distribute it. ... "
" ... The big line between critics and audience tends to be drawn between quality and entertainment, with critics proving unforgivable nitpicky, and audiences generally being receptive to terrible-yet-entertaining movies. ... "
" ... This disconcerting subtext rears its ugly head in the third act when our otherwise perfect love interest takes issue with the number of sexual partners that Amy has had. That this allegedly trail blazingly feminist picture is theoretically less progressive about slut-shaming than something like What's Your Number? (where Chris Evans's male lead didn't care one bit about how many people Ana Faris had slept with) is a little disappointing, but admittedly not remotely fatal (it's one line of dialogue during an argument). Now to be fair, Trainwreck both benefits from and is harmed by the notion that there are painfully few female-centric mainstream comedies of this nature in the marketplace right now. It is wholly possibly that I wouldn't be as nitpicky in terms of the film's moral politics if it were merely one of half a dozen such female-centric romantic comedies coming down the pike in a given year. ... "