I went to go see the most recent adaptation of True Grit on Tuesday, and in the credits I noticed a minor character was played by a boy of American Indian appearance named "Brandon Sanderson." That made reminiscing about Jeff Bridges slapping him around and kicking him to the ground highly entertaining in retrospect.
For those who've seen the film, he was the kid at Bagby's Store who was tormenting the horse or mule at the hitching post before Cogburn intervened.
If we're going to get all symbolic, is WoT the horse he was torturing or are we readers?
For those who've seen the film, he was the kid at Bagby's Store who was tormenting the horse or mule at the hitching post before Cogburn intervened.
If we're going to get all symbolic, is WoT the horse he was torturing or are we readers?
Cannoli
"Sometimes unhinged, sometimes unfair, always entertaining"
- The Crownless
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Deus Vult!
"Sometimes unhinged, sometimes unfair, always entertaining"
- The Crownless
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Deus Vult!
Interesting coincidence in the movie True Grit
27/01/2011 01:06:26 PM
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Bwah hah hah! Poor B.S. He may not be perfect but at least he's finishing the story for us. *NM*
27/01/2011 02:03:46 PM
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