Charms
Smiley Face [Color] [Dolby] [DVD]
(DVD) First Look Pictures
Release date: 2008-01-08
Price:
$14.98
$3.28
Customer Reviews:
-
Rare- a woman-centered weed-movie that rocks
For fans of Harold & Kumar, Half-Baked, Cheech and Chong, etc. this film may hold limited appeal. It doesn't star buddy-buddy man-boys, it isn't very sexist or homophobic, and it has humor, references and film technique that occasionally rise above the level of a sit-com. What it also has is an... -
People, This was a great movie!
I can't understand why so many people have panned this movie. Anna Farris did a great job of playing someone who was way stoned. The movie was a fun adventure. Are you all pissed 'cause it isn't Casablanca? It's not supposed to be; it's a day in the life of a stoner. You get it now? I love...
Answers
How do you make a smiley face on your computer? Not the usal simple " :) " I mean like with an actual round circle face around the eyes and mouth right side up. It's like ctrl shift somethin,,or I dunno. Can anyone help? OH and I don't...
☺☺☺☺☺☻☻☻☻☻♥♥♥♥♥Alt+1=☺ Alt+2=☻Alt+3=♥♥♥♥
and you can do a bunch more.
Trailer for the comedy 'Smiley Face' starring Anna Faris, John Krasinski, Jane Lynch, John Cho, and Adam Brody.
Larry and Jeff discuss the use of Smiley Faces when texting
Smiley Face
how do you make this smiley face?
ツ
lol i copy and pasted that one
☺Alt+1
☻Alt+2
♥♥♥ (Alt+3)
Curb Your Enthusiasm Recap (Season 8, Episode 4): “The Smiley Face”
Larry gets a little sunburn in HBO’s Curb Your Enthusiasm
In “The Smiley Face”, Larry’s assistant has been away from work visiting her dying father, leaving Larry rather disorganized. He forgets about lunch with Jeff and accidentally lets a new guy, “Big Dog,” take over a cabinet in the kitchen.
Larry takes Jeff to lunch at a restaurant where his current girlfriend, Heidi, works as the hostess. They talk about how Heidi sends him text messages with smiley faces and how annoying it is. Jeff is worried that once the two have broken up, they won’t be able to return to the restaurant: “you don’t shit where you eat.” Larry says he will return and “eat where I shat.”
During lunch, a guy named Stu arrives and awkwardly hugs both of them. He invites them to dinner. Jeff gets out of it by saying “things haven’t been great with Susie and I.” Larry accepts and plans to bring Heidi. Once Stu has left, Larry is impressed with Jeff’s excuse.
Grumpy Old Fan | Putting a smiley face on the 1970s Superman ...
DC’s superhero comics of the ‘70s and ‘80s will always fascinate me — not just because I grew up on them, but because they represented the first steps past the Silver Age. While the latest members of Marvel’s Bullpen sought to maintain the momentum Jack Kirby, Stan Lee, and Steve Ditko brought to their creations, DC’s writers, artists, and editors took their iconic charges in new directions. We all know what Denny O’Neil and Neil Adams did for Batman, Green Lantern, and Green Arrow. We can see some of what Kirby wanted to do for Superman, and we know what writers like O’Neil, Elliott S! Maggin, Cary Bates, Martin Pasko, and Marv Wolfman ended up doing. Of course, the period brought two revamps (and a revival) for Teen Titans , the first making them into an un-costumed youth group, and the second involving Wolfman and George Pérez….
… and at this point the post threatens to turn into another Tom Goes Down The Old-Comics Rabbit Hole extravaganza. Haven’t we had enough of these indulgences?...
"The Smiley Face" | Curb Your Enthusiasm | TV Club | TV | The A.V. ...
Is now in its eighth season and by now, a little unevenness is to be expected but still; it’s odd how one week, Larry’s petty, privileged squabbles are uproariously entertaining, and the next, they feel just a bit tedious. The other odd thing is that, aside from the occasional “instant classic” episode like “Palestinian Chicken,” there’s little consensus on the show’s more ho-hum installments. (For evidence, look no further than the comments on these recaps, where no one agrees on anything.) So what separates the solid (if not great) episodes from the subpar ones? “The Smiley Face,” I think, sits right on the brink between “solid” and “subpar,” so maybe it can provide a useful example.
In “The Smiley Face,” we’ve got a very familiar Curb trajectory: Larry does something sort-of nice for someone else (or, in this case, for two people: his very attractive temporary girlfriend, Heidi, as well as his cheesy new office neighbor, Dino); they each act unreasonably (Heidi borrows money but doesn’t use it for the stated purpose; Dino takes two cabinets in stead of one); Larry un-diplomatically points out said unreasonable behavior, only to increase his own misery.
...


