Interest: Shows / Top chef Chat

This page shows everyone interested in Top chef Chat. At WireClub you can find other people with similar interests, sharing interests is a fun way to meet new people, not just about Top chef but anything else!

People Interested in Top chef

Whyntagain from Illinois - United States

WhyntagainWhy not again?

,   JolietIllinois - United States US Chat

Why not get out there and try again?


ladyfromstl23 from Missouri - United States

ladyfromstl23I'm Still Waiting

,   St.louisMissouri - United States US Chat

What I'm looking for a good man that's ready to settle down and knows what he wants out of life, about me i'm 25 yrs single with 2 kids, dont have drama in my life live alone. so if you wanna know more i'll tell you later


oreo85 from New Jersey - United States

oreo85the sweetest thing

,   LindenNew Jersey - United States US Chat

im have a good sense of humor. I like to enjoy myself. I love all kinds of music. Im sweet and down to earth person.


PrincessFuSkeeto from Michigan - United States

PrincessFuSkeetoLonely:(

,   CantonMichigan - United States US Chat

Hi. I'm Amanda (Mandie) Looking For Someone To Make Me Feel Special Again...Not Feeling It Anymore...


Esa_Rosa_Linda from Florida - United States

Esa_Rosa_LindaThat Sweet~N~Sexy Thick Mami

,   North MiamiFlorida - United States US Chat

I'm not your average Girl, I may look sweet, and I am, but thats not there is to me. But like your average girl, I wanna Love and Be Loved.


Page: 1234Next >
 

Forum Topics (0)

No Messages


Events

No Events

More

A rich portrait of life in New York in the wake of disaster, The Great New Wonderful offers a kind of compassion rare in film. Five storylines intertwine--including competitive pastry chefs (Maggie Gyllenhaal, Secretary, and Edie Falco, The Sopranos), an elderly woman (Olympia Dukakis, Moonstruck) realizing she can't stand her lumpish husband, and a middle-class parents (Judy Greer, Arrested Development, and Tom McCarthy, Syriana) coping with their increasingly sociopathic child--all of them thick with brilliantly observed social tension. As a therapist (Tony Shalhoub, Big Night) questions a patient (Jim Gaffigan), it's ambiguous whether he's diagnosing the patient's anger or actually causing it. The Great New Wonderful makes compelling drama out of the subtle discords of commonplace life, the kind of frustration and hostility that rises up constantly but has to be tamped back down in order to get through the day--but in the aftermath of a catastrophe like 9/11, the smallest things become unbearable. The Great New Wonderful doesn't rise to the scope of Robert Altman's best work (like Nashville), but it successfully avoids the forced pretensions of other ensemble pieces like Magnolia. Subtlety is too often invoked to excuse a lack of substance, but this movie genuinely makes small nuances tangible and compelling. --Bret Fetzer

 More