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  • Landau's hilariously crotchety Bela Lugosi is as poignant as he is scabrously funny.
  • The New York Times'Stephen Holden calls it " a scabrously risky new comedy ."
  • Spike Lee has grabbed a tiger by the tail in his scabrously risky new comedy, " Bamboozled ."
  • But the unadorned truth is that " Ace " was a scabrously funny movie once you gave in to it.
  • The next morning, they trooped through the crumbling interior, where plaster chunks had fallen scabrously amid colonies of wavy-capped white fungi.
  • Not that this philosophy is serving Roger very well when we meet him in the scabrously entertaining new film " Roger Dodger ."
  • Garry Shandling's dark, insightful and scabrously funny look at the talk-show business _ there's plenty more where they came from.
  • Who would have suspected that Kevin Smith _ the scruffy creator of the scabrously hilarious " Clerks " and the vilely unfunny " Mallrats " _ was a romantic?
  • And now she's co-starring in the best feature at the Austin Film Festival, " Roger Dodger, " a scabrously funny black comedy by newcomer Dylan Kidd.
  • I don't know what's more seductive about " Lost Girls, " author Andrew Pyper's scabrously witty, darkly musical language or the psychological pull of his plot.
  • But what gets lost in complaints about how the show may contribute to the coarsening of our culture is the fact that it takes a knowing, acute and scabrously uproarious look at the very people who are paid boggling gobs of money specifically for coarsening our culture.
  • And there is a scabrously surreal musical number from " Gentlemen Prefer Blondes " in which Jane Russell tries unsuccessfully to get a rise out of a gym full of preening bodybuilders, all of whom are too interested in one another to give her the time of day.
  • He showed up on time, knew his lines, was supportive to people in distress, and had a great sense of humor about himself, as he demonstrated in Billy Wilder's scabrously unpleasant film " Kiss Me, Stupid, " where he played a lecherous, alcoholic singer named Dino.
  • David Hiltbrand's review for " People Magazine " called it a " scabrously funny, mock-reverent look at the life and career of a venerable old actor " and a " marvelous jape . " Michael Hill, in " The Baltimore Sun ", highlighted the film's placement in the distinguished PBS series : " [ The film ] sounds like just the sort of self-important biography of an upper crust British actor you'd expect to find on PBS'Great Performances & [ but ] not only has Great Performances taken the highly unusual step of putting on something funny, it's actually poking fun at itself . " In " The Los Angeles Times ", Ray Loynd called the film " delicious, managing to be droll and pungent at the same time.