#Ellen Green
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
theoscarsproject · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Little Shop of Horrors (1986). A nerdy florist finds his chance for success and romance with the help of a giant man-eating plant who demands to be fed.
I can't believe I'd never seen this before? God, it's so much fun, with amazing puppetry, musical numbers and energy. It's high camp in every sense of the phrase, and also just the best time? Love it. 9/10.
19 notes · View notes
80smovies · 1 year ago
Photo
Tumblr media
28 notes · View notes
abs0luteb4stard · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
W A T C H I N G
(DIRECTOR'S CUT)
2 notes · View notes
onenakedfarmer · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Currently Playing
PUSHING DAISIES Original Television Soundtrack
Jim Dooley Kristin Chenoweth Ellen Green
2 notes · View notes
glimeres · 1 year ago
Text
youtube
MDA Telethon 1983 - Ellen Greene and Lee Wilkof perform Suddenly Seymour from the musical Little Shop of Horrors
5 notes · View notes
adamwatchesmovies · 1 year ago
Text
Bless the Child (2000)
Tumblr media
While I didn't enjoy this film, that doesn't mean you won't. No matter what I say, the people involved in this project did it: they actually made a movie. That's something to be applauded. With that established...
Although Bless the Child initially appears to be yet another one of those “bad seed” Omen knock-offs, it’s trying something different. The results are often unintentionally silly, the film is never even remotely frightening and large chunks of it are badly written but at least it gets some points for originality.
Maggie O’Connor (Kim Basinger) adopts her newborn niece, Cody (Holliston Coleman) after she is abandoned by her mother (Angela Battis). At six, Cody displays severe autism and also the miraculous ability to heal others with a touch. Meanwhile, a cult has begun kidnapping and killing children in ritual murders. When former priest-turned-FBI agent John Travis (Jimmy Smits) realizes all the victims share a birthday with Cody, he believes the girl is in danger.
I tried to think of a way this story could work. Maybe if we stripped away all of the supernatural stuff and Maggie was an ultra-religious woman whose beliefs verged on the obsessive, then this story might work. Although he isn’t introduced immediately, the film’s villain is a former celebrity turned religious guru and addiction therapist, Eric (Rufus Sewell). He shows up out of nowhere one day with Cody’s mother as his new wife, demanding custody of the kid. If this was a smart movie, his malice would be subtle or up for interpretation. The conflict might come from Maggie desperately trying to convince everyone that her “daughter” is in danger. I know, I know. At this point, we’re watching a completely different movie. I tried. The fact is, this plot just doesn’t work. At all.
Let’s begin with the villain, Eric. He’s a hardcore Satanist whose followers (basically thinly-veiled stand-ins for Scientologists) have been going around, looking for a child born on a specific date in one of the biggest cities in the world. They've butchered five kids and still, nothing. Their mission? Convince Cody that God is no good and that she should join their club instead. If they do it before “the Black Easter”… something bad will happen. The problem with this scenario is that we have a grown man hamming it up like there’s no tomorrow trying to play head games with a six-year-old who can barely string together proper sentences… and failing. I won’t say what the film’s ending is like (this is, in theory, a horror movie so it could go either way) but seeing him fumble even one attempt to turn Cody makes him seem completely ineffective. You can’t take any of this story seriously.
Bless the Child is packed full of spooky shots of gargoyles leering at our heroine and moments that should petrify you in terror but instead make you wonder what dimension this story is set in. This is the kind of movie where someone will get decapitated and their severed head will get placed back on the body just so their friend can touch gasp in horror as the noggin tumbles to the ground at the exact right time. The cult is already looking pretty sad considering when you realize they put off finding the child and are now running out of time - they have less than a week before the big day - but their methods of silencing the heroes aren’t just ineffective, they’re so poorly thought-out no one would attempt them.
As soon as we meet FBI agent Travis, it should become obvious to everyone watching that this is a stinker. If you hold onto hope, just wait until the demonic visions and instances of divine intervention. Director Chuck Russell has never heard the word “subtle”. Or maybe it just doesn’t exist in German. I mean, I know Eric is the leader of a cult that kidnaps children so they can chop them into pieces and use their blood to write strange symbols on walls but he’s so obviously evil it’s hard to believe a body of evidence has to be built against him. With his wild-looking eyes and slimy demeanor, it would take exactly zero seconds for any jury to return with a guilty verdict - regardless of what crime he’d be accused of.
I obtained Bless the Child as part of a two-pack with Jade, a lame 1995 sex thriller that may be the better of the two, which is saying something. A horror film doesn’t have to generate screams to be good but it doesn't hurt. Bless the Child never even approaches the realm of terror; it’s only good for some unintentional laughs and even then, not many. (On DVD, April 14, 2020)
Tumblr media
1 note · View note
bebx · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Eva Green as Isabelle in The Dreamers (2003) † Venus de Milo (130 BC) by Alexandros of Antioch
Lily-Rose Depp as Ellen Hutter in Nosferatu (2024) † Somnambulant (1878) by Maxmilián Pirner
2K notes · View notes
artist-ellen · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Helaena Targaryen
From what I gather from the show and the wiki's Helaena is one of the characters that fate just loves to sucker punch. My understanding is that she is sort of like a Cassandra parallel. Gifted with some prophecy, doomed in that all her warnings are ignored. So I feel for her quite a bit and wanted to capture that.... "madness" in futility? in her costume design. Her gown closely matches the style of her mother, but the colors are all washed out and almost sickly-looking. Her hair is unbound and unadorned. I suppose she should feel almost like a living ghost, or a Crimson Peak reference.
I am the artist! Do not post without permission & credit! Thank you! Come visit me over on: instagram, tiktok or check out my coloring book available now \ („• ֊ •„) /
https://linktr.ee/ellen.artistic
859 notes · View notes
sarahjaneadventures · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
on the 23rd day of the month of september… (movie edition) (posted a day late anyway)
223 notes · View notes
drrav3nb · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
GET TO KNOW ME MEME: favourite lost/lesser known ships [5/10] - Ellen Ripley & Dwanye Hicks (Aliens)
Hicks I'm not going to end up like those others. You'll take care of it won't you? If it comes to that...I'll do us both. Listen, let's just make sure it doesn't come to that. Alright? Alright.
352 notes · View notes
haveyouseenthismovie-poll · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
385 notes · View notes
evaggreendaily · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
EVA GREEN. photographed by Ellen Von Unwerth for Vogue Greece.
287 notes · View notes
mademoiselle-is-a-fairy · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Eva Green photographed by Ellen von Unwerth for Vogue Greece November 2023
460 notes · View notes
80smovies · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
139 notes · View notes
driveintheaterofthemind · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Little Shop Of Horrors
Art by Suspiria Vilchez
157 notes · View notes
marvelsgirl616 · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Little Shop of Horrors <3 | Cinefantastique Vol. 17 No. 5 (September 1987)
65 notes · View notes