#another country
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luthienne · 2 months ago
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James Baldwin, from Another Country [ID'd]
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vietlad · 10 months ago
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Another Country (1984) dir. Marek Kanievska
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gayfilmgeek · 27 days ago
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Another Country (1984) dir. Marek Kanievska
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filmgifs · 4 months ago
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Another Country (1984) dir. Marek Kanievska
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cary-elwes · 1 year ago
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My favourite movies of Cary Elwes
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oceancentury · 1 year ago
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Rupert Everett and Cary Elwes in Another Country (1984).
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quotespile · 9 months ago
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The occurrence of an event is not the same thing as knowing what it is that one has lived through. Most people had not lived — nor could it, for that matter, be said that they had died — through any of their terrible events. They had simply been stunned by the hammer. They passed their lives thereafter in a kind of limbo of denied and unexamined pain. The great question that faced him this morning was whether or not he had ever, really, been present at his life.
James Baldwin, Another Country
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wewerealwaysthere · 3 months ago
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Some say that only Gay actors should be cast in Gay roles. I don’t agree. That would require an actor to come out of the closet before he’s ready.
For instance, Rupert Everett made “Another Country” where he played gay spy in 1984 but he didn’t come out publically until 1989. Should be have been denied the role or forced to come out earlier?
Cary Elwes is married (to a woman). If he decides to come out as Gay or bisexual later that’s his prerogative.
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numnum-num · 2 months ago
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"Another Country" (1984) with Rupert Everett and Colin Firth
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mo-film · 6 months ago
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Another Country (1984)
dir. Marek Kanievska
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nuwandassaxophone · 1 year ago
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just leaving these pictures here for my future self to find them and be grateful cause i was so prudent and caring.
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celluloidrainbow · 1 year ago
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ANOTHER COUNTRY (1984) dir. Marek Kanievska Elderly former soviet spy Guy Burgess is being interviewed by an American journalist about how his life ended up on the path it did. In relaying his story, he focuses on the transition into his senior year at a prestigious boys school in Britain in the 1930s, his desire to climb the student hierarchy, his friendships, his first love, and his developing life beliefs. Based on the play by Julian Mitchell. (link in title)
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reverendsrevenge · 1 year ago
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what genre of movie is this
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holisticdirkmuppet · 4 months ago
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ok i'm not really active in the marauders fandom but i just watched another country (1984) on a whim and THIS is my remus lupin and james potter
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cary-elwes · 8 months ago
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HAPPY PRIDE FROM Elwesblr 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈
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overthegardenwirtt · 2 months ago
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top ten books I read this year, ranked:
10. And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie (pub 1939)
Honestly this wasn't the most mind-blowing or memorable book, but it was my first Christie and my introduction to this genre. It got me out of a slump too which was great. Christie's style is so very british but I thoroughly enjoyed this as my introduction to this kind of mystery, and I found the reveal to be surprising and well done! This book definitely made me want to pick up more Agatha Christie in the future, but I'm not in any particular hurry to do so.
9. Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood (pub 1939)
This was actually my most recent read. I picked up this book knowing that it was the inspiration behind the musical (and film) Cabaret. This book feels much more of a piece of creative nonfiction/memoir than a novel, but it tells different stories in vignettes of people in Berlin in the 1930s. Between dancers and artists like Sally Bowles, queer people in Berlin, and Jewish people living through the rise of the Nazi party, these true stories were incredibly touching and really made me think about the way we talk about fascism today. The modern way in which people spoke in Weimer Germany, and the extent to which they knew what was going on in Germany at this time and still just let the Nazi takeover happen, is terrifying and all too real, and I am glad this book exists to highlight that.
8. Go Tell it on the Mountain by James Baldwin (pub 1953)
My first Baldwin of the year and third Baldwin book overall. I really enjoyed this book, as it was an exploration of a Black family in Harlem, and each family members' relationship with one another and with God. I loved the way the story was told, through flashbacks and memories of each character as they sat to pray in a church. Each story was both incredibly humanizing and devastating, and the ending was surprisingly somewhat hopeful.
7. Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice (pub 1976)
I read this after the second season of the amc show aired. Honestly, this book was so much better than I was expecting it to be, given what I know about where Anne Rice takes the series in the future. In this novel, the prose is so beautiful and breathtaking. Anne Rice also delves into such deep and thought-provoking discussions about God and religion, goodness and evil and monstrousness, through her characters and their philosophies, and how they deal with their vampirism. I fully feel that this book deserves to be called the modern Frankenstein.
6. Babel by RF Kuang (pub 2022)
The youngest book on here by far. I am often weary of the trendy new books and the 'booktok' books, especially those that seem to be fulfilling some kind of aesthetic. So, my expectations going into this weren't the highest, I was expecting, as is true with most 'dark academia' books, a rip-off of The Secret History. However, I was so pleasantly surprised by this book! This book is an anti-colonialist response to The Secret History and the like, and explores how academia always serves the institutions in power, and how specifically British academia has driven, and continues to drive, imperialism. This book was also very science-fictiony, and completely deserves its Nebula award. The magic system in this book is so interesting and novel to me, and i truly think Kuang is a genius. Also, I personally loved the footnotes. It's so clear how much work and research went into this book, and it adds so much to the quality of the book.
5. Animal Farm by George Orwell (pub 1945)
This was technically a re-read, since I read Animal Farm with my mom in elementary school and didn't understand it at all. So, I finally got back around to reading this and it was great. Just so perfectly told, the story of revolt from one authoritarian regime and the decline into another, arguably worse regime. It was also incredibly heartbreaking, and made even more so by making the characters farm animals. It is truly a perfect book and I know it sounds cliche, but everyone should read it. George Orwell is well-known for a reason.
4. Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut (pub 1969)
This one was unexpected! I have owned Slaughterhouse-Five for years, I think it has been sitting on by bookshelf for over five years untouched. I finally got around to reading it a few months ago and it was incredible. Kurt Vonnegut has a witty and to-the-point writing style that was difficult to get used to at first, but I definitely believe it worked in this book's favor. The childlike, simple way of writing and speaking, combined with the grim topic of WWII and PTSD, really highlight the sadness of Kurt Vonnegut's situation and how young he, and Billy Pilgrim, and all these soldiers really were. I absolutely loved the sci-fi interludes as well. It worked both creatively, to provide an allegory for war and PTSD, and literally to show just how dissociative Billy Pilgrim would get after the war. This book left me feeling incredibly sad, and I know that was just the point.
3. The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K Le Guin (pub 1969)
And the book that beat Slaughterhouse-Five for both the Hugo and the Nebula! This book is not one that I would typically read, but I am so glad that I did. It is considered a seminal work of feminist science fiction, and tells the story of a human man named Genly who goes to a planet where all the people are genderless. It is a beautiful story of finding love and understanding with other people, and learning that there are strengths in our differences, and those differences can bring us together. This is a truly great novel, and left me feeling the way the protagonist felt, having gained a new empathy and love for human beings, no matter how different we may be.
2. Another Country by James Baldwin (pub 1962)
My fourth and final James Baldwin novel to date. I absolutely loved this book. The writing style, the beautiful vibes, and the beautiful and devastating story of a group of friends in Greenwich Village, New York was so compelling. This was one of those books that I could not just put away after I finished it. I had to read and reread the book, go over it in my mind for a while afterwards. This book explores Black masculinity and Black womanhood in America, it explores queerness, and specifically Black queerness during this time, and it explores the complicated dynamics between a multiracial group of friends in 1960s America. It feels so shockingly ahead of its time.
Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell (pub 1949)
yeah yeah, this is cliche, but it's so well-known, and so spoken about, for a good reason. This book, outside of its talk about authoritarianism, was actually just a thoroughly enjoyable and effective work of psychological horror. The way that language and history can shape our current really was so brilliantly done that it had me questioning whether O'Brien was telling the truth to Winston at times. I feel like this is a controversial opinion, but I felt that many of the characters, including Winston, Julia, Syme, and even O'Brien to a lesser extent, were humanized in a way that I felt terrible for these characters. This book had such incredible world-building that I would have been okay with reading 300 full pages of Winston's day-to-day life, that's how interested I was in this horrifying world Orwell created. However, the plot was equally as compelling! I truly felt like I was there with Winston through every step of his journey, and that made this novel feel so sickeningly horrific, and so effective.
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