#ken sagoes
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creepynostalgy · 4 months ago
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Patricia Arquette in A Nightmare On Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)
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helena-bottom-farter · 2 years ago
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duranduratulsa · 4 months ago
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Up next on my 40th Anniversary Freddy Krueger movie 🎬 🎞 🎥 🎦 📽 marathon...The Making Of A Nightmare On Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988) on classic DVD 📀! #movie #movies #horror #documentary #anightmareonelmstreet #anightmareonelmstreet4 #ANightmareOnElmStreet4TheDreamMaster #themakingofanightmareonelmstreet4thedreammaster #themakingofanightmareonelmstreet #themakingofanightmare #wescraven #RIPWesCraven #freddy #freddykrueger #robertenglund #heatherlangenkamp #lisawilcox #RennyHarlin #BrookeTheiss #racheltalalay #screamingmadgeorge #drewcummings #howardberger #dvd #80s #elmstreet40
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slimewalk · 1 year ago
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therealmrpositive · 2 years ago
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Hollywood and Elm Part 3 - A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988)
in today’s review, I put my learned experience to the test. as I attempt a #positive review of the 1988 sequel The Dream Master #LisaWilcox #DannyHassel #RobertEnglund #TuesdayKnight #BrookeTheiss #KenSagoes #RodneyEastman #AndrasJones #NicholasMele
Our imagination can be our own worst enemy sometimes, we need reassurance, even in the face of insurmountable evidence. Even then, all our collected experiences may go out of the window, in the face of our deepest fears. In 1988, after ending with the ultimate sacrifice, the survivors begin to readjust to normal lives, only releasing that their nightmares were just beginning, unless they can…
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fashionbooksmilano · 9 months ago
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Africa in Fashion
Luxury, Craft and Textile Heritage
Ken Kweku Nimo, Foreword by Deola Sagoe
Lawrence King, London 2022, 200 pages, 19x26cm, ISBN 978 1913 94 7958
euro 46,00
email if you want to buy [email protected]
Africa in Fashion explores the kaleidoscope of craft cultures that have shaped African fashion for centuries and captures the intriguing stories of contemporary and avant-garde African brands. Part One looks at Africa's rich cultural heritage and place in the network of global fashion. The first chapter retells the history of African fashion, exploring Africa's textile traditions, artisanship and role as a global resource. The second chapter presents a New Africa and examines the promise and potential of Africa's markets, while challenging stereotypes and the concept of European hegemony particularly in the realm of luxury fashion. It also spotlights Africa's unique position as the global industry shifts towards a more sustainable future. Part Two ushers the reader into the spectacular world of African fashion today. It showcases a carefully curated set of the continent's most dynamic brands and, through interviews with prominent and inspiring designers, offers rare insight into their ethos and design practice. Covering unisex fashion, menswear, womenswear, accessories and jewelry the brands are each purposefully selected to contribute uniquely to the mosaic of Africa evolving creative landscape.
10/06/24
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goat-yells-at-everything · 1 year ago
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Hey! I resent that Black History Month horror movie tweet. How could you forget Childs from The Thing? XD
Thats, technically, debatable. Its theorized that he was The Thing all along so debatable if he "survived".
But I will say that the tweet you're talking about was still wrong. Ken Sagoes played Roland Kinkaid in Nightmare on Elm Street: Dream Warriors, though he did die in the next installment. The first to truly survive a movie but did die in the next one.
Mario Van Peebles was eaten in the original cut of Jaws: The Revenge but survived in later cuts. Technically the first to survive in perpetuity but only in later cuts of the movie.
John Billingslea who played Moss Woodley in The Blob remake survived. The first to survive in perpetuity in the original cut but not an original property.
Danny Glover survived in Predator 2. The first to survive in perpetuity in an original property but in a sequel.
Brandon Adams played Poindexter Williams in The People Under the Stairs. This makes him the first to survive in perpetuity in an original property in the original film.
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watching-pictures-move · 1 year ago
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Movie Review | A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (Harlin, 1988)
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It's been a while since I've seen the third movie, and when we were introduced to three characters who were supposed to have returned, I felt like I was being gaslit. These are the characters I know and love? Uh, sure, whatever you say, movie. Of course, once I realized that Patricia Arquette had been recast with Tuesday Knight, things started to click. Of course, I didn’t remember Ken Sagoes or Rodney Eastman at all, but whatever, the relationship between them wasn’t hard to grasp. I do think this highlights a problem with a lot of slashers, in that the characters are not always three dimensional, but I think the principals here have at least two dimensions. For example:
Girl from the last one who has psychic powers
Girl with crappy father and cool brother (who inherits psychic powers)
Guy who does martial arts and has a sister (also father)
Guy who is loud and has a dog
Other guy who returns from the last one
Girl with big hair who likes Dynasty
Girl who is nerdy and has asthma
Hunky guy
Okay, some of those were a dimension short, and some have more dimensions. And I’m probably forgetting some people as well. If you put enough of them together, you get a D20 which you can roll to beat Freddy once and for all. Anyway, I think it’s less of an issue here because the characters are well acted and likable (except the comically unsympathetic adults), and most refreshingly, seem to actually like each other. There’s none of the bullying and jocks vs. nerds conflicts other slashers sometimes throw in to spruce things up. The friendship of the characters sells the emotional stakes as they’re killed off one by one, which also parallels the heroine’s character arc as she internalizes each death.
At this point the series has mostly stopped being scary, and this is definitely adhering to the formula locked in by the last one, in that the extravagance and imagination of the dream sequences are the raison d’etre of the movie rather than treating them as medium for actual horror. (I should note that the weightlifting cockroach death did make me squirm, as it’s gorier and more painful looking than the others on top of my phobia of creepy crawlies.) I understand this is known as the most MTV influenced of the series, and that’s certainly evident in the soundtrack, with choice tracks by Sinhead O’Connor, Blondie, the Divinyls, even a song by Tuesday Knight and an end credits rap by the Fat Boys, which summarizes the essence of the movie better than I could. (The best I could come up with is “My name’s Freddy Krueger, and I’m here to say, that killing people in their dreams, is A-okay.”) And this is directed by Renny Harlin, who throws the full force of his visual style into the dream sequences, assaulting you with lavish special effects and production design, all manner of coloured lighting, whooshing camera moves, and some of what video games call particle effects to make them pop.
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brody75 · 3 years ago
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A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)
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horrorwaveofgrain00000 · 2 years ago
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beautifilms · 3 years ago
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A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987) dir. Chuck Russell
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80smovies · 3 years ago
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duranduratulsa · 8 months ago
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Up next on my 80's Fest Movie 🎬 🎞 🎥 marathon...A Nightmare On Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988) on glorious vintage Media Home Entertainment VHS 📼! #movies #Movie #horror #anightmareonelmstreet #anightmareonelmstreet4 #ANightmareOnElmStreet4TheDreamMaster #wescraven #RIPWesCraven #freddy #freddykrueger #robertenglund #Tuesdayknight #rodneyeastman #kensagoes #lisawilcox #ANDRASJONES #brookebundy #BrookeTheiss #toyenewkirk #mickeyyablans #robertshaye #nicholasmele #RennyHarlin #racheltalalay #linneaquigley #jefflevine #vintage #VHS #mediahomeentertainment #80s #80sfest #durandurantulsas6thannual80sfest
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therealmrpositive · 2 years ago
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Hollywood and Elm Part 2 - A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)
In today’s review, I find your childhood dreams can shape your destiny. As I attempt a #positive review of the sequel to A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors #HeatherLangenkamp #CraigWasson #PatriciaArquette #RobertEnglund #KenSagoes #RodneyEastman
The fears and traumas of our past can affect us in many ways: scars carry over, and they can shape us, and inspire us to do better. In some sequels, this can be more than literal, as familiar characters return with the knowledge of their past stories now readily available. In 1987, one Elm Street resident got to impart their learned wisdom as they went up against Freddy Krueger for the final…
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brokehorrorfan · 4 years ago
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Horror Noire: A History of Black Horror will be released on Blu-ray and DVD on February 2 via RLJE Films. The 2019 documentary is streaming on Shudder. Gary Pullin designed the cover art.
It features interviews with Jordan Peele, Tony Todd, Keith David, Rachel True, Ken Foree, Rusty Cundieff, Ernest Dickerson, Loretta Devine, William Crain, Miguel A. Núñez Jr., Kelly Jo Minter, Ken Sagoes, Richard Lawson, Paula Jai Parker, and more.
Based on Dr. Robin R. Means Coleman’s 2011 book, the film is directed by Xavier Burgin and written by Ashlee Blackwell and Danielle Burrows. Fangoria editor-in-chief Phil Nobile Jr. executive produces.
No special features are listed. Check out the trailer below.
youtube
Horror Noire takes a critical look at a century of genre films that by turns utilized, caricatured, exploited, sidelined, and embraced both black filmmakers and black audiences.
Pre-order Horror Noire on Blu-ray or DVD from Amazon.
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whoreforhorrorsblog · 3 years ago
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Literally the best day ever!!! I got to meet Ken Sagoes and he was so nice
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