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#monster buster club john
bubblybumblebee1 · 1 year
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2nd Monster Buster Club art dump
I should've taken the pic before my coloring attempts but it is what it is
This is also the 1st time I've drawn Mark, John or any aliens from the show too
Danny and Chris are my faves
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herobrilne · 6 months
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its spring baybe, heres chris' spring fit!! featuring. john :>
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whumpsday · 1 year
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i'm gonna talk about my very first ocs because i feel like they deserve it :) when i was a kid i didn't quite have the imagination yet to create whole worlds, so my ocs were often inserts into existing things i was into.
this is a very long post with a lot of useless personal information, and is more a diary entry than anything.
i had many more ocs than what's listed here, but i can't remember most of them, so here are just the ones i remember.
childhood:
at 7, the very first oc i can ever remember making was Maya, a pokemon oc. she was the fourth member of team rocket in the anime canon, and could shapeshift between being a human and a celebi. i remember her being "older" but that could mean anything from a middle schooler to an adult.
also pokemon-related but not quite an oc, i had a lot of fakemon around that time. the only one i remember was a raccoon-like one named Tyco.
at 9, soon after was Tanya, a fairly oddparents oc. she was a little girl who was friends with the main character.
at 10, i really got into oc-making, and the next bunch are all from when i was about 10.
i started getting into "somewhat whumpier" things and made my first "edgy" oc, Deepheart, for warrior cats. she was a black cat with purple eyes and a tragic backstory i can't remember, who eventually got with stormfur.
i was very into danny phantom and continued my tragic backstory experiments with Chelsea. she was a ghost and the younger sister of ember (she was basically an ember recolor) who died in the same fire. she also had fire+music powers, but a polar opposite personality to ember (she was nice).
i can't remember the specifics or names of the ocs i made for a bunch of these, but i also made oc-inserts for the following around this time:
total drama island - multiple ocs, i think i had a whole fancast, which was the closest i got around this time to making an original story.
monster buster club - character existed to be friends with chris, who was my favorite. she was a monster in disguise or something of that nature.
percy jackson - i definitely had one and i was REALLY into it, but can't even remember what god she was a daughter of.
in middle school as i entered early teenhood, i started reading YA books. sadly, my taste was not that great.
preteen:
at 12, i made Chelsea (reused the name from the danny phantom oc because i just rly liked the name), a twilight oc. she was the first vampire oc i ever made, so i guess she was the start of All This. she was the youngest cullen at 14 years old (i do not remember if this was a chronological age or just a physical age and i think i was too oblivious to realize just how significant that difference was), and had a Forbidden Romance with seth, the werewolf kid.
at 13, i realized i could have ocs that were boys! a fantastic revelation! technically i already had ones from the total drama fanseason i had in my head but they were all side characters. made my first main guy, Oliver, a scott pilgrim oc and ramona's 8th ex-boyfriend.
i made a LOT of other ocs for YA books in middle school, but i don't remember much about the others.
teenhood - homestuck:
at 15, i got into homestuck, and that was when things got out of control.
i started with a literal self-insert with my birthname, who eventually got split into 2 alt-timeline versions of herself (i was a girl at the time), one who went with dave and rose during the timeskip and one who went with john and jade during the timeskip. when they met back up, they fell in love and got together, which i think might be the truest expression of self-love i've ever had.
but it didn't end there. i got really into making fantrolls, and made TONS of them. i don't remember their names very well (esp bc they were all made up alien names) but i remember my favorites: a bronzeblood with an eyepatch whose name started with a P, and a violetblood whose name started with an I.
the violetblood was probably my first true whumpee. while violetbloods are normally amphibious, he was born with lungs that don't work, and was forced to remain underwater at all times since he could only use his gills. when sgrub caused the apocalypse, he had a little tank he would stay in on the ship. and when gamzee started killing everyone, he couldn't get away.
this was also where i branched out into creating original characters not tied to an existing IP!!! FINALLY!!! it all started with fantrolls. i made two more significant sets of fantrolls: one centering around an abnormally overpowered purpleblood who had his memory erased and used to be a cruel whumper-type (and a set of supporting characters to go with him), and one centering around a purpleblood who'd been tortured and the lowblood who acted as his caretaker. you can tell i was very much getting into whump at this point, despite not yet knowing the term.
i eventually decided that homestuck's lore was not equipped to carry the stories i wanted to tell for those two, and split them each off into original universes. i am not into homestuck anymore and it's really a relic of its time, but it impacted me quite a lot creatively.
teenhood - original stories:
the amnesia guy came to be named Nova, my first wholly-original character. he existed in a magic/fantasy type universe, and was the most powerful magic-user in his world. he'd previously been extremely evil and caused untold carnage, countless people tortured to death. the heroes, after realizing they could not stop him, decided to try to wipe his memory instead. this did, in fact, work. Nova became a character saddled by EXTREME ANGST about his past wrongs. to make it worse, his pre-memory-wipe evil self eventually started to slowly come back as a separate entity in his mind, essentially haunting him. i daydreamed about Nova for a long, long time, and occasionally still do.
the whumpee-caretaker duo became Dwar and Clobu, members of an original alien species i came up with. unlike Nova's story, which became so divorced from his fantroll beginnings that his origin was basically unrecognizable, this one remained heavily homestuck-inspired. the aliens here were grouped/inspired by the layers of the atmosphere, rather than the signs of the zodiac. Dwar (the whumpee) had skin that looked like the night sky, dark blue with stars all over, while Clobu (the caretaker) looked like a cloudy day. they were pretty :) these guys are a very very early inspiration for the Kane & Jim dynamic.
i also started making non-IP-related ocs without "converting" them around this time. in particular, i became very interested in demons.
first i made Charlie, a teenage demon raised by humans who just wanted to be A Normal Kid. he played the guitar and used tumblr and was all in all very nonthreatening and normal. he was a bit boring.
at about 16, i later made Nicky, a "redo" of the Charlie concept but with more pizzazz. his mother had brought him on a hunt (for humans to kill and eat) while he was an infant, and she was killed by a demon hunter. the hunter couldn't bring herself to kill the baby, so she took him in and raised him instead. Nicky's story is very very long, because he is the only oc from my childhood i still regularly daydream about to this day, and i have been building him up for a decade. some highlights:
accidentally burns his adoptive mom when he's a little boy who's just gotten his fire powers, and it's what makes him realize he never wants to hurt people. she forever has a scar shaped like his tiny little 5-year-old hand.
demons generally need to eat human flesh to be healthy. this is obviously not something Nicky wants to do or even feasibly can do when he's younger. he eats a lot of other meat (mainly pork), and is basically constantly hungry. he carries jerky around with him all the time to snack on.
as a young adult, he and his (human) best friend (mutual pining crush) are stuck in a cave (entrance blocked by rocks) with a bunch of demons waiting to kill them when they leave. Nicky knows he's not strong enough to defeat them, but he could be if he wasn't malnourished. in a moment of desperation, his friend ends up giving him a few fingers to eat so they can make it out alive, and he feels guilty forever that it's the best thing he's ever tasted.
his mom is killed by demons in a fight in his early 20s, and he goes on a ballistic rampage murdering everyone in sight. after this, he runs away and ends up moving to hell.
when he's in his 40s, he sees a little human girl who's been captured and brought to hell, and quickly rescues her. he can't find a way to smuggle her back to earth, so he ends up raising her in his apartment.
when he does eventually get her back to earth years later, he moves in with her dad and they co-parent. becomes a love triangle thing with the dad and his childhood friend who he eventually reconnects with- not for the usual "you have to choose one!" reasons that i hate, but because his relationships with each are honestly very tumultuous.
my other early demon oc was Crimson, a magicless demon who'd been captured by hunters and tortured until a kind hunter rescued him and became his caretaker. this character would later become Kane, but originally there was no "former whumper" backstory, he was just a pathetic little guy.
at 16, my other main obsession as a teenager was dangan ronpa, and of course i made several dangan ronpa ocs whose names i can't remember. one of them was a girl who had a fierce rivalry with togami. i started getting into g/t around this time, and liked to play around with that with my dangan ronpa oc for some reason. i don't know why, it's not like DR had any kind of g/t in it. but i would always imagine a story where togami became tiny and he and my oc came to a begrudging alliance as they tried to fix it.
i also ended up converting this into an original story, taking place in a low-fantasy universe, where a bully character Damien got shrunk by magic, kept in a jar, and was tortured by some of his former victims. his one victim who thinks this is fucked up (can't remember his name) rescued him, and they put aside their differences to fix it. i just love reluctant caretakers and whumper-turned-whumpees.
and that's all the notable ocs i can think of from my childhood! figure they deserve at least a small space on my blog :) and i still might write Nova, Nicky, or Damien's stories someday.
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daphnethebanjolover · 3 years
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You guys ready for another MBC meme?
'Cause here it is!
Episode 10-Acting Out
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John is the fifth Monster Buster. Change my mind.
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My Big Kylux AUs Tag List (part 3)
ABOUT
Go here to find an INDEX of every lists (including all thematic lists)
–> A - C (part 1)
–> D - F (part 2)
G
Game of Thrones AU {part of Fantasy AU}
Game Show AU [see TV Show (game) AU]
Gamers/Vloggers AU [see Bloggers AU]
Gangsters AU [see Mafia AU]
Garage AU
Gatsby AU [see Great Gatsby (the) AU]
Gem AU
Ghost Busters AU {part of Ghost hunters AU}
Ghost Hunters AU {includes Ghost Busters AU}
Ghost Hux AU (also see Haunted Mansion AU)
Ghost Kylo AU {except for Force Ghost Kylo AU} (also see Haunted Mansion AU)
Gladiator Kylo AU (also see Ancient Rome AU)
Gods AU
Gothic Style AU [or see Southern Gothic AU]
Grand Admiral Hux AU [see Rogue One AU]
Grand Marshal Hux AU
Grease AU (also see 50′s AU)
Great British Bake Off (the) AU {part of Bakery AU and TV Show (game) AU}
Great Gatsby (the) AU (also see 20′s AU)
Greatest Showman (the) AU {part of Circus AU }
Greek Mythology AU {includes Centaurs [both] AU, Centaur Hux AU, Centaur Kylo AU, Hades and Persephone AU, Harpies [both] AU, Harpy Hux AU, Harpy Kylo AU, Hercules AU, Satyrs [both] AU, Satyr Hux AU and Satyr Kylo AU} {part of Mythology AU}
Grunge Style AU
Guardians of the Galaxy AU {part of Marvel AU}
Gundam AU
Gym AU
H
Hacker Hux AU
Hacker Kylo AU
Hades and Persephone AU {part of Greek Mythology AU}
Hair Salon AU
Hanahaki (disease) AU
Handmaid Hux AU
Hannibal AU
Happy Anakin and Padme AU (also see Light side AU)
Harpies [both] AU {combines:} {part of Greek Mythology AU}
Harpy Hux AU
Harpy Kylo AU
Harry Potter AU
Haunted Mansion AU (also see Ghost Hunters AU, Ghost Hux AU, Ghost Kylo AU, and Horror AU)
Hawk Hux AU {parted from Birds AU}
Hercules AU {part of Greek Mythology AU}
High school AU {includes Breakfast Club AU} (also see Grease AU)
Hippie Style AU
Hitmen AU [see Assassins AU]
Hockey AU (also see Canadian AU) [or see Ice Skating AU]
Hogwarts AU [see Harry Potter AU]
Horror AU (also see Haunted Mansion AU, Jane Eyre AU, Lovecraft AU, Monster Kylo AU, Rocky Horror Picture Show AU, Southern Gothic AU and Zombie AU)
Horse kylo AU
Horse Riding AU
Howl’s moving Castle AU
Hunger Games AU
I
Ice Skating AU [or see Hockey AU]
Ikea Trip AU
Immortal Hux AU
Imperial Guard Hux AU [see Praetorian Guard Hux AU]
Inside Out AU
In the Flesh AU {part of Zombie AU}
In the Garden of the Sun AU {part of They Met Before AU}
Indiana Jones AU {parted from Archeology AU}
Inuyasha AU
Irish Mythology AU  {includes Selkie Hux AU and Selkie Kylo AU} {part of Celtic Mythology AU}
J
Jacobite AU (also see XVIIth Century AU)
James Bond AU [see 007 AU]
Jane Eyre AU (also see Horror AU and Victorian AU)
Jazz AU {part of Musicians AU}
John Wick AU (also see Assassins AU, Assassin Hux AU and Assassin Kylo AU)
Journalist Hux AU
Journalist Kylo AU
Jurassic AU {includes Jurassic Park AU and Jurassic World AU}
Jurassic Park AU {part of Jurassic AU}
Jurassic World AU {part of Jurassic AU}
K
Kabuki Masks of the Noh AU [see Masks of the Ren AU]
Kiki’s Delivery Service AU (also see Witches [both] AU, Witch Hux AU and Witch Kylo AU)
Killers AU [see Assassins [both] AU, Assassin Hux AU and Assassin Kylo AU]
Kindergarten AU
Kinglo and Minister Huggs AU
Kingsman AU (also see Agents AU, Agent Hux AU and Agent Kylo AU)
Kitsune AU [see Foxes AU]
Kresrel Hux AU [see Hawk Hux AU]
Kuzco - The Emperor’s New Groove AU
Kylo Amidala AU [see Senator Kylo AU]
L
Labyrinth AU
Ladybug AU [see Miraculous AU]
Ladyhawke AU {part of Fantasy AU}
Last of Us (the) AU {part of Post Apocalyptic AU}
Last Unicorn (the) AU
Lawyer Hux AU
Legend of Zelda AU
Library AU [see Book Shop AU]
Life Is Strange AU {part of Time Travel AU}
Light side AU (also see Reverse AU)
Lilo & Stitch AU
Little Red Riding Hood AU (also see Little Red Riding Hux AU and Wolf Kylo AU)
Little Red Riding Hux AU (also see Little Red Riding Hood AU)
Lord of the Rings (the) AU {part of Fantasy AU}
Lost Son AU {part of Parents AU}
Lovecraft AU (also see Horror AU)
–> M - R (part 4)
–> S - Z + # (part 5)
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dweemeister · 4 years
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2020 Movie Odyssey Awards
Because the 2020 Movie Odyssey Award for Best Original Song final was extended, the 2020 Movie Odyssey Awards themselves are late once more - and all because of me this time out (oops). As you may know, this is the annual awards ceremony to recognize a year of films that I saw for the first time in their entirety in the calendar year. All films featured - with the exception of those in the Worst Picture category - are worth seeing.
The full list of every single film I saw as part of the 2020 Movie Odyssey can be seen in this link.
Best Pictures (I name ten winners, none of which are distinguished above the other nine)
The African Queen (1951)
The Haunting (1963)
The Irishman (2019)
A Letter to Three Wives (1949)
Mädchen in Uniform (1931, Germany)
Once Upon a Time in America (1984)
Ordet (1955, Denmark)
Parasite (2019, South Korea)
The Shop on Main Street (1965, Czechoslovakia)
The Trial (1962)
Seven of these films received 10/10 ratings. The others received 9.5/10 ratings. This Best Picture lineup were the ten best films I saw in all of 2020. The African Queen is a rollicking adventure film with Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn that took me by surprise (I was long put off from the film because of its reputation). It displays some of the most charming moments that only Golden Age Hollywood can offer. Golden Age Hollywood horror may not be scary to viewers; but what it lacks in elicited screams, it makes up in goosebumps. The Haunting is one of the great haunted house movies of all time with its thick atmosphere, fantastic production design, and spectral ambiguity. Watch it in the dark, if you dare.
Two gangster epics with a mournful disposition are also here in Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman and Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in America. The former sees Robert De Niro seeking absolution despite personally not being fully regretful; the latter sees a regretful Robert De Niro seeking not absolution, but peace.
Made in Weimar Germany in the years just before the Nazi takeover is a classic of queer cinema, Mädchen in Uniform. Beyond its LGBTQ themes, it is a tale of young women finding friendship amongst each other. On the other side of Europe after its Nazi takeover is The Shop on Main Street - which switches gears between drama to lighthearted comedy to tragedy so nimbly. Another film exemplifying mastery in tonal shifts was the headline-grabber Parasite - an explosive, justly historic movie.
Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s A Letter to Three Wives is a suburban feminist ensemble piece, reflecting on the martial anxieties of women questioning their spousal bliss. The ending there, though not quite storybook, is poignant. Questions of faith, too, are asked in Carl Theodor Dreyer’s Ordet - not in others, but in God. The film, one of the greatest films ever made about religious faith, ends impossibly, provocatively.
Best Comedy
The Battle of the Century (1927 short)
Best in Show (2000)
Elmer, the Great (1933)
It Happened on Fifth Avenue (1947)
Klaus (2019)
One Hour with You (1932)
The Princess and the Pirate (1944)
Road to Utopia (1945)
Soul (2020)
Three Little Girls in Blue (1946)
Now I typically give this category to the film that elicits the most belly laughs from me. None of these comedies did that for me this year. So I went with Ernst Lubitsch’s One Hour with You - starring Lubitsch regular Maurice Chevalier and Jeanette MacDonald. It is what some folks might call a sophisticated comedy. But if you read between the lines, this pre-Code romantic comedy was probably one of the raunchiest things I saw all year.
For example:
POLICE OFFICER: Come on, come on. Where do you think you are? What are you doing? What’s going on here? ANDRE BERTIER: The French Revolution! [resumes kissing Colette] POLICE OFFICER: Hey, you can’t make love in public. ANDRE BERTIER: I can make love anywhere! POLICE OFFICER: No, you can’t! COLETTE BERTIER: Oh, but officer, he can! ANDRE BERTIER (joyously): Darling!
Otherwise, runners-up included It Happened on Fifth Avenue and Best in Show.
Best Musical
Blue Hawaii (1961)
Flower Drum Song (1961)
Hamilton (2020)
The Magic Flute (1975, Sweden)
My Dream Is Yours (1949)
New Orleans (1947)
New York, New York (1977)
One Hour with You
The Shocking Miss Pilgrim (1947)
Three Little Girls in Blue (1946)
You know, if Hamilton was an original musical and not a filmed version of the original Broadway run, it would certainly threaten in this category. Instead, it rounds things out. Martin Scorsese’s New York, New York - as a deconstruction of the mid-century MGM musical - wins out not only its strong soundtrack, but glossy aesthetic that one would not associate with Scorsese. Runners-up are Flower Drum Song (the last movie with at least a majority Asian-American cast until The Joy Luck Club thirty years later and Crazy Rich Asians after that) and Bergman’s adaptation of Mozart’s opera The Magic Flute.
Best Animated Feature
I Lost My Body (2019, France)
Klaus (2019)
The Last Unicorn (1982)
Mad Monster Party? (1967)
Marona’s Fantastic Tale (2019, France)
Melody Time (1948)
Saludos Amigos (1942)
Soul
Weathering with You (2019, Japan)
Wolfwalkers (2020)
Perhaps the least known animated feature of these nominees takes the prize. Anca Damian’s Marona’s Fantastic Tale is gorgeously animated, attempting to tell its story through the point of view of its small canine protagonist. The film appears as a dog might understand the confusing mess that is humanity. Close behind is Cartoon Saloon’s Wolfwalkers and Pixar’s Soul.
Best Documentary
Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment (1963)
Diego Maradona (2019, United Kingdom)
Elvis: That’s the Way It Is (1970)
The Eyes of Orson Welles (2018)
The Great Buster: A Celebration (2018)
I Am Not Your Negro (2016)
I Am Somebody (1970 short)
The River (1938 short)
The T.A.M.I. Show (1964)
Tokyo Olympiad (1965, Japan)
This was the best year for documentaries in a year’s Movie Odyssey for a long, long while. As a part of the tradition of Olympic films, Kon Ichikawa’s Tokyo Olympiad is a chronicle of the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. The film resembled nothing like the Olympic documentaries before it - choosing not to concentrate on just gold medalists and reportage, but a story of Japan’s reintroduction to the Western world and the pains of the many also-rans in any Olympics. I also considered Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment (a JFK/RFK real-time documentary on the racial integration of the University of Alabama system), Elvis: That’s the Way It Is, The River (a New Deal-funded documentary short about the importance of the Mississippi River - narrated in free verse!), and The T.A.M.I. Show as potential winners, but nothing could eclipse Ichikawa’s monumental effort.
Best Non-English Language Film
The Cave of the Yellow Dog (2005), Mongolia
Emitaï (1971), Senegal
Kaagaz Ke Phool (1959), India
Olivia (1951), France
Ordet, Denmark
Parasite, South Korea
Persona, Sweden
The Shop on Main Street, Czechoslovakia
Sleepwalking Land (2008), Mozambique
Tokyo Olympiad, Japan
My god, this is always a stacked category. So why do I even bother? Because non-English language films - though they shouldn’t be ghettoized and considered a specialty - are nevertheless ghettoized and considered a specialty in America. This sort of category also gives some attention to a few films that don’t make much of an impression in other categories (namely the wondrous Sleepwalking Land and stunning The Cave of the Yellow Dog). But it is Ordet the reigns supreme here, edging out The Shop on Main Street, Parasite, and Kaagaz Ke Phool for this prize.
Best Silent Film
The Battle of the Century
Body and Soul (1925)
Bumping into Broadway (1919 short)
The Dragon Painter (1919)
I Do (1921 short)
Next Aisle Over (1919 short)
Ramona (1928)
The Scar of Shame (1927)
Shoes (1916)
Young Mr. Jazz (1919 short)
Lois Weber was as instrumental to shaping early American cinema as D.W. Griffith or Cecil B. DeMille. And in Shoes, she brings her sense of social righteousness and cinematic innovation to the fore. It is one of her best feature films, and its release came at the height of America’s Progressive Era - a time of greater awareness of industrialization and unregulated capitalism’s ill effects. Distant runners-up are new National Film Registry inductee The Battle of the Century (a Laurel and Hardy film with one of the best pie fights you will see) and Body and Soul (Paul Robeson’s theatrical debut). 
Personal Favorite Film
The African Queen
The Cave of the Yellow Dog
The Haunting
A Letter to Three Wives
Marona’s Fantastic Tale
McFarland, USA (2015)
Murder Most Foul (1964)
Stars in My Crown (1950)
Three Little Girls in Blue
The Trial
An understated but nevertheless eloquent screenplay, light humor, and careful attention to all three of its lead actresses roles define A Letter to Three Wives. It is one of the best exercises of empathy I saw all year, amid its tremulous and anxious narrative backdrop. We like to deride post-WWII American film as depicting an idyllic suburbia that never existed... but not here. Byambasuren Davaa’s The Cave of the Yellow Dog captured my heart, too. The film, from Mongolia, was one of the gentlest movies I’ve had the pleasure to see in the longest time. McFarland, USA revived memories in me of high school cross country days; Murder Most Foul was a Ms. Marple whodunit that cements Margaret Rutherford as one of my favorite actresses; the homespun Stars in My Crown is Americana at its finest.
Best Director
Ingmar Bergman, Persona (1961, Sweden)
Carl Theodor Dreyer, Ordet
Guru Dutt, Kaagaz Ke Phool
John Huston, The African Queen
Kon Ichikawa, Tokyo Oympiad
Sergio Leone, Once Upon a Time in America
Joseph L. Mankiewicz, A Letter to Three Wives
Leontine Sagan, Mädchen in Uniform
Ousmane Sembène, Emitaï
Orson Welles, The Trial
Dreyer is in command of the film’s mise en scene from the beginning - culminating in breathtaking scene set-ups for conversations spoken in hushed tones. The style is never oppressive, never showy, and just right for a deeply introspective movie of tried and troubled faith.
Best Acting Ensemble
Edge of the City (1957)
Gosford Park (2001)
The Irishman
A Letter to Three Wives
Little Women (2019)
Marriage Story (2019)
Once Upon a Time in America
Ordet
Parasite
Stars in My Crown
Subtract any one actor from Parasite and the film cannot work as well as it does. Perhaps Song Kang-ho has the best performance in the movie, but that isn’t possible without his fellow cast members putting out the incredible turns that they offer. Ordet is a close second. Behind by a country mile are Gosford Park, A Letter to Three WIves, and Little Women.
Best Actor
Humphrey Bogart, The African Queen
Maurice Chevalier, One Hour with You
Guru Dutt, Kaagaz Ke Phool
Jozef Kroner, The Shop on Main Street
Alan Ladd, This Gun for Hire (1942)
Joel McCrea, Stars in My Crown
Paul Robeson, Body and Soul
Howard Vernon, Le Silence de la mer (1949, France)
Jon Voight, Deliverance (1972)
Denzel Washington, Malcolm X (1992)
Arguably Denzel’s finest. He inhabits Malcolm X - the bravura, the attitude, the pastor-like (and occasionally incendiary) rhetorical devices, the early rage, the standoffishness. It is a magnificent performance. Just behind is Bogart and the irresistible Chevalier.
Best Actress
Bibi Andersson, Persona
Edwige Feuillère, Olivia
Helen Hayes, The Sin of Madelon Claudet (1931)
Katharine Hepburn, The African Queen
Scarlett Johansson, Marriage Story
Ida Kamińska, The Shop on Main Street
Liza Minnelli, New York, New York
Lucia Lynn Moses, The Scar of Shame
Madhabi Mukherjee, The Big City (1963, India)
Waheeda Rehman, Kaagaz Ke Phool
As Ms. Lautmannová, Kamińska - in the autumn of her career - gives us a portrait of devout religiosity, elderly naivete, and otherworldly trust. She and co-star Jozef Kroner play off the other’s performance, one benefitting from the other. It is a delicate, heartbreaking performance. Some ways away are our two Indian actresses, Madhabi Mukherjee and Waheeda Rehman, as well as Bibi Andersson in the dizzying Persona.
Best Supporting Actor
Stephen Boyd, The Man Who Never Was (1956)
Haren Chatterjee, The Big City
James Edwards, The Steel Helmet (1951)
Moses Gunn, Aaron Loves Angela (1975)
Victor McLaglen, The Princess and the Pirate (1944)
Victor Moore, It Happened on Fifth Avenue
Sidney Poitier, Edge of the City
Song Kang-ho, Parasite
Richard Widmark, Kiss of Death (1947)
James Woods, Once Upon a Time in America
For the sixth straight year, Best Supporting Actor - a category almost always filled to the brim with villains - goes to an actor playing a menacing villain. That smirk, that creepy laugh. Holy crap. Widmark knocks it out of the park as the psychopathic Tommy Udo in his debut role. The role, taken by some the wrong way, inspired Tommy Udo frats in American colleges and universities (their central premise: male chauvinism and anti-feminist beliefs). Who else did I consider for a win here? Victor Moore, Sidney Poitier, Song Kang-ho, and James Woods (before he became a twitter conspiracy theorist).
Best Supporting Actress
Tsuru Aoki, The Dragon Painter
Ethel Barrymore, Pinky (1949)
Ruby Dee, Edge of the City
Laura Dern, Marriage Story
Nancy Kwan, Flower Drum Song
Maggie Smith, Gosford Park
Genevieve Tobin, One Hour with You
Emilia Unda, Mädchen in Uniform
Ethel Waters, Pinky
Dorothea Wieck, Mädchen in Uniform
Emilia Unda beats out fellow co-star Dorothea Wieck as the headmistress of the boarding school featured in Mädchen in Uniform. As the strict, uptight disciplinarian, one can see hints behind the facade she displays in front of the girls at the school. Nevertheless, yet another antagonist takes home this award. Also contending are Nancy Kwan and Ethel Waters.
Best Adapted Screenplay
John Huston, James Agee, Peter Viertel, and John Collier, The African Queen
Ladislav Grosman, Ján Kadár, and Elmar Klos, The Shop on Main Street
Steven Zaillian, The Irishman
Joseph L. Mankiewicz and Vera Caspary, A Letter to Three Wives
Christa Winsloe and Friedrich Dammann, Mädchen in Uniform
Leonardo Benvenuti, Piero De Bernardi, Enrico Medioli, Franco Arcalli, Franco Ferrini, and Sergio Leone, Once Upon a Time in America
Samson Raphaelson, One Hour with You
Carl Theodor Dreyer, Ordet
Teresa Prata, Sleepwalking Land
Orson Welles, The Trial
And unlike the mistake the Academy made in just giving the Oscar to Mankiewicz back in the day, the award also goes to his co-screenwriter, Vera Caspary.
Best Original Screenplay
Juan Antonio Bardem, Death of a Cyclist (1955, Spain)
Ousmane Sembène, Emitaï
Julian Fellowes, Gosford Park
Jérémy Clapin and Guillaume Laurant, I Lost My Body
Everett Freeman, Vick Knight, and Ben Markson, It Happened on Fifth Avenue
Bong Joon-ho and Han Jin-won, Parasite
Ingmar Bergman, Persona
Melvin Frank and Norman Panama, Road to Utopia
David Starkman, The Scar of Shame
Delphine Girard, A Sister (2018 short, Belgium)
This is Sembène’s first Movie Odyssey Award, and I think he was probably one of the most overdue. As one of the fathers of African cinema, Sembène’s movies are colored by politics, specifically anti-colonialism, racism, tribal relations, and the destruction of traditional Senegalese life. His biting work to Emitaï is an excoriating piece, and essential to anyone seriously wanting to learn more about movies. No real challengers, in my mind, but the next ones up would have been Bergman and Bong Joon-ho and Han Jin-won.
Best Cinematography
David Schoenauer, The Cave of the Yellow Dog
Michel Remaudeau, Emitaï
Davis Boulton, The Haunting
Rodrigo Prieto, The Irishman
V.K. Murthy, Kaagaz Ke Phool
Norbert Brodine, Kiss of Death
László Kovács, New York, New York
Tonino Delli Colli, Once Upon a Time in America
Kazuo Miyagawa, Shigeo Murata, Shigeichi Nagano, Kenji Nakamura, and Tadashi Tanaka, Tokyo Olympiad
Edmond Richard, The Trial
The Trial unfolds and is shot as if it was a nightmare, albeit a nightmare without any dreamlike elements. With Dutch angles and unconventional use of focus, it is a remarkable film to look at. Having the soon-to-be Orsay Museum as an interior certainly helps. The Cave of the Yellow Dog, The Haunting, Kaagaz Ke Phool, Once Upon a Time in America, and even Tokyo Olympiad would have been worthy winners too.
Best Film Editing
Don Deacon, Born Free (1966)
De Nosworthy and Nicholas T. Proferes, Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment
Tom Priestly, Deliverance
Ernest Waller, The Haunting
Barry Alexander Brown, Malcolm X
Nino Baragli, Once Upon a Time in America
Yang Jin-mo, Parasite
Ulla Ryghe, Persona
Tatsuji Nakashizu, Tokyo Olympiad
Yvonne Martin and Frederic Muller, The Trial
Best Adaptation or Musical Score
S.D. Burman, Kaagaz Ke Phool
José Feliciano and Janna Merlyn Feliciano, Aaron Loves Angela
Nat W. Finston, Woody Herman, Louis Alter, and Edgar De Lange, New Orleans
W. Franke Harling, Oscar Straus, Rudolph G. Kopp, and John Leipold, One Hour with You
Maury Laws and Jules Bass, Mad Monster Party?
Joseph J. Lilley, Don Robertson, Hal Blair, George David Weiss, Hugo Peretti, Luigi Creatore, Sid Tepper, and Roy C. Bennett, Blue Hawaii
Alfred Newman, Flower Drum Song
Edward H. Plumb, Paul J. Smith, and Charles Wolcott, Saludos Amigos
David Raksin, George Gershwin, and Ira Gershwin, The Shocking Miss Pilgrim
Harry Warren, Ralph Blane, and Howard Jackson, My Dream Is Yours
Oh geez what a line-up. But this category favors original musicals above all. And though some might hesitate to call it a musical, Kaagaz Ke Phool’s soundtrack - in its melding of dramatics and music - is as cinematic as they come. As opposed to the let’s-just-put-a-song-here-to-kill-free time attitude of some of these musicals, Kaagaz Ke Phool uses its songs purposefully. In other words, with feeling. Alfred Newman’s adaptation of Flower Drum Song was probably up next.
Best Original Score
John Barry, Born Free
Elmer Bernstein, The Comancheros (1961)
Akira Ifukube, Destroy All Monsters (1968, Japan)
Zdeněk Liška, The Shop on Main Street
Toshiro Mayuzumi, Tokyo Olympiad
Ennio Morricone, Once Upon a Time in America
Alfred Newman, The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965)
Leonard Rosenman, Edge of the City
Virgil Thomson, The River
John Williams, Empire of the Sun (1987)
This is not a sympathy prize for the recently-departed Italian composer. The key cue is the second one featured, "Deborah's Theme" and, when you listen to it, I think it tells you all you need to know about this movie. It's deeply expressive. And in the movie, it's allowed to be prominent. I've seen people say the late Morricone considered this his best score, but I can't find any official word of that anywhere. It is tremendous work, with Bernstein, Newman, and Thomson just behind.
Best Original Song
“Angela”, music and lyrics by José Feliciano and Janna Merlyn Feliciano, Aaron Loves Angela
“Can’t Help Falling in Love”, music and lyrics by Hugo Peretti, Luigi Creatore, and George David Weiss, Blue Hawaii (1961)
“Dekhi Zamaane Ki Yaari / Bichhde Sabhi Baari Baari”, music by S.D. Burman, lyrics by Kaifi Azmi, Kaagaz Ke Phool
“(Do You Know What It Means to Miss) New Orleans”, music by Louis Alter, lyrics by Edgar De Lange, New Orleans
“Farewell to Storyville",  music by Louis Alter, lyrics by Edgar De Lange, New Orleans
“Happy Endings", music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb, New York, New York
“Here They Come (From All Over the World)", music and lyrics by P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri, The T.A.M.I. Show
“Is There Still Anything That Love Can Do?", music and lyrics by Yôjirô Noda, Weathering with You
“Theme from New York, New York”, music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb, New York, New York
“Waqt Ne Kiya Kya Haseen Sitam”, music and lyrics by S.D. Burman, Kaagaz Ke Phool
Thank you to all of those who participated in the 2020 Movie Odyssey Award for Best Original Song!
Best Costume Design
Uncredited, The Duke Is Tops (1938)
Irene Sharaff, Flower Drum Song
Jenny Beavan, Gosford Park
Jacqueline Durran, Little Women
Henry Noremark and Karin Erskine, The Magic Flute
Ruth E. Carter, Malcolm X
Marcelles Desvignes and Mireille Leydet, Olivia
Gabriella Pescucci, Once Upon a Time in America
Travis Banton, One Hour with You
Bonnie Cashin, Three Little Girls in Blue
Best Makeup and Hairstyling
Daniel C. Striepeke, John Chambers, Verne Langdon, Jack Barron, Mary Babcock, and Jan Van Uchelen, Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971)
Sallie Jaye and Jan Archibald, Gosford Park
Judy Chin and Fríða Aradóttir. Little Women
Uncredited, Lone Wolf and Cub: Sword of Vengeance (1972)
Uncredited, The Magic Flute
Marietta Carter-Narcisse and John James, Malcolm X
Michael Westmore, Christina Smith, Mary Keats, June Miggins, and Sydney Guilaroff, New York, New York
Carmen Brel, Simone Knapp, Jean Lalaurette, and Maguy Vernadet, Olivia
Ben Nye, The Shocking Miss Pilgrim
Ben Nye, Three Little Girls in Blue
Best Production Design
Norman Reynolds and Harry Cordwell, Empire of the Sun
Alexander Golitzen, Joseph C. Wright, and Howard Bristol, Flower Drum Song
Stephen Altman and Anna Pinnock, Gosford Park
Elliot Scott and John Jarvis, The Haunting
Bob Shaw and Regina Graves, The Irishman
M.R. Achrekar, Kaagaz Ke Phool
Henny Noremark, Anna-Lena Hansen, and Emilio Moliner, The Magic Flute
Harry Kemm, Robert De Vestel, and Ruby R. Levitt, New York, New York
Dennis Gassner and Lee Sandales, 1917 (2019)
Carlo Simi, Once Upon a Time in America
The production design, or the haunted house, was a character. Nothing else in this category could compare.
Achievement in Visual Effects (all are winners because it would be unfair to compare the visuals of 1917 against When Worlds Collide)
Babe: Pig in the City (1998)
Destroy All Monsters
The Irishman
1917
Red Dawn (1984)
Plymouth Adventure (1952)
War of the Worlds (2005)
When Worlds Collide (1951)
Worst Picture
Age 13 (1955 short)
Fireman, Save My Child! (1932)
Frankie and Johnny (1966)
The Greatest Story Ever Told
Red Dawn
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (2018)
Fuck Fallen Kingdom.
Honorary Awards:
Colored Players Film Corporation, for its thematically courageous race films, tackling issues neglected by Hollywood
Harold Michelson, for his contributions as an illustrator and storyboard artist (posthumous)
Lillian Michelson, for her dedication as a film researcher and archivist
Tadahito Mochinaga, for achievements in stop-motion animation with Rankin/Bass
Floyd Norman, for his pioneering career in cinematic animation
FILMS WITH MULTIPLE NOMINATIONS (excluding Worst Picture... 57)
Ten: Once Upon a Time in America Nine: Kaagaz Ke Phool Seven: New York, New York; One Hour with You Six: The African Queen; Gosford Park; The Irishman; Parasite; The Shop on Main Street; The Trial Five: Flower Drum Song; The Haunting; A Letter to Three Wives; Mädchen in Uniform; Ordet; Persona; Three Little Girls in Blue; Tokyo Olympiad Four: Edge of the City; Emitaï; The Magic Flute; Malcolm X; New Orleans; Olivia Three: Aaron Loves Angela; Blue Hawaii; The Cave of the Yellow Dog; It Happened on Fifth Avenue; Marriage Story; The Scar of Shame; The Shocking Miss Pilgrim; Stars in My Crown Two: The Battle of the Century; The Big City; Body and Soul; Born Free; Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment; Deliverance; Destroy All Monsters; The Dragon Painter; The Greatest Story Ever Told; I Lost My Body; Kiss of Death; Klaus; Mad Monster Party?; Marona’s Fantastic Tale; My Dream is Yours; 1917; Pinky; The Princess and the Pirate; The River; Road to Utopia; Saludos Amigos; Sleepwalking Land; Soul; The T.A.M.I. Show; Weathering with You
WINNERS (excluding honorary awards and Worst Picture; 28) 3 wins: A Letter to Three Wives; Ordet 2 wins: The Haunting; Mädchen in Uniform; Once Upon a Time in America; Parasite; The Shop on Main Street; The Trial 1 win: The African Queen; Babe: Pig in the City; Blue Hawaii; Destroy All Monsters; Emitaï; Gosford Park; The Irishman; Kaagaz Ke Phool; Kiss of Death; Malcolm X; Marona’s Fantastic Tale; New York, New York; 1917; One Hour with You; Red Dawn; Persona; Plymouth Adventure; The Shocking Miss Pilgrim; Shoes; Tokyo Olympiad; War of the Worlds; When Worlds Collide
92 films were nominated in 26 categories.
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ecofinisher · 5 years
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Miraculous and Monster Buster Club comparision.
Just to be clear, I’m not comparing the show on what show is better and what not. I’m comparing the similarities between the two shows. I’ve came across a few Miraculers, that were also fans of the Monster Buster Club cartoon claiming that MBC (Monster Buster Club) had a few similarities to MLB (Miraculous Ladybug) due to the animation and the adventure. I had thought about it, since I belonged before to the MBC fandom too.  (And still do, except the fandom is probably dead now)
So where do I start? Well just to summarize the shows for those who don’t know one/both of them: 
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[From left to right: Cathy Smith, Sam(antha), Chris(stopher) and Daniel (Danny) Jackson]
Monster Buster Club came out around 2008 and is a French-Canadian computer-animated TV show, which focused on a group of pre-teens (12-year-old)  consisting of three human children and one so-called Rhapsodian (Fictional Alien species) whose also the protagonist of the show called Cathy Smith. Together with the three human teens named Chris, Danny and Samantha, they revive the old secret society named “Monster Buster Club” to fight together and protect their town from aliens, that invade it. Special about their town is, that 200 years ago it was founded by a man named Addison Single, who unbeknownst to the citizens was an alien in disguise and got defeat in the past by the former MBC. Also in this city, Cathy isn’t the only alien to be living there in disguise, but many other aliens are present. 
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[Left to right Tikki (A magical being called a “kwami”, that helps the person transform into a superhero), Marinette Dupain-Cheng, her alter ego Ladybug, Cat Noir, his civilian identity Adrien Agreste and his kwami Plagg]
Miraculous Ladybug is a French animated TV show, that debuted in 2015 and is set in the modern metropole Paris and is focused on the lives of the clumsy Marinette Dupain-Cheng and the famous teeny-model Adrien Agreste. Both wield a special magical jewelry, which is called a “Miraculous” which they use to transform into the superheroes “Ladybug and Cat Noir”  The two don’t know each other’s identity, but funnily Adrien has a huge crush on Ladybug and in the civilian life he sees her as just a friend, while Marinette is obsessed with Adrien and sees Cat Noir only as his trustful crime-fight partner. Both students are around 14 years old in the show.
As superheroes they fight villains, that were akumatized by Hawk Moth. (He owns the butterfly miraculous, with which he can create supervillains by sending an akuma (Butterfly jinxed by Hawk Moth’s magic) and Hawk Moth’s miraculous sends people’s negative feelings such as anger, sadness and dissapointment and uses his akumas to follow them and akumatize them and they’re transformed by Hawk Moth into a specific-themed supervillain.
Now about the comparisons....Miraculous and Monster Buster Club have many things in common when it comes to the animation, the characters or other things and I wanted to list them down. 
1: Logo shortcut.
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The Unofficial Logo
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The official Logo
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Both the shows have a long name and they’re usually abbreviated by the fans or the writers by three letters, this case Miraculous LadyBug is shortened to MLB and Monster Buster Club into MBC. The minor difference here is that Monster Buster Club also used the shortcut on their logo, while Miraculous only kept the title. 
2: Logo Switching up between scenes.
Both shows, when they skip to another part of the episode, both have the symbol appear on a background animated for 2-3 seconds, then disappear. MBC has the full title of the show, instead of the round symbol, which is the team’s recognition sign. 
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3:  Transformation sequences
Both of the shows our main characters have a transformation sequence, where they turn from their civilian self into the secret identity. While Ladybug and Cat Noir look in their tight suits a little different than from their alter egos they can’t be recognized by their friends or citizens. Unlike the MBC they are also a bit covered, but if any of the classmates see them fighting around, they can recognize them without any problem. (I can’t recall at the moment the episode, but it was as Danny had tried to save his crush Wendy and failed, shortly afterward she had got angry at him as she recognized him immediately)
Monster Buster Club (Group transformation sequence) (French)
The show most of the times used the whole group to transform together, occasionally, they also have shown a single transformation sequence or two characters only) 
youtube
Miraculous transformation sequence (Adrien Agreste’s into Cat Noir) (French)
All the characters have single transformations and have the same specific transformation phrase (Plagg, Tranforme-moi) to say before they transform. The English dub is so far the only dub, where the superheroes have different phrases exp. Cat Noir’s is “Plagg, Claws Out!). Most of the phrases are based after their miraculous theme (Exp. Ladybug, Bee, Snake, etc)
youtube
4: Villains of the week trope
Each of the episode the main heroes fight a different villain, who mostly appear for one episode. 
On Miraculous, most of them are just classmates, citizens or acquaintances of the protagonists that get akumatized by Hawk Moth, when they have a negative feeling and are fought by Ladybug and Cat Noir. In the end, the villain turns back into his civilian-self, most of the time they don’t remember, what had happened during the time they were absent. 
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[Akumatized villains counting from left to right, going from up to the bottom: Oni-chan, Reflekta, Horrificator, Miraculer, Party Crasher, Silencer, Weredad, Christmaster, Stoneheart, The Bubbler, Befana and Captain Hardrock]
At Monster Buster Club it usually starts with the presence of unknown people around the school or anywhere in the city or strange things happen around them and the group units together to find out, what’s going on and later near the end they figure it out and follow that alien to capture it in the end. Difference from the MBC, most of the extraterrestrials don’t change in the end of the episode and remain locked into a separate room in the secret clubhouse, where at some point one of the members (Mostly Chris) is there in the room inserting it into a special device to send the encapsulated ET away to the galactic authorities, that take care of them. Others get redeemed at the end of the show and get back to their home planet or stay on the earth, where they belong. 
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The aliens from left to right, up to bottom: Gilbert (Good), Jenny’s grandmother (Encapsulated),  Mr. Gluten (Encapsulated), Glor Glenemore (Encapsulated), Zeborp (Good), Nosidda Single (Encapsulated), Doudo Hundletorph (Good), Mr. Bigshnell (Encapsulated)
5: Animated Intro
Both of the intros have the protagonists Cathy and Marinette narrate to us about  “their world”, followed by their usual day-routine with school, fighting and afterschool. 
Fun fact: Noam Kaniel worked on both of the intros. (Probably explains why I enjoy these two intros so much)
The intro of Monster Buster Club (English)
youtube
The Intro of Miraculous (English) 
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6: Cute, Cartoony 2D/3D backgrounds. 
Wanna know, why I had last year suddenly had the urge to go back to the Monster Buster Club? It was those background images such as the pink bubbles behind a character, who’s in love. I had just bumped into my mind the show that I had seen that behind Danny from Monster Buster Club as he saw his crush, Wendy. When I went to check out again the episodes from the available ones on Youtube I saw also other types of backgrounds, that I had also seen in Miraculous too. 
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Here we got pinky bubble background behind Cathy
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And here we got Adrien with a full-on bubble background.
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Some also are transparent like this one here.
Paper sheet backgrounds:
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Danny’s smart idea in trying to make money and his mind shown on the background as a notebook sheet.
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Chloé, one of the secondary characters and her mind shown on the background also with a type of notebook sheet her childhood. 
This are the ones, who are the most similar ones. Both have other ones, but a little different, but used for the same occasion. 
Other backgrounds:
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Weapon activation (Monster Buster Club)
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Power activation (Miraculous)
Minor parts of a specific fight:
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Running towards an Alien.
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Dodging Hawk Moth’s punch
And a few more from both shows
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Sorry boy, but she’s not your type.
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Wanna make your character look like she can run fast? Just add smoke like on the roadrunner!
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Your portable console getting stolen, while you’re trying to beat the high score, sure was the worst thing to happen to a 12-year old back in the 08′.
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Marinette just found out that Hiro Hamada of Zag Heroes wrote a fanfic of her alter ego having a crush on a friend of hers. (The real plot twist: It’s a self-insert fanfic, where he’s Ladybug and not the real Ladybug *le gasp*) 
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You know what I miss about the time season 2 trailer got spoilered? That they had Marinette had this imagination of herself with Adrien as Hawk Moth posing similar to a Twilight Poster.  Those were good times.
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She had her life full planned, even had names for her kids and all, while people like me are living their life, not knowing what the hell is going to happen next week.
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I don’t know, but this picture is hilarious :D (And for non-Miraculers, that small animal up there is an akuma)
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I never got why they fence with one glove only. is this some Michael Jackson reference or something?
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Yep, this is how weird Marinette’s imagination gets during the seasons. (Believe it or not, if they were in a relationship Kagami would definitely wear the pants there!)
7: Sorry if the last one turned a little long, but now the next part is inside both of the shows, the similar tropes the show shares. Well, many other shows have it too of course, but I felt the need to point it out. (Since I’m doing this post)
7.1:  Male Protagonist is a jokester (Cat Noir and Danny) If it’s the right situation or not. They have always to crack a joke.
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7.2 Tagalong kid - (John, Chris’ younger brother, Manon, Child Marinette babysits, Chris Lahiffe, the younger brother of Nino Lahiffe, Adrien’s best friend) - The three are from their personality different, but they have one or two moments, where they seem really annoying to the protagonist.
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 7.3 Alpha B’s. (Chloé and Wendy) - Both don’t treat the main characters right (Chloé almost everyone besides Adrien and Wendy is most likely alright with the classmates), both are girly girls, they gossip and use specific people for their own benefits. (Chloé using Sabrina and Wendy using Danny)
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7.4 Wise old man (Hugo Smith, Cathy’s Grandpa and Master Wang Fu, the guardian of the miraculouses) - It’s quite funny how similar they look like, even the red shirt, their body size and nearly their hairstyle.  About the wisdom, both help out the protagonists and are serious about harm. 
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7.5 Deep down still a child (Principal Rollins and Principal Damocles) - For the most of the students Principal Rollins seems like a very strict person, that came from the military service as she calls the students soldiers and uses words such as Company Halt, but she has been shown off-guard playing with a toy rhino panzer and a convoy in her office at the school. Principal Damocles, seems also like a strict Principal, that likes when students act correctly and warns them when they acted wrong (Such as not knocking on the door, before entering). After school, when all students are gone, he dresses up as an owl-themed superhero and acts as a superhero and tries to help out in the city, mostly ending in a catastrophy. 
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7.6 Nameless Background characters, that the fandom finds interesting. (Redheaded girl from MBC and Brunette boy a.k.a Just Anextra/Justin Extra from Miraculous) - The girl has like a few background appearances and like two sentences and a burst of laughter during the whole two seasons, Just/in has probably only one sentence so far I remember, otherwise, he appears at the backgrounds, sometimes also with other color palettes. (I think he also appears at the fencing group photo if I’m not wrong) Just Anextra/Justin Extra has two fanarts so far I know, done by fans and the girl had one or two edits, where the editor had given her the name Lola I think and she had another type of clothing and hair color. (Confession I’m not taking into the grave with me. When I was younger I shipped her with Nossida (His human form obviously), one of the main villains of the show and I even wrote a fanfic about them. I re-read it last year and laughed so hard at how weird it was) Honestly my first ones were just.....eugh!
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7.7 Protagonist has allergies  (Cathy and Adrien/Cat Noir) - Cathy is allergic to dogs while Adrien has allergies to feathers. 
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7.8 Excitable Protagonists (Cathy Smith and Marinette Dupain-Cheng) - Both girls are shown mostly happy and lucky throughout the show. Cathy still is the most optimistic and excitable one out of the two, due to her being a curious personality and is always fascinated, when she discovers new things on Earth, that she doesn’t know in her home planet. 
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7.9 Best friends between different cultures (Danny with Chris, Adrien with Nino, Cathy with Sam and Marinette with Alya) As many other TV shows would do: Two best friends of the same gender. 
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 Cathy’s just doing an Abominable reference...joke, she confessed something, she should have done long way before. 
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 Danny about to teach Chris how to act like a bad boy for the group’s plan.
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I don’t remember what was here, except this is from season 1.
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“Just be yourself” .- Nino Lahiffe (And Nathaniel there on the back sleeping on his table. I feel you, son)  
That was all I had found out yet. There could be more out there, that I haven’t figure out yet, but I might do one of these posts again when I got more information and the shows, mostly MBC are more present in my memories. 
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iseedumbthings-blog · 5 years
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Reviews
2019
Theatrical Reviews
Cinepocalypse 2019: Belzebuth- CINAPSE.CO
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The Gangster, The Cop, The Devil - CINAPSE.CO
Booksmart - PHAWKER.COM
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John Wick 3: Parabellum - PHAWKER.COM
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Avengers: Endgame - PHAWKER.COM
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I Spit on Your Grave: Deja Vu - CINAPSE.CO
Us - PHAWKER.COM
Captain Marvel - PHAWKER.COM
Alita Battle Angel - PHAWKER.COM
Horror Noire - PHAWKER.COM
Glass - PHAWKER.COM
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Evil Town: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Growing up with I Spit on Your Grave - CINAPSE.CO
Uninvited: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
The Suckling: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Fleshpot on 42nd Street: Blu-ray  - CINAPSE.CO
Bloody New Year: Blu-ray- CINAPSE.CO
A Star is Born: 4K - CINAPSE.CO
Valentine: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Weirdo and Monstrosity: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
8mm: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Let the Corpses Tan: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
2018
Theatrical Reviews
Aquaman - PHAWKER.COM
The House Jack Built - PHAWKER.COM
Green Book -PHAWKER.COM
Vox Lux - PHAWKER.COM
Creed 2 - PHAWKER.COM
Suspiria (2018) - PHAWKER.COM
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I Kill Giants - CINAPSE.CO
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The Maze: 3D Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider & The Cradle of Life: 4K - CINAPSE.CO
The Transformers Franchise: 4K - CINAPSE.CO
Interstellar: 4K - CINAPSE.CO
2017
Theatrical Reviews
I, Tonya - PHAWKER.COM
Shape of Water - PHAWKER.COM
Star Wars: The Last Jedi - PHAWKER.COM
The Disaster Artist - PHAWKER.COM
Justice League - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Thor: Ragnarok - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF26: Ladybird - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF26: Let the Corpses Tan - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Blade Runner 2049 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PUFF 2017: Assholes - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Mother! - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
IT - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ingrid Goes West - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Dark Tower - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Dunkirk - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
War of the Planet of the Apes - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Spiderman: Homecoming - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Beguiled - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Baby Driver - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Transformers: The Last Knight - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Wonder Woman - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Baywatch - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Alien: Covenant - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Fate of the Furious - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Colossal - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ghost in the Shell - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Power Rangers - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Kong: Skull Island - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Logan - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Lego Batman Movie - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
John Wick: Chapter 2 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
XXX: The Return of Xander Cage - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Split - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Fantastic Fest 2017: Prince of Nothingwood - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest 2017: King Cohen - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest 2017: Top Knot Detective - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest 2017: Bat Pussy - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest 2017: Let the Corpses Tan - CINAPSE.CO
Fantasia 2017: Game of Death - CINAPSE.CO
Fantasia 2017: Replace - CINAPSE.CO
Dunkirk - CINAPSE.CO
NYAFF 2017: Zombiology: Enjoy Yourself Tonight - CINAPSE.CO
NYAFF: Aroused by Gymnopedies - CINAPSE.CO
NYAFF: KFC - CINAPSE.CO
Home Media Reviews
Gun Fury: 3D Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Wish Upon: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Transformers: The Last Knight: 3D Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Red Roses of Passion: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Snapshot: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
The Tashio Trilogy: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Ghost in the Shell: 3D Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
New Battles Without Honor Series: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Ghost World: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Rings: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Trailer Trauma 3 - CINAPSE.CO
Hellraiser: The Scarlet Box: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Dark Water: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Blair Witch: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Doctor Strange 3D: Blu-ray 3D - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Wishmaster: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Moana 3D: Blu-ray 3D- GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Underworld: Blood Wars: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
La La Land: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Resident Evil: The Final Chapter: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
2016
Theatrical Reviews
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Moana - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF25: Arrival - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF25: Raw - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF25: Personal Shopper - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF25: La La Land - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF25: Jackie - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Shin Godzilla - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Antibirth - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Suicide Squad - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ghostbusters (2016) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ghostheads - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Neon Demon - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Bite - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Batman Vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
10 Cloverfield Lane - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Pride + Prejudice + Zombies - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Deadpool - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Home Media Reviews
Microwave Massacre: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Nikkatsu Diamond Guys Vol. 1: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Female Convict Scorpion Series: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
The Happiness of the Katakuris: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Blind Woman's Curse: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Comin' At Ya!: 3D Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Stray Cat Rock Series: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Zombie Fight Club: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ninja Busters: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Curse & The Curse 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Hateful Eight: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Swiss Army Man: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Neon Demon: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
2015
Theatrical Reviews
My Life Directed By Nicolas Winding Refn - CINAPSE.CO
Headless - CINAPSE.CO
A Labor of Love - CINAPSE.CO
Kung Fu Killer - CINAPSE.CO
Mad Women - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest 2015: German Angst - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest 2015: Assassination Classroom - CINAPSE.CO
Biozombie - CINAPSE.CO
The Force Awakens - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Spectre - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF24: Love - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Jem and the Holograms - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Martian - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Mistress America - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Fantastic 4 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Look of Silence - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ant-Man - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Minions - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Terminator: Genisys - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Jurassic World - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
When Marnie Was There - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Connection  - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Tomorrowland - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Human Centipede III (The Final Sequence) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Mad Max: Fury Road - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Avengers 2: Age of Ultron - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Furious 7 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
It Follows - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Divergent Series: Insurgent - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Kingdom of Dreams and Madness - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Predestination- GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Inherent Vice - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Home Media Reviews
The American Dreamer: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
At Close Range: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Catacombs and Cellar Dweller: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Madman: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Heart of America and Auschwitz: DVD - CINAPSE.CO
A Labor of Love: DVD - CINAPSE.CO
Love at First Bite and Once Bitten: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
John Wick: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Dear White People: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Big Hero Six: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Phantom of the Opera (1989): Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Blacula & Scream Blacula Scream!: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Tale of Princess Kaguya: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Invaders From Mars: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Babadook: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Carrie and The Rage: Carrie 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Escape from New York: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Class of 1984: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ghoulies 1+2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Mad Max: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Gun Woman: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Sleepaway Camp 2 & 3: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Tentacles and Reptilicus: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Dog Soldiers: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Spirited Away: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ex-Machina: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Howling 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Robot Jox: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ghost Town: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Toolbox Murders 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Mad Max: Fury Road 3D:3D Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Editor: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
People Under the Stairs: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Metamorphosis and Beyond Darkness: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Sentinel: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Shocker: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Avengers: Age of Ultron: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
San Andreas: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Aladdin: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Tales From the Crypt Demon Knight and Bordello of Blood: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Human Centipede Complete Sequence: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Army of Darkness: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Garbage Pail Kids: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Cooties: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Knock Knock: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
2014
Theatrical Reviews
The Strange Colour of Your Body's Tears - CINAPSE.CO
Wetlands - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest X: Dwarves Kingdom - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest X: Electric Boogaloo the Wild Untold Story of Cannon Films - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest X: Kung-Fu Elliot - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest X: Wastelander Panda: Exile - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest X: Danger 5 Series 2 - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest X: Open Windows - CINAPSE.CO
Waiting for August - CINAPSE.CO
The Hobbit: Battle of the Five Armies - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1
PAAFF 2014: Uzumasa Limelight - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Interstellar - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PAAFF 2014: A Leading Man - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF23: Big Hero 6 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF23: The Guest - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF23: Revenge of the Green Dragons - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF23: Mudbloods - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
John Wick - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF23: The Immortalists - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
God Help The Girl - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Live - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Life After Beth - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Guardians of the Galaxy - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Lucy - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Purge: Anarchy - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Transformers: Age of Extinction - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Signal - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
X-Men: Days of Future Past - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Amazing Spiderman 2 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Raid 2: Berandal - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Captain America: The Winter Soldier - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Veronica Mars - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Morris County - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Wind Rises - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Pompeii - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Robocop (2014) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Lego Movie - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Home Media Reviews
Christmas Evil: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Dogville Shorts: DVD - CINAPSE.CO
Fire in the Sky: DVD - CINAPSE.CO
Motel Hell: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Hallucination Strip: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
You're Next: DVD - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Catching Fire: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Grandmaster: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Thor: The Dark World: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Here Comes the Devil: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Beyond Outrage: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Nurse 3D: 3D Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Big Bad Wolves: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Escape From Tomorrow: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Journey to the West: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Grand Piano: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Monkey's Paw: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Adjust Your Tracking: DVD - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ginger Snaps: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Nymphomaniac: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Under the Skin: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Protector 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Phantom of the Paradise: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Toy Story of Terror: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ong-Bak Trilogy: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Locke: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Legend of Hell House: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Captain America The Winter Soldier: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Pumpkinhead: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Jack and the Cuckoo Clock Heart: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Sharknado 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Life After Beth: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Night Breed: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Squad: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Doctor and the Devils: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Maleficent: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Pumpkinhead 2: Blood Wings: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Guardians of the Galaxy: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
2013
Theatrical Reviews
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Thor: The Dark World - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF22: The Suspect - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Machete Kills - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Riddick - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
You're Next - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Drug War - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Wolverine - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Act of Killing - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Pacific Rim - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
World War Z - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Man of Steel - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Violet and Daisy - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Fast and Furious 6 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Iron Man 3 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Oblivion - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Lords of Salem - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Evil Dead (2013) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The We and I - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Zero Dark Thirty - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Fantastic Fest 2013: Escape from Tomorrow - CINAPSE.CO
Fantastic Fest 2013: The Green Inferno - CINAPSE.CO
Home Media Reviews
Five Dolls for an August Moon & Bay of Blood: Blu-ray - CINAPSE.CO
Tai Chi Zero: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Thieves: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
A Simple Life: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Dead Ball: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Cloud Atlas: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Side Effects: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Mad Max Trilogy: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Sadako 3D: 3D Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Enter The Dragon: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Bullet to the Head: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Pacific Rim 3D: 3D Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Monsters University: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Wolverine Unleashed Extended Edition: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
2012
Theatrical Reviews
Django Unchained - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Les Miserables - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Skatopia: 88 Acres of Anarchy - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF21: Flight - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF21: We are Legion - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Looper - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Dredd 3D - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Brooklyn Brothers Beat the Best - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Sleepwalk with Me - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Words - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Dark Knight Rises - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Moonrise Kingdom - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Men in Black 3 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Dark Shadows - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Avengers - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Cabin in the Woods - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Raid: Redemption - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Hunger Games - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Casa Di Mi Padre - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
John Carter - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Red Tails - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Home Media Reviews
Gremlins 1 & 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Cherry Bomb: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Quick! & Karate Robo Zaborgar: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Battleship: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Jaws: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Expendables 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
V/H/S: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Dark Knight Rises: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
2011
Theatrical Reviews
Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Hugo/The Muppets - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF20: Melancholia - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Paranormal Activity 3 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Thing (2011) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Drive - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Bellflower - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Don't Be Afraid of the Dark - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Fright Night (2011) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Final Destination 5 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Rise of the Planet of the Apes - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Cowboys and Aliens - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Captain America: The First Avenger - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Transformers: Dark of the Moon - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Green Lantern - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Super 8 - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
X-Men: First Class - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Cinefest 2011: Robot aka Endhiran - GEEKADELPHIA
Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Super - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Suckerpunch - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Your Highness - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Insidious - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Limitless - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Paul - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Adjustment Bureau - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
I Am Number Four - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Gantz (Live Action) - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Green Hornet - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Home Media Reviews
Bambi: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Tron & Tron: Legacy: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
2010
Theatrical Reviews
Tron Legacy - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Warrior's Way - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF19: Mutant Girls Squad - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Let Me In - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
PFF19: Black Swan - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Social Network - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Buried - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Catfish - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Machete - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Salt - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Danger After Dark: The Temptation of Saint Tony - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Danger After Dark: Amer - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Danger After Dark: Robogeisha - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Danger After Dark: Dogtooth - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Square - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Kick Ass - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Black Waters of Echo Pond - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Repomen - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Crazies - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Home Media Reviews
Toy Story 1 & 2: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
James and the Giant Peach: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Toy Story 3: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Best Worst Movie: DVD - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
2009
Theatrical Reviews
Fall Down Dead - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
The Fourth Kind - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
AstroBoy - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Home Media Reviews
The Princess and the Frog: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
Ponyo: Blu-ray - GEEKADELPHIA.COM
1 note · View note
stainedglassgardens · 6 years
Text
Favourite films watched in 2018
I arranged them into broad categories -- other than that they’re in no particular order.
Indie
River of Grass, Meek’s Cutoff and Night Moves (Kelly Reichardt, 1994, 2010 and 2013)
Tangerine and The Florida Project (Sean Baker, 2015 and 2017)
We Need to Talk About Kevin (Lynne Ramsay, 2011)
Winter’s Bone (Debra Granik, 2010)
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter (David Zellner, 2014)
Ginger & Rosa (Sally Potter, 2012)
Cracks (Jordan Scott, 2009)
I Am Not a Witch (Rungano Nyoni, 2017)
Turn the River (Chris Eigeman, 2007)
Hello I Must Be Going (Todd Louiso, 2012)
Shuttle Life (Tan Seng Kiat, 2017)
On Body and Soul (Testről és lélekről, Ildikó Enyedi, 2017)
Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi, Agnès Varda, 1984)
Easy Living (Adam Keleman, 2017)
Mother of George (Andrew Dosunmu, 2013)
Khadak (Peter Brosens and Jessica Hope Woodworth, 2006)
Shirkers (Sandi Tan, 2018)
Comedy
Lipstick Under My Burkha (Alankrita Shrivastava, 2016)
Addicted to Fresno (Jamie Babbit, 2015)
The Spy Who Dumped Me (Susanna Fogel, 2018)
Edge of Seventeen (David Moreton, 1998)
Secretary (Steven Shainberg, 2002)
Experimental
Scorpio Rising (Kenneth Anger, 1963)
Always Shine (Sophia Takal, 2016)
The Midnight Swim (Sarah Adina Smith, 2014)
La Jetée (Chris Marker, 1962)
Daisies (Sedmikrásky, Věra Chytilová, 1966)
Classics
Reflections in a Golden Eye (John Huston, 1967)
Dead Ringer (Paul Henreid, 1964)
Horror
Creep and Creep 2 (Patrick Brice, 2014 and 2017)
The Poughkeepsie Tapes and As Above, So Below (John Erick Dowdle, 2007 and 2014)
Raw (Grave, Julia Ducournau, 2016)
Cargo (Ben Howling and Yolanda Ramke, 2017)
Hard Candy (David Slade, 2005)
Snowtown (Justin Kurzel, 2011)
Banshee Chapter (Blair Erickson, 2013)
Mandy (Panos Cosmatos, 2018)
Science fiction
Primer and  Upstream Color (Shane Carruth, 2004 and 2013)
Resolution and The Endless (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2012 and 2017)
Midnight Special (Jeff Nichols, 2016)
Arrival (Denis Villeneuve, 2016)
Into the Forest (Patricia Rozema, 2015)
Ex Machina (Alex Garland, 2014)
Under the Skin (Jonathan Glazer, 2013)
Liquid Sky (Slava Tsukerman, 1982)
Bird Box (Susanne Bier, 2018)
Action
Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie, 2016)
M.F.A. (Natalia Leite, 2017)
Revenge (Coralie Fargeat, 2017)
Brick (Rian Johnson, 2005)
Full list of 306 films watched in 2018 under the cut!
January
The Devil’s Candy (Sean Byrne, 2015)
A United Kingdom (Amma Asante, 2016)
Creep (Patrick Brice, 2014)
The Witch (Robert Eggers, 2015)
The Blues Brothers (John Landis, 1980)
The Lost Boys (Joel Schumacher, 1987)
Midnight Special (Jeff Nichols, 2016)
Arrival (Denis Villeneuve, 2016)
We Need to Talk About Kevin (Lynne Ramsay, 2011)
Life (Daniel Espinosa, 2017)
Logan (James Mangold, 2017)
Creep 2 (Patrick Brice, 2017)
The Discovery (Charlie McDowell, 2017)
Otherlife (Ben C. Lucas, 2017)
The Dressmaker (Jocelyn Moorhouse, 2015)
Bokeh (Geoffrey Orthwein and Andrew Sullivan , 2017)
February
Get Out (Jordan Peele, 2017)
The Handmaiden (아가씨, Agassi, Park Chan-wook, 2016)
Brick (Rian Johnson, 2005)
Looper (Rian Johnson, 2012)
Winter’s Bone (Debra Granik, 2010)
Thelma (Joachim Trier, 2017)
The Guest (Adam Wingard, 2014)
Beach Rats (Eliza Hittman, 2017)
Let the Right One In (Låt den rätte komma in, Tomas Alfredson, 2008)
Cameraperson (Kirsten Johnson, 2016)
Sweet Bean (あん, An, Naomi Kawase, 2015)
The Hallow (Corin Hardy, 2015)
Cloverfield (Matt Reeves, 2008)
10 Cloverfield Lane (Dan Trachtenberg, 2016)
The Cloverfield Paradox (Julius Onah, 2018)
Moonlight (Barry Jenkins, 2016)
28 Days Later (Danny Boyle, 2002)
Take Shelter (Jeff Nichols, 2011)
Ginger Snaps (John Fawcett, 2000)
River of Grass (Kelly Reichardt, 1994)
Old Joy (Kelly Reichardt, 2006)
Reflections in a Golden Eye (John Huston, 1967)
March
Raw (Grave, Julia Ducournau, 2016)
Palo Alto (Gia Coppola, 2013)
By the Sea (Angelina Jolie, 2015)
Lady Bird (Greta Gerwig, 2017)
Jupiter Ascending (The Wachowskis, 2015)
Irreplaceable You (Stephanie Laing, 2018)
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter (David Zellner, 2014)
Annihilation (Alex Garland, 2018)
Ravenous (Les Affamés, Robin Aubert, 2017)
The Bad Batch (Ana Lily Amirpour, 2016)
Notes on Blindness (Peter Middleton and James Spinney, 2016)
Breathe (Respire, Mélanie Laurent, 2014)
Night Moves (Kelly Reichardt, 2013)
Carol (Todd Haynes, 2015)
Lovesong (So Yong Kim, 2016)
Upstream Color (Shane Carruth, 2013)
April
ARQ (Tony Elliott, 2016)
Primer (Shane Carruth, 2004)
Meek’s Cutoff (Kelly Reichardt, 2010)
Certain Women (Kelly Reichardt, 2016)
The Lady from Shanghai (Orson Welles, 1947)
Waking Life (Richard Linklater, 2001)
Roman Holiday (William Wyler, 1953)
American Honey (Andrea Arnold, 2016)
Maurice (James Ivory, 1987)
The Silent House (La Casa Muda, Gustavo Hernández, 2010)
Viral (Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost, 2016)
Buster’s Mal Heart (Sarah Adina Smith, 2016)
Waitress (Adrienne Shelly, 2007)
Grey Gardens (Albert and David Maysle, 1975)
Ginger & Rosa (Sally Potter, 2012)
Cracks (Jordan Scott, 2009)
Into the Forest (Patricia Rozema, 2015)
A New Leaf (Elaine May, 1971)
Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958)
The Beguiled (Sofia Coppola, 2017)
Scarface (Brian De Palma, 1983)
The Violent Years (William Morgan, 1956)
The Ritual (David Bruckner, 2017)
Casting JonBenet (Kitty Green, 2017)
Slums of Beverly Hills (Tamara Jenkins, 1998)
We’ve Forgotten More Than We Ever Knew (Thomas Woodrow, 2017)
Love and Other Cults (Kemonomichi, Eiji Uchida, 2017)
You Were Never Really Here (Lynne Ramsay, 2017)
Shirley: Visions of Reality (Gustav Deutsch, 2013)
Catfight (Onur Tuckel, 2017)
Pyewacket (Adam MacDonald, 2017)
May
Lick the Star (Sofia Coppola, 1998)
Scorpio Rising (Kenneth Anger, 1963)
Novitiate (Maggie Betts, 2017)
The Tree of Life (Terrence Malick, 2011)
The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki (Hymyilevä mies, Juho Kuosmanen, 2016)
Dead Reckoning (John Cromwell, 1947)
Human Flow (Ai Weiwei, 2017)
Mystery Train (Jim Jarmusch, 1989)
Dawson City: Frozen Time (Bill Morrison, 2016)
The Killing of a Sacred Deer (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2017)
I Am Not a Witch (Rungano Nyoni, 2017)
Cléo from 5 to 7 (Cléo de 5 à 7, Agnès Varda, 1962)
Orbiter 9 (Órbita 9, Hatem Khraiche, 2017)
M.F.A. (Natalia Leite, 2017)
Lipstick Under My Burkha (Alankrita Shrivastava, 2016)
Kedi (Ceyda Torun, 2016)
Deidra and Laney Rob a Train (Sydney Freeland, 2017)
The Most Dangerous Game (Irving Pichel and Ernest B. Schoedsack, 1932)
Girl Asleep (Rosemary Myers, 2015)
Always Shine (Sophia Takal, 2016)
The Monster (Bryan Bertino, 2016)
Desert Hearts (Donna Deitch, 1985)
Addicted to Fresno (Jamie Babbit, 2015)
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (Fritz Lang, 1956)
The Fits (Anna Rose Holmer, 2015)
Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie, 2016)
The Midnight Swim (Sarah Adina Smith, 2014)
The Quiet Hour (Stéphanie Joalland, 2014)
Synchronicity (Jacob Gentry, 2015)
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Mike Nichols, 1966)
Pod (Mickey Keating, 2015)
Turn the River (Chris Eigeman, 2007)
Tangerine (Sean Baker, 2015)
Frequencies (Darren Paul Fisher, 2013)
Spring (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2014)
Time Lapse (Bradley D. King, 2014)
Meet Me There (Lex Lybrand, 2014)
Ex Machina (Alex Garland, 2014)
The Florida Project (Sean Baker, 2017)
Berberian Sound Studio (Peter Strickland, 2012)
Laggies (Lynn Shelton, 2014)
Starlet (Sean Baker, 2012)
Dead Ringer (Paul Henreid, 1964)
The Doom Generation (Gregg Araki, 1995)
The Riot Club (Lone Scherfig, 2014)
Berlin Syndrome (Cate Shortland, 2017)
Dude (Olivia Milch, 2018)
Nightcrawler (Dan Gilroy, 2014)
June
Hello I Must Be Going (Todd Louiso, 2012)
Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion (David Mirkin, 1997)
Mystery Road (Ivan Sen, 2013)
The Double (Richard Ayoade, 2013)
Dear White People (Justin Simien, 2014)
The Selfish Giant (Clio Barnard, 2013)
Don’t Breathe (Fede Álvarez, 2016)
Marina Abramović: The Artist is Present (Matthew Akers, 2012)
Hot Bot (Michael Polish, 2016)
Beneath the Harvest Sky (Aron Gaudet and Gita Pullapilly, 2013)
Tim’s Vermeer (Teller, 2013)
The Firefly (La Luciérnaga, Ana Maria Hermida, 2015)
Twinsters (Samantha Futerman and Ryan Miyamoto, 2015)
Resolution (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2012)
Enemy (Denis Villeneuve, 2013)
Mother of George (Andrew Dosunmu, 2013)
We Are What We Are (Jim Mickle, 2013)
The Battery (Jeremy Gardner, 2012)
Crystal Fairy & The Magical Cactus (Sebastián Silva , 2013)
Boy (Taika Waititi,2010)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Steven Chbosky, 2012)
White Bird in a Blizzard (Gregg Araki, 2014)
The American (Anton Corbijn, 2010)
Ocean’s Eight (Gary Ross, 2018)
Compliance (Craig Zobel, 2012)
Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (Lorene Scafaria, 2012)
Weekend (Andrew Haigh, 2011)
Under the Skin (Jonathan Glazer, 2013)
July
Martha Marcy May Marlene (Sean Durkin, 2011)
Safety Not Guaranteed (Colin Trevorrow, 2012)
Hard Candy (David Slade, 2005)
Duck Butter (Miguel Arteta, 2018)
The Artist (Michel Hazanavicius, 2011)
Another Earth (Mike Cahill, 2011)
Melancholia (Lars von Trier, 2011)
Woodshock (Kate and Laura Mulleavy, 2017)
Hanna (Joe Wright, 2011)
Snowtown (Justin Kurzel, 2011)
Aloft (Claudia Llosa, 2014)
A Fantastic Woman (Una mujer fantástica, Sebastián Lelio, 2017)
The Feels (Jenée LaMarque, 2017)
The Endless (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2017)
Shuttle Life (Tan Seng Kiat, 2017)
I Origins (Mike Cahill, 2014)
The Taking of Deborah Logan (Adam Robitel, 2014)
Chasing Ice (Jeff Orlowski, 2012)
Manchester By the Sea (Kenneth Lonergan, 2016)
The Bar (El Bar, Álex de la Iglesia, 2017)
Mr. Roosevelt (Noël Wells, 2017)
Woman Walks Ahead (Susanna White, 2017)
The Manual (William Magness, 2017)
The Conjuring (James Wan, 2013)
Oculus (Mike Flanagan, 2013)
The Eye (Pang brothers, 2002)
August
The Overnight (Peter Brice, 2015)
Axolotl Overkill (Helene Hegemann, 2017)
Little Sister (Zach Clark, 2016)
Witchfinder General (Michael Reeves, 1968)
Secretary (Steven Shainberg, 2002)
The Quiet Earth (Geoff Murphy, 1985)
The Hunger (Tony Scott, 1983)
They (Anahita Ghazvinizadeh, 2017)
Revenge (Coralie Fargeat, 2017)
Cargo (Ben Howling and Yolanda Ramke, 2017)
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (Amy Heckerling, 1982)
Radius (Caroline Labrèche and Steeve Léonard, 2017)
17 Girls (17 Filles, Delphine Coulin and Muriel Coulin, 2011)
The Deuce of Spades (Faith Granger, 2011)
The Bank Job (Roger Donaldson, 2008)
La Jetée (Chris Marker, 1962)
Train to Busan  (부산행, Busanhaeng, Yeon Sang-ho, 2016)
As Above, So Below (John Erick Dowdle, 2014)
Liquid Sky (Slava Tsukerman, 1982)
Wild Zero (Tetsuro Takeuchi, 1999)
Multiple Maniacs (John Waters, 1970)
The Lifeguard (Liz W. Garcia, 2013)
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Les Parapluies de Cherbourg, Jacques Demy, 1964)
The Beales of Grey Gardens (Albert Maysles, David Maysles and Ian Markiewicz, 2006)
The Edge of Seventeen (Kelly Fremon Craig, 2016)
Salesman (Albert Maysles, David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin, 1969)
Easy Living (Adam Keleman, 2017)
Going Back (Adam Keleman, 2010)
A Series of Acts (Adam Keleman, 2006)
Long Days (Adam Keleman, 2012)
Okja (Bong Joon-ho, 2017)
Before I Fall (Ry Russo-Young, 2017)
The Poughkeepsie Tapes (John Erick Dowdle, 2007)
Three Colours: Blue (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1993)
Three Colours: White (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1994)
Three Colours: Red (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1994)
Island of Lost Souls (Erle C. Kenton, 1932)
Khadak (Peter Brosens and Jessica Hope Woodworth, 2006)
The Lure (Córki dancingu, Agnieszka Smoczyńska, 2015)
Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi, Agnès Varda, 1984)
Little Evil (Eli Craig, 2017)
September
The Harder They Come (Perry Henzell, 1972)
Isle of Flowers (Ilha das Flores, Jorge Furtado, 1989)
Beat Girl (Edmond T. Gréville, 1960)
On Body and Soul (Testről és lélekről, Ildikó Enyedi, 2017)
Village of the Damned (Wolf RIlla, 1960)
Tampopo (タンポポ, Tanpopo, Juzo Itami, 1985)
Mustang (Deniz Gamze Ergüven, 2015)
Outside In (Lynn Shelton, 2017)
Voyeur (Myles Kane, 2017)
The Land of Steady Habits (Nicole Holofcener, 2018)
Clouds of Sils Maria (Olivier Assayas, 2014)
Already Tomorrow in Hong Kong (Emily Ting, 2015)
Tig (Kristina Goolsby and Ashley York, 2015)
Shortwave (Ryan Phillips, 2016)
The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond (Jodie Markell, 2008)
Sexy Beast (Jonathan Glazer, 2000)
October
The Most Assassinated Woman in the World (La Femme la plus assassinée du monde, Franck Ribière, 2018)
I Think We’re Alone Now (Reed Morano, 2018)
The Woman Who Left (Ang Babaeng Humayo, Lav Diaz, 2016)
The Babysitter (Brian Duffield, 2017)
The Frighteners (Peter Jackson, 1996)
Emelie (Michael Thelin, 2015)
21 Grams (Alejandro González Iñárritu, 2003)
Apostle (Gareth Evans, 2018)
Phantasm (Don Coscarelli, 1979)
Banshee Chapter (Blair Erickson, 2013)
Joshua (George Ratliff, 2007)
Office (오피스, Hong Won-chan, 2015)
The Nightmare (Rodney Ascher, 2015)
The Spy Who Dumped Me (Susanna Fogel, 2018)
Before I Wake (Mike Flanagan, 2016)
The Most Unknown (Ian Cheney, 2018)
Private Life (Tamara Jenkins, 2018)
Octavio is Dead! (Sook-Yin Lee, 2018)
Leave No Trace (Debra Granik, 2018)
Cube (Vincenzo Natali, 1997)
Galveston (Mélanie Laurent, 2018)
Growing Up Coy (Eric Juhola, 2016)
Texas Chain Saw Massacre (Tobe Hooper, 1974)
November
Murder My Sweet (Edward Dmytryk, 1944)
Madeline’s Madeline (Josephine Decker, 2018)
Out of the Past (Jacques Tourneur, 1947)
Mandy (Panos Cosmatos, 2018)
Crossfire (Edward Dmytryk, 1947)
The Lobster (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2015)
Silent Light (Stellet Licht, Carlos Reygadas, 2007)
Shirkers (Sandi Tan, 2018)
Berlin Express (Jacques Tourneur, 1948)
Red Road (Andrea Arnold, 2006)
Angels Wear White (嘉年华, Vivian Qu, 2017)
Interstellar (Christopher Nolan, 2014)
The Italian Job (F. Gary Gray, 2003)
In the Aisles (In den Gängen, Thomas Stuber, 2018)
Edge of Seventeen (David Moreton, 1998)
Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller, 2015)
Columbus (Kogonada, 2017)
I Don’t Feel at Home in this World Anymore (Macon Blair, 2017)
The Full Monty (Peter Cattaneo, 1997)
Daisies (Sedmikrásky, Věra Chytilová, 1966)
Blue My Mind (Lisa Brühlmann, 2017)
December
The Tokyo Night Sky is Always the Densest Shade of Blue (夜空はいつでも最高密度の青色だ, Yozora wa itsudemo saiko mitsudo no aoiro da, Yuya Ishii, 2017)
Michael Lost and Found (Daniel Wilner, 2017)
The Trader (Sovdagari, Tamta Gabrichidze, 2018)
Valley Girl (Martha Coolidge, 1983)
The Kindergarten Teacher (Sara Colangelo, 2018)
Everything Beautiful is Far Away (Pete Ohs and Andrea Sisson, 2017)
McQueen (Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui, 2018)
Better Watch Out (Chris Peckover, 2016)
I Feel Pretty (Abby Kohn, 2018)
Eighth Grade (Bo Burnham, 2018)
A Simple Favor (Paul Feig, 2018)
Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story (Alexandra Dean, 2017)
Grandma (Paul Weitz, 2015)
Bird Box (Susanne Bier, 2018)
The Man in the Wall (האיש שבקיר‎, Evgeny Ruman, 2015)
Tout ce qui brille (Géraldine Nakache and Hervé Mimran, 2010)
Gas Food Lodging (Allison Anders, 1992)
Love, Cecil (Lisa Immordino Vreeland, 2018)
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daleisgreat · 5 years
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The Accountant
I have been anticipating doing today’s entry for awhile, but held off to put some distance behind my initial theatrical viewing two and a half years ago to see if 2016’s The Accountant (trailer) was still worthy of being ranked as my 2016 film of the year. After re-watching it yesterday I can safely assure it absolutely does. Another reason I was a little reluctant going back to it was being trepid of having rose-colored glasses for the time and place I originally saw The Accountant. I was on my last day of work before starting a vacation in fall of 2016 and on break I was skimming through the local paper’s entertainment section and it had a little write-up of The Accountant and its risks taken of doing a movie centered around a person with autism and making them a professional assassin. I somehow missed previews for it and it was the first I heard of the film. A couple friends who knew I was heading out of town the next day gave me a buzz after work to see if I wanted to join them to see The Accountant, and I was intrigued by the brief summary in the paper I read and have been a huge fan of Affleck for the better part of his career to jump on the opportunity. It turned out being a great decision and a perfect way to kickoff a vacation.
The film grabbed me right away with the opening scene where one Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) is at his front, ‘ZZZ Accounting,’ doing the taxes for a down-on-their-luck farming couple. The way it plays out almost instantly made Christian affable for pulling the farmers out of a tough hole. The opening scenes proceed to introduce how Christian copes with his day-to-day lifestyle while we are introduced to a pair of FBI agents Ray King (JK Simmons) and Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) who is tasked with tracking down Wolff throughout the film. There are so many great little exchanges early in the film, especially when Wolff is getting acquainted with the rest of the cast. He is introduced to Lamar Blackburn (John Lithgow) who hires him to track down missing money recently reported to his company. Wolff’s scenes with the adorably aloof Dana Cummings (Anna Kendrick) steal the film every time they share the screen. Cummings is Wolff’s assistant in tracking down the missing money, and naturally their digging gets too deep and assassins are sent after them with the primary one going by Brax (a pre-Punisher Jon Bernthal). Little did the assassins know who they were targeting as their attempts at laying waste to the accountants is the catalyst that yields several thrilling action/chase sequences as a result.
Interspersed throughout the film is a series of flashbacks with Christian and his family coping with Christian’s condition and how his father put him through some grueling home therapy and training that lead him to become the ‘accountant’ he is in the film’s present day. It was fascinating watching these flashbacks play out and piecing The Accountant’s greater over-arching plot together along with the FBI in some excellent deducing scenes as everything falls into place. Most films have twists that we can predict or see coming from a mile away, but I loved how they played out in multiple ways in the closing moments to wrap a tidy bow on this. I do not want to overhype this as the quintessential brain-buster, but for me The Accountant provided the perfect balance of detective work, exposition, high-tempo chases and action that combined for the killer formula and make it my favorite film of 2016. There are only three quick bonus features on the BluRay totaling up to 25 minutes, but worth going out of your way to see. Both Inside the Man and Behavioral Sciencedeal with the cast and crew’s research that went into the film and how they strived to give a faithful portrayal of Autism. They both provided great insight on their experiences and sessions on doing their background for the film. Accountant in Action is all about the stunts and choreography for the movie. What is here is good, but the extra features felt they were missing one or two things to make the bonuses collectively pop like a commentary track with Affleck, Kendrick, Simmons and director Gavin O’Connor, but it was not meant to be!
On a final note I want to make sure to applaud the casting for this film as O’Connor got excellent performances out of everyone. When doing research for this film I became giddy to see a sequel was announced with most of the headlining cast returning and O’Connor coming back to direct, but that was two years ago and when checking IMDB the sequel is still listed as merely ‘announced.’ Here is hoping the sequel comes to fruition, and if you cannot tell by now The Accountant gets my highest of recommendations to check out if you have not done so already. Other Random Backlog Movie Blogs 3 12 Angry Men (1957) 12 Rounds 3: Lockdown 21 Jump Street Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie Atari: Game Over The Avengers: Age of Ultron Batman: The Killing Joke Batman: Mask of the Phantasm Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice Bounty Hunters Cabin in the Woods Captain America: Civil War Captain America: The First Avenger Captain America: The Winter Soldier Christmas Eve Clash of the Titans (1981) Clint Eastwood 11-pack Special The Condemned 2 Countdown Creed Deck the Halls Die Hard Dredd The Eliminators The Equalizer Dirty Work Faster Fast and Furious I-VIII Field of Dreams Fight Club The Fighter For Love of the Game Good Will Hunting Gravity Guardians of the Galaxy Hercules: Reborn Hitman Indiana Jones 1-4 Ink The Interrogation Interstellar Jobs Joy Ride 1-3 Man of Steel Man on the Moon Marine 3-6 Metallica: Some Kind of Monster Mortal Kombat National Treasure National Treasure: Book of Secrets The Replacements Reservoir Dogs Rocky I-VII Running Films Part 1 Running Films Part 2 San Andreas ScoobyDoo Wrestlemania Mystery The Secret Life of Walter Mitty Shoot em Up Skyscraper Small Town Santa Steve Jobs Source Code Star Trek I-XIII Take Me Home Tonight TMNT The Tooth Fairy 1 & 2 UHF Veronica Mars Vision Quest The War Wild Wonder Woman The Wrestler (2008) X-Men: Days of Future Past
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jeramymobley · 6 years
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UK Retailer John Lewis Launches 2018 Christmas Ad Starring Elton John
UK retailer John Lewis & Partners has released its new Christmas ad—and this year it features none other than Sir Elton John.
The ad, called “The Boy and the Piano,” kicks off in the modern day, with John quietly tickling the ivories in his home. Then, with “Your Song” playing, it takes us back through the years to when he received his very first piano as a Christmas gift from his mother and grandmother.
In between, we revisit with John performing to packed stadiums, in smaller clubs and pubs, and nervously perched on a piano bench front of his first audience during a school performance.
Then once again, we are back with John in his home, and the ad closes with the words: “Some gifts are more than just a gift.”
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While this is a departure from John Lewis’ previous Christmas ads featuring lovable animals, this ad, which uses the hashtag #EltonJohnLewis, still looks to make the same emotional connection. Some found that connection easy to make.
John Lewis have won Christmas, everyone else go home (and cry over their advert) #EltonJohnLewis pic.twitter.com/upTiBRnIba
— Shannon (@shannon_deeley) November 15, 2018
At the start I was thinking what the hell? In the middle I thought, I don't get it. By the end I held back tears.
So beautiful. Well done. #EltonJohnLewis
— Jordan Smith (@jordanfpsmith) November 15, 2018
This.This is so sweet and touching!You might get goosebumps or be balling by the end. So rare do we see someone who's gift has touched the world,go back in time on their journey in a rapid way to the magic moment when their eyes lit up.#EltonJohn #EltonJohnLewis #MerryChristmas https://t.co/37bOtxRScc
— KATE FLOOD (@Richnessofbeing) November 15, 2018
Others felt it lacked a true Christmas connection.
Well I don’t know about you, but to me, nothing says Christmas like the story of a multi millionaire pop star and the humongous present that you’d have to give your toddler to mirror it. I wonder what happened to the kids who got tangerines. #eltonjohnlewis pic.twitter.com/39v9nc5OtD
— Charlotte (@tinycharlotte72) November 15, 2018
hmmm, I love a good Christmas advert but this #EltonJohnLewis isn't doing it for me. Too much Elton, not enough Christmas? I get the sentiment but it feels like more of a partnership promo
— Caroline (@runswithpencil) November 15, 2018
WELL DONE JOHN LEWIS, VERY CHRISTMASSY ADVERT AND DEFINITELY NOT AN ADVERT FOR A FILM#WeArePartners #EltonJohnLewis pic.twitter.com/lK0FYDpN6E
— Jake FM (@JustScruff) November 15, 2018
In 2017, the retailer introduced “Moz the Monster,” the lovable creature who lived under a little boy’s bed.
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In 2016, we met “Buster the Boxer,” who famously mastered the art of bouncing on a trampoline.
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And in 2015, a young girl was determined to send a gift to the lonely “Man on the Moon.”
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2014 brought us “Monty the Penguin.”
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And in 2013, we met “The Bear & The Hare.”
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2013’s ad was all about “The Journey.”
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And in 2011, we had “The Long Wait.”
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The post UK Retailer John Lewis Launches 2018 Christmas Ad Starring Elton John appeared first on brandchannel:.
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herobrilne · 1 year
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redraw of my old edison-lang family photo!!
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old picture from 2021 (?)
ive changed a lot of the ages of the characters since i drew this, and also i decided to have my hc version back when the show first came out instead of 2020. im definetely very nostalgic about the late 2000s </3
i definetely improved alot and im v happy with the new piece :3
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samsdisneydiary · 5 years
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Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration Aired on NBC
What Do Michael Eisner, Harry Anderson, Ashford and Simpson, George Burns, Joy Monica and Leanna Creel, Walter Cronkite, Jane Fonda, John Forsythe, Estelle Getty, George S Irving, Kate Jackson, Rue McClanahan, Ann Miller, Eve Montand, Willie Nelson, Buster Poindexter, The Pointer Sisters, Stephanie Powers, Tony Randall, John Ritter, Smokey Robinson, Mickey Rooney, Suzanne Somers, James Stewart, Dick van Dyke,  Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and Lech Walesa all have in common?
They all participated in the Walt Disney World MGM Studios Opening Day Television Special; well maybe not together, but they were on the same telecast on April 30th 1989.
30 years ago, Disney MGM Studios opened to the public and with only 5 opening day attractions: The Great Movie Ride, The Backstage Studio Tour, The Magic of Disney Animation Tour, The Monster Sound Show and Superstar Television.  MGM Studios was the definition of a half day park.  The Great Movie Ride was the last opening day attraction at MGM studios until it closed August 13, 2017, marking the end of an era.  The recently opened International Gateway at EPCOT Center allowed guests to board a tram to MGM Studios then return to EPCOT Center later that same day.  The tram pickup was where the Skyline Station is currently being built, and the ride included views of the still under construction Swan & Dolphin and Yacht & Beach Club.
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Being a Disney history buff, I find it fascinating to look back at how Disney positioned the opening of the new park.  The Hollywood that always was, and never will be; at the time, it was a working studio giving you a look at how movies and television shows are made.  After Animal Kingdom opened in 1998, there were lots of rumors of a 5th gate at Walt Disney World, another theme park.  I think it’s safe to say that with the changes at Disney Hollywood Studios over the last 5 years, they have created that new theme park while we were watching and paying admission to Studios.   It’s clear the new Hollywood studios, if that’s the name, will immerse us into the movies, not behind the scenes of the movies.
I hope you enjoy this look back at Hollywood Studio’s opening day as much as I do!
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration Aired on NBC
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration Aired on NBC
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – Smokey Robinson takes flight on Hollywood Blvd
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – John Ritter
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – John Ritter
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – Harry Anderson
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – John Ritter
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – A look inside the animation studio
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – Herbie and Micky on residential street
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – New York Street
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – Hollywood Blvd full of Performers
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration – Fireworks
Disney MGM Studios Opening Day Celebration
  Disney MGM/Hollywood Studios Opening Day Celebration What Do Michael Eisner, Harry Anderson, Ashford and Simpson, George Burns, Joy Monica and Leanna Creel, Walter Cronkite, Jane Fonda, John Forsythe, Estelle Getty, George S Irving, Kate Jackson, Rue McClanahan, Ann Miller, Eve Montand, Willie Nelson, Buster Poindexter, The Pointer Sisters, Stephanie Powers, Tony Randall, John Ritter, Smokey Robinson, Mickey Rooney, Suzanne Somers, James Stewart, Dick van Dyke,  Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and Lech Walesa all have in common?
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mydreamosphere · 6 years
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Annabelle me Herman kicked me to the curb he was Batman I was John Doe
Jeremy a rich ghost boy tried to take over my life, but we bonded in the end
Andi Mack was pregnant with Jonah’s child but they weren’t dating and Cyrus was jealous and tried to run away but andi told him it’s okay and to finally confess to Jonah/ Stewie was dating Brian and Brian was a bum ass nigga and an apocalypse happened and Brian proposed to stewie and became a better man, well dog, dog man? Man dog ?/ I was Geralt of rivia and went to a store with vesmer, and we laughed a lot, then I turned into a woman and my husband and his alternate universe selves fought and died and I became an alcoholic and ended up with another alternate in the end/ I was a power ranger, red one, trained a new ranger, all rangers came together after years and the we sang.
A vampire werewolf hybrid boy( he was born a vamp but made into a werewolf) was my friend but my bully and crush and turned me into a werewolf too and we had to do battle at the end and I’m sad cause he had to die but I loved him but I only just realized 😪
Magic world And human one, kinda hidden but not really. / Had massive amount of drugs, was in a true blood esque enviroment.
Club, took mad pills, nick was there, caught up and went on a date. We weren’t compatible, but we Rekindled friendship, I still loved him.
Extremely vivid dreams, lucid ones, feel so real, almost can’t tell I’m dreaming. Had powers and twin, dating same boy, interrogated ninjA turtles human versions, so hot. Fought giant troll beast creatures, killed one but he was cute.
Was in love with king of Spain even tho he’s married, I was his mistress and Assassin, we we’re sharing a cigarette and flirting, then he needed help with his sons’, Avalon, murder. Alex Lilly was there for some reason, all my old friends were Assassins with me actually. We last left off going through old castle ruins, but a spider got in the way, which the king found amusing XP
We were on water and ships and this guy didn’t want this little boy to be gay, so RuPaul raised him but he has to go away, and he cane back to visit with his boyfriend and it was so emotional and happy, then he went back to land and opened a matchmaker cafe and he had powers of love.
A movie about the apocalypse, people were turning into demons and the only way to avoid them was to remain absolutely still, I mean like the slightest movement and you were dead, it was one of the scariest dreams I’ve had. I turned into one and so did my friends, but we could retain our humanity, and we fought and found a way to the heavens and started to live in peace but god was trying to kill us all./ I found a man who could fly, and he lent me the power to do it, but I ended up being a natural with it and didn’t need his power, so he tried to get rid of me but I busted out of there and flew away.
An apocalypse and we had different groups trying to all meet up. I had oral sex with Mikey. Thanos came down and was looking for gamora, we got the help of the astrals from ffxv, but it didn’t work, and then went to destroy half the world. I killed a werewolf, but he had a boyfriend, they were werewolf priests ? It was weird, but I felt terrible and buried him. Then I was a surviver mountain-y guy with a pet bear, zombies were coming so I tried to find a place inside. I was gohan and was trying to steal moonshine from the Archean from ffxv with my friends that had a crush on me ?
My mom was giant, and kissed Eb. Eb cheated on Marcus. I was a white gay married to a bisexual gay that cheated with his old ex gf, we had kids, 4, and I loved them all. I went to a party and made friends except one of them thought I liked him cause I kept accidentally falling into.
Apocalypse I was Bayek of Siwa and then he died and then I was his eagle and it was sad and sweet. Years after apocalypse things are returning to normal in a pair of twins and they’re in love and yeah it was odd and animals evolved and adapted and were dangerous.
We were doing a play in front of the classical and in the basement was a monster witch, she tried to kill us all, even children, we ended up in a castle and the royals had powers too, come to find out she stole her powers from the old king and his magician, and they were the only ones able to get rid of her. I hitch hiked after leaving my brother, fought a bear, then I was at witch school and helping the head master defeat the evil assistant. I gave him head too.
This bitch was fucking with my friends so I destroyed her shit dumb Bitch, and we had a party to go to and she had no clothes
Freaky nightmare ghost
Murders and gore, a haunted house and a rabid buster.
Monsters and werewolves. Rival and me were wolves. In the end I rewrote history to fall in love with him.
Time hopped again, everyone was happy and alive. The best time so far, everyone was alive and I was in love with Anthony(tony).
Saw amazing band, on the ceiling, climbed and crawled around the ceiling and it was amazing. Jen turned a men tried to kill me and the bad mates got really violent, I turned out to be an old girlfriend turned into a man.
Kinda of a vuugle set up but at a restaurant setting but also a daycare. I was magic and he was a vamp and he confessed his love for me.
De-mitri was mad at me, and was my pimp, I lost my virginity. Madelane moved into my house, and Jonah from Andi Mack did too, was in love with Jonah. Stole my dad medicine.
Got shoot at, turned evil and ate my mother, wasn’t my fault, ghost friend made me evil but I got fixed. Joined a team, demitri was there, and healed people of nature, mall setting, couldn’t walk again. Turned out to be a past life. Witches tried to stop me from healing. Had sex with an evil henchmen and I was the top.
Dyed hair but eyebrows got dyed too, Luis cane down and I cleaned myself out for him, gross btw, and then turned into another cute boy who lied to me. So I stole his drugs and money with my mom.
Herman and me, sleep over. Love and stuff and sadness.
Was dating Sharon but he looked like fleury, he died, so I went to a witch, so remade him from clay and his hair took a year of baking and constant streams of my love and own power.
Sea monster, demonic, kidnapped women, criminal minds girls. AHHHHHHHHHHHHH!
Reunion, fleury and me flirted and yeah.
An old entity split into 6 people, and they kept meeting throughout history. They didn’t remember past lives, only one did at a time, and the one who did remember got taken over. Found out that it’s bad side also broke away and was trying to take over the 6 one by one. The only way to stop it was to dispel the negativity they felt.
Boyfriend was demon, loved him. Marcus had a son.
Mona demon, fought him, tried to win.
Boyfriend and Melissa, had sex with him, was too tight for penetration so I fingered him, I had to be the top. I miss him.
Friends stay at cabin, werewolf bites girl. Head werewolf was hot
Witch and powers, haunted house. Huey Dewey and Louie, I was Donald but we were all human ?
Madelane and me were friends again ?
I was getting bullied by a boy from Michigan, but then I fell for him, Jackson, then had to leave, I texted but he didn’t respond, I felt terrible but something happened to his family and he had written me letters, come to find out he was the reason I survived a tragic fall, ended up costing him his football career. We reunited in the end. Also ran into Raymond outside of ronzios. Worked at rack room, but spent a lot of time in game stop which was also a psychiatric place ? And I made friends there, karina especially, but went by rina, and was looking for Skyrim switch but bought Pokémon emerald cards instead.
Was going to classical even tho I graduated and bunked and mr bar found me and I told him off. Then I got an uber in this cool as trolley thing and fell in love with the rider alexgoober?, something Dutch like, and we did it and then he broke up with me but we were looking for each other again.
I was a drug dealer trying to avoid getting arrested. I was looking for Reid, and we found him.
Girl fights off monster bird, after trying to set it free, and then demons. Loses memory, and her amphos weapon. but is saved by mysterious power, fast forward to now she’s living with a new family in the city. Demons exist and the only thing that hurts them is amphos, a plant that contains light. There’s a church that exists dedicated to amphos, a d fighting the demons. There are hunters who have weapons that can’t meld with the amphos, and they’re are nuns that use them too and speak a language to fight the demons off. You can speak the language and you have a necklace that wards off the demons.
Buff boyfriend had sex and I love him. Ticks, cause of rain, one crawled into my thumb.
Demons and It, uncle fester but didn’t want to be called that. I was two brothers and they had a falling out after receiving superpowers cause one received better powers, and it went to his head, and the other felt left out and unimportant and unloved by his brother, and went to demon world and got back together.
I was me, and I was babysitting ravens baby, and Melissa was Chelsea, and Corey was there and victor, but Corey still looked the same, raven had a Disney thing to go to, and when she left an apocalypse type thing happened, sully was there too. I traveled to Spain I guess and was trying to learn more Spanish.
Girl, powers from a alien ai robot, meets other like her, gives some to her best friend.
Boyfriend, first date, cooked for me, lived in veazie, had a cat, six sinks, need him back.
Cameron Boyce moist, went back in time and changed things for the better. Jenny and me. Me and a girl and this gon like boy, loved each other, he could control weather, he got hurt when we were kids, and it was our fault and it changed him and he became possessive as obsessive. We had to kill him but we loved him.
Serial killer brothers, believed they were predators and everyone else was prey. Until they met me, another predator. I got to know and connect with one of the brothers and I knew if things had been different we would’ve been something. We convinced them to have a shoot out, and I won, I shoot him in the throat, but I felt bad, and he seemed so heart broken that I killed him. I held him while he bleed to death in my arms.
Madelane back in life a bit, dating a boy, in love, was Luis at first then it wasn’t m then dating luis gets involved and boy stays instead of leaving for school.
Older robin, killed people, protected best friend Isabel, killed her abusive bf. Then younger robin, flashback to how he became robin and met Isabel at smart school and wanted to date a cute nerd boy.
Are you afraid of the dark/goosebumps. Kids set of nuclear bomb, had powers, before that, main girl (wind/air powers), was dating boy (flame powers), but he was angry, third girl was younger (powers of light and flight). Horror characters like Chucky/slappy tried to kill original victims, plus the new kids. They defeated them and helped past victims. I ended up dating angry boy instead.
Melissa and me in Japan kids, someone has to stay behind in the past She does, her ring breaks like it did before and she finally realizes why, this time our friend stays behind with the ring
Toys could come alive, and wanted freedom to be, but mainly they just wanted to be with loving kids. We fought, and I killed a few. After understanding them, and realizing they just wanted to be loved, I befriended them, and reunited with mine. After everything was said and done, my old friend turned bully, who was trying to help the toys in their rebellion rekindled with me, for some reason he ended up being homeless and moved in with me and family, we fought once more and kissed and lived in love with my toys and each other. My toys lived in the basement floorboards, like the borrowers, and every night and morning I’d knock on them to let them know I still loved them.
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wlreports-blog · 6 years
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UK Retailer John Lewis Launches 2018 Christmas Ad Starring Elton John
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UK retailer John Lewis & Partners has released its new Christmas ad—and this year it features none other than Sir Elton John. The ad, called “The Boy and the Piano,” kicks off in the modern day, with John quietly tickling the ivories in his home. Then, with “Your Song” playing, it takes us back through the years to when he received his very first piano as a Christmas gift from his mother and grandmother. In between, we revisit with John performing to packed stadiums, in smaller clubs and pubs, and nervously perched on a piano bench front of his first audience during a school performance. Then once again, we are back with John in his home, and the ad closes with the words: “Some gifts are more than just a gift.” While this is a departure from John Lewis’ previous Christmas ads featuring lovable animals, this ad, which uses the hashtag #EltonJohnLewis, still looks to make the same emotional connection. Some found that connection easy to make. John Lewis have won Christmas, everyone else go home (and cry over their advert) #EltonJohnLewis pic.twitter.com/upTiBRnIba — Shannon ✨ (@shannon_deeley) November 15, 2018 At the start I was thinking what the hell? In the middle I thought, I don't get it. By the end I held back tears. So beautiful. Well done. #EltonJohnLewis — Jordan Smith (@jordanfpsmith) November 15, 2018 This.This is so sweet and touching!You might get goosebumps or be balling by the end. So rare do we see someone who's gift has touched the world,go back in time on their journey in a rapid way to the magic moment when their eyes lit up.#EltonJohn #EltonJohnLewis #MerryChristmas https://t.co/37bOtxRScc — KATE FLOOD (@Richnessofbeing) November 15, 2018 Others felt it lacked a true Christmas connection. Well I don’t know about you, but to me, nothing says Christmas like the story of a multi millionaire pop star and the humongous present that you’d have to give your toddler to mirror it. I wonder what happened to the kids who got tangerines. #eltonjohnlewis pic.twitter.com/39v9nc5OtD — Charlotte (@tinycharlotte72) November 15, 2018 hmmm, I love a good Christmas advert but this #EltonJohnLewis isn't doing it for me. Too much Elton, not enough Christmas? I get the sentiment but it feels like more of a partnership promo — Caroline (@runswithpencil) November 15, 2018 WELL DONE JOHN LEWIS, VERY CHRISTMASSY ADVERT AND DEFINITELY NOT AN ADVERT FOR A FILM#WeArePartners #EltonJohnLewis pic.twitter.com/lK0FYDpN6E — Jake FM (@JustScruff) November 15, 2018 In 2017, the retailer introduced “Moz the Monster,” the lovable creature who lived under a little boy’s bed. In 2016, we met “Buster the Boxer,” who famously mastered the art of bouncing on a trampoline. And in 2015, a young girl was determined to send a gift to the lonely “Man on the Moon.” 2014 brought us “Monty the Penguin.” And in 2013, we met “The Bear & The Hare.” 2013’s ad was all about “The Journey.” And in 2011, we had “The Long Wait.” Read the full article
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dancewithmeplano · 6 years
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Dance to the Music of Time
There’s been a lot going on. Leaving the Bad Plus is the largest shift, but various other kind of career and conceptual themes also have been undergoing transformation. I also just turned 45, ” which could be believed midpoint of this journey.
It really all does seem curved. Themes re-occur. The last month nearly felt like a trip of yesteryear.
Sarah and I visited Daniel Pinkwater. There is a meme inquiring, “What four pictures are you?” I really don’t have four pictures, but I really do have the collected works of Daniel Pinkwater. Alan Mendelsohn, Boy From Mars; The Snarkout Boys and the Avocado of Death; Lizard Music — these 3 novels “are me”
Sarah stated, let’s give Pinkwater a monster. That monster charge me a small fortune in Tokyo, but she had been right. It had been the great present, a perfect trade.
On the drive we listened to Pinkwater music books in the car. Amazing! I only learned that Mr. Pinkwater himself reads his own books and you can purchase them on iTunes. They are now an essential part of my travel catalog.
Rufus Reid turned in the Pat Zimmerli Clockworks concert at Merkin Hall. Rufus is a consecrated jazz bassist, but for me he had been also an important teacher. One afternoon at Banff in 1990, students and faculty were sitting around the coffee shop and Miles Davis’s “Bye Bye Blackbird” came on as background music. Rufus Reid staged together with Coltrane’s solo note for note. I had been impressed and impressed. To understand to perform, was I really going to have to sing Coltrane solos also? That seemed hard — too difficult! It took me decades and some further strict instruction from Lee Konitz, however, in the long run I decided that Reid was perfect. I can not sing any Coltrane yet, but I can sing a lot of Lester Young and Charlie Parker.
Photo by Vinnie Sperrazza
Seeing Reid brought back that memory and from this time next year I guarantee to have the ability to sing Coltrane’s “Bye Bye Blackbird” and “All of You” from ‘Round About Midnight.
I added ” You” to the heap because Billy Hart told me:
The first time I fell in love with John Coltrane was that his solo on ” You” from Miles’ ‘Round Midnight. I have talked to Gary Bartz about this, and he felt exactly the same way–which this solo made us Coltrane fans, forever.
Billy Hart is my most important teacher and we have worked together for over twenty decades. However, I hadn’t ever played with Buster Williams and Billy Hart collectively, despite Buster and Billy being universally considered one of the wonderful bass/drum mixes.
It finally occurred on Tuesday, quartet together with Billy Harper. Everybody agreed that it was incredible to listen to the beat played with that bassist with that drummer.
Billy Hart, Lenny White, Buster Williams
Lenny White was there. He plays with Buster all the time — they have become a traditional contemporary rhythm section — but I think he wished to find a flavor of that other thing Mchezaji has with Jabali. In the dressing room I had been as silent as possible while I listened to them tell stories.
Billy Hart talked about studying Afro Cuban songs from Lenny White! They were playing with Pharoah Sanders. Neither was playing with drum group, they were on cowbells and claves. Afterwards Billy whined to Lenny about how Lenny appeared so much better and Lenny said that he was actually checking out authentic Afro Cuban songs. This anecdote describes in a flash Lenny White was able to walk into and power a lot of the best fusion recordings: The deep background for its “new” method of dealing with the eighth circa 1970 was African American procedures from tens of thousands of years back. Of course.
Patrick Zimmerli’s Clockworks  together with Chris Tordini, John Hollenbeck, and me personally is out, and so is — finally — Shores Against Silence, the recording with Kevin Hays, Larry Grenadier, and Tom Rainey from 1991. I had been at that recording session, and discovered “The Paw” for the very first time in the studio. Pat provides me a particular mention in the liner notes to Shores Against Silence, which I think is only fair, as I’ve been telling people that this is an amazing album since…well I figure since 1991.
Vinnie Sperrazza is getting to be a major new collaborator. At the Clockworks position that he appeared in the score and stated, “I can hear Pat had been an effect on you” Without a doubt — Pat will always be a monument in my own entire life, which is elaborated further in our interview.
Vinnie took the photograph of me and Rufus Reid collectively afterwards telling me of a period he played with James Williams and Rufus Reid in Knickerbocker’s. Yeah, Vinnie’s my type of cat, with a swinging cymbal beat that undulates inside the music. We’re working collectively in Pepperland, the extravagant revue created by Mark Morris for the Mark Morris Dance Group.
It is just wonderful to be back together with Mark Morris back again. For five years that I had been his musical manager. I watched the dance shows every night, then following the series went to Mark’s hotel room and listened to Handel and Partch. Lorraine Hunt Lieberson would attend rehearsal; I played with Schumann with Yo-Yo Ma. It had been around me to attract conductors in line about tempi and singers around diction.
Pepperland is the Beatles as viewed though the prism of classical music and it really works. It’s been really amazing to expose Vinnie and other buddies Jacob Garchik, Sam Newsome, and Rob Schwimmer to the magic of Morris. In addition, it is just incredible to leave the Bad Plus and also be instantly involved in another hit project.
Concerto to Scale reflects Morris, Zimmerli, Jabali, and everything else that I love. It surely reflects Pinkwater. Program notes:
My very first piece for orchestra is blatantly modest in measurement, or “to scale” While composing, I re-read a number of my favourite books from when I was a young adult and tried to catch that kind of joyful emotion. The work is devoted to John Bloomfield.
Allegro. Sonata form in C major with tons of scales. My left hand and the bass drum soloist are the rhythm section offering syncopations in conversation with the orchestra’s standard chain material.
Andante. A 19th-centutry nocturne air meets modern polyrhythms. That is a stunning elaboration of a piece originally written for Mark Turner called “We Come In the Future.”
Rondo. The rate mark is, “Misfit Rag.” Ragtime is how American composers traditionally insert a touch of jazz on the concert stage, and who am I to disagree? The orchestra gets a chance to improvise along with the pianist and percussionist enjoy a double cadenza.
I didn’t really have to re-read Pinkwater for the Concerto — I have these publications memorized — but that I did examine The Toothpaste Millionaire from Jean Merrill (1972) and Alvin’s Secret Code by Clifford B. Hicks (1963). These two are undisputed classics and remain in print. Interestingly, both will also be on race relations, a simple fact I had completely forgotten. They are white writers referring to the midwest in the 1960s, therefore perhaps not every authorial decision will beyond muster now, but they had been in there, trying to swing. They had been about my two favourite novels when I was ten or eleven. I had good taste!
The review by Seth Colter Walls was satisfying (Amanda Ameer said I look just like  Schroeder in the picture, which is ideal) and I have been astonished just how much I enjoy listening to the cassette.
(if you would like to listen to the rough mix of this premiere or examine the score, sign up for Floyd Camembert Reports.)
Between Pepperland and the Concerto, it’s beginning to feel as though my future will involve extended composition.
Composition might be part of this future, but additionally, I will always be a jazz pianist who enjoys to play with clubs. Starting tomorrow I am on an extensive UK tour together with Martin Speake.
20/4 Sheffield Jazz Crookes Social Club http://www.sheffieldjazz.org.uk/ 21/4 Brighton Verdict https://verdictjazz.co.uk/ 22/4 Colchester Arts Centre https://www.colchesterartscentre.com/ 23 Cheltenham Jazz http://www.cheltenhamjazz.co.uk/ 24/4 London Pizza Express https://www.pizzaexpresslive.com/venues/soho-jazz-club 25/4London Pizza Express https://www.pizzaexpresslive.com/venues/soho-jazz-club 26/4 St George’s Bristol https://www.stgeorgesbristol.co.uk/ 27/4 Reading Progress Theatre http://www.jazzinreading.com/ 29/4 Cinnamon Club Manchester http://www.thecinnamonclub.net/ 1/5 Hastings http://jazzhastings.co.uk/ 3/5 Cambridge https://www.cambridgejazz.org/index.php?name=home 4/5 Poole Lighthouse https://www.lighthousepoole.co.uk/
Go to Martin’s FB site to get more.
Martin and I go back to Banff in 1990. It was a hell of a lineup there: Faculty included Rufus Reid, Marvin Smitty Smith, Stanley Cowell, Kevin Eubanks, Kenny Wheeler. Abraham Adzenyah taught dance from Ghana — I suppose the very first time I danced with a woman was in that course. (Currently this post is becoming overly personal.) Steve Coleman was the artistic manager.
The students were also amazing. Tony Malaby, Seamus Blake, Ralph Alessi, George Colligan, John Stetch, Andy Milne — Jeez, I know I am forgetting some others that are now renowned…
Particularly important to my artistic growth were Benoît Delbecq and Steve Argüelles, that went on for a real force collectively and big influence. With Noël Akchoté they turned into The Recyclers and released Rhymes in 1994. You want to understand something that I checked out? Rhymes was some thing that I checked out, especially the monitor “Suguxhama” from  Argüelles and Django Bates.
(Later, motivated by David King and Craig Taborn, I’d listen to all the fantabulous Django Bates records together with Martin France on drums. It turns out that France is going to be on several gigs of this Martin Speake tour. Wow! I’m going to have to play with Martin France for the very first time.)
At Banff 2 duo connections had notable resonance. The fantastic Jill Seifers (a wonderful vocalist who ended up dying far too young) and that I did a set in the little Banff club which I listened to repeatedly. Along with Martin Speake and that I created a recording which was enormous fun, he is splendid lyrical participant that sees it from all the angles.
At the Vortex gig earlier this year, Martin told the audience that after we met with Banff, I delivered him (by post from Menomonie, Wisconsin to London, England) a tape of Ornette Coleman’s then-scarce Science Fiction accompanied by a note on Doctor Who stationery. Yes It really does all seem curved. Themes re-occur. I openly admit I can’t wait to get Jodie Whittaker.
Writer with George Colligan.
Writer with Benoît Delbecq.
Writer with Django Bates.
Stanley Cowell plays “Carolina Shout” in my James P. Johnson event.
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