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camyfilms · 2 years ago
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SCHOOL OF ROCK 2003
God of Rock, thank you for this chance to kick ass. We are your humble servants. Please give us the power to blow people's minds with our high voltage rock. In your name, we pray. Amen.
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cillianmurphyfanatic · 2 months ago
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Cillian Murphy was photographed by Yu Tsai for Flaunt Magazine (August 1, 2010)
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harrison-abbott · 7 months ago
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Robert Tsai (the boy who plays the keyboard) came to Richard Linklater early on in the filming stages and said he wasn’t sure he was the right cast for the role. Linklater told him that it was his insecurity that benefitted the role, and encouraged him to continue with the part.
Jack Black made up all the nicknames for the kids. They weren’t in the script.
Throughout the film, Jack Black switches his hair from left to right, depending on whether he is playing Dewey Finn or Ned Schneebly.
Jack Black said it was the highlight of his career because he enjoyed working with the kids so much.
Richard Linklater agreed to direct the movie on the promise that all the kid actors played their own instruments.
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dannyreviews · 3 months ago
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Golden Age of Hollywood Actors Born Before (And Including) 1937 Still Alive
This only includes actors that had at least one credited role in a Hollywood feature film or short up to 1959.
Elisabeth Waldo (b. 1918)
Caren Marsh Doll (b. 1919)
Patricia Wright (b. 1921)
Jacqueline White (b. 1922)
Annette Warren (b. 1922)
Ray Anthony (b. 1922)
Tommy Dix (b. 1923)
Eva Marie Saint (b. 1924)
Anne Vernon (b. 1924)
Maria Riva (b. 1924)
June Lockhart (b. 1925)
Lee Grant (b. 1925)
Peggy Webber (b. 1925)
Lise Bourdin (b. 1925)
Brigitte Auber (b. 1925)
Kerima (b. 1925)
Bob Graham (b. 1925)
Terry Kilburn (b. 1926) 
Marilyn Erskine (b. 1926)
Bambi Linn (b. 1926)
David Frankham (b. 1926)
Tommy Morton (b. 1926)
Jill Jarmyn (b. 1926)
Marilyn Knowlden (b. 1926)
Genevieve Page (b. 1927)
Donna Martell (b. 1927)
William Smithers (b. 1927)
Peter Walker (b. 1927)
H.M. Wynant (b. 1927)
Betty Harford (b. 1927)
Cora Sue Collins (b. 1927)
Marilyn Granas (b. 1927)
Ann Blyth (b. 1928)
Nancy Olson (b. 1928)
Peggy Dow (b. 1928)
Kathleen Hughes (b. 1928)
Colleen Townsend (b. 1928)
Marion Ross (b. 1928)
Gaby Rodgers (b. 1928)
Jan Shepard (b. 1928)
Walter Maslow (b. 1928)
Tom Troupe (b. 1928)
Sidney Kibrick (b. 1928)
Garry Watson (b. 1928)
Fay Chaldecott (b. 1928)
Mark Rydell (b. 1929)
Terry Moore (b. 1929)
Vera Miles (b. 1929)
Ann Robinson (b. 1929)
Liseotte Pulver (b. 1929)
James Hong (b. 1929)
Rachel Ames (b. 1929)
Olga James (b. 1929)
Michael Forest (b. 1929)
Vikki Dougan (b. 1929)
Steve Terrell (b. 1929)
Margaret Kerry (b. 1929)
James Congdon (b. 1929)
Betsy Gay (b. 1929)
Jack Betts (b. 1929)
Clint Eastwood (b. 1930)
Joanne Woodward (b. 1930)
Mara Corday (b. 1930)
Nita Talbot (b. 1930)
Taina Elg (b. 1930)
Robert Wagner (b. 1930)
John Astin (b. 1930)
Tommy Cook (b. 1930)
Mary Costa (b. 1930)
Lois Smith (b. 1930)
Will Hutchins (b. 1930)
Peggy King (b. 1930)
Lynn Hamilton (b. 1930)
Don Burnett (b. 1930)
Clark Burroughs (b. 1930)
Robert Hinkle (b. 1930)
Sheila Connolly (b. 1930)
Barbara Bestar (b. 1930)
Rita Moreno (b. 1931)
Leslie Caron (b. 1931)
Carroll Baker (b. 1931)
William Shatner (b. 1931)
Mamie Van Doren (b. 1931)
Robert Colbert (b. 1931)
Barbara Eden (b. 1931)
Angie Dickinson (b. 1931)
Claire Bloom (b. 1931)
Marianne Koch (b. 1931)
Sylvia Lewis (b. 1931)
Carmen De Lavallade (b. 1931)
Zohra Lampert (b. 1931)
Michael Dante (b. 1931)
Ann McCrea (b. 1931)
Jack Grinnage (b. 1931)
Maralou Gray (b. 1931)
Billy Mindy (b. 1931)
Sugar Dawn (b. 1931)
Joanne Arnold (b. 1931)
Joel Grey (b. 1932)
George Chakiris (b. 1932)
Felicia Farr (b. 1932)
Abbe Lane (b. 1932)
Steve Rowland (b. 1932)
Jacqueline Beer (b. 1932)
Colleen Miller (b. 1932)
Joanne Gilbert (b. 1932)
Olive Moorefield (b. 1932)
Neile Adams (b. 1932)
Jacqueline Duval (b. 1932)
Edna May Wonnacott (b. 1932)
Richard Tyler (b. 1932)
Mickey Roth (b. 1932)
Leon Tyler (b. 1932)
Peggy McIntyre (b. 1932)
Christiane Martel (b. 1932)
Elsa Cardenas (b. 1932)
Claude Bessy (b. 1932)
Kim Novak (b. 1933)
Julie Newmar (b. 1933)
Debra Paget (b. 1933)
Constance Towers (b. 1933)
Joan Collins (b. 1933)
Kathleen Nolan (b. 1933)
Brett Halsey (b. 1933)
Robert Fuller (b. 1933)
Pat Crowley (b. 1933)
Barrie Chase (b. 1933)
Jackie Joseph (b. 1933)
Geoffrey Horne (b. 1933)
Tsai Chin (b. 1933)
Lita Milan (b. 1933)
Vera Day (b. 1933)
Diana Darrin (b. 1933)
Ziva Rodann (b. 1933)
Jeanette Sterke (b. 1933)
Marti Stevens (b. 1933)
Annette Dionne (b. 1933)
Cecile Dionne (b. 1933)
Patti Hale (b. 1933)
Gary Clarke (b. 1933)
Olive Sturgess (b. 1933)
Shirley MacLaine (b. 1934) 
Sophia Loren (b. 1934)
Shirley Jones (b. 1934)
Russ Tamblyn (b. 1934)
Pat Boone (b. 1934)
Audrey Dalton (b. 1934)
Claude Jarman Jr. (b. 1934)
Tina Louise (b. 1934)
Karen Sharpe (b. 1934)
Joyce Van Patten (b. 1934)
May Britt (b. 1934)
Joby Baker (b. 1934)
Jamie Farr (b. 1934)
Myrna Hansen (b. 1934)
Priscilla Morgan (b. 1934)
Aki Aleong (b. 1934)
Robert Fields (b. 1934)
Dani Crayne (b. 1934)
Donnie Dunagan (b. 1934)
Richard Hall (b. 1934)
Charles Bates (b. 1934)
Marilyn Horne (b. 1934)
Marilee Earle (b. 1934)
Rod Dana (b. 1935) 
Pippa Scott (b. 1935)
Ruta Lee (b. 1935)
Barbara Bostock (b. 1935)
Johnny Mathis (b. 1935)
Leslie Parrish (b. 1935)
Salome Jens (b. 1935)
Yvonne Lime (b. 1935)
Jean Moorehead (b. 1935)
Marco Lopez (b. 1935)
Joyce Meadows (b. 1935)
Richard Harrison (b. 1935)
Christopher Severn (b. 1935)
Richard Nichols (b. 1935)
Carol Coombs (b. 1935)
Nino Tempo (b. 1935)
Patricia Prest (b. 1935)
Dawn Bender (b. 1935)
John Considine (b. 1935)
Jerry Farber (b. 1935)
Clyde Willson (b. 1935)
Bob Burns (b. 1935)
Joel Newfield (b. 1935)
Marlene Cameron (b. 1935)
Susan Kohner (b. 1936)
Millie Perkins (b. 1936)
Burt Brickenhoff (b. 1936)
Mason Alan Dinehart (b. 1936)
Anna Maria Alberghetti (b. 1936)
Lisa Davis (b. 1936)
Joan O'Brien (b. 1936)
Richard Harrison (b. 1936)
Tommy Ivo (b. 1936)
John Wilder (b. 1936)
Gary Conway (b. 1936)
Michael Chapin (b. 1936)
Carol Morris (b. 1936)
Fernando Alvarado (b. 1936)
Jack Nicholson (b. 1937)
Tommy Sands (b. 1937)
William Wellman Jr. (b. 1937)
Paul Hampton (b. 1937)
George Takei (b. 1937)
Margaret O’Brien (b. 1937)
Connie Francis (b. 1937)
Carol Nugent (b. 1937)
Patti Brady (b. 1937)
June Hedin (b. 1937)
Paul Collins (b. 1937)
Maureen Hingert (b. 1937)
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sleepythug · 2 years ago
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slice-of-life type films?
yi yi (edward yang, 2001)
tokyo sonata (kiyoshi kurosawa, 2008)
killer of sheep (charles burnett, 1978)
taste of cherry (abbas kiarostami, 1997)
pixote (hector babenco, 1980)
the quiet man (john ford, 1952)
nashville (robert altman, 1975)
days of heaven (terrence malick, 1978)
floating weeds (yasijuro ozu, 1959)
a summer's tale (eric rohmer, 1996)
wheel of fortune and fantasy (ryusuke hamaguchi, 2021)
4 months, 3 weeks, 2 days (cristian mungiu, 2007)
all about lily chou chou (shunji iwai, 2001)
poetry (lee chang-dong, 2010)
who am I this time? (jonathan demme, 1982)
rebels of the neon god (tsai ming-liang, 1992)
model shop (jacques demy, 1969)
a scene at the sea (takeshi kitano, 1991)
ossos (pedro costa, 1997)
somewhere (sofia coppola, 2010)
hold me back (akiko ohku, 2021)
la libertad (lisandro alonso, 2001)
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palmviewfm · 4 months ago
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mw?
there's a ton of mw faces that we'd love to see here ! i put it under a read more since it's a large list. but bring us whoever you've got the muse for, ofc !
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taylor zakhar perez, nicholas galitzine, noah lalonde, danny griffin, jonathan daviss, drew starkey, darren barnett, elias kacavas, emilio sakraya, evan mock, eli brown, glen powell, zane phillips, john boyega, jordan gonzalez, austin butler, henry zaga, felix mellard, thomas weatherall, miles teller, sam claflin, penn badgely, chace crawford, lewis tan, lucas bravo, kit harrington, joseph morgan, josh segarra, harry shum jr, chris pine, ryan gosling, alex saxon, theo james, andrew garfield, gregg sulkin, ben levin, adam brody, logan lerman, pedro pascal, tom holland, mason gooding, lucien laviscount, ryan gosling, rege jean page, froy guiterrez, tanner buchanan, xolo mariduena, robert scott wilson, carson boatman, ross lynch, algee smith, cody christian, adam dimarco, alex fitzalan, daniel ezra, anthony keyvan, keith powers, keiynan lonsdale, joseph quinn, aramis knight, antonio cipriano, derek luh, leo howard, leo woodall, brandon perea, dacre montgomery, diego tinoco, mena massoud, maxence danet-fauxel, lorenzo zurzolo, michael cimino, paul mescal, callum turner, d'pharoh woon-a-tai, jordah fisher, josh heuston,l alex meraz, kiowa gordon, tom glynn carney, avan jogia, dylan minnette, josh hutcherson, assad zaman, gabriel basso, ross butler, robert buckley, james lafferty, david casteneda, brandon soo hoo, grifflin gluck, grant gustin, dylan wang, asa germann, alejandro spietzer, colin ford, alex landi, alfred enoch, aria shahghasemi, anthony turpel, cha eunwoo, aj saudin, danny ramirez, david iacono, chris briney, sabrina carpenter, ayo edibiri, madison bailey, samantha logan, kim doyeon, nichola coughlan, madison davenport, indiana evans, india eisley, lyrica okano, virginia gardner, liana liberato, kiersey clemons, lindsey morgan, liv hewson, emma d'arcy, victoria pedretti, logan browning, lola tung, louriza tronco, lorenza izzo, lovie simone, luca hollestelle, hunter schafer, zion moreno, taylor russell, laura harrier, lana condor, lauren tsai, anna sawai, jane de leon, kylie bunbury, kathryn bernardo, chienna filomeno, phoebe dynevor, simone ashley, maitreyi ramakrishnan, courtney eaton, nicole maines, jessica alexander, peyton alex smith, ella purnell, sophie neilsse, dev patel, rahul kohli, natalia dyer, danielle campbell, ella balinska, bailey bass, jessica sula, emma mackey, mia goth, melissa barerra, alva bratt, kiana lede, kiana madiera, olivia scott welch, kiernan shipka, meg donnelly, camila mendes, brianne tju, maddie hasson, dianna agron, emilija baranac, danielle rose russell, kaylee kaneshiro, isabella gomez, jenny boyd, lulu antarisksa, josephine langford, lizeth selene, marina ruy barbosa, kaya scodelario, katherine mcnamara, chloe rose robertson, kathryn newton, kristine froseth, pat chayanit, davika hoorne, mint ranchrawee, rabia soyturk, hande ercel, aslihan malbora, melisa pamuk, katie stevens, meghann fahy, merrit patterson, adelaide kane, alexxis lemire, adria arjona, amanda arcuri, sadie soverall, sara waisglass, chelsea clark, blu hunt, antonia gentry, brianne howey, bianca santos, bianca lawson, phoebe tonkin, shelley hennig, bruna marquezine, brittany o'grady, crystal reed, charithra chandran, jessie mei li, halston sage, carlson young, willa fitzgerald, halle bailey, chloe bridges, chloe bailey, margot robbie, anne hathaway, lisa yamada, raven bowens, olivia rose keegan, camryn grimes, gideon aldon, tiera skovbye, amy adams, jane levy, angela bassett, anya taylor joy, anya chalotra, ashleigh murray, lucy hale, troian bellisario, sophia bush, bethany joy lenz, shantel vansanten, hilarie burton, shay mitchell, sasha pieterse, janel parrish, malia pyles, bailee madison, chandler kinney, jordan alexander, zaria simone, auli'i cravalho, bebe wood, angourie rice, renee rapp, ashley moore, ashley park, aisha dee, alisha boe, elizabeth lail, alia bhatt, reina hardesty, victoria justice, liz gillies, bahar sahin, amber midthunder, gemma chan, madchen amick, marisol nichols, madison mclaughlin, malese jow, maris racal, maya hawke, jessica chastain, ana de armas, angela sarafyan, and anna lambe !
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transnickle · 2 months ago
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Today is trans day of remembrance. The day we and the world honor the memory of the transgender people whose lives were lost in acts of anti-transgender violence.
Today we remember the 37 known trans people killed in the the last year and the ones we will never know
Nex Benedict - Owasso, Oklahoma
The following List is courtesy of the human rights campaign
https://reports.hrc.org/an-epidemic-of-violence-2024#in-memoriam
Amiri Reid - Toledo, OH
Kejuan Richardson - Toledo, OH
Jean Butchart - Van Buren Township, MI
Savannah Ryan Williams - Minneapolis, MN
Meghan Riley Lewis - Bel Air, MD
Amber Minor - Rayton, MO
Kitty Monroe - Phoenix, AZ
Righteous “TK” Chevy Hill - East Point, GA
Diamond Brigman - Houston, TX
Alex Franco - Taylorsville, UT
Meraxes Medina - Los Angeles, CA
Africa Parrilla Garcia - San Juan, PR
Tee “Lagend Billions” Arnold - Hallandale Beach, FL
River Nevaeh Goddard - Stow, MA
Andrea Doria Dos Passos - Miami, FL
Sasha Williams - Las Vegas, NV
Starr Brown - Memphis, TN
Kita Bee - Kansas City, MO
Reyna Hernandez - Renton, WA
Brandon “Tayy Dior” Thomas - Mobile, AL
Michelle Henry - San Francisco, CA
Yella (Robert) Clark Jr. - Angola Prison, LA
Jazlynn Johnson - Las Vegas, NV
Liara Tsai - Minneapolis, MN
Pauly Likens - Sharon, PA
Shannon Boswell - Atlanta, GA
Kenji Z. Spurgeon - Seattle, WA
Monique Brooks - Orlando, FL
Dylan Gurley - Denton, TX
Tai’Vion Latham - Baltimore, MD
Vanity Williams - Houston, TX
Redd (Barbie) - Chicago, IL
Kassim Omar - Columbus, OH
Honee Daniels - Rochester, NY
Santonio “San” Coleman - Athens, GA
Quanesha Shantel (“Cocoa”) - Greensboro, NC
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weyesbloodgf · 2 years ago
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the meaning of life doesn't seem to shine like that screen
movies, weyes blood // new york movie, edward hopper // edward hopper's "new york movie", joseph stanton // intermission, edward hopper // death at the movies, car seat headrest // solitary figure in a theater, edward hopper // ave maria, frank o'hara // empire theater, yoichiro yoda // please refrain from talking during the movie, robert polito // way down east, yoichiro yoda // heroic simile, robert hass // the sheridan theatre, edward hopper // the war films, henry newbolt // goodbye dragon inn, tsai ming-liang (2003) // 42nd st. nocturne, xavier j. barile // picture-show, siegfried sassoon // the new yorker cover, may 6, 1961 // can't make a sound, elliott smith // vivre sa vie, jean-luc godard (1962)
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princetonarchives · 2 months ago
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“As companies fiddle with CD-ROM technology, the future of the book and the library becomes questionable.”
--Princeton senior Robert Tsai '94, in an editorial in the Daily Princetonian, October 22, 1993
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owencharly · 5 months ago
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Nobody asked but i'm making the "36 questions to fall in love" concept with myself here so maybe i'll love myself a little more tsais le gars trop dramatique pour rien
so here you go then (probably won't make it to the end and skip some questions)
1 - Given the choice of anyone in the world, whom would you want as a dinner guest?
Robert Smith from The Cure. Not even sure we'd really talk about music, more like bitching for hours about the absurdity of monarchy. Or Pedro Alonso, who plays Berlin in lcdp cuz he seems interesting and a very complete artist.
2 - Would you like to be famous? In what way?
No. Because I'm anxious. But as an "artist" and hopefully future podcast host I'd like to have a public so mixed feelings here.
3 - Before making a telephone call, do you ever rehearse what you are going to say? Why?
If it's a formal call yes but don't make me think about it because raaaah fucking hate it
4 - What would constitute a "perfect" day for you?
To Wake up, eat, make a good drawing, spend time with my bf, see friends, why not a small party at my apartment after some time at the board games bar, not to think about stupid shit, sleep
5 - When did you last sing to yourself? To someone else?
This morning (Heroes by Bowie) / two weeks ago approximately (Hate by Archive)
7 - Do you have a secret hunch about how you will die?
depending on the circumstances i'd say either old age or suicide. now i'd say old age.
8 - Name three things you and your partner appear to have in common.
if talking about me and my bf we're cringe but we're free. wait that's only two. i'd say we're both dreamers and artists. it's four now.
9 - For what in your life do you feel most grateful?
Probably stable family.
12 - If you could wake up tomorrow having gained any one quality or ability, what would it be?
Ability to touch grass.
13 - If a crystal ball could tell you the truth about yourself, your life, the future, or anything else, what would you want to know?
Will I get bald ?
14 - Is there something that you've dreamed of doing for a long time? Why haven't you done it?
forming a cool music band with friends! not enough musician friends before but now we're trying! (almost complete, we need a bassist !)
15 - What is the greatest accomplishment of your life?
Hope it's not done yet cause I have zero idea i've been way too lazy to accomplish anything
16 - What do you value most in a friendship?
Honesty and kindness. Additionally i'd say humour and interest in music because it's mostly how i make friends.
19 - If you knew that in one year you would die suddenly, would you change anything about the way you are now living? Why?
I'd like to say I'd work more on my hobbies to make a full comic book but I'm not even sure the idea of dying soon would kill my laziness, so I guess I'd just spend all my money in food and sleep a lot
26 - Complete this sentence: "I wish I had someone with whom I could share..."
my old interest in UFOs. My passion for any tv show created by Mike Flanagan especially Midnight Mass and Bly Manor.
Thats it 🕺
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cantsayidont · 6 months ago
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Some movies, considered chronologically:
THE FLAMINGO KID (1984): Nostalgia-burdened period piece, set in 1963, about working-class kid Jeffrey (Matt Dillon), who gets a summer job parking cars at an exclusive beach club called El Flamingo, starts dating a rich girl (Carole R. Davis), and becomes fascinated by her father (Richard Crenna), a self-made sports car dealer and local card sharp who thinks college is sucker's game. This alienates Jeffrey's own father (Hector Elizondo), a stalwart plumber who doesn't want to see Jeffrey squander his chances of bettering himself. The story is thus a sort of YA prototype of Oliver Stone's later WALL STREET — a Reagan-era morality play about a young man caught between two father figures, one representing the Lure of Easy Money and the other a paragon of Honest Hard Work — badly undermined by its absurdly idealized longing for the alleged innocence of the Kennedy era (underlined by an obnoxious oldies soundtrack). It offers a meaty role for Crenna, but as a drama, it has less substance than FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF. Davis's character is such a nonentity that you keep forgetting she's there, and the way she ends up functioning as a proxy for Jeffrey's obsession with her dad is awkward. CONTAINS LESBIANS? Nope. VERDICT: A simple-minded story blinded by its rose-colored glasses.
THE JOY LUCK CLUB (1993): Sudsy but affecting episodic adaptation of Amy Tan's novel about four middle-aged Chinese women and their strained relationships with their Chinese-American daughters, starring Ming-Na Wen and nearly every other Chinese actress working in the U.S. at the time. The way the script segues between the characters' respective stories is clunky, and it often teeters on the brink of schmaltz, but there are moments of real dramatic power amongst the more superficial tearjerker moments, and you'd have to have a stonier heart than I to not sob at the bittersweet ending. Strong acting helps, with Tsai Chin particularly good as Auntie Lindo. CONTAINS LESBIANS? It seems like it should, but alas. VERDICT: Heavy-handed at times, but undeniably moving.
COLD COMFORT FARM (1996): Before she became an action star, Kate Beckinsale starred in this hilarious adaptation of Stella Gibbons' 1932 satiric novel about glib orphan Flora Poste, who makes it her project to fix all the problems of the titular farm and its eccentric denizens — distant cousins who feel obligated to Flora (whom they will only address as "Robert Poste's child") because of some unspecified wrong they once did her late father. Among the inmates of Cold Comfort are Cousin Judith (Eileen Atkins), a hysterically morose creature straight out of a gothic novel; Cousin Amos (Ian McKellen), a fire-and-brimstone preacher who warns his brethren, "There'll be no butter in Hell!"; Amos and Judith's oversexed son Seth (Rufus Sewell), a local stud who dreams of being in the talkies; and of course Aunt Ada Doom (Sheila Burrell), who rules the family with an iron fist and won't let anyone forget that she once saw something nasty in the woodshed. A delightfully silly spoof of a particular category of once-popular English literature, as the farm's assorted grim melodramas prove no match for the implacable (if somewhat snobbish) modern sensibilities of its plucky heroine. CONTAINS LESBIANS? Nope. VERDICT: Great fun throughout, although Stephen Fry irritates as a boorish "Laurentian person" who keeps hitting on Flora despite her obvious disinterest.
BREAKDOWN (1997): Competent but underwhelming Jonathan Mostow thriller starring Kurt Russell and Kathleen Quinlan as Jeff and Amy Taylor, a couple of Yuppies whose fancy Jeep breaks down on the highway on a trip from Massachusetts to California. A passing trucker (J.T. Walsh) gives Amy a ride into the nearest town to find them a tow truck, but when Jeff gets their Jeep running again and follows her into town, he finds that Amy has disappeared, and no one, including the trucker, will admit to having seen her. It has a great premise, and Russell is credible enough in the lead, but it's pretty ordinary, and, once you know what's going on (which is revealed a little over a half-hour in), pretty superficial — there's no psychological depth, and I kept waiting for some other story twist that never came. CONTAINS LESBIANS? It barely contains women (Amy is absent for 80 percent of the running time). VERDICT: Not bad, but nothing special, and you'll forget it 10 minutes after it ends.
MY TWO HUSBANDS (2024): Okay Lifetime thriller about a young woman named Eliza (Isabelle Almoyan), still reeling from the recent murder of her mother (Joanie Geiger), who becomes deeply suspicious of her father's young new wife, a flight attendant named Brooke (Kabby Borders) who's no older than Eliza — and, as the title alludes, is secretly married to another man (Britton Webb, who looks like a lesser Baldwin brother) and up to no good. Despite the cheesy title (which is really also a spoiler) and awkward marketing (which misleadingly suggests a comedy-drama with Brooke rather than Eliza as the main character), it has a surprisingly decent, reasonably credible script, hamstrung by very weak performances. The story is still interesting enough to make it a not-bad little thriller, although it would have been better with a stronger cast and less somnabulistic direction. CONTAINS LESBIANS: It sometimes seems like Eliza's friend Star (Kristen Grace Gonzalez) might be her girlfriend, but the script is noncommittal on this point. VERDICT: A B+ script burdened with D+ acting and C- direction.
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movies-to-add-to-your-tbw · 6 months ago
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Title: School of Rock
Rating: PG-13
Director: Richard Linklater
Cast: Jack Black, Joan Cusack, Mike White, Sarah Silverman, Miranda Cosgrove, Joey Gaydos Jr, Kevin Alexander Clark, Rivkah Reyes, Robert Tsai, Maryam Hassan, Aleisha Allen, Caitlin Hale, Brian Falduto, Z. Infante, James Hosey, Angelo Massagli, Cole Hawkins
Release year: 2003
Genres: comedy, music
Blurb: Fired from his band and hard up for cash, guitarist and vocalist Dewey Finn finagles his way into a job as a fifth-grade substitute teacher at a private school, where he secretly begins teaching his students the finer points of rock 'n' roll. The school's hard-nosed principal is rightly suspicious of Dewey's activities, but his roommate remains in the dark about what he's doing.
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lilflowerpot · 2 years ago
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not to be "that person" but the implications of calling half-galra/mixed galra/part galra, "hybrids" feels dehumanizing.
In a real-world context I'd be inclined to agree with you, but within the realms of the narrative there are several elements at play as to why I personally choose to use the term hybrid—chief among them being that race as we define it is a social construct (see below), whereas Keith & Lotor's status as hybrids very much has a biological basis—but let us first start by clarifying the key components of the topic at hand.
A race is a categorization of humans based on shared physical or social qualities into groups generally viewed as distinct within a given society.[1] The term came into common usage during the 16th century, when it was used to refer to groups of various kinds, including those characterized by close kinship relations.[2] By the 17th century, the term began to refer to physical (phenotypical) traits, and then later to national affiliations. Modern science regards race as a social construct, an identity which is assigned based on rules made by society.[3][4] While partly based on physical similarities within groups, race does not have an inherent physical or biological meaning.[1][5][6] [1] Barnshaw, John (2008). "Race". In Schaefer, Richard T. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Society. Vol. 1. SAGE Publications. pp. 1091–3. ISBN978-1-45-226586-5. [2] Roediger, David R. "Historical Foundations of Race". Smithsonian. [3] Amutah, C.; Greenidge, K.; Mante, A.; Munyikwa, M.; Surya, S. L.; Higginbotham, E.; Jones, D. S.; Lavizzo-Mourey, R.; Roberts, D.; Tsai, J.; Aysola, J. (March 2021). Malina, D. (ed.). "Misrepresenting Race — The Role of Medical Schools in Propagating Physician Bias". The New England Journal of Medicine. Massachusetts Medical Society. 384 (9): 872–878. [4] Gannon, Megan (5 February 2016). "Race Is a Social Construct, Scientists Argue". Scientific American. Springer Nature. ISSN0036-8733. Archived from the original on 14 February 2023. Retrieved 1 March 2023. [5] Smedley, Audrey; Takezawa, Yasuko I.; Wade, Peter. "Race: Human". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. Retrieved 22 August 2017. [6] Yudell, M.; Roberts, D.; DeSalle, R.; Tishkoff, S. (5 February 2016). "Taking race out of human genetics". Science. American Association for the Advancement of Science. 351 (6273): 564–565.
The dictionary definition of a hybrid is pretty clear-cut across the board, but I've included several different sources, for the sake of both clarity and peace of mind.
​Oxford: [1] (of an animal or plant) Having parents of different species or varieties.​ [2] That is the product of mixing two or more different things. Cambridge: [1] A plant or animal that has been produced from two different types of plant or animal, especially to get better characteristics. [2] Something that is a mixture of two very different things. Merriam-Webster: [1] An offspring of two animals or plants of different subspecies, breeds, varieties, species, or genera. [2] A person whose background is a blend of two diverse cultures or traditions. [3] Something heterogeneous in origin or composition. Collins: [1] A hybrid is an animal or plant that has been bred from two different species of animal or plant. [2] You can use hybrid to refer to anything that is a mixture of other things, especially two other things.
So yes, the term hybrid is much more commonly used to refer to plants and animals than humans, with Merriam-Webster's definition alone being the only one to specify "people", but all the above agree that it is a term that references anything that is a mixture of two different things (heterogeneous). Scientifically speaking, humans are never this; we are all of the same species—homosapiens—and our perceived "race" is actually a societal construct born of phenotypical traits. So while objectively we can argue that Keith as a character was written as biracial, within the narrative he is very explicitly born of parents of two different scientific species: the term hybrid isn't being used to other him, it's,,, literally a genetic fact.
But let's approach this from Lotor's perspective. Our favourite galra prince is a scientist with "a modest background as a geneticist, [his] particular field of study being the rather niche subject area of galra hybridisation" (LB:ch13), meaning it's hardly surprising he'd feel comfortable using the scientific terminology. If ever the term hybrid was used in imperial circles as a slur intended to dehumanise (degalranise?), then Lotor as a hybrid himself has reclaimed it in much the same way that n-slur has been reclaimed the black community. I, myself, am not black, so I can't really speak to that experience, but I do not imagine the reclamation of that word to be dissimilar to that of queer by the queer community. Approaching it from this angle, I am personally happy to identify as queer, and equally happy for other people to identify me as queer; that being said, there's still intent to consider. Though I've no problem with (and in fact quite like!) the word queer, if a homophobe were to throw it at me with obviously malicious intent, it would still sting—not for the word itself, but the fact that the person using it is aiming to other and dehumanise, which begs the question: does the Empire consider hybrid to be a slur?
Personally, I don't think so. I certainly don't write LB with that in mind, but what I do do is apply that sort of a weight to "half-breed" given that canon made particular use of it as a derogatory term, most notably with Throk in s3ep01—"Worse than that, [Lotor's] top generals aren't even pure galra, they're half-breeds at best. He has no honour."—and Haggar in s5ep04—"The blood that so bolsters your claim is also what quells it! You are not full galra, you are a half-breed."—both of whom put a distinctly unkind spin on this term with both their tone and the context within which they use it (to discredit the inherent "worth" of hybrids). In Little Blade, it has thus-far been used twice, both by Lotor and both when he's evidently echoing cruel sentiments that he himself suffered in the past:
“Impure half-breeds we may be, but weak we are most certainly not.” It’s a cold sort of pride. - Lotor, Little Blade, chapter 15 “Any commander worth his quintessence would be able to subdue a mere cadet with ease, especially one so small as you.” the amused lilt Lotor says this with fades in favour of something sweet and deeply saddened, “As for the rest of it—the neglect you suffered as a child—that would never have happened had you been raised galra. Even if we are half-breed whelps, our value is in our blood: it is an irrefutable part of us.” blue eyes turn baleful, “The Empire, for all its faults, would not have forsaken you.” - Lotor, Little Blade, chapter 24
So no, within the context of LB, hybrid is not a derogatory term, but a scientific one that Lotor, his generals, and Keith all identify with and use to encompass the rather unique experience of their lineage in a universe where both sides of their parentage are likely to other them for simply existing as they are.
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fifihunterbakariafrocentric · 7 months ago
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Law Office of Robert Tsai, PLLC https://g.co/kgs/yXQuHTr
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dannyreviews · 3 months ago
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Veteran British born/based film/TV actors born before and including 1937 still alive:
With the recent death of Dame Maggie Smith, I thought I'd detail the legendary actors of UK cinema and television that are still living as of the date of this post:
Eileen Bennett (b. 1919)
Beulah Garrick (b. 1921)
Elizabeth Kelly (b. 1921)
Elisabeth Kirkby (b. 1921)
Sara Luzita (b. 1922)
Annabel Maule (b. 1922)
Paul Harding (b. 1923)
Vincent Ball (b. 1923)
David Lawton (b. 1923)
Anne Vernon (b. 1924)
Donald Pelmear (b. 1924)
Laurie Webb (b. 1924)
Thelma Ruby (b. 1925)
Pete Murray (b. 1925)
Michael Beint (b. 1925)
Shelia Mitchell (b. 1925)
Kerima (b. 1925)
David Attenborough (b. 1926)
Elizabeth Benson (b. 1926)
Margaret Barton (b. 1926)
Terry Kilburn (b. 1926)
Stanley Baxter (b. 1926)
David Frankham (b. 1926)
William Glover (b. 1926)
Josephine Stuart (b. 1926)
Patricia Davidson (b. 1926)
Barbara Clegg (b. 1926)
Glen Michael (b. 1926)
Araby Lockhart (b. 1926)
Eileen Page (b. 1926)
Rosemary Harris (b. 1927)
Cleo Laine (b. 1927)
Lee Montague (b. 1927)
Genevieve Page (b. 1927)
Neville Phillips (b. 1927)
Jean Lodge (b. 1927)
Barbara Ashcroft (b. 1927)
Jill Freud (b. 1927)
Jean Southern (b. 1927)
Antonia Pemberton (b. 1927)
Peter Cellier (b. 1928)
Jeanette Landis (b. 1928)
Sheila Ballantine (b. 1928)
Dorothea Phillips (b. 1928)
Jeannie Carson (b. 1928)
Hazel Ascot (b. 1928)
Brenda Hogan (b. 1928)
Philip Guard (b. 1928)
Raymond Llewelyn (b. 1928)
Pauline Brailsford (b. 1928)
Leonard Weir (b. 1928)
Kevin Scott (b. 1928)
Joan Plowright (b. 1929)
Patricia Routledge (b. 1929)
Colin Jeavons (b. 1929)
Michael Craig (b. 1929)
Thelma Barlow (b. 1929)
Peter Myers (b. 1929)
Paul Williamson (b. 1929)
John Gale (b. 1929)
Phillip Ross (b. 1929)
Jimmy Fagg (b. 1929)
Hazel Phillips (b. 1929)
Mignon Elkins (b. 1929)
Margaret Stallard (b. 1929)
Maya Koumani (b. 1929)
Clive Revill (b. 1930)
Charles Kay (b. 1930)
Roy Evans (b. 1930)
Una McLean (b. 1930)
Roddy Maude-Roxby (b. 1930)
Ruth Trouncer (b. 1930)
Cyril Appleton (b. 1930)
Vera Frances (b. 1930)
Gary Watson (b. 1930)
Keith Alexander (b. 1930)
Libby Morris (b. 1930)
Pauline Jefferson (b. 1930)
Claire Bloom (b. 1931)
Leslie Caron (b. 1931)
Carroll Baker (b. 1931)
Virginia McKenna (b. 1931)
Vivian Pickles (b. 1931)
Stanley Meadows (b. 1931)
Gerald Harper (b. 1931)
Patricia Greene (b. 1931)
Ellen McIntosh (b. 1931)
Elvi Hale (b. 1931)
Maureen Connell (b. 1931)
June Laverick (b. 1931)
James Martin (b. 1931)
Denyse Alexander (b. 1931)
Arthur Nightingale (b. 1931)
Eileen Derbyshire (b. 1931)
Carl Held (b. 1931)
Shelia Bernette (b. 1931)
George Eugeniou (b. 1931)
Corinne Skinner-Carter (b. 1931)
Tusse Silberg (b. 1931)
Petula Clark (b. 1932)
Prunella Scales (b. 1932)
Phyllida Law (b. 1932)
Ray Cooney (b. 1932)
Brian Murphy (b. 1932)
Edward De Souza (b. 1932)
Alan Dobie (b. 1932)
John Turner (b. 1932)
Roland Curram (b. 1932)
Gabriel Woolf (b. 1932)
Johnnie Wade (b. 1932)
Eileen Moore (b. 1932)
Laurie Leigh (b. 1932)
William Roache (b. 1932)
Athol Fugard (b. 1932)
Carmen Munroe (b. 1932)
Norman Bowler (b. 1932)
Marcia Ashton (b. 1932)
Thelma Holt (b. 1932)
Antony Carrick (b. 1932)
Sally Bazely (b. 1932)
Edwina Carroll (b. 1932)
Michael Caine (b. 1933)
Joan Collins (b. 1933)
Sian Phillips (b. 1933)
Sheila Hancock (b. 1933)
Elizabeth Seal (b. 1933)
Shani Willis (b. 1933)
Patrick Godfrey (b. 1933)
Caroline Blakiston (b. 1933)
Donald Douglas (b. 1933)
Ann Firbank (b. 1933)
Vera Day (b. 1933)
Tsai Chin (b. 1933)
Geoffrey Frederick (b. 1933)
Marla Landi (b. 1933)
Monte Landis (b. 1933)
Mary Germaine (b. 1933)
Ruth Posner (b. 1933)
Barbara Archer (b. 1933)
W.B. Brydon (b. 1933)
Robert Gillespie (b. 1933)
Brian Patton (b. 1933)
Arthur White (b. 1933)
Barbara Archer (b. 1933)
Sally Bazley (b. 1933)
Madhur Jaffrey (b. 1933)
Jeanette Sterke (b. 1933)
Ann Rogers (b. 1933)
Barbara Knox (b. 1933)
John Boorman (b. 1933)
Derek Martin (b. 1933)
Michael Aspel (b. 1933)
Bill Edwards (b. 1933)
Judi Dench (b. 1934)
Eileen Atkins (b. 1934)
Tom Baker (b. 1934)
Alan Bennett (b. 1934)
Jean Marsh (b. 1934)
Annette Crosbie (b. 1934)
Wendy Craig (b. 1934)
Richard Chamberlain (b. 1934)
Millicent Martin (b. 1934)
John Standing (b. 1934)
Vernon Dobtcheff (b. 1934)
Nanette Newman (b. 1934)
David Burke (b. 1934)
Christopher Benjamin (b. 1934)
Mary Peach (b. 1934)
Geraldine Newman (b. 1934)
Renny Lister (b. 1934)
Priscilla Morgan (b. 1934)
Audrey Dalton (b. 1934)
Leila Hoffman (b. 1934)
Simone Lovell (b. 1934)
Magda Miller (b. 1934)
Robert Aldous (b. 1934)
Ram John Holder (b. 1934)
Jamila Massey (b. 1934)
Margaretta D’Arcy (b. 1934)
Leslie Saeward (b. 1934)
Maurice Podbrey (b. 1934)
Steve Emerson (b. 1934)
Peter Bland (b. 1934)
Michael Darlow (b. 1934)
Barbara Archer (b. 1934)
Joy Webster (b. 1934)
Jacqueline Ellis (b. 1934)
Jacqueline Jones (b. 1934)
Julie Andrews (b. 1935)
Julian Glover (b. 1935)
Jim Dale (b. 1935)
Anne Reid (b. 1935)
James Bolam (b. 1935)
Christina Pickles (b. 1935) 
Judy Parfitt (b. 1935)
Wanda Ventham (b. 1935)
Amanda Barrie (b. 1935)
Derren Nesbitt (b. 1935)
Nadim Swalha (b. 1935)
Gary Raymond (b. 1935)
Janet Henfrey (b. 1935)
Melvyn Hayes (b. 1935)
Susan Engel (b. 1935)
Amanda Walker (b. 1935)
Delena Kidd (b. 1935)
Derek Partridge (b. 1935)
Allister Bain (b. 1935)
Derry Power (b. 1935)
Phyllis MacMahon (b. 1935)
Rowena Cooper (b. 1935)
Derek Partridge (b. 1935)
Jill Dixon (b. 1935)
Des Keough (b. 1935)
Barbara Angell (b. 1935)
Lucille Soong (b. 1935)
Anita West (b. 1935)
June Watson (b. 1935)
David Daker (b. 1935)
Shirley Cain (b. 1935)
Bobby Pattinson (b. 1935)
George Roubicek (b. 1935)
Glenn Beck (b. 1935)
Shirley Greenwood (b. 1935)
Isabella Rye (b. 1935)
Anna Barry (b. 1935)
Brian Blessed (b. 1936)
Richard Wilson (b. 1936)
Tommy Steele (b. 1936)
Edward Petherbridge (b. 1936) 
Ursula Andress (b. 1936)
John Leyton (b. 1936)
Jess Conrad (b. 1936)
Elizabeth Shepherd (b. 1936)
Sandra Voe (b. 1936)
Doug Sheldon (b. 1936)
John Golightly (b. 1936)
Peter Ellis (b. 1936)
Andria Lawrence (b. 1936)
Jon Laurimore (b. 1936)
Tony Scoggo (b. 1936)
Barry MacGregor (b. 1936)
Frank Barrie (b. 1936)
Kenneth Farrington (b. 1936)
Eileen McCallum (b. 1936)
Frederick Pyne (b. 1936)
Philip Lowrie (b. 1936)
Marian Diamond (b. 1936)
Anthony Higginson (b. 1936)
Elsie Kelly (b. 1936)
Ann Taylor (b. 1936)
Heidi Erich (b. 1936)
Keith Faulkner (b. 1936)
Ruth Meyers (b. 1936)
Julia Blake (b. 1936)
Heather Downham (b. 1936)
Robin Gammell (b. 1936)
Anthony Hopkins (b. 1937)
Edward Fox (b. 1937)
Vanessa Redgrave (b. 1937)
Tom Courtenay (b. 1937)
Steven Berkoff (b. 1937)
Susan Hampshire (b. 1937)
Barbara Steele (b. 1937)
Shirley Eaton (b. 1937)
Kenneth Colley (b. 1937)
Ian Hogg (b. 1937)
Sheila Reid (b. 1937)
Valerie Singleton (b. 1937)
Suzy Kendall (b. 1937)
Gawn Grainger (b. 1937)
Tom Georgeson (b. 1937)
Alan Rothwell (b. 1937)
Michael Knowles (b. 1937)
Jocelyn Lane (b. 1937)
Michael Kilgarriff (b. 1937)
Clifton Jones (b. 1937)
Paul Collins (b. 1937)
Anna Dawson (b. 1937)
Marlene Sidaway (b. 1937)
Jeremy Spenser (b. 1937)
Freddie Davies (b. 1937)
Justine Lord (b. 1937)
Davyd Harries (b. 1937)
Hugh Futcher (b. 1937)
Anne Cunningham (b. 1937)
Anne Aubrey (b. 1937)
Vic Taliban (b. 1937)
Dorothy Paul (b. 1937)
Denis Tuohy (b. 1937)
Claire Neilson (b. 1937)
Patricia Collins (b. 1937)
Jan Waters (b. 1937)
Dorothy Paul (b. 1937)
Brian Grellis (b. 1937)
Kenneth Alan Taylor (b. 1937)
Yvonne Buckingham (b. 1937)
Eileen Helsby (b. 1937)
Ray Donn (b. 1937)
Terrence Scammell (b. 1937)
Pauline Devaney (b. 1937)
Rosie Bannister (b. 1937)
Jeanne Roland (b. 1937)
William Gaunt (b. 1937)
Rosaleen Linehan (b. 1937)
Norman Coburn (b. 1937)
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harvardfineartslib · 2 years ago
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#BlackResistance
Some of the powerhouse contemporary artists’ books from the stacks!
Dawoud Bey on photographing people and communities / photographs and text by Dawoud Bey ; introduction by Brian Ulrich. 2019. HOLLIS number: 99153846094103941
Lorna Simpson / Thelma Golden, Kellie Jones, Chrissie Iles, Naomi Beckwith. 2022
HOLLIS number: 99156213824303941
Kara Walker : Dust jackets for the niggerati. 2013. HOLLIS number: 990138041340203941
I'm / Deborah Roberts. 2021. HOLLIS number: 99156414672603941
Glenn Ligon : unbecoming / Judith Tannenbaum ; with essays by Richard Meyer and Thelma Golden ; and an interview with Glenn Ligon by Byron Kim. c1997
HOLLIS number: 990076940110203941
Dawoud Bey & Carrie Mae Weems : in dialogue / Ron Platt and Kinshasha Holman Conwill. 2022. HOLLIS number: 99156378937603941
Double consciousness : Black conceptual art since 1970 : Terry Adkins, EdgarArceneaux, Sanford Biggers ... / essay by Valerie Cassel Oliver, Franklin Sirmans. 2005. HOLLIS number
990095704830203941
Radical presence : black performance in contemporary art / Valerie Cassel Oliver ; essays by Yona Backer, Naomi Beckwith, Valerie Cassel Oliver, Tavia Nyong'o, Clifford Owens, Franklin Sirmans. 2013. HOLLIS number: 990137858880203941
Sanford Biggers / organized for the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis by Lisa Melandri.
2019. HOLLIS number: 99153814871703941
Theaster Gates : black archive / Kunsthaus Bregenz ; Herausgeber, Thomas D. Trummer.
2017. HOLLIS number: 990149445900203941
Sanford Biggers : sweet funk-- an introspective / Eugenie Tsai ; with an essay by Gregory Volk. 2011. HOLLIS number: 990133106710203941
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