#t; candice
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brooklynxcox · 4 months ago
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📲: BROOKE
Candice: that's really cute though.. i'm still deciding what to wear, its been a while since I've been to an event. Candice: Its like i barely have time now. Brooke: I just went thrifting and found my dress. I didn't own anything formal, most of my clothes are not clothes at all but lack thereof. Brooke: Don't panic, there is still a few days. Do you have options?
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swan2swan · 1 year ago
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@aspiringwarriorlibrarian​ This more lightning-bolt for you?
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undercooked-icicle · 8 months ago
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In an Eric Cartman voice-
But Maaaaaawm! Phineas and Ferb are making a title sequence!
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anime093se · 1 year ago
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irlkisukeurahara · 1 year ago
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I hope I'm not too late for this joke
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womenofwrestlingfashion · 1 year ago
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Raw 8/14/23
Candice wore the AE Ne(x)t Level Ripped Super High-Waisted Jegging Crop in Fresh White from American Eagle (no longer sold) and the Air Force 1 '07 Mid Sneaker in White / Black from Nike (on sale for $88.97)
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thewwshow · 3 months ago
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You Don't Jewish People Shooting Each Other... Kanye West and Candice Owens
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cordelianewman · 4 months ago
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anime093se · 1 year ago
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milliondollarbaby87 · 10 months ago
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Book Club: The Next Chapter (2023) Review
Following on with the four best friends as they go on an adventure fo Italy for a fun girls trip, something they never managed to do! ⭐️⭐️ Continue reading Untitled
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moviesandmania · 1 year ago
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A DREAM HOUSE (2023) Overview and free to watch on YouTube
‘Some dreams are nightmares’ A Dream House is a 2023 American supernatural horror film about a young couple who win a housing auction with nightmarish consequences. Directed by Candice T. Cain (A Holiday Homecoming; Ivy & Mistletoe; Santa’s Second Wife) from a screenplay written by Charles Vidal. Produced by Amy Minter and Monika Mannix (supervising producer). Executive produced by Stacey Lambui…
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boomgers · 2 years ago
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Son escandalosas pero fabulosas… “Cuando Ellas Quieren Más”
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Las mejores amigas, Vivian, Sharon, Diane y Carol llevan su club de lectura a Italia para hacer el divertido viaje de chicas que nunca tuvieron. Pero cuando las cosas se salen de control y se revelan secretos, sus relajantes vacaciones se convierten en una aventura única en la vida.
Estreno: 1º de Junio de 2023 en Cines.
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La película está dirigida por Bill Holderman y protagonizada por Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen, Mary Steenburgen, Craig T. Nelson, Giancarlo Giannini, Andy Garcia y Don Johnson.
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Pósteres Individuales
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akultalkies · 1 year ago
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Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Mary Steenburgen, Candice Bergen, Andy Garcia, Don Johnson, Craig T. Nelson, Hugh Quarshie, Giancarlo Giannini, Vincent Riotta, Vera Dragone, Giampiero Judica, Grace Truly, Pietro Angelini
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Book Club: The Next Chapter (12): Dull and wooden Italian Job.
#onemannsmovies review of "Book Club: The Next Chapter" (2023). #BookClub. Lame sequel that creaks through Italy. 2/5.
A One Mann’s Movies review of “Book Club: The Next Chapter” (2023). (As sponsored by the Italian Tourist Board and “those nice people” at Lufthansa!) It’s 5 years since the first “Book Club” film came out and one of the blessings, given the ages of the four stars – totalling 309 years!- is that they are all still with us! “Book Club: The Next Chapter” is the usual answer to the question of…
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moorheadthanyoucanhandle · 2 years ago
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TOMEGIRLS
Opening in theaters this weekend:
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Book Club: The Next Chapter--"Best friend tough love."
Several times throughout this sequel to the 2018 comedy, one of the characters uses this phrase before offering a critique, usually not terribly tough, of one of the other three. In that spirit, I'm tempted to offer the returning quartet of leading ladies--Candice Bergen, Jane Fonda, Diane Keaton and Mary Steenburgen--some unsolicited movie critic tough love: cranking out this sort of girls-night-out fluff shouldn't be all they do in the valedictory stretch of their careers.
But I can't do it. These four women are all great stars, first-rate actors and classic screen beauties. In some cases they won their chops gradually--Bergen had a pretty rough start, for instance, but eventually developed killer comic timing--while others, like Keaton, seemed to find a one-of-a-kind persona early on. Each of them, however, has a splendid body of work to be proud of, and if now they want to make money doing relatively harmless, undemanding fare like this, they've earned the right.
That said, this one is really fluffy. But so what? There's a sense in which movies like this are critic-proof. As with 80 for Brady, another emeritus chick flick from earlier this year (also featuring Fonda), the stars here are such good company that the feeble plotting and rambling dialogue and platitudes about pursuing your dreams at any age become a shared smirk between them and the audience.
You may recall the line up, lifelong friends who stay in touch through a book club: Keaton's character, conveniently named Diane, is a reserved widow who defaults to finding reasons not to have adventures and has never scattered her husband's ashes. Fonda plays Vivian, a successful hotel magnate who has never married. Part One linked Vivian up with Arthur (Don Johnson) and Diane up with Mitchell (Andy Garcia).
Steenburgen plays Carol, a married chef; here her husband Bruce (Craig T. Nelson) has had a heart attack and she's policing his bacon intake. Bergen rounds out the quartet as Sharon, the long-divorced and still single retired federal judge.
Last time around the ladies were reading Fifty Shades of Grey, which rather embarrassingly stirred them up erotically. This time, after a long COVID lockdown, their selection is Paulo Coehlo's The Alchemist, which helps inspire them to go on a trip, a bachelorette party for Vivian, who has at last agreed to marry Arthur. So the four of them tour Italy; first Rome, then Venice, then Tuscany.
You can imagine the results, again directed by Bill Holderman from a script he co-wrote, again, with Erin Simms. The ladies cavort, from montage to montage, making low-hanging-fruit lewd jokes about classical sculptures, or trying on wedding dresses. They get robbed, and the case is handled without much urgency by a venerable and impressively unformed officer of the polizia (played by Seven Beauties himself, Giancarlo Giannini). They flirt with guys, although Sharon being the only fully unattached one, she's the only one that gets to fully cut loose in this way. And through it all, they drink wine. Lots and lots of wine.
Like many other directors, Holderman leans hard on the Italian locations, and the movie looks great. It sounds great, too; the soundtrack has Bette Midler singing "Mambo Italiano" and Italian-language versions of pop hits from The Monkees to Hall and Oates. And it's hard to completely dismiss any movie that features Hugh Quarshie singing "Gloria," in Italian, accompanied by Mary Steenburgen on the accordion.
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screenzealots · 2 years ago
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"Book Club: The Next Chapter"
BOOK CLUB: THE NEXT CHAPTER was unapologetically made for a target audience that will gobble it up and leave wanting more, despite the film not being very good.
The first question I asked myself after leaving the theater after screening “Book Club: The Next Chapter” was “wait a minute, did this movie even have a script?” The story is so paper-thin that it seems like a long improv session between four of the most charming actresses over 70. The sad (or great?) thing about this is that it doesn’t really matter, because co-writer and director Bill Holderman…
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