#the curse of downer's grove
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theclassymike · 1 year ago
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Lucas TIll in the film The Curse of Downer's Grove (2015)
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quintennyson · 9 months ago
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LUCAS TILL in THE CURSE OF DOWNERS GROVE
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beseeingyou · 5 months ago
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lucas' burthday is coming up in 20 days (yeah i know im getting to this a little late 😭 im so sorry) and i have put together this project so we can show him how much we appreciate him!
https://forms.gle/mMXrfXMtxpRLPVCN
@boolger @cannibalisticcorpse @nursestardust @desparikon @rosieblogstuff
https://forms.gle/mMXrfXMtxpRLPVCN
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impossiblepluto · 4 months ago
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hi this is random but since you enjoy the dynamic between jack and Mac so much I thought you might enjoy the dynamic between two characters Ty and Jack from a show called Heartland. it is a horse show but it’s very wholesome and they have one of my favourite dynamics in the whole show
Ahhh! Okay, so! A while back, probably like 4 years ago now, there was a gifset that I think was from The Curse of Downer's Grove and because I have never once scrolled past a gifset without being seized by the fatal need to drop some angsty, fic-adjacent thoughts in the tags, I rambled on about troubled teenage Mac who ends up in Jack's care on the ranch.
After the latest round of fights and explosions, Mac is looking at spending some time in a detention center. Grandpa Harry (with probably James pulling strings behind the scenes) is able to make an appeal and send Mac off to a ranch in Texas with an old friend, Jack Dalton Sr who has experience working with at risk youth. However, prior to Mac's arrival, Jack Sr. passes unexpectedly and Mac shows up about the same time Jack Jr. comes back to Texas for the first time in over a decade.
Jack has no plans to stick around in Texas after his handled his father's affairs, and he certainly isn't about to take responsibility for some punk kid from California.
Apparently there are quite a few similarities to Heartland! And I have now seen a couple of episodes. It's also sort of similar to "Bravetown" and if you check out the tag "bt in texas" on Anguish's blog, you'll probably find some gifsets the capture the vibes
Anyway, that's more than you were expecting but I should probably check out Heartland again and maybe that will spark me into finishing this idea because realizing that it's 4 years old kind of makes my heart hurt a little bit
#tumblr buddies#ask impossiblepluto#macgyver#i have an outline and a few misc scenes/lines#so mac is of course ready for Jack to give upon him like everyone else has#and just keeps waiting for the day that Jack sends him away#there's also a bit where someone realizes oh wait Jack sr. is dead and Mac expects Jack to like send him back to california and juvie#and he's just continually surprised that doesn't happen#(it's revealed later that Jack was a troubled teen and Jack Sr. starts mentoring because of his regret about how things went down)#there are lots of quiet sullen mac moments and how he gets jumped by bullies and is just staring at jack with a black eye#nearly hidden by a fringe of hair#just almost daring jack to give up on him#and then the moment where everythign changes and Mac calls him because he needs help and he trusts jack#and some teenage stupidity where mac is at like a party or something and dumb decisions are made#but he realizes decisions were dumb and calls jack who picks him up at like 3 in the morning and puts him to bed#but then gets him up at the crack of dawn because it's a working ranch and there are chores to do#(there are also notes about accidental branding like mac burns himself somehow but maybe someone else breaks into the barn and burns him)#(it is unclear what the plan was- just vibes)#(which is unfortunately most of the this idea so at least it's consistent)#(there's also stuff about a hair cut but dude i do not know what the plan was for that at all)#(also someone coming after mac because of james but no one knows that it's james' fault)
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livvyrph · 2 months ago
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✦✧✧PENELOPE MITCHELL GIF HUNT[ gif page ]
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By clicking the source link you will find { #116 } 245x135, small, gifs of Penelope Mitchell from The Curse of Downers Grove. All of these are made by yours truly, and I would appreciate it if they were not used in other gif hunts or on photosets. If any are used to make gif icons or rp icons, I also ask that you credit me. Please like and/or reblog if using or are a rph/t/c. [ Trigger Warnings: Smoking and Alcohol ]
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prettylittlcresources · 1 year ago
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In the source is a payhip link to download 59 gifs (280x210px) of Jackie Emerson in various projects (FBI, Wayward Guide, Nineteen on Fire, and Curse of Downer's Grove). All of these gifs were made by me (and are 100% free), please read the gif rules linked to on this blog before using the pack. There is a link to them on the payhip page as well for your convenience.
Jackie is an American actress, known mostly for her role as Foxface in The Hunger Games. Speaking of that movie though, I'd appreciate it a lot if you did not use these gifs if you are also using resources of her in that movie (as she was a minor while filming The Hunger Games and that makes me deeply uncomfortable, thank you!)
If you like my content and would like to support it, please consider donating to the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund or an indigenous cause. I have links in my pinned post to point you toward some if you need suggestions. Thank you! 💕
TWs: Slight flashing (walking in and out of the direct way of bright stage lights)
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mrlnsfrt · 5 months ago
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Love Your Enemies
The true test of genuine Christianity is how believers treat those whom they are naturally inclined to hate or who mistreat or persecute them. - Craig Blomberg, Matthew, vol. 22, The New American Commentary (Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1992), 114–115.
If you have been following my Join Me on the Mountainside series you have realized by now that Jesus calls His followers to a higher ethical standard than the average person (non-believer) lives by. Continuing on this theme Jesus adds a new dimension to how we ought to live our lives.
Love your enemies.
43 “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ 44 But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you, 45 that you may be sons of your Father in heaven; for He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust. 46 For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? 47 And if you greet your brethren only, what do you do more than others? Do not even the tax collectors do so? - Matthew 5:43-47 NKJV
Hate your enemy?
“You shall love your neighbor” comes from Leviticus 19:18. However, nowhere can the phrase “hate your enemy” be found in the Old Testament. The sentiment is common enough that Jesus’ audience would have heard it. Another possibility is that the religious and ethnic community could narrowly define the commandment to love their neighbor (brother, friend, fellow believer) as permission and perhaps even encouragement to hate those who were not their neighbors, those who were different, who didn’t belong, those who were considered enemies. This line of reasoning is rational enough to convince those who want to be convinced and have their own racial/religious prejudice substantiated. But does God actually want us to hate our enemies? Did God tell His followers to hate their enemies in the Old Testament?
Context
To use Leviticus 19:18 as an excuse to hate your enemy is to embark on an ‘adventure in missing the point.’ Though Leviticus 19 is addressed to all the congregation of the people of Israel and gives Israelites instructions on their duties to their own parents, and more widely to their neighbor and their brother, it does not limit ethical behavior to only fellow believers.
As you read through the chapter you come to Leviticus 19:34, clearly telling the people to love the stranger who is among them as themselves. Not to mention other Old Testament verses such as Exodus 23:4,5 that deal with caring for the animal of ���one who hates you.” Interestingly, Deuteronomy 22:1-4 has very similar instructions regarding your brother’s animals, which indicates that God required a loving and caring response regardless if the animal belonged to a “brother” or “enemy.”
The words ‘and hate your enemy’ were a ‘parasitical growth’ upon God’s law; they had no business there. God did not teach his people a double standard of morality, one for a neighbour and another for an enemy. - John R. W. Stott and John R. W. Stott, The Message of the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7): Christian Counter-Culture, The Bible Speaks Today (Leicester; Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1985), 117.
But I say to you…
But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you, - Matthew 5:44
Once again Jesus goes against the common teaching of His time, challenging His listeners to go against the prevalent culture of their time by pronouncing a more demanding ethic. Followers of Jesus should love their enemies. If we do not love our enemies then we are no different from those who do not follow Jesus. Jesus compares those who don’t love their enemies to tax collectors (and Gentiles in some translations) representing two groups of people that were despised by orthodox Jews.
The tax collectors were hated for working for Rome by collecting tribute from Israel. The Gentiles/pagans were loathed because of their false religion. Jesus tells those who considered themselves spiritually superior that if they do not love their enemies they are no better than those they consider the worst sinners.
Children of God
that you may be sons of your Father in heaven; for He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust. - Matthew 5:45 NKJV
It is commonplace for us to look after our own people, those who belong to our group, those we like, our family, our friends, and those who have something in common with us. We naturally gravitate towards those people, we enjoy their company, we help them and they help us. Therefore the true test of being a child of God is how we treat those who we are naturally inclined to hate, mistreat, or even persecute. One of the reasons we ought to love our enemies is because God loves them and Jesus died for them.
God also gives us the example of showing kindness and mercy to all. The sun and rain benefit both the just and the wicked. God is not asking us to do something that goes against His principles but rather to join Him in His values and thus better understand who God is.
We know intellectually that God is love, but do we have any idea what that means? Do we truly believe that God is love?
He who does not love does not know God, for God is love. - 1John 4:8 NKJV
What did Jesus mean by ‘love?’
Part of our struggle with loving our enemies comes from being unsure of what that would look like. From Jesus’ command for us to love our enemies, it becomes clear that what Jesus meant is not connected to feelings since we can’t experience feelings on demand. Love then must be connected to certain behaviors.
To ‘love’ them is ardently to desire that they will repent and believe, and so be saved. […] The point he is making is that true love is not sentiment so much as service—practical, humble, sacrificial service. —John R. W. Stott and John R. W. Stott, The Message of the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7): Christian Counter-Culture, The Bible Speaks Today (Leicester; Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1985), 117-118.
It is a divine principle of thought and action that modifies the character, governs the impulses, controls the passions, and ennobles the affections.  —Francis D. Nichol, ed., The Seventh-Day Adventist Bible Commentary, vol. 5 (Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1980), 340.
Whatever emotions may be involved, “love” here refers to “generous, warm, costly self-sacrifice for another’s good.” “Greet” (v. 47) refers to more than a simple hello, namely, heartfelt “expressions of desire for the other person’s welfare.” People who so love and greet their enemies and pray for their persecutors thus prove themselves to be those, as in v. 9, who are growing in conformity to the likeness of their Heavenly Father (v. 45). —Craig Blomberg, Matthew, vol. 22, The New American Commentary (Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1992), 115.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky, a Russian novelist, has an interesting insight into love which he shares in his book The Brothers Karamazov, “Love in action is a harsh and dreadful thing compared to love in dreams.” With this in mind, I would add, stop thinking about romantic love that exists in dreams and focus on the practical aspects of love.
I have quoted theologians and a novelist, but how does the Bible define love? A great number of books have been written on this topic and many verses help us better grasp what God means by love, but one of the best places to turn to is 1 Corinthians 13.
4 Love is patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud 5 or rude. It does not demand its own way. It is not irritable, and it keeps no record of being wronged. 6 It does not rejoice about injustice but rejoices whenever the truth wins out. 7 Love never gives up, never loses faith, is always hopeful, and endures through every circumstance. — 1 Corinthians 14:4-7 NLT
The practical implication of Jesus’ words is that while our enemies are seeking our harm, we are called to seek their good because this is how God has treated us, while we were enemies Christ died to reconcile us to God. (Romans 5:10) But that is not all, our love should also be expressed through our words. We are called to bless those who curse us. This means that while they are calling down disaster and catastrophe upon us and expressing their wish for our downfall, we are to “retaliate” by calling heaven’s blessings upon them, declaring with our words and wishing with our thoughts nothing but good for them.
John Chrysostom was an early Church Father, biblical interpreter, and the archbishop of Constantinople. He interpreted Jesus’ words in the sermon on the mount as a sequence that escalated with each step.
First, we are not to take any evil initiative ourselves. Secondly, we are not to avenge another’s evil. Thirdly, we are to be quiet, and fourthly, to suffer wrongfully. Fifthly, we are to surrender to the evildoer even more than he demands. Sixthly, we are not to hate him, but (steps 7 and 8) to love him and do him good. As our ninth duty, we are ‘to entreat God Himself on his behalf’. —John R. W. Stott and John R. W. Stott, The Message of the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7): Christian Counter-Culture, The Bible Speaks Today (Leicester; Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1985), 118–119. (quoting from THE HOMILIES of S. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, ARCHBISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE, on the GOSPEL OF ST. MATTHEW, p276.)
In light of all of this, it would be fair to say that love for our enemies is evidence of our love for God.
Intercessory prayer and love
…and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you, - Matthew 5:44b
Have you ever considered intercessory prayer as an expression of the love we have? Not only that, it is also a means of increasing our love. It is impossible to pray for someone without loving her, and impossible to go on praying for her without discovering that our love for her grows and matures. Knowing this, it would be foolish to wait before praying for an enemy until we feel some love for him in our hearts. We must begin to pray for him before we are conscious of loving him, and we will experience our love begin to grow.
Think of Jesus as our example. He seems to have prayed for His tormentors while the iron spikes were being driven through His hands and feet. Some point out that the imperfect tense suggests that Jesus kept praying, repeating His appeal ‘Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do’. (Luke 23:34) If the cruel torture of crucifixion could not silence Jesus’ prayer for His enemies, what pain, pride, bigotry, or laziness could justify the silencing of ours? (John R. W. Stott, 119. (paraphrased)).
Some contrast the “realistic” ethics of Judaism with “Christian romanticism” and cite this as an example. However, the command is not to have good feelings about your enemies, but to want and do good for them, and, more specifically, to pray for those who persecute you. It is realistic enough to have been flattered by imitation in a well-known medieval Jewish work: “Pray for your enemy that he serve God.” (Orchot Tzaddikim15c)  —David H. Stern, Jewish New Testament Commentary : A Companion Volume to the Jewish New Testament, electronic ed. (Clarksville: Jewish New Testament Publications, 1996), Mt 5:44.
Be Perfect
Therefore you shall be perfect, just as your Father in heaven is perfect. —Matthew 5:48 NKJV
I imagine some of you becoming very uncomfortable. Nobody is perfect, why ask us to be perfect? I’ll share what some theologians think about this then share my personal thoughts.
The word perfect in Matthew 5:48 does not imply sinlessly perfect, for that is impossible in this life (though it is a good goal to strive for). It suggests completeness, maturity, as the sons of God. The Father loves His enemies and seeks to make them His children, and we should assist Him! —Warren W. Wiersbe, The Bible Exposition Commentary, vol. 1 (Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1996), 24–25.
Jesus does not here deal with absolute sinlessness in this life (see SC 62; EGW RH March 18, 1890). Sanctification is a progressive work.
The Jews were toiling wearily to become righteous by their own efforts, to earn salvation by works. But in their scrupulous legalism they paid so much attention to the minute details of the letter of the law that they lost sight completely of its spirit (see Matthew 23:23). In the Sermon on the Mount Christ sought to turn their attention from the husks to the wheat. They had made the law an end in itself, something to be kept for its own sake, and had forgotten that its purpose was to lift their gaze to the high ideals of supreme love toward God and self-sacrificing love toward one’s fellow men (Matthew 22:34–40). The rabbis taught that righteousness consists in having an excess of good deeds over evil deeds credited to one’s account in heaven.
It is important to note the relationship between vs. 48 and 45 (ch. 5), for to be “children of your Father which is in heaven” (v. 45) is equivalent to being “perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect” (v. 48). —Francis D. Nichol, ed., The Seventh-Day Adventist Bible Commentary, vol. 5 (Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1980), 341.
“Perfect” here is better translated as “mature, whole,” i.e., loving without limits (probably reflecting an underlying Aramaic tamim). Jesus is not frustrating his hearers with an unachievable ideal but challenging them to grow in obedience to God’s will—to become more like him. J. Walvoord rightly observes, “While sinless perfection is impossible, godliness, in its biblical concept, is attainable.” — Craig Blomberg, Matthew, vol. 22, The New American Commentary (Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1992), 115.
My favorite interpretation is found in the book The Desire of Ages where the author points out that God’s ideal for us is higher than we can imagine or possibly achieve on our own, rather it looks forward to what God desires for us when His work in our hearts is completed and the works of the devil are completely destroyed.
God’s ideal for His children is higher than the highest human thought can reach. “Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.” This command is a promise. The plan of redemption contemplates our complete recovery from the power of Satan. Christ always separates the contrite soul from sin. He came to destroy the works of the devil, and He has made provision that the Holy Spirit shall be imparted to every repentant soul, to keep him from sinning. —The Desire of Ages, Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1898, 311.
Jesus calls us to be perfect and one day will make us completely perfect in every way when He comes again. (1 Corinthians 15:53) This does not mean that our salvation depends on us becoming sinless, but rather that we should not aim for anything lower than perfection. I am saved by grace and I have the assurance of my salvation because of what Jesus did for me. So I live my life aiming at perfection, and repenting as I fall short, but never being comfortable with any known amount of sin in my life.
Another way of saying this is, I will always strive to love my enemies and repent as I fall short and turn to God for help to love like He wants me to. I’ll never settle, making as excuse that I don’t have to love ‘that person,’ since I am not perfect and can’t be expected to actually do what Jesus asks of me.
I hope this makes sense. When I aim for anything less than perfection I create room for my favorite sins in my life, this is what I want to avoid. I aim at perfection and never settle for less. But I am aware that my salvation is not linked to my achievements but depends completely on what Jesus did for me. So I am sure of my salvation but I strive to perfectly follow my best understanding of God’s plan for my life.
Practical Application
Since love is such a difficult topic I decided to make the practical application a little more actionable. My challenge for you is to pray for those you consider to be your enemies, those who persecute you and go out of their way to make your life miserable. I am not asking for you to have them over for dinner or to become best friends forever. My challenge is for you to begin praying for them, every day, at least once a day.
Try it at least for one week and let me know how it goes.
God wants what’s best for you. I am curious how this simple habit will transform your life and your relationships.
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awholelottagifs · 7 years ago
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Under the cut you’ll find 245 gifs of Bella Heathcote in the movie The Curse of Downer’s Grove. These were all made by me so please don’t take credit or repost these anywhere without my permission. Please give this post a quick like/reblog if you found these useful!
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theclassymike · 1 year ago
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Lucas Till for Watch Magazine.
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museswithinx · 4 years ago
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“who taught you how to shoot like that?” { Monty for Aubrey bc he should know who he's messing with lol }
THE CURSE OF DOWNERS GROVE SENTENCE STARTERS  :   quotes taken from the 2015 film the curse of downers cove.
The wolf was very lively today. Aubrey never did like being on the outs with Deniz, but she wasn’t going to just ‘get over it’ like he expected her to either. There had been a better way to handle that whole mess but at the very least, he could have apologized to Lane and his family for the stunt pulled. Unfortunately, he was too proud for that and she wasn’t going to sacrifice her moral grounds so they could put a band-aid on it. Needless to say, she was upset and frustrated.
Usually performing helped her keep the wolf at bay, but since her next theater production wasn’t until Christmas time, she found herself back at Fight School. A little target practice was the next best thing. Grabbing one of the crossbows from the equipment locker, she locks it back up before heading out back to the range set-up.
After a little warm-up, Aubrey was in the zone as she re-loaded and aimed for one of the moving targets. It was easy predicting where it would move before taking each shot. In the end, she hit all three shots dead in the center of each marked area of the ‘body’. All non-lethal, but enough to eliminate any further threat if it were real.
As she was re-loading her weapon again, a greeting voice startles her causing her to drop the arrow she was holding. Whirling around, she found Levi’s bestie Monty approaching from the sidelines. “Holy freaking God! You scared me.”
“who taught you how to shoot like that?” Monty asks, having obviously caught her skill. She wondered how long he’d been standing there.
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“Gray Hunter.” Aubrey answers proudly, gently setting her crossbow down on one of the tables. “Her and my mom are besties, so I got some private one-on-one lessons while I was growing up. She’s a weapons expert and kind of a beast with, well, everything. So you could say I learned from the very best.”
She wasn’t one to brag, but it wasn’t an easy skill to master either. It took a very long time for her to learn and use all the different weapons effectively. Connor was the better shot, it was just in his blood, but she was still proud that she knew how to hold her own. She had more than just her magic to fall back on. 
“So, uh, mind if I ask what you’re doing here?” She asks changing the subject. “Are you thinking of taking up some lessons or something?”
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nitetimeperson · 4 years ago
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I just finished watching a horror movie (wasn't scary) and HES A FUCKING YANDERE
I won't spoil it but the movie is called the curse of downer grove or something like that on hulu
BUT HOLY SHIT HES A FUCKING YANDERE
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singleteachmehowtomingle · 5 years ago
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I'm watching this movie, and this guy got a thumb to the eye.
Do you know what this guy did instead of going to the hospital? He went home.
I mean, there's a difference between going home after getting punched in the face, and going home after getting your eyeball smushed by a thumb. I get movie writers and such don't exactly understand injuries or normal human reactions, but my God.
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horror-hotties · 7 years ago
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Bella Heathcote (Dark Shadows)
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nade2308 · 3 years ago
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@thethistlegirl I am thinking thoughts 😈
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asflowersfade · 7 years ago
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Alright, another Lucas Till movie down: The Curse of Downers Grove! And he was positively wonderful in it. So sweet and kind and lovely and... did I mention sweet? He liked Chrissie so much. And he respected her choices and followed her lead and... and he survived!
And Chrissie. Well, Chrissie was a bad-ass. Like such a bad-ass! The way she planned the whole thing and mowed down the bad buys! And then the ending :(( That hurt because she deserved so much better! And all that just because a guy couldn’t take a no for an answer. Christ...
Also, Kevin Zegers and Zane Holtz are in this, playing the bad guys. 
This film’s definitely worth seeing for Lucas Till. Who’s INCREDIBLY CUTE in it!
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lucas--till · 8 years ago
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Lucas Till messing around early in the season while recording a voiceover for MacGyver
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