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#gossip girl#soundtrack#2023#2x08#y lu's mama tambien#ethel cain#everytime#britney spears#cover#aesthetic#dj#spotify#music#pop
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Aki is about to quit this relationship with Audrey and Max 👀
#gossipgirl#gossip girl#hbo max#akeno menzies#evan mock#audrey hope#emily alyn lind#max wolfe#thomas doherty#y lus mama tambien#lgbt#throuple#georgina sparks#akimax#maki
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I am a real stylist. Of course you are, mi amor.
Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#she literally looks like a barbie doll sometimes and i love it#zion moreno#luna la#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#[zion moreno]#[oc]#[gossip girl]#gghboedit#tusercaro#tuseraicr#teendramaedit#userhallie#userkass#dearindies#rey1x1#chewieblog#femaledaily#popularculturesource#dailywoc#dailytvwomen#dailylgbtq#usertelevision#userbbelcher#userpinked#tvedit#lgbtedit#wonderfulwoc#userladiesblr#dailyfilmtvgifs
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#membermegan#smallscreensourcepost#gghboedit#luna la#zion moreno#monet de haan#savannah lee smith#bitchys#teendramaedit#dailytvwomen#dailytvfilmgifs#latinesource#wonderfulwoc#dailywomen#pocpopculture#popularculturesource#tusercaro#emmanelson#lgbtedit#dailylgbtq#televisiongifs#entgifs#mediagifs#thatsent#tvfilmspot#tvseriessource
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The Best Films of 2018, Part V
We’re finally here. Thank you for reading. Or at least scrolling around to the movies that you care about. GREAT MOVIES
12. Minding the Gap (Bing Liu)- In part because it's produced by Steve James, Minding the Gap's easy short-hand is "Hoop Dreams for skateboarding." Because most of the film's pleasures come from following the subjects over the course of five or six years, that makes sense. What differs is that director Bing Liu is so young, which makes this a promising film if a less definitive one than James's feature debut. It’s trying to do so much, but it never feels calculated or constructed as it expands. Boldly, Liu seems to suggest that people don't really change that much, that what drives them or gnaws at them just manifests itself in different ways. The cycle of abuse ends up being a common element for the three skaters, and, as Liu admits on camera, domestic violence is the reason he made the film. (The treatment of it is raw, a blunt object when a more delicate instrument might work better.) He got the hard part right though: delicately getting us to care about people who sometimes don't care about themselves. 11. A Quiet Place (John Kransinski)- Strong early Shyamalan vibes from this lean chiller. Krasinski's directing debut, Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, didn't do much for me, and I skipped his obligatory man-comes-back-to-hometown-because-his-mom's-dying follow-up. But the filmmaking really impressed me here just by understanding how to set the table of this kind of movie. A close-up on an important nail sticking out of a floorboard here, an effortless explanation of a rule there. The hang-up for a film this high-concept is that you get distracted by all of the unanswered questions. (How did he get a printer quiet enough to print out all of those radio call signals?) But this world is fleshed out enough, especially an eerie dinner sequence, to bypass that kind of stuff for me. More than anything, there's a sort of elasticity of shot selection that serves the suspense. A tender early scene in which the central couple is dancing while wearing headphones goes on for maybe twice as long as one might expect. So later, the cross-cuts and smash-cuts have even more weight because the camera was allowed to linger earlier. Here's maybe the biggest reason for the movie's success: The characters are all slightly smarter than the audience, whereas the temptation might have been to go the other way with it. 10. Black Panther (Ryan Coogler)- I don't know if I can add anything to the discourse on this meditative yet ambitious film. I do think one early scene points at what makes it special for the genre. When T'Challa is first named king, he has to be drained of the Black Panther powers to fight anyone who wishes to challenge the throne. A member of an outsider tribe challenges him and nearly beats him. It shows a) the world-building of this noble, fair culture, b) the existence of this fully developed clan that will be important later, c) just how human T'Challa is if his reign can come so perilously close to ending just as it has begun. Every scene like that has a logical purpose. Of course, once Killmonger, the best, most realistically motivated Marvel villain of all time, gets introduced, we return to that method of challenging the throne, and writers Ryan Coogler and Joe Robert Cole aren't afraid to let the worst possible thing happen to T'Challa. What occurred forty-five minutes earlier makes this fight seem like a fait accompli. And it's in this sort of narrative detail that the film is able to work up to its thematic purpose. The first half is about, to quote T'Chaka, whether a good man can be a good king. But the second half is about the responsibility of goodness. Show me where Iron Man bit off that much. 9. Support the Girls (Andrew Bujalski)- Although it takes place mostly in one location during one day, Support the Girls has a bigger world going on in its margins. We hear it on radios, or we see it in the people taking a pitstop in Double Whammies while they're on their way somewhere better. But the force that's really encroaching on the characters' insulated environment is Mancave, the national chain that threatens to put them out of business. "They have commercials and everything," one character complains, and we get snatches of those commercials that were presumably directed by Andrew Bujalski himself. It's ten seconds of content maybe, shot in a bigger, broader style than the modest approach of the rest of the film. But the key to understanding how far Bujalski has come is realizing that he is no longer making fun of the people in the commercial, even if they're jacked bros screaming for a boxing match. That portrayal is amplified, sure, but Bujalski is mature enough now to not ridicule those people. It's okay that they're just not the people he's interested in. He's supernaturally empathetic toward the rogue's gallery of people he is interested in, who spin the ordinary challenges of the working class into something extraordinary. The sunniest member of the team is played by Haley Lu Richardson, who deserves special recognition as the indefatigable Maci. I can't think of parts that are much different from her roles in this, Columbus, and Split, to the extent that people probably don't realize they're played by the same woman, but she rules in every single one. The sky is the limit for her. When a workplace is described as "a family," it's usually just a way for the boss to take advantage of workers when the "family" designation does nothing to help them: "I know I shouldn't ask you to work off the clock, but can you help me out as a FAMILY MEMBER?" Occasionally though, it does feel like a family when people work closely to one another for hours on end and depend upon one another for real life needs. This movie is about what happens when a work family is both control and support.
8. Roma (Alfonso Cuaron)- The trailer for Children of Men advertises itself as "from the director of The Prisoner of Azkaban and Y Tu Mama Tambien," and I remember an audience giggling at that strange CV. For one thing, at the time people didn't understand yet why someone would brag about contributing to a Harry Potter movie. But to pair that children's picture with either a Spanish title they hadn't heard of or a movie that they knew was sexually explicit? Who was this guy? Roma is who he is. I like some of his other films more--I would argue that his approach hurts the performances here--but it seems impossible for him to make anything this personal again. The baldly emotional highs that it reaches come not only from the direct simplicity of the story but also from the sophisticated perspective with which it's being downloaded directly from Cuaron's memory. (It's also, accidentally or purposefully, quite a political film at this moment in time. It insists, sometimes in the dialect of Mixtec, that these people around us silently washing dishes or picking up dog poo are, in fact, part of our family.) There's a moment when one brother throws something at another's head, barely missing, and they both stop in their tracks with fear about how tragically things could have ended up. My dad experienced a similar moment in his childhood, and he would tell the same story about Uncle Steve throwing a shoe at him any time we passed the wooden door with a dent in it at my grandma's house. What a tiny moment to live on for decades, in tangible and intangible ways. Cuaron claims that all of these moments shape us, and taking us to the moon was only a warm-up for resurrecting them for us. 7. Happy As Lazzaro (Alice Rohrbacher)- Alice Rohrwacher won the screenplay award at Cannes, probably because her script for Happy As Lazzaro is fundamentally unpredictable. Games of checkers are unpredictable though. That word doesn't quite cover the way the viewer is forced to guess at something as elemental as "What year is this taking place?" And none of the twists and turns of the storytelling--I refuse to spoil--would gel if Rohrwacher as a director wasn't teaching you how to watch the film the whole time with a rich, warm, light touch. Considering the purity of this vision as a fable, buoyed by realistic labor concerns on the other hand, it's a pity that people are calling Birdbox "crazy" when something like this is just a few clicks down on that service. 6. The Favourite (Yorgos Lanthimos)- When assessing The Favourite, the easy temptation is to say that because it isn't stuffy, because of its scabrous wit or its intimate filming techniques, that it "isn't your mother's chamber drama." It is invigorating, but in a lot of ways, the film isn't saying anything that the average Masterpiece Theater production doesn't. Instead it takes cultural touchstones about the emptiness of power and distorts them, much like the fish-eye lenses that Yorgos Lanthimos favors to photograph the palace. It says an easy thing in a hard way, with conviction to burn. Lanthimos seems freed by not having to write the screenplay, and every decision of his is rooted in making things more narrow. The barrel distortion of the fish-eye seems apt for this idea, but so do the secret passageways that Queen Anne gets wheeled through to avoid the lower rungs of the estate. Of course there's no outside world to intrude upon her majesty. But there's even an inner world to the inner world. (It's impossible to watch Olivia Colman's gonzo depiction of Anne's incurious indolence and not think of Trump.) I'm convinced that Emma Stone can do anything, and the final shot, an all-timer, only validates that suspicion. 5. Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot (Gus Van Sant)- You have to check out every Gus Van Sant movie, even after a few missteps, because you never know: He might take the emotional climax that you didn't even know you wanted and score it to inter-diegetic "Still Rock 'N Roll to Me," thus grounding real poignance with even realer goofiness.I'll admit that the bar is low, but this is probably the most authentic, least treacly movie ever made about addiction recovery. Van Sant, who wrote, directed, and edited, tells the story with patient command. We take Joaquin Phoenix for granted at this point, but everybody on the poster is exceptional. And Udo Kier gets to say, "Pop, pop. It's always about penises." INSTANT CLASSICS
4. A Star Is Born (Bradley Cooper)- In one scene Cooper's Jackson Maine wears a black leather jacket under a brown leather vest, and the movie itself risks that kind of hat-on-a-hat silliness and redundancy. But instead it comes off as the best kind of big swing, a comforting and warm serving of Old Hollywood. Cooper's camera knows how to embrace silence and let the leads play off each other to craft raw, touching performances. Sometimes the close-ups are so intense and focused that, when he cuts back to a master, it's disorienting to be reminded that there are other people in that space, in the world at all.The movie's deficiencies come from "Wait, how much time has passed?" moments in the writing, problems that I always have had with Eric Roth projects. But it's easy to get swept up in a movie of moments that believes so much in itself.
3. Mission: Impossible- Fallout (Christopher McQuarrie)- The pattern of Mission: Impossible- Fallout is: infodump that explains the stakes and the strategy of what we're about to see, followed by an action sequence that is somehow even more thrilling than the one that came before it. Imagine a really interesting day of grade school classes, in which you learned, like, multiplication, followed by recess every other period. As for T.C., what more could you possibly want out of a human being?
2. Wildlife (Paul Dano)- When Jerry, Jake Gyllenhaal's groundskeeper of pathetic pride, figures out that his boss is about to fire him in front of his son, he smiles and, through clenched teeth, asks if this talk can happen tomorrow. Part of him actually believes that postponing the meeting will help; maybe the boss's temper will cool overnight. But this is a man who is bound by the same desperate spirit as his wife Jeanette, who muses, "Tomorrow something will happen that will make us feel different." When people are living day-to-day, clinging to their dignity--he refers to himself as a "small person" at one point--tomorrow really does offer a regenerative power. Those characters are the same-pole magnets that inform this coming-of-age tale, and the subtext of the film is "Can you believe Carey Mulligan and Jake Gyllenhaal have a fourteen-year-old son?" It works for the 1960 setting because these are people who defined themselves before they knew who they were, and they'll now do anything to re-define themselves as brave/sexy/valuable. But it works for the actors too. Gyllenhaal in particular is tender and heartbreaking in a true supporting role, allowing himself to look his age, framing himself with the dad akimbo arms. But Mulligan's fake confidence is great too, especially in a scene in which she nearly begs her husband to let her work. Something tells me that I should credit a director for coaxing two career best performances from two great actors. Some people just have it, and Paul Dano does.
1. First Reformed (Paul Schrader)- In 1998 I dragged my father to see Paul Schrader's Affliction, a movie that was kind of about my father's father. When the end credits rolled on that bleak, wrenching film, my dad turned to me and said, "I feel like I have to take a shower." We walked around a nearby hotel and talked for an hour, not that he was able to articulate why he was so shaken. We discussed the difference between entertainment and art and what makes a piece of either successful. Even though he hated the experience, he couldn't deny that it was an experience. He kept on saying, "That's not why I go to the movies." And no matter what I, fifteen at the time, told him, he couldn't understand that's exactly why I go to the movies. First Reformed had the same mesmerizing effect as the best of Schrader's work: When I exited the building, I stumbled into the sunlight because I had been trapped in someone else's mind for almost two hours.
Part of that effect comes from the narrative device of Reverend Toller's journal, which plants us in his headspace from the beginning. Part of it comes from the intimate scale of the film, which features only a handful of locations. But if what I'm explaining seems small, then I'm doing a bad job. The canvas expands. Schrader insists that our care for the environment is our most immediate responsibility; this film historian has no problem with planting the film at 2017 in dialogue. And that emphasis is matched only by his disdain for how big business encroaches on personal aspects of our lives. There's even a scene that tries to account for a recent rise in extremism among young people. As if to prove that he isn't being pedantic, he has one character communicate one of those ideas, letting you assume that role is his mouthpiece, then he has another character reply with something just as convincing. First Reformed weaves in those elements, but it's ultimately a character piece that humanizes the type of person we think we know but for which we have no frame of reference. In Ethan Hawke's piercing performance, we see a Reform minister who punishes himself actively and passively for what he thinks are sins. He uses faith as an armor and as an excuse, being so of the mind and--as another character puts it--"in the garden" that he denies himself medical care. No matter what anyone else tells him, he is convinced of one of the tenets that Schrader could never shake from his Calvinist upbringing: There's nothing you can do to save yourself.
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#[gossip girl]#[zion moreno]#[oc]#zion moreno#latinesource#lgbtedit#dailylgbtq#userkass#dearindies#rey1x1#userhallie#useraicr#chewieblog#userladiesblr#dailytvwomen#tvedit#dailytvsource#fyeahtv#teendramaedit#popularculturesource#femalecharacters#dailywoc#pocpopculture#femaledaily#dailyfilmtvgifs
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#[gossip girl]#[oc]#latinesource#femalecharacters#userladiesblr#wonderfulwoc#lgbtedit#luna la#zion moreno#dailylgbtq#dailytvwomen#tvedit#userkass#rey1x1#dearindies#userentertainments#usertelevision#femaledaily#dailywomen#gghbosource#tusercaro#emmanelson#pocpopculture#popularculturesource#teendramaedit#userpinked
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
@lgbtqcreators event 08 — new years idols
Luna La — Gossip Girl (2021-2023)
#luna la#zion moreno#gossip girl#[oc]#[gossip girl]#[zion moreno]#lgbtedit#userlgbtq#dailytvedit#dailytvwomen#gossip girl 2021#gghbosource#userhallie#usertelevision#userladiesblr#useraicr#dearindies#rey1x1#userkass#dailytvsource#tvfilmsource#femaledaily#tusercaro#femalecharacters#fyeahtv#televisiongifs#dailyfilmtvgifs#mediagifs#userentertainments#thatsent
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu's Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#membermegan#smallscreensourcepost#userentertainments#chewieblog#pocpopculture#popularculturesource#dailytvwomen#tvedit#usertelevision#userhallie#userladiesblr#womendaily#dailytvsource#gghbosource#zion moreno#fyeahtv#gossipgirledit#bitchys#teendramaedit#dailytvfilmgifs#userspot#usersource#userstream#lgbtedit#dailylgbtq#userkass#dearindies#latinesource
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#luna la#gossip girl 2021#zion moreno#[oc]#[zion moreno]#[gossip girl]#dearindies#rey1x1#userkass#useraicr#userhalle#womendaily#flawlessfemale#dailywoc#latinesource#teendramaedit#usertelevision#userladiesblr#dailytvwomen#pocpopculture#popularculturesource#gghbosource#fyeahtv#dailytvsource#femalecharacters#mediagifs#thatsent
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#membermegan#smallscreensourcepost#gossipgirledit#ggedit#gghbosource#gghboedit#zion moreno#luna la#latinesource#dearindies#userkass#userentertainments#userbbelcher#usertelevision#dailylgbtq#lgbtedit#teendramaedit#thatsent#mediagifs#tvedit#wonderfulwoc#pocpopculture#popularculturesource#femalecharacters
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#zion moreno#[oc]#[zion moreno]#[gossip girl]#luna la#dailywoc#userkass#userladiesblr#usertelevision#useraicr#teendramaedit#gghboedit#userhallie#popularculturesource#tusercaro#dearindies#dailytvwomen#tvedit#dailytvsource#dailyfilmtvgifs#dailytvedit#pocpopculture#latinesource#womendaily#femaledaily#wonderfulwoc#mediagifs#thatsent
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#membermegan#smallscreensourcepost#zion moreno#luna la#rachellme#gossipgirledit#latinesource#dearindies#rey1x1#emmanelson#useryusi#userkass#gghbosource#teendramaedit#femaledaily#wonderfulwoc#pocpopculture#tusercaro#popularculturesource#femalecharacters#tvedit#dailytvwomen#dailywomen#userladiesblr#userladiesofcinema#cinematv#fyeahtv#dailytvfilmgifs
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#[oc]#[zion moreno]#[gossip girl]#zion moreno#userladiesblr#userkass#usertelevision#useraicr#userhallie#tusercaro#gghbosource#emmanelson#teendramaedit#popularculturesource#dailywoc#latinesource#dearindies#rey1x1#lgbtedit#dailylgbtq#tvedit#userentertainments#wonderfulwoc#femaledaily#womendaily#dailytvwomen#dailytvedit#dailytvfilmgifs
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Gossip Girl (2021-). Y Lu’s Mama Tambien.
#gossip girl#gossip girl 2021#membermegan#smallscreensourcepost#tusercaro#gghbosource#zion moreno#userladiesblr#usertelevision#userentertainments#useraicr#userhallie#userkass#dearindies#rey1x1#chewieblog#lgbtedit#dailylgbtq#dailytvwomen#tvedit#dailytvfilmgifs#thatsent#mediagifs#charactersofcolordaily#wonderfulwoc#pocpopculture#popularculturesource#fyeahtv#femalecharacters#dailywomen
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