
Product Placement
todays bird
Acquired Stardust
No title available
dirt enthusiast

Love Begins
Game of Thrones Daily

shark vs the universe
h

⁂
YOU ARE THE REASON
trying on a metaphor
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
ojovivo

roma★
Monterey Bay Aquarium
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
No title available
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
d e v o n

seen from Malaysia
seen from Romania

seen from Malaysia

seen from Finland
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Singapore
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seen from Canada

seen from South Africa

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@appa-w-choppa
I want submissions of Wet fat pussy 😭😭
Send me that fat wet coochie 😍
Same 😈
here mentally
a form of intimacy.
Michael Jackson performing during the Jacksons’ Triumph Tour, 1981.
@palomija
Barbara Hepworth (UK) Mother and Child (1934)
Wholesome
This gif is outrageous
■ The so-called “blood explosion” which punctuates the conclusion of Akira Kurosawa’s 1962 movie Sanjuro remains one of the most memorable and influential special effects in film history. Production designer Yoshiro Muraki would later recall this scene was filmed in a single take. No such effect had ever been attempted before, as movies of the time rarely showed violence with graphic detail. Filled with uncertainty, Muraki worried the blood spray he’d rigged up wouldn’t impress Kurosawa, so he added an extra 30 pounds of pressure to the fluid pump. At the moment the pump was activated, the additional pressure caused the compressor hose attached to actor Tatsuya Nakadai to blow a coupling which created a slight, unintentional delay before the fake blood began to spray, and caused a much larger gush of fluid than planned. It sprayed so powerfully Nakadai claimed it almost lifted him off the ground. His heart sinking, as he believed the delay and over-pressure had ruined the effect, Muraki nervously glanced at director Akira Kurosawa, but Kurosawa only nodded in approval.
“oh god i fucked this up”
“yoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooOOOOOOOO”
And to think this is so iconic that “two dudes clash, there’s a beat, then one dies incredibly violently” is just a must-have for action in anime
Its crazy to think that this iconic visual that has been so ubiquitous in pop culture for so long despite that the source material barely being known by people all came from actors staying in character thru an FX malfunction.
It could aaaaall be so simple *Lauryn Hill voice*
Priscilla Cheseaux by Vivek Vadoliya for Vogue India - August 2021
LMAOOOO