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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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KIROKAZE

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@bastillae
There goes the cutest woman this town has ever seen.
the air is getting pretty salty… 🌊
⏆ ⁺ 📻 ★ ¡
⏆ ⁺ 📻 ★ ¡
★ ㅤ⌣ㅤ ㅤ 🎞 𓈒ㅤ ͏ 𓈈 ͏५
★ ㅤ⌣ㅤ ㅤ 🎞 𓈒ㅤ ͏ 𓈈 ͏५
⭒ fav or reblog if you save
headband tete (original) cr. jung-koook
— Anne Carson, Red Doc
“American Honey forcibly rubs and shoves against the boundaries of cinema until it spills out into its own paths, down which it can impulsively wander and explore. It pushes the medium forward, but it also attempts to bridge the gaps in political cinema that few filmmakers can even discern. These changing times demand more directors like Arnold, who is doing something much more intricate than delivering messages or holding up a mirror to reflect the world as it appears. Arnold captures the desolation of the milieus her characters inhabit, but she refuses to withhold hope or beauty for the sake of starkness, or to ignore her poetic instincts in the name of sheer authenticity. Watching Star stumble and soar throughout American Honey, one can envision what political filmmaking might continue to become in the next few years: less a mirror than a window, opening outward onto an alternative view of the world, in which reality and imagination are not alienated, but allied.”
Read “Political Moviemaking in Hopeless Places: On American Honey” by Matthew Eng
American Honey 2016, dir. Andrea Arnold.
American Honey (2016)
Directed by Andrea Arnold Cinematography by Robbie Ryan
“Do you think you’re special? You don’t mean nothing to him.”
American Honey (2016) Directed by Andrea Arnold
American Honey (2016) dir. Andrea Arnold
smile like a nuclear accident
Just before sunrise it can look like a different world.
In this business, fame lasts for a second. You can be blown up and be blown down. People keep losing interest in faces because new ones come along every single second. I’m one at the moment. Tomorrow I won’t be. That’s cool. I’m not saying that when it does end, I’ll be like, “Yay! It’s ending.” But I’ll move on and do something else because that’s what has to be done. It’s about survival. If you’re sad about it, then you’re in the wrong job.
Isn’t it splendid to think of all the things there are to find out about? It just makes me feel glad to be alive–it’s such an interesting world. It wouldn’t be half so interesting if we know all about everything, would it? There’d be no scope for imagination then, would there?
movies watched in 2020 ⇁ the devil wears prada
One time an assistant left the desk because she sliced her hand open with the letter opener and Miranda missed Lagerfeld just before he boarded a 17 hour flight to Australia. She now works at TV Guide.