i am not lying when i say i think about this everyday
This is 100% the most underrated Tim and Eric sketch.
wallacepolsom
i don't do bad sauce passes
Peter Solarz
Mike Driver

Kaledo Art

pixel skylines

titsay
dirt enthusiast
$LAYYYTER
RMH
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
🪼

izzy's playlists!
occasionally subtle

Kiana Khansmith
Show & Tell
Jules of Nature
trying on a metaphor

roma★
Stranger Things
seen from Germany

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@collinisababy
i am not lying when i say i think about this everyday
This is 100% the most underrated Tim and Eric sketch.
When a game has “And you.” in the special thanks section of the credits.
And who are you, exactly?
The Shining—rare behind-the-scenes footage.
During the filming of The Shining, director Stanley Kubrick gave his seventeen-year-old daughter, Vivian, unprecedented access to the set to film a documentary on the making of the movie.
Although her finished film is only thirty-five minutes long, Vivian filmed over eighty hours of footage over the course of production. Most of that footage still exists, and is housed at the Stanley Kubrick Archive at the London College of Communication. Unfortunately, none of it is available to the public for viewing.
This rare sequence of clips, which was broadcast on French television in 1980, offers a tantalizing glimpse into more of Vivian’s footage. None of these clips were used in her finished documentary.
In the first clip. we see the filming of the shot where Jack Nicholson chops down the Caretaker’s Apartment entrance door. The finished shot used in the film contains a series of impeccably operated whip-pans, and this clip shows, for the first time, that it was Stanley Kubrick himself who operated the camera during the shot.
In the second clip, Kubrick, Nicholson and Shelley Duvall watch video playback of the shot where Shelley hysterically reacts to Jack chopping his way into the bathroom. Interestingly, Duvall says “That’s the one…” during a moment in her performance that did, indeed, get used in the finished film.
In the third clip, the crew shoots the low angle shot of Jack leaning against the Pantry door. Camera Operator Kelvin Pike shoots the scene, but Kubrick lays on the floor next to him, using his hand to model and control the fill light which illuminates Jack from below.
In the final clip, Nicholson and Duvall run lines from the Pantry scene at a table on the Kitchen set, discussing the scene with Kubrick. —Lee Unkrich, theoverlookhotel.com
There’s kind of a story behind this scene, Justin actually did this IRL (and tells the story so triumphantly) and now he’s got a guest room full of hoarded limited edition 3DSes as a result lmao
…you good boi? Lolol
Probably not
Fresh Prince of breaking the fourth wall.
LMAOOO
This never stops being funny!
One of the greatest scenes in t.v. history
total classic
Since childhood, I’ve never been able to stop thinking about this moment
look what i just found in the attic. this is starting to really freak me out…
wait what the FUCK
the multiverse theory is real
I KNEW THEY SAID BERENSTEIN