
Janaina Medeiros
Peter Solarz

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Today's Document
YOU ARE THE REASON

Product Placement
Cosimo Galluzzi

★

No title available
One Nice Bug Per Day

shark vs the universe
noise dept.
tumblr dot com
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
styofa doing anything
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
No title available
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
occasionally subtle

roma★

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@doucheblag
Matilda (1996) dir. Danny DeVito
“Eleanor Roosevelt said that.” “Yes. Another special lady, like yourself.”
The Princess Diaries (2001) dir. Garry Marshall
The Shell CEO has this lever on their desk at all times
Natalie Imbruglia - Torn
They’re all dead. They just don’t know it yet.
Spider-Man: The Animated Series (1994-1998)
I saw a joke about Howard Shore managing to make a scene as simple as 9 guys and a pony walking past a rock one of the most memorable epic scenes in history, which made me rewatch the "The Ring Goes South" sequence but no. That's an understatement. Yes the scene would never be what it is without Shore's score. However, there is so much meaning in a scene as simple as this. Everything is looked after in excruciating detail and the reason we consider this scene (along with most LOTR scenes) so special is that it gives to our subconscious numerous information about the story, the main characters, their personalities. Look how much of it there is in few seconds.
Gandalf is the first to pass the rock. Gandalf is thus the leader, the guide. Being first is also linked to him being a higher being, as Wizards (or the Maiar) were kind of demigods. Gandalf moves fast, fixated on the horizon - at the path they have to take - and doesn't stop or look anywhere close to the camera. Gandalf is driven. He carries the responsibility of leading the fellowship to its goal. Gandalf also shortly adjusts his hat, showing us that the weather conditions are and will be harsh and against them.
Legolas is the second to pass. Legolas lingers slightly and looks around, his hair flowing. Him being second has two meanings: a symbolic and a literal. He is the second highest being after Gandalf but also he must be at the front as he is the ears and eyes of the fellowship since he has the most acute senses. This is why he is looking around, not just to make the hair flow. He is looking out for danger and possible enemies. But also him looking up high, the hair flowing gracefully, his steps being lighter than the others' - all these underscore the ethereal nature of the elves.
Gimli comes third. He does a quick left and right glance while Legolas is still on focus but after that he passes quickly and without any flamboyance. It shows the contrast between elves and dwarves. Gimli's job isn't to be the ears and eyes - his job is to kill the enemy once he comes. That's why our focus is on his precious axe. Gimli's gaze is fixed on the ground - a symbolism of the dwarves dwelling in the mines under the earth.
He and Legolas are skilled fighters and they are the front guard of the fellowship because one has the dexterity and acute senses and the other has the resilience to not allow whoever might escape Legolas to reach the real targets.
The real targets are the physically weakest beings in the fellowship, the hobbits. This is why they are in the middle, because they must be protected from all sides.
Frodo comes first, as he is the protagonist and the ringbearer. He is also by far the oldest (this isn't in the movies I think) and, in general, the most respectable and precious member of the fellowship. Merry and Pippin follow, in that order as this is always how we refer to them, and (almost) always together.
Sam is last and is half hidden behind Pippin and his pony Billy. He doesn't look at all close to the camera, unlike the other hobbits. He is of a humbler background and he is pragmatic. He is the gardener and here his role supposedly is to take care of others. He is to be the unassuming hero, hidden behind the animal and the supplies and the nobler hobbits.
Brave but mortal, always treated as expendables regardless of status, the men are the rearguard.
Boromir is brave and ready to protect. He will be the defender, as hinted by his shield. He fills the screen in reasonable but noble regalia and is kempt, besides brave being also proud and confident and of significant lineage.
Quite the contrary to Aragorn, for whom the camera actually angles down to show him. This is probably because the camera shows all members as they pass the rock but it shows Aragorn before he gets past the rock. Maybe there is a change we wait from him still, an upgrade to his final version, of sorts. Aragorn almost seems left behind and alone. He doesn't look at all anywhere close to the camera. He is fixated on his path. His eyes are casted downwards. His attire is modest to say the least. He stays behind the son of the Steward of Gondor, who is still the governor. It shows how Aragorn respects and understands each and everyone's place, even though he is the rightful heir. He is humble and above personal rivalries. He remains behind, ready to protect everyone with neglect to his own safety. Ready to be the first to fall, if that is his fate, as long as he saves others.
RoboCop 2 (1990) dir. Irvin Kershner
The Mask (1994) dir. Charles Russell
Preferences are so important to understand - because they genuinely mean you don’t throw away your vote, and voting for a minor party #1 doesn’t prevent a major party from forming government. 80% of Greens preferences go to Labor, which gives them seats, which has actually allowed them to form government instead of the Liberals. The only time preferences don’t do anything is if more than 50% of first preference votes go to just one party (which less than a 3rd are determined based off first preferences alone - so your 2nd choice matters!). If a Liberal member gets 52% first preference votes then it wouldn’t have changed the outcome had every single Greens person voted for Labor because at most Labor could’ve gotten 48% and still lost. So as long as Labor is 2nd in your preferences - then it’s OK. Plus: any party that gets more than 4% first preference votes gets funding from the AEC and given that Greens don’t take money from mining/gas/etc corporations that funding is super helpful to them. So Greens not winning, or even Labor not winning, still means putting Greens 1st is helpful.
So Greens 1st, Labor 2nd - Greens might get an extra seat or two, Labor wins seats on preferences and forms government, and Greens get funding from the AEC to continue representing actual progressive policies and being a voice for action.
Tada.
Now go forth and tell people.
Fun fact:
In the forth grade I once got a prize for most AR points. My teacher had brought in old toys that had been her daughters so they weren’t cheesy little things. Well anyways since I had the most points I got to choose first so I chose this weird looking Furby bc it was, quite frankly, the best thing there. I take it home and it doesn’t work bc no batteries. My mom finds my creepy new toy some and it instantly turns on. I can here it talking but not what it’s saying but I go back to playing whatever GameCube game I was playing. My mom slowly walks into the room holding it and asks,
“Did you teach it how to say your name?”
“No”
She looks horrified. Like beyond horrified she’s lost all the blood in her face.
So this was like right before the whole smartphone explosion so it would take like some time to go turn on our computer and search for a Furby saying Shellby.
For a week we couldn’t understand why this now demonic thing was saying my name and it only got stranger.
It was creeping out the whole family and we had to find out why it was saying my name.
Another week goes by and one day after school my mom walks into my room, goes into my closet and picks up the creature. She walks out, holds it so that it’s eyes are level with hers and then looks at me. She says
“It’s a Furby that has a Shell….Shellby…a Furby with a shell”
And for years no one has been able to look at this thing bc we all thought it could hear us and watch us even without batteries.
There it is
TL;DR: a Furby scared the shit out of my family by knowing my name but it turns out it was just saying it’s own name, Shellby.
The Mummy (1999) dir. Stephen Sommers