DAVID BOWIE as THOMAS JEROME NEWTON in The Man who fell to Earth (1976), dir. Nicolas Roeg

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DAVID BOWIE as THOMAS JEROME NEWTON in The Man who fell to Earth (1976), dir. Nicolas Roeg
ROYAL BLACK Nightingale Dress pls help me get out of debt donating to: ko-fi.com/fashionrunways or dinahlance-shop.fourthwall.com
XI SCORPII Mold Me Not Collection 2023 pls help me get out of debt donating to: ko-fi.com/fashionrunways or dinahlance-shop.fourthwall.com
how terrifying metamorphosis must be for the caterpillar has no concept of what it is doing, or what a butterfly is, or what will happen to it as it spins itself the cocoon. we r more alike than different
there are parts of your future self in you waiting emerge but you have to become unrecognizable slime first
Even cooler, recent research has determined (through classic conditioning of caterpillars) that these insects generally retain their memories from before metamorphosis into their new form!
Its like if you were born with your adult size body parts already stored in your ribcage as a set of these:
But instead of growing in water, they grow in the stew of your melted guts as soon you hit puberty
As per tradition, old sprites for new monsters! I have to say I'm relly into the new game feel and I love all of these guys so freaking much. 🌊🍃 #pokemonwindsandwaves #pixelart #pokemon
Some Patreon drawings of Abelard Arbogast as a borzoi. Promised someone I'd post and share them!
The Original 151
Maelle
You can look this animation as a GIF on my Deviantart
Impeccable music choice here:
On the American broadcast, about five seconds after the music started the announcer said about the woman, “she lists her hobbies as ‘forgetting things’ and ‘existential crises’”, and I can’t imagine a more delightful one-two punch
His lap
a lil bonus ;V
when the weird relative shows up to the farm
i have never seen an animal moving this silly
“Camels are far too intelligent to admit to being intelligent”
“Camels are largely made of knees, going in all directions”
“Camels gallop by throwing their feet as far away from them as possible and then running to keep up”
-Sir Terry Pratchett, discworld series
Seconding @ellynneversweet's tags 😂
do NOT trust your own thoughts that everyone hates you. the curse of the blood moon is imminent. it's not you. it's ganondorf
i need to [remembers suicide jokes lower your self esteem] free the four divine beasts and vanquish calamity ganon
Zelda Heritage Post
Here's my contribution to the Spread the Love challenge animation collab. Had a lot of fun with this one. I'll be sharing a process video of this soon.
the motions and expressions here feel like golden-age Don Bluth, and I mean that in the best possible way
This is still one of my favorite pieces of animation of all time.
Amazing animation!
The pets are the best part of the game hands down
Just learned this absolutely delightful bit of etymology:
During the 15th century, the English had an endearing practice of granting common human names to the birds that lived among them. Virtually every bird in that era had a name, and most of them, like Will Wagtail and Philip Sparrow have been long forgotten. Polly Parrot has stuck around, and Tom Tit and Jenny Wren, personable companions of the English countryside, are names still sometimes found in children’s rhymes. Other human names, however, have been incorporated so durably into the common names that still grace birds as to almost entirely obscure their origin. The Magpie, a loquacious black and white bird with a penchant for snatching shiny objects, once bore the simple name “pie,” probably coming from its Roman name, “pica.” The English named these birds Margaret, which was then abbreviated to Maggie, and finally left at Mag Pie. The vocal, crow-like bird called Jackdaw was also once just a “daw” named “Jack.” The English also gave their ubiquitous and beloved orange-bellied, orb-shaped, wren-sized bird a human name. The first recorded Anglo-Saxon name for the Eurasian Robin was ruddoc, meaning “little red one.” By the medieval period, its name evolved to redbreast (the more accurate term orange only entered the English language when the fruit of the same name reached Great Britain in the 16th century). The English chose the satisfyingly alliterative name Robert for the redbreast, which they then changed to the popular Tudor nickname Robin. Soon enough, the name Robin Redbreast became so identified with the bird that Redbreast was dropped because it seemed so redundant.
My annual invocation to play The Pathless to anyone that will listen
Just a self reminder to check this out
Pokemon.