almost home

oozey mess

ellievsbear
NASA
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wallacepolsom
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
RMH
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blake kathryn
Misplaced Lens Cap
Today's Document

#extradirty
$LAYYYTER

No title available
we're not kids anymore.
noise dept.
Cosimo Galluzzi

⁂

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
seen from United States
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@dublinarry
“Between Harry and Niall, they are the two that really lift, I think, the mood of the band.”
if everyone goes solo and niall just sits there playing golf all day im gonna sue him
Bless doors that have PUSH or PULL written on them, because without that I lose every time.
I lose every time even with the clearly written PUSH or PULL
someone: hey i genuinely care about u and i like u a lot
my brain: ?? ? time for Joke?? make Joke??? yes??
Ezra Koenig tweeted this 5 years ago and it ended up on a Beyoncé album with his name as a song credit
I’m on the tube all the time, why do I never get to see little baby niall
❥❥❥
harry’s in london and niall “stopped” snapchatting
Jake and Amy rewatch - Full Boyle
Narry- 17/4/2016 - USA
Sing Street (2016)
Returning to Sundance after breaking out with his Oscar-winning, shoe-string romance musical Once, director John Carney is back on a victory tour of sorts with Sing Street. Imbuing the same love for music its emotional highs, this is a film more earnest in its pleasure-giving than his last feature, Begin Again. While the structure can be a touch too formulaic, it’s difficult to resist getting swept up in the music and its modest ambitions, for his new musical is acutely attuned to being a crowd-pleaser in all the right ways.
In a lower-class area of Dublin circa 1985, we follow Conor (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo), a teenager whose school has just been downgraded so his parents can free up some money. He’s now forced to attend the local Catholic school Synge Street, which is full of a rough bunch and teachers that could care less about the kids — where a student as intelligent as Conor doesn’t quite fit in. Until he forms a band, that is, the catalyst for which is that of many a band before it: getting the girl. One day after school, Conor sees the beguiling Raphina (Lucy Boynton), a self-described model with aspirations to move to London, from across the street and sheepishly convinces her to be part of the music video for his band.
Our full Sundance review of Sing Street.