Cornflowers Under The Stars - Jennifer Taylor , 2023.
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we're not kids anymore.

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Cornflowers Under The Stars - Jennifer Taylor , 2023.
WELSH, B. 1982 -
Oil and textured gesso on MDF wood panel, triple primed ,
tiddles the church cat
The Death Of Pietro Aretino (1854) by Anselm Feuerbach.
-View of Het Steen-
'Cynthia and the Unicorn' by Leonard Weisgard, 1967
Ruhende Nymphe by Anselm Feuerbach (1870)
The distance is nothing when one has a motive.
Pride & Prejudice (2005) Dir. Joe Wright
Symposium or Das Gastmahl des Platon (The Banquet of Plato) by Anselm Feuerbach (1869)
Orpheus and Eurydice, Anselm Feuerbach, 1869
I had a very interesting discussion about theater and film the other day. My parents and I were talking about Little Shop of Horrors and, specifically, about the ending of the musical versus the ending of the (1986) movie. In the musical, the story ends with the main characters getting eaten by the plant and everybody dying. The movie was originally going to end the same way, but audience reactions were so negative that they were forced to shoot a happy ending where the plant is destroyed and the main characters survive. Frank Oz, who directed the movie, later said something I think is very interesting:
I learned a lesson: in a stage play, you kill the leads and they come out for a bow — in a movie, they don’t come out for a bow, they’re dead. They’re gone and so the audience lost the people they loved, as opposed to the theater audience where they knew the two people who played Audrey and Seymour were still alive. They loved those people, and they hated us for it.
That’s a real gem of a thought in and of itself, a really interesting consequence of the fact that theater is alive in a way that film isn’t. A stage play always ends with a tangible reminder that it’s all just fiction, just a performance, and this serves to gently return the audience to the real world. Movies don’t have that, which really changes the way you’re affected by the story’s conclusion. Neat!
But here’s what’s really cool: I asked my dad (who is a dramaturge) what he had to say about it, and he pointed out that there is actually an equivalent technique in film: the blooper reel. When a movie plays bloopers while the credits are rolling, it’s accomplishing the exact same thing: it reminds you that the characters are actually just played by actors, who are alive and well and probably having a lot of fun, even if the fictional characters suffered. How cool is that!?
Now I’m really fascinated by the possibility of using bloopers to lessen the impact of a tragic ending in a tragicomedy…
If we shadows have offended
Think but this and all is mended
wikipedia Tell me about this man's personal life
the last 48 hours i mean two weeks i mean two months i mean year i mean four years i mean decade has felt like a fever dream
I had to find this post. I read this in 2017 and it had a profound effect on me. I couldn’t stop saying it. It was echolalia. And now to this day, for seven years, I can still quote it perfectly Word for Word and often do when I do something stupid. This is the perfect post in my opinion