The first fifteen seconds of "The Social Network" by Aaron Sorkin.

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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shark vs the universe
we're not kids anymore.

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Love Begins
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@reversingentropy
The first fifteen seconds of "The Social Network" by Aaron Sorkin.
"American Beauty" by Alan Ball.
"The Dark Knight" by Jonathan and Christopher Nolan.
"Valentine's Day is a holiday invented by greeting card companies to make people feel like crap."
-"Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" by Charlie Kaufman
"Chronicle" by Max Landis and Josh Trank.
"Martha Marcy May Marlene" by Sean Durkin.
The internet has had an absolutely bizarre
effect on dating because it's reversed the most basic, natural order of things.
The way it's always gone is that you spend time with someone until they become an idea: A vessel for all of your hopes and aspirations, a tablet onto which you project your own concepts of love and romance and whatever neuroses you happen to bring to the table. For better or for worse, your view of your partner gets less and less objective. The fact that they are a tangible human being becomes secondary to all the feelings they represent to you personally.
When you meet someone on the internet, they start as an idea. All you can do is try and cobble together a cohesive picture of them based on all their posts and photos, what they seem to enjoy and their aesthetic sensibilities. Even the littlest things - how they punctuate, what they reblog, their use of emoticons - all of these tiny expressions get channeled into your mental attempt to imagine a cohesive person. But no matter how hard you try, all you have is that attempt.
Until, one day, you meet them.
And this individual - who had previously been confined to an LCD screen and composed entirely of hyperlinks and GIFs - has all at once become a breathing organism made out of skin, hair, bones, and other soft parts. And suddenly, this person has materialized from an idea into a tangible human being.
If that's not a little bit freaky, I don't know what is.
"Amen" by Donna Mae Foronda.
"(500) Days of Summer" by Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber.
Time Lapse Images of Earth at Night Taken From the International Space Station
"The Warriors" by David Shaber and Walter Hill, based on the novel by Sol Yurick.
The only description of Lisbeth Salander in "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" by Steven Zaillian, adapted from the novel by Stieg Larsson.
"Fight Club" by Jim Uhls, based on the novel by Chuck Palahniuk.