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@sentimentaltackycrap
Special effects artists affixing the table leg that would lead to her demise to Chiaki Kuriyama’s (Gogo Yubari) head.
god i wish that were me
The Well Presented Beaver - Low Priority Soup (Poopies in the Panties of My Life)
Merry Christmas, ya filthy animatronic!
What If by Peter Stults
If Stuntmen from the old movies don’t have your full respect then I just don’t know what to say to you
David Bowie was a wonderful creature. Probably the most wonderful and most wondrous. Absolutely definitely in fact! The best person ever even. I’ll honour him in the only way I know how. With a list. I’m a fan of lists. Here are 10 of my favourite Bowie tracks in no particular order:
Suffragette City - this was probably my first favourite Bowie song. I had no idea what a suffragette was, but it sounded like an exciting place to visit when on holidays. I love the sax, the hey manning, the mellow fat chicking and the wham bam thanking you kindly mam-ing. I’ve since learnt what a suffragette is. It’s a movie.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLnPd7lzT4g
Port of Amsterdam – This is a Jaques Brel song that Scott Walker translated and covered. Bowie then covered the Scott Walker cover. I like all the versions, but this is my favourite. I listen to it all the time. Very tasty indeed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LweR6nLQVaQ
Cat People (Putting Out Fire) – This song was sitting neglected on my computer for many whiles, but I didn’t realise it until I saw Inglourious Basterds. Thank you Mr Tarantino. There’s a 9-minute version out there in internet land that has some wonderful synth and saxophone solos if you like that sort of thing. I do. Look, I found it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvrXkOeu-ss
In The Heat of the Morning – “The blazing sunset in your eyes will tantalise every man who looks your way. I watched them sink before your gaze, seniorita sway, dance with me before their frozen eyes.” I’ve often thought about changing my name to Will Tantalise.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zTqrpc8xaQ
Rock and Roll Suicide – This song starts out softly and slowly builds and builds and then Bam! You’re not alone, you’re surrounded by horns and you’re wonderful.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jg4ekLG9Zo
Station to Station - "It's not the side-effects of the cocaine – I'm thinking that it must be love." Like a sleepy Doozer this is another slow builder, but a satisfying 10 minutes. This is also the only song I will air piano to. The Thin White Duke will return.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZY77zDzNmYw
Life On Mars? – This song is great. You’ve heard it before. There may be life on Mars, but it has left this planet.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v--IqqusnNQ
“Heroes” – I once stood in the back of a ute as my driver drove through a long lit up tunnel with this song cranking. I waved my arms about and it was amazing, but also irresponsible. Like most people, I’ve been listening to Bowie all morning. When Helden (German version of Heroes) started playing, my eyes melted and I bawled like lonely kitten. Now I’m ankle deep in salty eye broth.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBuwC4VJi50
Magic Dance – This song reminds me of the babe. The one what had all the power. It was used in a movie that everybody in the world has or should have seen. Did you know? The shit worm in the early stages of the labyrinth was played by David Bowie’s penis. It was the last scene they shot. Jim Henson was impressed by the fact that David’s penis kept stealing all the scenes, despite being obscured by tight fitting fabric. He wrote the worm character just for him. It was the last scene they shot.
https://vimeo.com/39655833
Lazarus – This is beautiful and creepy and it makes me really sad.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-JqH1M4Ya8
Space Oddity - This is the 11th song from my top 10. I couldn’t leave this out. Here’s an early version.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2JiCPJ1mlRw
Anyway, I’m really fucking sad. I’m just a sensitive little shy guy.
Farewell, David Jones. Bon voyage, Ziggy Stardust. Goodbye, Aladdin Sane. See you later, Thin White Duke. Sweet dreams, Jareth the Goblin King. Happy travels, David Bowie.
"I always had a repulsive need to be something more than human. I felt very puny as a human. I thought, “Fuck that. I want to be a superhuman."
Renato Cunha
https://renatoartes.wordpress.com/2015/09/09/that-the-joke-was-on-me/
Movie Directors’ Styles Reinterpreted As Architecture by Federico Babina
Bitch Better Have My Honey (Pooh-Pooh Remix)
JAWS (1975) Just a small bite… ^_^
Prints and other stuff: HERE
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Directors Insulting Each Other
1. Francois Truffaut on Michelangelo Antonioni:
“Antonioni is the only important director I have nothing good to say about. He bores me; he’s so solemn and humorless.”
2. Ingmar Bergman on Michelangelo Antonioni: “Fellini, Kurosawa, and Bunuel move in the same field as Tarkovsky. Antonioni was on his way, but expired, suffocated by his own tediousness.”
3. Ingmar Berman on Orson Welles: “For me he’s just a hoax. It’s empty. It’s not interesting. It’s dead. Citizen Kane, which I have a copy of — is all the critics’ darling, always at the top of every poll taken, but I think it’s a total bore. Above all, the performances are worthless. The amount of respect that movie’s got is absolutely unbelievable.”
4. Ingmar Bergman on Jean-Luc Godard: “I’ve never gotten anything out of his movies. They have felt constructed, faux intellectual, and completely dead. Cinematographically uninteresting and infinitely boring. Godard is a fucking bore. He’s made his films for the critics. One of the movies, Masculin, Féminin, was shot here in Sweden. It was mind-numbingly boring.”
5. Orson Welles on Jean-Luc Godard: “His gifts as a director are enormous. I just can’t take him very seriously as a thinker — and that’s where we seem to differ, because he does. His message is what he cares about these days, and, like most movie messages, it could be written on the head of a pin.”
6. Werner Herzog on Jean-Luc Godard: “Someone like Jean-Luc Godard is for me intellectual counterfeit money when compared to a good kung-fu film.”
7. Jean-Luc Godard on Quentin Tarantino: “Tarantino named his production company after one of my films. He’d have done better to give me some money.”
8. Harmony Korine on Quentin Tarantino: “Quentin Tarantino seems to be too concerned with other films. I mean, about appropriating other movies, like in a blender. I think it’s, like, really funny at the time I’m seeing it, but then, I don’t know, there’s a void there. Some of the references are flat, just pop culture.”
9. Nick Broomfield on Quentin Tarantino: “It’s like watching a schoolboy’s fantasy of violence and sex, which normally Quentin Tarantino would be wanking alone to in his bedroom while this mother is making his baked beans downstairs. Only this time he’s got Harvey Weinstein behind him and it’s on at a million screens.”
10. Spike Lee on Quentin Tarantino (and the “n-word” in his scripts): “I’m not against the word, and I use it, but not excessively. And some people speak that way. But, Quentin is infatuated with that word. What does he want to be made — an honorary black man?”
11. Spike Lee on Tyler Perry: “We got a black president, and we going back to Mantan Moreland and Sleep ‘n’ Eat?”
12. Tyler Perry on Spike Lee “Spike can go straight to hell! You can print that… Spike needs to shut the hell up!”
13. Clint Eastwood on Spike Lee: “A guy like him should shut his face.”
14. Jacques Rivette on Stanley Kubrick: “Kubrick is a machine, a mutant, a Martian. He has no human feeling whatsoever. But it’s great when the machine films other machines, as in 2001.”
15. Jacques Rivette on James Cameron (and Steven Spielberg): “Cameron isn’t evil, he’s not an asshole like Spielberg. He wants to be the new De Mille. Unfortunately, he can’t direct his way out of a paper bag. “
16. Jean-Luc Godard on Steven Spielberg: “I don’t know him personally. I don’t think his films are very good.”
17. Alex Cox on Steven Spielberg: “Spielberg isn’t a filmmaker, he’s a confectioner.”
18. Tim Burton on Kevin Smith (after Smith jokingly accused Burton of stealing the ending of Planet of the Apes from a Smith comic book): “Anyone who knows me knows I would never read a comic book. And I would especially never read anything created by Kevin Smith.”
19. Kevin Smith on Tim Burton (in response to “I would never read a comic book”): “Which, to me, explains fucking Batman.”
20. Kevin Smith on Paul Thomas Anderson (specifically, Magnolia): “I’ll never watch it again, but I will keep it. I’ll keep it right on my desk, as a constant reminder that a bloated sense of self-importance is the most unattractive quality in a person or their work.”
21. David Gordon Green on Kevin Smith: “He kind of created a Special Olympics for film. They just kind of lowered the standard. I’m sure their parents are proud; it’s just nothing I care to buy a ticket for.”
22. Vincent Gallo on Spike Jonze: “He’s the biggest fraud out there. If you bring him to a party he’s the least interesting person at the party, he’s the person who doesn’t know anything. He’s the person who doesn’t say anything funny, interesting, intelligent… He’s a pig piece of shit.”
23. Vincent Gallo on Martin Scorsese: “I wouldn’t work for Martin Scorsese for $10 million. He hasn’t made a good film in 25 years. I would never work with an egomaniac has-been.”
24. Vincent Gallo on Sofia (and Francis Ford) Coppola: “Sofia Coppola likes any guy who has what she wants. If she wants to be a photographer she’ll fuck a photographer. If she wants to be a filmmaker, she’ll fuck a filmmaker. She’s a parasite just like her fat, pig father was.”
25. Vincent Gallo on Abel Ferrara: “Abel Ferrara was on so much crack when I did The Funeral, he was never on set. He was in my room trying to pick-pocket me.”
26. Werner Herzog on Abel Ferrara: “I have no idea who Abel Ferrara is. But let him fight the windmills… I’ve never seen a film by him. I have no idea who he is. Is he Italian? Is he French? Who is he?”
27. David Cronenberg on M. Night Shymalan: “I HATE that guy! Next question.”
28. Alan Parker on Peter Greenaway (specifically The Draughtsman’s Contact): “A load of posturing poo-poo.”
29. Ken Russell on Sir Richard Attenborough: “Sir Richard (‘I’m-going-to-attack-the-Establishment-fifty-years-after-it’s-dead’) Attenborough is guilty of caricature, a sense of righteous self-satisfaction, and repetition which all undermine the impact of the film.”
30. Uwe Boll on Michael Bay: “I’m not a fucking retard like Michael Bay.”
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