Stigmata (1999) Nia Long as Donna Chadway
This movie was booty, but the Black lady lived, so 😌
seen from Japan

seen from Japan

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Japan

seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from Singapore
seen from Argentina
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Germany
Stigmata (1999) Nia Long as Donna Chadway
This movie was booty, but the Black lady lived, so 😌
Day 17: rnattrnurdock said to seaside-cave:
Maybe for the inktober thing you can draw Clint (barton) dressed up as Katniss for Halloween?
Clint is maybe getting a little too invested in this
by Blaz Porenta
Death and The Maiden by Elias Aquino
The Aokigahara Forest
This forest is the most popular site for suicides in Japan. After the novel Kuroi Jukai was published, in which a young lover commits suicide in the forest, people started taking their own lives there at a rate of 50 to 100 deaths a year. The site holds so many bodies that the Yakuza pays homeless people to sneak into the forest and rob the corpses. The authorities sweep for bodies only on an annual basis, as the forest sits at the base of Mt. Fuji and is too dense to patrol more frequently.
In September of 2008, a Metrolink commuter train running through Chatsworth, CA collided head-on with a freight train, killing 25 people and injuring 135 others.
One of the passengers onboard was Charles Peck, a Delta Airlines employee from Salt Lake City on his way to an interview at Los Angeles’ Van Nuys Airport. Peck had his hopes staked on the job, as his fiancee, Andrea Katz, lived in California and he intended to marry her if he was hired.
When Peck wasn’t found at the wreck or in any local hospitals, Katz and Peck’s family began to hope he might have survived. Then they started getting calls from his cell phone with nothing on the other end but static. The family received 35 separate calls over a 12 hour period that night, leading rescue workers to attempt to trace the phone’s signal in hopes of finding Peck.
What they found was unexpected, however: Charles Peck had died on impact in the crash. To make matters even more eerie, Peck’s cell phone was never located, as the calls coming from it stopped about an hour before his body was found.
To himself every one is an immortal: he may know that he is going to die, but he can never know that he is dead.
Samuel Butler