anacanet
anacanet
Pourquoi tu vis, et où tu vas.
8K posts
Runaway. Passionnée et instable.Ann, Anne, Anna, Ana, Anya, Annie.Paris c'est la ville de son cœur. Crimson and clover.
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anacanet · 4 months ago
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anacanet · 4 months ago
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Mourir c'est enfin pouvoir écouter la mer depuis l'intérieur du coquillage.
jacques dor
(photo : André Durand)
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anacanet · 4 months ago
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Sensation
Arthur Rimbaud
Par les soirs bleus d’été, j’irai dans les sentiers, Picoté par les blés, fouler l’herbe menue : Rêveur, j’en sentirai la fraîcheur à mes pieds. Je laisserai le vent baigner ma tête nue.
Je ne parlerai pas, je ne penserai rien : Mais l’amour infini me montera dans l’âme, Et j’irai loin, bien loin, comme un bohémien, Par la Nature, – heureux comme avec une femme.
Mars 1870
Arthur Rimbaud, Poésies
Mi poema favorito <3
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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Different people in different places can be thinking the same thoughts at the same time. It's an obsession of mine, that different people in different places are thinking the same thing but for different reasons. I try to make films which connect people.
Krzysztof Kieslowski, making of The Double Life of Véronique, 1991.
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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The Double life of Véronique (1991) 🍂
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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The Double Life of Véronique (1991) dir. Krzysztof Kieślowski
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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The Double Life of Véronique (1991) dir. Krzysztof Kieślowski
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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The Double Life of Veronique (La double vie de Veronique) 1991
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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La double vie de Véronique (1991)
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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Are you sad?
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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La Double vie de Véronique (1991), dir. Krzysztof Kieslowski
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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The Double Life of Veronique (1991) | dir. Krzysztof Kieślowski
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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There was such an authentic air around how Ellie and Riley interacted that I couldn't help but be reminded of the friends I had who were essentially my girlfriends before I could admit to liking women. The true sapphic experience.
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anacanet · 2 years ago
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How did you get bit? You know the old mall in the QZ?
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anacanet · 3 years ago
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‘Rusalka’ by Konstantin Vasiljev.
Rusalka is a female water spirit in Slavic mythology and folklore. According to Vladimir Propp, the original “rusalka” was an appellation used by Pagan Slavic tribes, who linked them with fertility and did not consider rusalkas evil before the nineteenth century. They came out of the water in the spring to transfer life-giving moisture to the fields and thus helped nurture the crops.
In nineteenth century versions, a rusalka is an unquiet, dangerous being who is no longer alive, associated with the unclean spirit. According to Dmitry Zelenin, young women, who either committed suicide by drowning due to an unhappy marriage (they might have been jilted by their lovers or abused and harassed by their much older husbands) or who were violently drowned against their will (especially after becoming pregnant with unwanted children), must live out their designated time on earth as rusalkas. However, the initial Slavic lore suggests that not all rusalkas occurrences were linked with death from water.
It is accounted by most stories that the soul of a young woman who had died in or near a river or a lake would come back to haunt that waterway. This undead rusalka is not invariably malevolent, and would be allowed to die in peace if her death is avenged. Her main purpose is, however, to lure young men, seduced by either her looks or her voice, into the depths of said waterways where she would entangle their feet with her long red hair and submerge them. Her body would instantly become very slippery and not allow the victim to cling on to her body in order to reach the surface. She would then wait until the victim had drowned, or, on some occasions, tickle them to death, as she laughed. It is also believed, by a few accounts, that rusalkas can change their appearance to match the tastes of men they are about to seduce, although a rusalka is generally considered to represent universal beauty, therefore is highly feared yet respected in Slavic culture.
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