The Fire Raisers (1934) Michael Powell
February 17th 2024
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Number Seventeen (1932)
Movie #1,134 • TGI-HITCHCOCK!
EVERY OTHER FRIDAY I’M REVIEWING THE COMPLETE WORKS OF ALFRED HITCHCOCK IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER
This one is nearly unwatchable despite some cool visual work with light/shadows and fun miniatures. We’re dropped into an incomprehensible story and it’s unclear what, or whether any of this is supposed to be funny. Apparently, Hitchcock himself called the film a "disaster." I couldn’t even get through the full 64 (!) minute run-time. Sorry.
SCORE: ⭐️⭐️
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The X-Men: Evolution gang, by Lukas Werneck!
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Secretary - 2002 - Steven Shainberg
"do you really wanna be my secretary?" - "Yes, I do."
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Jean: are you sure you have everything for the honeymoon?
Rogue: pretty sure, sugar. Let's see, Remy?
Remy: here
Rogue: clothes? Bikini? Inhibitor collar? Kurt?
Remy: All here.
Jean: KURT?
Kurt: Ja, I'm ready!
Jean: You can't take Kurt to your honeymoon!
Rogue and Gambit: WHY NOT
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I did it!
I colored ALL of them!
My Earth-911b X-men sketches are done!
Earh 911 is mostly how I dubbed the Earth they are from back then, just stuck with it.
They are based mostly on the 90's version, X-men Legends and some other more modern sources. Some of them are considerably more powerful/stronger version of those but that's the general gist of it.
(added some extra description stuff on these versions, some more similar to the regulars than others)
Now Im officially ready for X-Men 97!
(was planning to add a bit more info on my versions, but these high effort posts never blow up so I wont bother with that effort XD )
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Charlotte Brontë's 1850 Preface to Wuthering Heights
After Emily Brontë’s death in 1848, her sister Charlotte Brontë issued this 1850 edition of Wuthering Heights and Agnes Grey containing her Preface to the former novel. Also included was a biographical notice of Emily and Anne.
Its significance lies in the fact that this is the first official, public confirmation of the authors’ true gender. After the first publication of Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights and Agnes Grey under the male pen names Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell, respectively, critics and the public at large debated whether each novel was written by a man or woman, single or multiple authors. In addition, the Biographical Notice provides the background to their route to publication and acknowledges the prejudices facing women writers.
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