Tumgik
#carter young
athletic-collection · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Carter Young
109 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
43 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
88 notes · View notes
vogueman · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Mace Coronel photographed by Johnson Lui for Schön! Magazine. Mace wears denim jacket Carter Young, sweater Towncraft and trouser Bode By Emily Adams Bode Aujla
26 notes · View notes
rookie-critic · 1 year
Text
Rookie-Critic's Top 25 Films of 2022: #21: Inu-Oh (dir. Masaaki Yuasa)
Tumblr media
Japanese anime director Masaaki Yuasa is the mind behind some of the most highly regarded anime films & shows of the last decade, with TV credits like Ping Pong: The Animation, Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken, and Netflix's Devilman: Crybaby, and film credits including Lu Over the Wall, Ride Your Wave, and The Night Is Short, Walk On Girl. He has a style that is unmistakably his own and his stories are as engaging as they are visually arresting. Yuasa said that Inu-Oh would possibly be his last project for awhile, so how does he send the golden era of his career off? Why, with a rock opera set in Feudal Japan, of course! The story of two friends fighting back against the authority that seeks to keep them from doing what they love, Inu-Oh takes its time with its forward momentum, and doesn't mind halting everything every now and then for a series of musical numbers that mix more traditional Japanese instruments (the biwa, mainly) with more modern songwriting styles to create some truly unique and inspiring sequences, not to mention the animation is truly beautiful. That alone is enough to give Inu-Oh all the points it needed to make the list, the rest is just a wonderful bonus. (Also, just an aside, I do generally watch the English dub of anime, but for this one in particular I would HIGHLY recommend watching it in the original Japanese. The performances are stellar and fit much better with the songs.) Currently streaming on Hulu. Read my full review of Inu-Oh here
7 notes · View notes
jmunneytumbler · 2 months
Text
'Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead,' Do Become Stressed Out
'Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead,' Do Become Stressed Out
I haven’t told my mom that I watched this movie (CREDIT: Iconic Events/Screenshot) Starring: Simone Joy Jones, Nicole Richie, Donielle Tremaine Hansley, Ayaamii Sledge, Carter Young, June Squibb, Miles Fowler, Ms. Pat, Jermaine Fowler, Gus Kenworthy, Iantha Richardson Director: Wade Allain-Marcus Running Time: 99 Minutes Rating: R Release Date: April 12, 2024 (Theaters) Y’all know I sometimes…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
the-glacian · 1 year
Text
I don't care if the Crows spin-off is just the six of them acting it out in Freddy's living room while Freddy's wife films it on a phone, I'm willing to pay real money for the footage.
18K notes · View notes
toomanywatchers · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
4K notes · View notes
athletic-collection · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Carter Young
70 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
53 notes · View notes
ameliawarnerr · 1 year
Text
This is soooo crow of them
Tumblr media
And kit (= Jesper) being the one posting this is just peak characterism
14K notes · View notes
freddycartr · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
the comfort this cast gives me is unmatched
15K notes · View notes
rookie-critic · 1 year
Text
Inu-Oh (2022, dir. Masaaki Yuasa) - review by Rookie-Critic
Tumblr media
Inu-Oh is the newest (and possibly last) project from acclaimed anime director Masaaki Yuasa. The story revolves around two cursed children (one blind, one incredibly disfigured) who meet and decide to start recanting the stories of the lost souls of soldiers that one of them (the titular Inu-Oh) can see. Since the blind child can play the biwa (a traditional Japanese string instrument) and the other can dance, and they both can sing, they decide to do this through song... in a crazy mix of traditional Japanese biwa music and rock & roll! That's right, this is a rock opera.
We see them grow up and become more popular as they fight pushback from the oppressive regime of the time. Oh yeah, the wildest part? It's all taking place in 14th Century Feudal-Era Japan, and is (very loosely) based on the lives of 2 (I think) real Japanese historical figures. In true Yuasa fashion, this is an absolutely buckwild cinematic experience: with jaw-droppingly wonderful animation and kick-ass 10-minute-long musical numbers, as well as stellar performances from both real-life Japanese dancer Mirai Moriyama and real-life Japanese rockstar Avu-chan as the dual leads (fun fact: the dancer voices the biwa player and the rockstar voices the dancer). The beginning had me wondering where it would go, but somewhere around the 2nd big concert scene something clicked in my brain and I became fully bought in. I feel this is a movie that will heavily benefit from a rewatch. I can't say much more without giving too much away, so just go see it for yourself. This movie is a marvel of modern anime filmmaking and I think anyone who is a fan of the artform owes it to themselves to seek this one out.
Score: 9/10
Currently available to rent or purchase on digital (iTunes, Amazon, Vudu, etc.) and on DVD & Blu-ray through GKIDS.
3 notes · View notes
reggieslocket · 1 year
Text
you just don't get him like i do (a traumatized fictional character with a horrible past who has murdered people)
11K notes · View notes
omgericasnyder · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
0 notes