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#francis l. sullivan
lobbycards · 2 months
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Night and the City, US lobby card #3, 1950
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fourorfivemovements · 2 years
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Films Watched in 2022:
97. Mystery of Edwin Drood (1935) - Dir. Stuart Walker 
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randomrichards · 1 month
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THE DRUM:
Maharaja killed
His son wanted British soldiers
Pro colonial
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letterboxd-loggd · 6 months
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Her Last Affaire (1936) Michael Powell
March 17th 2024
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spryfilm · 1 year
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“Plunder of the Sun” (1953)
“Plunder of the Sun” (1953) Drama Running Time: 82 minutes Written by: Jonathan Latimer Directed by: John Farrow Featuring: Glenn Ford, Diana Lynn, Patricia Medina and Francis L. Sullivan Julie Barnes: “You stood me up because you think I’m a tramp.” Al Colby: “I don’t think you’re a tramp.” Julie Barnes: “Yes you do… cuz I am. I’m a tramp and everybody knows it; Julie the tramp. What’s a…
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bigmack2go · 4 months
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Newbie Newsies
A guide for new Newsie fans
Chapter two: Characters
Previous chapter: the basics->•
Chapter index ->•
Imma just start lf with a basic list of Characters. Only names. Nothing else. Then i‘ll give you the looks (and versions of that) and actors that played them and how to reckognise them (also split in versions) bc theres A L O T so like whos who‘sies
Then i‘ll tell you about some oc‘s and then i‘ll go into some lore for each of the characters that have one. That includes fannon
Imma try not to go TOO much into detail bc this is gonna be long enough as it is and there already are posts about them
Characters
This isn’t gonna have any specific order i literally not even sure if i didnt miss any.
Jack “Cowboy“ Kelly/ Francis Sullivan
Davey (“a walkin mouth”) Jacobs
Sarah Jacobs
Les Jacobs
Ed “Racetrack” Higgins
?“Spot” Conlon
Romeo ?
Katherine Plumber (but actually Pullitzer)
?“Mush” Meyers
Louis “Kid Blink” Balletti
Albert DaSilva
Isaac “Ike” ?
Michael “Mike”
Patrick ? ?
Hotshot “Hotshot” Hotshot
? Smalls ?
Jeany “Mack” MacDonald
Archie “Sniper” Wah
Niklas “York” ?
Samuel “Specs”?
Gabe “Boots” Argus
?”scobe”?
Patrick “Finch” Cortes
Elmer Kasprzak (pls tell me i spelled this right)
(Benjamin) “buttons” Davenport
Josephino Jorgelino “JoJo” De laGuerra (this is not a joke. That is his name.)
Kenny?
?”Graves”?
Niamh??
?Myron?
?”Splint”?
(Charlie) “Crutchie” Morris
Henry?
? “Skittery”?
?”bumlets”?
?”swifty”?
Gabriel “snaps” ?
?”splasher”?
?”comet”?
?”pie eater”
Thomas “Tommy boy”?
?”snipeshooter”?
?(“tumbler”)?
?”goldie”?
Looks
Imma have to handle this w repost cuz u can only add ten photos and all that ykyk
Jack:
His main four appearances are christian bale (92‘sies), jeremy jordan (obc and livesies), corey cott (broadway and toursies (i think)) michael ahomka (uk‘sies) and pierre marias (TUTS)
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Imma be honest i wanted to list everyone that plyed the characters but i don’t think i can even find that all so im just gonna go woth the most famous ones each
Basically the only thing thats always the same about him is the vest
Davey has been played by David Moscow(92‘sies) Ben Fankhauser (obc& live‘sies) ryan kopel (uk‘sies) and Ben Diamond (TUTS)
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He usually has a rather small face and a prominent nose. His hair has always been dark so far. He always has something blue about him sticking out/ is generally held in a blue vibe.
Sarah was played by ela keats. She was only in 92‘sies. She was originally planned to be in the theatre versions but her character was cut completely.
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She has lightbrown/darkblonde long hair and- well theres only one actress so u can see for urself
The most famous Race‘s have been Max Castella (92‘sies), Ryan breslin (obc), ben cook (livesies) and josh barnet (uk‘sies) and Cole Zieser (TUTS)
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emmedoesntdomath · 1 year
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Not an increase in difficulty but I want Crutchie content 😤😤
P l e a s e
aughshdidncosndn how has it taken me this long to do crutchie????? how dare I put him off??????
by the time charlie meets francis sullivan, he’s been in and out of the refuge three different times. they’ve released him all three times on what they call good behavior (which just means that charlie knows who he can insult and who he can’t, but hey, he’s not complaining), and each time, charlie makes it about a week before he starts struggling with food and has to resort to stealing.
francis, though. francis likes to help, and charlie’s not one for shooting himself in his one good foot.
suddenly, francis decides that he’s done with the refuge, and he’s jack kelly (charlie knows that he just picked it because it reminded him of the cowboys he always liked to read about). he asks charlie if he wants to come, and he just shrugs, not really expecting him to follow through. then charlie becomes crutchie (he thought it was funny, but francis jack shakes his head and tells him his sense of humor has problems. he still thinks it’s kinda funny), and then they’re gone.
slowly, their little family (because it’s a family, and screw you to anyone who says otherwise) grows, and crutchie gets some best friends, brothers, sisters, siblings, and honestly? he doesn’t remember all of their names, but he and race sell together twice a week; him, albert, and finch sell other times, and really, he’s never been better.
sometimes, crutchie- charlie- is sad. a lot of the time, if he really owns up to it. normally, he doesn’t want to move, or smile, or pretend that he’s happy with how his life is, and that’s just how it’s always been. but years before everything went to shit with pulitzer and hearst, before crutchie didn’t know which way was up, before he called his family broken for the first time, a young, tired boy with messy hair sat down next to him and gave him a new name and life, and well.
that was that.
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John Church Hamilton to unknown, New York, [January 12, 1824]
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Dear Sir: In the proceedings of the Senate, I yesterday ob served the Report of the Committee of Foreign Relations on the Petition of Francis Henderson Jr. In the course of my inquiries I have had an opportunity of forming an opinion of the services of Lieut. Col. Laurens and of the estimation in which he was held by the family of the Commander in chief, which entitles him, beyond all question to the first rank among the young men of the revolution. During his immediate attendance at headquarters he was, with Col. Hamilton always selected to perform the most delicate offices of his station, and was entrusted with Gen. Washington's most secret confidences, and, from the period of the arrival of C D'Estaing, until the close of the campaign of 1781, in the communications with the officers of our ally, the aids derived from him were invaluable. His military career has left behind him an uninterrupted blaze of glory. Sent forward to R Island, by Gen W. to superintend the conduct of affairs in that quarter until Gen. Greene took the command; to Col. Laurens is principally attributed the reconciliation of D'Estaing, who had been offended by Gen. Sullivan's indiscretion, which excited the most serious apprehensions as to its effect on our ally. His gallantry on this occasion was so conspicuous that he received from Congress a vote of thanks and a tender of a commission of Colonel, which he declined from delicacy to his brother aids. At Monmouth where every member of Gen. W's family seemed to contend, not only for their country but for their personal reputation, as connected with their chief, he participated in all the exposure of the day and, in the controversy between W. & Lee which agitated the camp and Congress, such was his devotion to the former that, late in the year, he invited Gen. Lee to a rencontre, who, after receiving a slight wound, made an explanation equally honorable to himself and satisfactory to his antagonist.
On the invasion of Georgia in '79, Co' L. hastened to Carolina. Here he was conspicuous in preparing for the expected invasion. In order to aid the councils of the State, he was elected a member of their Legisla ture where he used every arg to call out the militia and forward the black levies which he had begun to recruit. On the arrival of Gen. Lincoln, he immedi ately joined him; was present in the storm of Savannah, and such was his chivalry, that, after the retreat was sounded, and the troops had fallen back, he continued on, in the direction of the enemy's fire until C D'Es taing, who was himself wounded, pointed him out to Lincoln, who ordered him to draw off a detachment in order to remove him from the field.
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The misfortune of that day menacing the most alarming consequences, Laurens rode express to Philadelphia, in order to urge succours to the Southern Army. Here he received a new mark of confidence; being elected by Congress Secretary to the Minister at Versailles- a situation which he peremptorily declined (though sought for by the most conspicuous names in the country)_ in order to rejoin the army, and was at last induced to accept, on an intimation “that there was no other individual on whom the two parties in congress could unite.” Circumstances having occurred to render his departure on this service unnecessary, he hastened from Philadelphia and arrived in sufficient season to take part in the defence of Charleston, where I presume, he was taken prisoner_ (this fact I have to learn). The most important incident, however, of his life and that having the most immediate relation to the claim before you, is his mission as Envoy to France in Feby. 1781. The magnitude of his services on this occasion are matters of history, but among many inte resting incidents connected with this event there is one which may not be before the public. Vergennes was opposed to any open interference on our behalf at the outset of the quarrel, and always continued adverse to our independence. In this spirit he presented every obstacle in the way of Col. Laurens negotiation,_ Wearied by these delays L. obtained an interview with him, and after a warm expostulation, characteristic of his noble spirit, he broke from him_ prepared a memorial to the king, and, waiting upon him in the succeeding levée, regardless of the etiquette of the court, handed it to Louis in person. This decisive bearing although it excited great astonishment, was followed by the happiest effects. On the succeeding day the ministers contended with each other in their zeal to promote his views, and he returned here in sufficient season to aid us in a most critical posture of our affairs. (The money obtained by Laurens was deposited in the Bank of N. A. and sustained the financial operations of Mr. Morris until the signature of the provisional treaty). Laurens arrived in Boston, in Sept. 1781, and he immediately joined the army and in the storm of the Redout on the night of the 14th Oct, which was the closing scene of my father's service, L. who, with a body of picked men, was detached by him to take the enemy in reverse and intercept their retreat, entered the works among the foremost and made prisoner the commanding officer. As a compliment to his gallantry and in reference to the capture of Charleston, he with the Viscount De Noailles, was appointed a commissioner to settle the terms of the capitulation. (Signed) John C. Hamilton.
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By Thomas L. Friedman
Opinion Columnist
Every so often there is a piece of legislation on Capitol Hill that defines America and its values — that shows what kind of country we want to be. I would argue that when it comes to the $118.3 billion bipartisan compromise bill in the Senate to repair our broken immigration system and supply vital aid to Ukraine, Taiwan and Israel, its passage or failure won’t define just America but also the world that we’re going to inhabit.
There are hinges in history, and this is one of them. What Washington does — or does not do — this year to support its allies and secure our border will say so much about our approach to security and stability in this new post-post-Cold War era. Will America carry the red, white and blue flag into the future or just a white flag? Given the pessimistic talk coming out of the Capitol, it is looking more and more like the white flag, autographed by Donald Trump.
Barring some last-minute surprise that saves the compromise bill, a terrible thing is about to happen, thanks largely to a Republican Party that has lost its way as it falls in lock step behind a man whose philosophy is not “America First” but “Donald Trump First.” “Trump First” means that a bill that would strengthen America and its allies must be set aside so that America can continue to boil in polarization, Vladimir Putin can triumph in Ukraine and our southern border can remain an open sore — until and unless Trump becomes president once more. Our allies be damned. Our enemies be emboldened. Our children’s future security be mortgaged.
Today’s G.O.P. bumper sticker: Trump First. Putin Second. America Third.
“The United States has for some time ceased to be a serious country. Our extreme polarization combined with institutional rules that privilege minorities makes it impossible for us to meet our international obligations,” the political theorist Francis Fukuyama remarked on the American Purpose website. “The Republican Party has grown very adept at hostage holding. … The hard-core MAGA wing represents a minority within a minority, yet our institutional rules permit them to veto decisions clearly favored by a majority of Americans.”
Alas, though, while the current dysfunction of the Republican Party can explain why this particular legislation is likely to fail, how we came to this awful moment is a longer, deeper story.
This emerging post-post-Cold War era is a real throwback to the kind of dangerous, traditional great-power competition prevalent in the Cold War and World War II and most of history before that. Unfortunately, we have arrived at this moment with too many elected officials — especially in the senior ranks of the Republican Party — who never experienced such a world and with a defense-industrial base woefully unprepared for this world. Believe it or not, President Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, has had to spend hours of valuable time each month searching the world for 155-millimeter shells for the Ukrainian Army because we don’t have enough.
That’s crazy. And it is particularly crazy at a time when three revisionist powers (Russia, China and Iran) are each simultaneously probing every day to see if they can push back America and its allies along three different frontiers (Europe, the South China Sea and the Middle East). They probe, individually and through proxies, to see how we react — if we react — and then probe some more. In Putin’s case, when the time seemed right, he launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
“Because of generational change, most of America’s political elite today grew up in the relatively benign Pax Americana post-Cold War era, 1989 to 2022” (when Putin invaded Ukraine), “and they have lost the habit and the knack of thinking about global politics in military terms,” the U.S. foreign policy historian Michael Mandelbaum told me. “Very few members of the elite today have served in the military.”
This is “very different from the Cold War era, when most of our policymaking elite were people who experienced World War II,” added Mandelbaum, the author of the forthcoming book “The Titans of the Twentieth Century: How They Made History and the History They Made.” “Now, after 30 years of the post-Cold War era, Joe Biden is one of the few remaining leaders who was a policymaker during the Cold War — and issues of grand strategy and the management of great-power competition are no longer a major part of our public discourse.”
Trump, like Biden, grew up in the Cold War, but he spent a lot of it contemplating his wealth rather than contemplating the world. Trump’s instincts, Mandelbaum noted, are really a throwback to the interwar period between World War I and World War II, when a whole segment of the elite felt World War I was a failure and a mistake — the equivalent today of Iraq and Afghanistan — and then approached the dawn of World War II as isolationists and protectionists, seeing our allies as either hopeless or leeches.
As for House Speaker Mike Johnson, I wonder how often he uses his passport. I wonder if he has a passport. He is one of the most powerful people in America, following in the footsteps of both Republican and Democratic speakers who advanced our interests and made us strong in the world for decades. So far, he seems to care only about serving Trump’s interests, even if that means playing extremely risky games with foreign policy.
Meanwhile, many on the left emerged from this post-Cold War era with the view that the biggest problem in the world is not too little American power but too much — the lessons they drew from Iraq and Afghanistan.
And so who will tell the people? Who will tell the people that America is the tent pole that holds up the world? If we let that pole disintegrate, your kids won’t grow up in just a different America; they’ll grow up in a different world, and a much worse one.
After Ukraine inflicted a terrible defeat on the Russian Army — thanks to U.S. and NATO funding and weapons — without costing a single American soldier’s life, Putin now has to be licking his chops at the thought that we will walk away from Ukraine, leaving him surely counting the days until Kyiv’s missile stocks run out and he will own the skies. Then it’s bombs away.
As the Financial Times columnist Gideon Rachman reported, the ammunition shortage in Ukraine “has already led to an increase in Ukrainian casualties. … The shortage of weaponry is also having an effect on the willingness of Ukrainians to volunteer for military service. The mounting pressure on the Kyiv government is part of the explanation for the public falling-out between President Volodymyr Zelensky and his commander in chief, Valeriy Zaluzhny.”
If this is the future and our friends from Europe to the Middle East to Asia sense that we are going into hibernation, they will all start to cut deals — European allies with Putin, Arab allies with Iran, Asian allies with China. We won’t feel the change overnight, but, unless we pass this bill or something close to it, we will feel it over time.
America’s ability to assemble alliances against the probes of Russia, China and Iran will gradually be diminished. Our ability to sustain sanctions on pariah nations like North Korea will erode. The rules governing trade, banking and the sanctity of borders being violated by force — rules that America set, enforced and benefited from since World War II — will increasingly be set by others and by their interests.
Yes, America still has considerable power, but that power led to influence because allies and enemies knew we were ready to use it to defend ourselves and help our friends defend themselves and our shared values. All of that will now be in doubt if this bill goes down for good.
Remember this week, folks — because historians surely will.
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lobbycards · 2 months
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Night and the City, US lobby card #8, 1950
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byneddiedingo · 1 year
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John Howard Davies and Robert Newton in Oliver Twist (David Lean, 1948)
Cast: Robert Newton, Alec Guinness, Kay Walsh, John Howard Davies, Francis L. Sullivan, Henry Stephenson, Mary Clare, Anthony Newley. Screenplay: David Lean, Stanley Haynes, based on a novel by Charles Dickens. Cinematography: Guy Greene. Art direction: John Bryan. Film editing: Jack Harris. Music: Arnold Bax.
After George Cukor's 1935 David Copperfield, this is my favorite adaptation of Dickens for film or TV. What Lean does right is to treat the Dickens book as a fable, not a novel. A novel takes its characters seriously as human beings; a fable sees them as embodiments of good and evil. And there's plenty of evil on display in Oliver Twist, from the brute evil of Bill Sikes (Robert Newton) to the venal evil of Fagin (Alec Guinness) to the stupid evil of Mr. Bumble (Francis L. Sullivan) and Mrs. Corney (Mary Clare). Oliver (John Howard Davies) is innocently good, whereas Mr. Brownlow (Henry Stephenson) is a man of good will. Nancy (Kay Walsh) and, to a lesser extent, the Artful Dodger (Anthony Newley) are potentially good people who have been corrupted by evil. The performers are all beautifully cast, especially Davies as Oliver: He's just real-looking enough in the role that he doesn't become saccharine, the way some prettier Olivers do. This is Lean in what I think of as his great period, when he was making beautifully filmed movies with just the right measure of sentiment: Brief Encounter (1945) and Great Expectations (1946) in addition to this one. But he would be bit by the epic bug while working on The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), and its success would betray him into bigger but not necessarily better movies: Lawrence of Arabia (1962), Doctor Zhivago (1965), and the rest of his later oeuvre would have the same attention to visual detail that make his early movies so rich, but they seem to me chilly in comparison. Here he benefits not only from a perfect cast, but also from Guy Green's photography of John Bryan's set designs. There are probably few more terrifying scenes in movies than Sikes's murder of Nancy, which sends Sikes's dog (one of the most impressive performances by an animal in movies) into a frenzy. Running it a close second is Sikes's death, seen from a vertiginous rooftop angle. We don't actually see the death, but only the swift tautening of the rope as he plunges, punctuated by a sudden snap. The film is not as well known in America as in Great Britain: Guinness's portrayal of Fagin elicited charges of anti-Semitism, especially since the film appeared so soon after the world learned about the Holocaust. Guinness doesn't play to Jewish stereotypes, but Fagin's absurdly exaggerated nose (which makeup artist Stuart Freeborn copied from George Cruikshank's illustrations for the novel) does evoke some of the caricatures in the Nazi newspaper Der Stürmer. The film was edited to remove some of the shots of Fagin in profile, and was held from release in the United States until 1951. 
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sisilafami · 2 years
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2022
Rap:
Chicken P - BussaBrick Vol.2 : BussOne 101 / BussaBrick Vol.1 Deep In The Pot
Bandgang Lonnie Bands - Creatures In Paris / Scorpion Eyes / Hard 2 Kill Reloaded
Billy Woods - Aethiopes / Church
Rx Papi - Dope Deals And Record Sales Vol. 2 / First Week Out (Deluxe)
SME TaxFree - This One For My Brothers / Unexpected / Im Off The West / Cant Write This Shit vol. 2
Bear1boss - BEAR1BOSS
Cash Cobain & Chow Lee - 2 SLIZZY 2 SEXY (DELUXE)
DevStacks - Now They Know Us 3
MarijuanaXO - Da Under Dog / Growth & Development / Windshield Tinted
Quelle Chris - Deathfame
Big Ouee - Dreams Money Can Buy I & II
Tony Shhnow - Plug Motivation / Kill Streak 2 (deluxe) / Reflexions
Hook - From, Hook
CEO Trayle - Loosies Compilation / HH5 / The Collection / Vier
Joe Pablo - Blow the World
Wizz Havin - Mr. Too Sticky
YoungBoy Never Broke Again - 3800 Degrees
RRB Duck - Still Standing / Top Side
DaeMoney - Slayer's Coming
Papo2oo4 - Ballerific
Shaudy Kash - On The Yeah Side / Young CBFW (Deluxe)
Certified Trapper - I'm Certified
42 Dugg x EST Gee - Last Ones Left
NoCap - The Main Bird
MarijuanaXO & Joe Pablo - Window Service / Window Service 2
$ilkMoney - I Don't Give a Fuck About This Rap Shit, Imma Just Drop Until I Don't Feel Like It Anymore
Mike - Beware of the Monkey
Sexyy Red - Ghetto Superstar
454 - FAST TRAX 3
Top$ide - Lost Files
MHPG Sound - Sound or Drown
Goldenboy Countup - Coach Golden 2 / Golden Ticket / The Rawest / Chicken Man 3 / Chill Golden
Baby Smoove - Im Still Serious 2
Babytron - Megatron
Boldy James - Fair Exchange No Robbery / Be That as It May / Mr. Ten08
LUCKI - FLAWLESS LIKE ME
E L U C I D - I Told Bessie
Karma2zz - New St Louis / Rookie Of The Year
Fly Anakin - Frank
Ayoolii - Personal Compilation 2022
Tisakorean - 1st Round Pick
Los and Nutty - 25 Features, Vol. 2
WB Nutty - City of Addiction
Hm:
1100 Himself & Mitchell - 2 Headed Goat
AKAI SOLO - Spirit Roaming
Ame - At The Fore /  No Mans Land
Babyface Ray - FACE (Deluxe Edition)
Bandmanrill - The Singles
Cash Cobain - SLIZZY TIMING
Damedot - The Umbrella Again
Dopeboy Ra - Book of PSlums Chapter 36 (Deluxe)
Duwap Kaine - Underdog 3 / Family Guy / Kaine's Diary / A Doggs Influence / Faith Like Esther
Four50 - Glasshouse
Ghetto Baby Boom - Ghetto Mode
Izaya Tiji - WASP / Nevameant2b 
Jelly - Wolf of Peachtree 2
Ka - Woeful Studies / Languish Arts
KanKan - WAY2GEEKED
Kodak Black - Kutthroat Bill Vol. 1
Lil Baby - It's Only Me
Lil Uzi Vert - RED & WHITE
Mavi - Laughing so Hard, it Hurts
Moh Baretta - DOGMA II
Money Waters - The Porch II
Open Mike Eagle - Component System with the Auto Reverse
Princesa 28 - Princesa WorldWide V2
Reed - Reed
Roc Marciano - The Elephant Man's Bones
Rodneyy - #OGTG
RXK Nephew - BEEN BALLIN IN OUTER SPACE / My Wrist Need Rehabilitation / Universal Slither
Sickboyrari - City Of Crows
Shawny Binladen - Wick City (Deluxe)
Summrs - FALLEN RAVEN
Tae Rackzz & Javi Turnt - Our Year
WiFiGawd - Charge It To The Game
Wiki & Subjxct5 - Cold Cuts
WTM Milt - Dog$hit & Ammunition / RAFA
Young Bleed - Dare' Iza' God
Young Nudy - EA Monster
Yeat - 2 Alivë (Geëk Pack)
R&B:
Cruel Santino - Subaru Boys - FINAL HEAVEN
Jacquees - Sincerely For You
Brent Faiyaz - WASTELAND
Jazmine Sullivan - Heaux Tales, Mo’ Tales The Deluxe
Contemporary :
Olli Aarni - Suontee- 23112021
Clara de Asís & Ryoko Akama - sisbiosis
Malin Bång - Works for Orchestra
Natasha Barrett -  Heterotopia
Björk - Fossora
Joshua Bonnetta - Innse Gall
Brannten Schnüre - Das Glück vermeiden 
Björg Brjánsdóttir - VÍDDIR
Isaiah Ceccarelli - Toute clarté m’est obscure
Delphine Dora - a l'abri du monde
Jacob Dwyer - The Devil Museum
Jürg Frey - Borderland Melodies
goo age - Open Zone
Howard Stelzer - The Flemish Giants (Suburban Observances Vol. 5)
Atte Elias Kantonen - POP 6 SUSURRUS
Nile Koetting - Remain Calm
Lance Austin Olsen - Fukushima Rising
Michael Pisaro & Keith Rowe - Venerable Bede
Francis Plagne - The Refrain
RLW - Tunnel
Manja Ristic - Him, fast sleeping, soon he found In labyrinth of many a round, self-rolled
Vanessa Rossetto - The Actress
Wojciech Rusin - Syphon
Sombra ac​ú​stica - Sombra acústica
Stateside - Mouthfeelings Sessions
Stefano Scodanibbio - String Quartets
Havadine Stone - Old Young
Valerio Tricoli - Say Goodbye To The Wind
Simon Whetham - Invitation to Migrate to a New Planet
Digital Beats:
qua - Hasbulla ep
DJ Travella - Mr Mixondo
islurwhenitalk  - ☥skkkult r𖤐dio☥
Model Home - Model Home 20
Jana Rush - Dark Humor
BILLY G - billy.exe
HiTech - HiTech
Vivid The Producer - HEALING
Theo Parrish - Ooh Bass
Andy Loebs - Flexuous Vertex 
Jazz ?:
Andrew Cyrille / Wadada Leo Smith / Qasim Naqvi - Two Centuries
BI BA DOOM - graceful collision
LIFTED -  3
New Old:
Henning Christiansen - OP.163 PENTHESILEA
Luc Ferrari - Solitude Transit
Jigen - Blood's Finality 狂雲求敗
Miles Davis - That's What Happened 1982-1985 The Bootleg Series, Vol. 7
Nature - 98' Nate
Universal Liberation Orchestra - Communion
Iannis Xenakis - Electroacoustic Works
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letterboxd-loggd · 7 months
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The Fire Raisers (1934) Michael Powell
February 17th 2024
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