#sleuth 1972
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Living In The 70's
Movies in order: Dracula AD 1972 (1972) The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971) Phantom Of The Paradise (1974) Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) The Wicker Man (1973) Dog Day Afternoon (1975) Eyes Of Laura Mars (1978) Opening Night (1977) Mephisto Waltz (1971) The Omen (1976) Little Murders (1971) Don's Party (1976) Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) Ganja & Hess (1973) Halloween (1978) Female Trouble (1974) Taxi Driver (1976) Play Misty For Me (1971) Cisco Pike (1972) Perfect Friday (1970) Harold And Maude (1971) Werewolf Of Washington (1973) Two Lane Blacktop (1971) Sleuth (1972) Dead Of Night (1974) Dawn Of The Dead (1978) Tommy (1975) Carrie (1976) Thunderbolt And Lightfoot (1974) Mikey And Nicky (1976) Blacula (1972) Fox And His Friends (1975) Wake In Fright (1971) O Lucky Man! (1973) Klute (1971) A Woman Under The Influence (1974) Hi Mom! (1970) The American Friend (1977) The Dunwich Horror (1970) Get Carter (1971) Husbands (1970) Electric Horseman (1979) Minnie And Moskowitz (1971) The Long Goodbye (1973) Martin (1977) Mean Streets (1973) California Split (1974) Slap Shot (1977) Jaws (1975) A New Leaf (1971) Coffy (1973) Suspiria (1977) The In-Laws (1979) Stroszek (1977) The Last Wave (1977) Performance (1970) The Brood (1979) Hooper (1978) Pink Flamingos (1972) Five Easy Pieces (1970) Sleeping Dogs (1977) What's Up, Doc? (1972) The Last Movie (1971)
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Sleuth (1972, Joseph L. Mankiewicz)
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i am once again telling the terror mutuals to watch the wicker man 1973 and sleuth 1972
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Today’s problematic ship is Andrew Wyke and Milo Tindle from Sleuth (1972)
Toxic
Bully/victim
Killer/victim
Requested by @baseball-bat-bi

#proship#comship#proshippers please interact#proship please interact#proshipper safe#toxic#bully/victim#killer/victim#sleuth#sleuth 1972#andrew wyke#milo tindle#andrew x milo
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sleuth 1972 is an awesome movie about an all out psychosexual war between the world's first masc hairdresser and pops from regular show
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Michael Caine in "Sleuth" (1972)
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He was a phenomenal director!! So far only seen Sleuth and All About Eve, but can't wait to watch more soon ❤️❤️


Joseph L. Mankiewicz was born on February 11, 1909 #botd 🎥
#joseph l mankiewicz#director#sleuth 1972#all about eve#thinking about watching either 5 fingers or no way out next
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New Scotland Yard: We Do What We Can (2.11, LWT, 1972)
"I have to be careful."
"You're big and ugly enough to look after yourself."
"Not with this little firm I'm not."
"Which firm?"
"Jimmy Sutton's. He don't believe in straighteners. Goes in for surgery."
"Surgery?"
"Amputation with a sawn-off shotgun."
"Ah. Well, you can always apply for a claim at the Criminal Injuries Board."
"I wouldn't have a leg to stand on, would I?"
#new scotland yard#we do what we can#1972#lwt#classic tv#tony hoare#john reardon#john woodvine#john carlisle#robert morris#susan glanville#stanley lebor#frank jarvis#michael balfour#peter childs#natalie kent#dennis blanch#donald maciver#a fairly unusual script; this series hasn't been particularly continuity focused‚ just handwaving a few details about our leads#homelives etc‚ but this episode features a specific call back to a previous case (Ward's failure to prove the guilt of Ray Lonnen's#gangster back in 2.5) as well as featuring a returning minor character (Balfour's seedy informant‚ a pivotal part of the plot of the#previous episode‚ here having more of a cameo sort of role to get some vital exposition across to Ward)#the plot concerns a planned wages snatch (there's a time capsule for you; nobody snatches wages anymore but then i suppose electronic#banking has put paid to it). the villains of the piece are a triumvirate of classic telly faces: future sitcom stalwart Lebor as the#vicious leader�� Public Eye's Ron Gash himself Peter Childs as the quieter member of the gang‚ and good old Frank Jarvis (speaking in an#unnaturally gruff voice) as the wide boy. they're involving another ex con tho‚ who happens to be one that Ward helped to get a job and#turn his life around (very out of character for Ward tbh...). cue much skulking and sleuthing. it's a solid ep really but there's a brief#side plot concerning an elderly police widow fallen on hard times that sits awkwardly with the rest of the ep; it's not that it's a bad#side plot‚ exactly‚ actually it's quite affecting; it's just that it's very briefly handled‚ and stood to be further developed or given a#weightier position in the plot‚ rather than two brief scenes in the first half that are never referenced in the second
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There's nothing like a little bit of mayhem to cheer one up. SLEUTH [1972]
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I regularly find it hard to decide what to watch, which is why it's great to just be given recommendations. Something about a recommendation puts it higher on the watchlist than if I just came across a movie I find interesting.
To that end I ask: what's a movie you think everyone should watch at least once? If I haven't seen it it's going on my list.
If I had to pick an answer, I think I'd go with Sleuth. It's about two men working together to commit the perfect crime: one man ransacks the other man's house. He sells the jewels, and the other man gets the insurance money. And then it goes one step further. And then another, and then another. Everyone I show that movie to has their eyes glued to the screen, especially when it really gets going. However it's impossible to find the 1972 version online, and the 2007 remake is hot garbage.
For an easier to find movie, I'd pick Sorcerer. 4 men with dangerous pasts are hired to drive trucks in the jungle, with poor road conditions and lots of offroading required. The cargo: unstable nitroglycerin. A single bump could kill them all. It's an unlicensed remake of The Wages of Fear and it's just incredible.
#movie#cinema#film#watchlist#sleuth#Sleuth (1972)#michael caine#sorcerer#william friedkin#reccomendation#joseph l. mankiewicz
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Martin Freeman (179/366)
Sir Michael Caine and Martin Freeman attend the Raindance Film Festival opening night gala party at The Dorchester (2021). PHOTO 📸 by David M. Benett/Dave Benett.


Special mention to these two films starring Sir Michael Caine: "Funeral in Berlin" (1966) by Guy Hamilton and "Sleuth" (1972) by Joseph L. Mankiewicz.
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Honor? That's another one of your words. I know that you stripped me more than naked. I know that you actually terrified me to death. I stood on those stairs, looking down, and realizing that my coat sleeve button, the banister, the nail on my fourth finger were absolutely the last things I was gonna see. Ever. Then, I heard the sound of my own death. Now, that changes you, Andrew. Believe me. And I still owe you for that.
#sleuth#sleuth 1972#michael caine#laurence olivier#joseph l. mankiewicz#anthony shaffer#filmedit#filmgifs#moviegifs#classicfilmblr#*erm
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I’m sooo tired but I want to talk about knives out's relationship with sleuth 1972 so bad it’s so so interesting both feature protagonists who are the children of immigrants. one of whom chooses to 'play the game' and one who refuses. the eccentric renowned mystery author is a villain in one, a victim in the other. they aren’t telling the same stories but they are like grandpa and granddaughter to me.
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~H5~
Woke up today to find out Halsey has set the stage for a new hunt for fans to go on. In true Halsey fashion, it's cryptic with a distinct visual style we can probably expect from this era.
So let's explore, shall we?
A Lil' Timeline:
Halsey played the 27th at Lollapalooza India. During their set before they began to play Gasoline, a visual on screen displayed a URL: FOR MY LAST TRICK (click to go to the site).
Click HERE to see a video of when it was displayed at the concert.
The Website:
The theme behind the website seems to be opening a miscellaneous stick/patch packet.
The first thing is prompting the user to "pull to open" as in a tag to swipe off. You can see the collection of patches behind the plastic wrap. Once you finally open the package, all the patches will disperse.

This is where the Internet sleuthing begins, people. 24 unique patches (technically 25, but I'll get into that later) with different meanings. Let's get into it.
1 - SNA Flight Tag
So really obscure, but googling Air California flight tag brought me to this used bookstore site. In any case, the thing to notice is the date it is attributed with, 1968.
2 - Vintage Blotter Art
According to this blog (which is the only place I could find the image), this is a vintage blotter from 1994. Blotter art is an "...art form printed on perforated sheets of absorbent blotting paper infused with liquid LSD."
3 - Blythe Dolls
I believe this doll is a Blythe doll. Image reverse search does not come up with an exact result, but from the details you can make out, the dolls eyes are quite clear. Which looks a lot like Blythe Dolls, a doll brand that came out in 1972. Their gimmick was that the eyes could move left to right.
4 - Witch Halsey
Unsure, but it would seem it's Halsey as a witch. The aesthetics are similar to IICHLIWP (H4).
If the main theme here is the 70s, there’s the movie Season of the Witch that came out in 1973, February 14th. It’s apparently commentary on traditional American suburban lifestyle through the perspective of a housewife who does not like her place in life. She meets a witch and progressively gets into the occult.
5, 18, 19, 23 - Outside of USA
5: It's hard to tell what most of the words are, but the text "Pagado" (Spanish for "paid") is on the piece of paper. . The particular location might be Palenque, a Mexican city. Relevant date: June 25th, 1977.
18: Belleville. Based on a real winter carnival programme. Belleville is a a city in Ontario, Canada. Relevant date: 1971.
19: “We smokers all want to be non-smokers too” or something along these lines. I'm trusting online translation for this (German to English). Unable to find when this was made.
23: “For Us.” French. The image search doesn’t result anything. Unable to find when this was made.
6 - Peril is My Pay
Based off of a detective book involving traveling. The font is the exact same as one of the book covers. It was published in 1960s.
7 - I have something to tell you
A sign up. I assume it has to do with being updated on any album news.
Looking through the inspect tab you can see the information is being sent to “Sony Fan Music.” It does take note of which country you are in and your address.
8 , 9 - Round visuals
I think these are visuals to give grasp to the 70s theme. It’s reminiscent of 60’s/70’s clothing/aesthetic.
10 - Michigan license plate.
1971 comes up in the plate. Michigan has come up in HFK (H2), on Bad At Love. I doubt this has anything to do about the “boy back in Michigan” but perhaps traveling back throughout her albums.
11 - Ghost
Jan 27th 2014, interesting date to put since this is the date this is all happening, just a decade after.
I've seen some people say this is meant to be the anniversary for Ghost, the song. Although it came out in 2014, its release date was in July, and it originally came out on sound cloud on February 3rd. So unsure why Jan 27th is there. EDIT: I have been made aware that Jan 27th 2014 was its international release date! I am but a fool.
The text can be in response to the lyric “Where did you go?” and the themes on the song of someone leaving. IDK, this could also be a meta thing. If a theme here is traveling and visiting locations/people, then perhaps one thing you won't find if the ghost?
Additionally, this follows the theme of revisiting her previous albums.
12 - Cannel 17
WPHL-TV is a television station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, serving as the local outlet for The CW Television Network. The logos here are form the 60’s/70’s.
13 - Master Mystifier
Or, alternatively, Harry Houdini. The date I do not believe has any relevance here but perhaps the idea of magic.
I came about the google search “Houdini’s Last Trick” where his last trick is widely asked about. It would seem to be an inspiration for the name of the website. So potentially Halsey will lean into magic, tricks, and deception.
14 - Calling Cards
Text on card: “Compliments - May I See (C) You (U) Home? If not, please return this card.”
“May I See You Home” seemed to be a common phrase for calling cards. They were handed out to ask people out. Again, the font and images are similar to H4 aesthetic. These were used in the 18th and 19th century.
15 - B&W Hair
Oh, I actually no idea.
16 - Candy
The closest I could get to finding what this meant is when this font was used for the book Candy by Maxwell Kenton, published in 1958.
As wiki describes the plot "Candy Christian, aged eighteen, is an extremely pretty and desirable but naïve young woman, who finds herself in a variety of farcical sexual situations as a result of her desire to help others. The men in her life, regardless of age or relationship, wish only to possess her."
17 - Southern-Belle
Clearly the saying southern belle. A girl born form the south, typically with certain attributes. The saying came from the idea that “... a girl who was expected to grow up into a lady. She was supposed to be fragile and flirtatious while also sexually innocent. She was beautiful but risky to touch, like porcelain.”
https://historyengine.richmond.edu/episodes/view/2259#:~:text=Course%3A,risky to touch%2C like porcelain
20 - Rabbit
I couldn’t find anything that looks the same, but I assume it has to do with Alice and Wonderland. Concerning dates, the book was published in the 1800s, while the arguably most famous iteration (the animated movie) came out in the 50s.
However, this can relate to the potential theme of magic and deception and girl/womanhood. But I’m also inclined to think the rabbit might have nothing to do with Wonderland and might be something else all together.
21 - K-Mart
Wiki comes in handy here. As described, “Satisfaction Always icon seen on Kmart branded packaging until the mid-to-late 70s, adapted from a hanging sign displayed in every early Kmart store.” So 70’s themed.
https://logos.fandom.com/wiki/Kmart_(United_States)/Other?file=Kmart_-_1960s_(Satisfaction).svg.
22 - Eye, Eye, Eye, and Eye
The eyes. Girl IDK, they’re eyes. They kind of remind me of the biblically accurate angels and the eyes they have. Although, I doubt that's what they're meant to be.
24 - Cigarette
People seem to think this relates more to Badlands, and I’m inclined to agree.
Themes:
Here are overall themes that seem to be present within the collection.
- Travelling
- Magic
- 60s-70s
- Eyes
- Books
- A Feminist Lens
- Past albums
A Tangent on Web Dev:
I just kinda wanted to point out the cool coding stuff they've done. When the patches are still in the plastic bag, they're always randomized in which order they're in (you have to refresh to notice this). They also disperse in a randomized order. I thought maybe the way they disperse could be a trail of sorts, like a map. But it seems totally random. I still find it cool how they've done that, every time in a different location, as if you open the package they come out uniquely for each person.
Oh and about the 25 patch, it seems the first patch in your packet appears twice when you open it. Idk if the number 25 matters or if this was done by accident. But the 25th patch is a duplicate, and never one in particular, just which ever is the first in your shuffle.
The End
For now.
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A Sporting Chance.
A piece loosely inspired by the character dynamics in the 1972 adaptation of Anthony Shaffer’s Sleuth.
The character of Syja (depicted in blue) belongs to the skilled @calllynx
#2d artwork#2d art#artists on tumblr#original art#original characters#mutual’s oc#my art#digital art#limited color palette#j-deco art
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