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Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
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thetheodispatch · 1 year
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Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964) dir. Stanley Kubrick
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lamiaprigione · 2 years
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Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
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bettslovesromance · 4 months
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I looove the snowed in trope and here are some books with it that I've recently read and enjoyed
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camyfilms · 1 year
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ALICE IN WONDERLAND 1951
If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense. Nothing would be what it is because everything would be what it isn't. And contrary-wise; what it is it wouldn't be, and what it wouldn't be, it would. You see?
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adamwatchesmovies · 2 years
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Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
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Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, is a film so permanent you don’t even know how much influence it's had until you've seen it. This satirical take on the Cold War is both hilarious and terrifying thanks to an impeccable attention to detail, terrific performances, and more than one scene that will stick with you forever.
United States Air Force Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper (Sterling Hayden) has done the unthinkable and single-handedly declared nuclear war against the USSR. With foolproof safety precautions preventing further orders from reaching the planes approaching enemy territory, his executive officer Group Captain Lionel Mandrake (Peter Sellers) desperately searches for a way to recall the attack. Meanwhile, the President of the United States (played by Sellers again) attempts to prevent the incoming catastrophe with the help of his advisors and the mysterious Dr. Strangelove (Sellers one more time).
The film begins with an assurance that what takes place here could never happen in real life. This statement is about as convincing and reassuring as a friendly dinner invitation from Hannibal Lecter. No detail is spared when showing us the codes, secret envelopes, radio signals, and equipment that form this air-tight mechanism designed to prevent wrong orders from reaching the planes. These planes - always in the air and always ready to strike - ensure that if the Soviet Union decides to strike "the free world" retaliation will be swift. But what happens when a jingoistic lunatic decides that counterattacking isn’t good enough? It could mean a long-lasting nuclear winter that’ll wipe out all humanity. If not, it could be the much-needed catalyst to usher us into an era of global peace. That’s, of course, if General Ripper can be prevented from damning us all.
So thorough is this exploration of mutually-assured nuclear destruction that only repeat viewings will allow you to appreciate the humorous side of this scenario. Like so many boneheaded attempts by the Soviet Union and the U.S.A. to one-up each other during the Cold War, Dr. Strangelove is funny in hindsight but in the moment it makes you sweat buckets. The suspense is intensified by how many people fail to realize how close they are to complete annihilation. That, in turn, is what makes it so funny. Seeing Captain Mandrake sit back and try to remain calm while he’s listening to General Ripper’s rambling logic, General Buck Turgidson (George C. Scott) trying and spin the scenario into something positive for the President, witnessing the clearly insane Dr. Strangelove (who isn’t actually in the film all that much) propose a solution in case war does break out makes you want to jump into a straightjacket… until you realize your side of the screen is perfectly safe.
There are so many memorable elements in this film. Dr. Strangelove and his Alien Hand Syndrome (a syndrome often called Dr. Strangelove Syndrome), Ripper yammering about “precious bodily fluids” or the U.S. President’s interactions with the Russian President, the introduction credits, the music, the design of the Pentagon’s War Room, the screenplay, the cinematography (gorgeous and chilling black-and-white) and the performances. Every aspect of filmmaking is firing on all cylinders. It’s a movie you want to come back to again and again to catch all of the little details. There’s no way you can get everything Dr. Strangelove has to offer on a single viewing because unless you know ahead of time, there’s no way you’d recognize Sellers in his three roles. And that ending! This is a must-see. (On Blu-ray, October 20, 2017)
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esonetwork · 4 months
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Dr. Strangelove | Episode 398
New Post has been published on https://esonetwork.com/dr-strangelove/
Dr. Strangelove | Episode 398
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Jim discusses a cult-classic celebrating its 60th Anniversary this year – Stanley Kubrick’s “Dr. Strangelove,” starring Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Keenan Wynn, Slim Pickens, James Earl Jones, Peter Bull, and Tracy Reed. An Air Force General (Hayden) sends his bomber wing into Russia to bomb the country because of a conspiracy he believes in. Find out more about this heralded Black Comedy on this episode of MONSTER ATTACK!, The Podcast Dedicated To Old Monster Movies.
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volleypearlfan · 8 months
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once upon a studio but awesome
Panchito and Jose are there
The Mad Hatter and King Candy quip about how similar their voices are (hi guys Peter Griffin here to explain the joke. Mad Hatter was voiced by Ed Wynn and King Candy's voice is an impression of Ed Wynn. Candy was voiced by Alan Tudyk, who voices Hatter in the short)
On that note, more voice actor related jokes, like how Pooh, Kaa, and Cheshire Cat all have the same voice (Sterling Holloway)
Someone, anyone, gets to punch out Frollo
Peter and the Wolf (Make Mine Music) characters show up
Johnny Appleseed (Melody Time) shows up
(they acknowledged none of the package films except for Ichabod and Mr. Toad and Fun and Fancy Free (saw the golden harp girl there) 💀
now I loved the short, don't get me wrong, I'm just sick of the three caballeros erasure 😤
EDIT: I was wrong, Jose and Panchito ARE in the movie, in the group picture at the end, along with Johnny Fedora, Alice Blue Bonnet, Casey, Pedro, and that ice-skating couple
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eludin-realm · 8 months
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Character Name Ideas (Male)
So I've been browsing through BehindTheName (great resource!) recently and have compiled several name lists. Here are some names, A-Z, that I like. NOTE: If you want to use any of these please verify sources, meanings etc, I just used BehindTheName to browse and find all of these. Under the cut:
A: Austin, Aiden, Adam, Alex, Angus, Anthony, Archie, Argo, Ari, Aric, Arno, Atlas, August, Aurelius, Alexei, Archer, Angelo, Adric, Acarius, Achilou, Alphard, Amelian, Archander B: Bodhi, Bastian, Baz, Beau, Beck, Buck, Basil, Benny, Bentley, Blake, Bowie, Brad, Brady, Brody, Brennan, Brent, Brett, Brycen C: Cab, Cal, Caden, Cáel, Caelan, Caleb, Cameron, Chase, Carlos, Cooper, Carter, Cas, Cash, Cassian, Castiel, Cedric, Cenric, Chance, Chandler, Chaz, Chad, Chester, Chet, Chip, Christian, Cillian, Claude, Cicero, Clint, Cody, Cory, Coy, Cole, Colt, Colton, Colin, Colorado, Colum, Conan, Conrad, Conway, Connor, Cornelius, Creed, Cyneric, Cynric, Cyrano, Cyril, Cyrus, Crestian, Ceric D: Dallas, Damien, Daniel, Darach, Dash, Dax, Dayton, Denver, Derek, Des, Desmond, Devin, Dewey, Dexter, Dietrich, Dion, Dmitri, Dominic, Dorian, Douglas, Draco, Drake, Drew, Dudley, Dustin, Dusty, Dylan, Danièu E: Eadric, Evan, Ethan, Easton, Eddie, Eddy, Einar, Eli, Eilas, Eiljah, Elliott, Elton, Emanuel, Emile, Emmett, Enzo, Erik, Evander, Everett, Ezio F: Faolán, Faron, Ferlin, Felix, Fenrir, Fergus, Finley, Finlay, Finn, Finnian, Finnegan, Flint, Flip, Flynn, Florian, Forrest, Fritz G: Gage, Gabe, Grady, Grant, Gray, Grayson, Gunnar, Gunther, Galahad H: Hale, Harley, Harper, Harvey, Harry, Huey, Hugh, Hunter, Huxley I: Ian, Ianto, Ike, Inigo, Isaac, Isaias, Ivan, Ísak J: Jack, Jacob, Jake, Jason, Jasper, Jax, Jay, Jensen, Jed, Jeremy, Jeremiah, Jesse, Jett, Jimmie, Jonas, Jonas, Jonathan, Jordan, Josh, Julien, Jovian, Jun, Justin, Joseph, Joni, K: Kaden, Kai, Kale, Kane, Kaz, Keane, Keaton, Keith, Kenji, Kenneth, Kent, Kevin, Kieran, Kip, Knox, Kris, Kristian, Kyle, Kay, Kristján, Kristófer L: Lamont, Lance, Landon, Lane, Lars, László, Laurent, Layton, Leander, Leif, Leo, Leonidas, Leopold, Levi, Lewis, Louie, Liam, Liberty, Lincoln, Linc, Linus, Lionel, Logan, Loki, Lucas, Lucian, Lucio, Lucky, Luke, Luther, Lyall, Lycus, Lykos, Lyle, Lyndon, Llewellyn, Landri, Laurian, Lionç M: Major, Manny, Manuel, Marcus, Mason, Matt, Matthew, Matthias, Maverick, Maxim, Memphis, Midas, Mikko, Miles, Mitch, Mordecai, Mordred, Morgan, Macari, Maïus, Maxenci, Micolau, Miro N: Nate, Nathan, Nathaniel, Niall, Nico, Niels, Nik, Noah, Nolan, Niilo, Nikander, Novak, O: Oakley, Octavian, Odin, Orlando, Orrick, Ǫrvar, Othello, Otis, Otto, Ovid, Owain, Owen, Øyvind, Ozzie, Ollie, Oliver, Onni P: Paisley, Palmer, Percival, Percy, Perry, Peyton, Phelan, Phineas, Phoenix, Piers, Pierce, Porter, Presley, Preston, Pacian Q: Quinn, Quincy, Quintin R: Ragnar, Raiden, Ren, Rain, Rainier, Ramos, Ramsey, Ransom, Raul, Ray, Roy, Reagan, Redd, Reese, Rhys, Rhett, Reginald, Remiel, Remy, Ridge, Ridley, Ripley, Rigby, Riggs, Riley, River, Robert, Rocky, Rokas, Roman, Ronan, Ronin, Romeo, Rory, Ross, Ruairí, Rufus, Rusty, Ryder, Ryker, Rylan, Riku, Roni S: Sammie, Sammy, Samuel, Samson, Sanford, Sawyer, Scout, Seán, Seth, Sebastian, Seymour, Shane, Shaun, Shawn, Sheldon, Shiloh, Shun, Sid, Sidney, Silas, Skip, Skipper, Skyler, Slade, Spencer, Spike, Stan, Stanford, Sterling, Stevie, Stijn, Suni, Sylvan, Sylvester T: Tab, Tad, Tanner, Tate, Tennessee, Tero, Terrance, Tevin, Thatcher, Tierno, Tino, Titus, Tobias, Tony, Torin, Trace, Trent, Trenton, Trev, Trevor, Trey, Troy, Tripp, Tristan, Tucker, Turner, Tyler, Ty, Teemu U: Ulric V: Valerius, Valor, Van, Vernon, Vespasian, Vic, Victor, Vico, Vince, Vinny, Vincent W: Wade, Walker, Wallis, Wally, Walt, Wardell, Warwick, Watson, Waylon, Wayne, Wes, Wesley, Weston, Whitley, Wilder, Wiley, William, Wolfe, Wolfgang, Woody, Wulfric, Wyatt, Wynn X: Xander, Xavier Z: Zachary, Zach, Zane, Zeb, Zebediah, Zed, Zeke, Zeph, Zaccai
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galathynius · 1 year
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2023 reading log
the uncensored picture of dorian gray by oscar wilde / jan. 2-9 / 4 stars
buzz saw: the improbable story of how the washington nationals won the world series by jesse dougherty / jan. 9-11 / 4.5 stars
proposal by meg cabot / jan. 17 / 3 stars
sidelined: sports, culture, and being a woman in america by julie dicaro / jan. 12-17 / 4 stars
remembrance by meg cabot / jan. 18-19 / 3 stars
how sweet it is by dylan newton / jan. 19-20 / 3 stars
daughters of sparta by claire heywood / jan. 21-22 / 3 stars
highly suspicious and unfairly cute by talia hibbert / jan. 22 / 4 stars
gentlemen prefer blondes: the diary of a professional lady by anita loos / jan. 23-26 / 3 stars
hell bent by leigh bardugo / jan. 26-31 / 4 stars
all about love: new visions by bell hooks / jan. 22-31 / 4 stars
daisy jones & the six by taylor jenkins reid / jan. 31-feb. 2 / 4 stars
everything i know about love: a memoir by dolly alderton / feb. 2-9 / 4 stars
emma by jane austen / feb. 11-19 / 4 stars
fake it till you bake it by jamie wesley / feb 19-23 / 3.5 stars
my dark vanessa by kate elizabeth russell / feb. 23-26 / 4 stars
throttled by lauren asher / feb. 26-28/ 2 stars
the locker room by meghan quinn / mar. 1-5 / 1 star
come as you are: the surprising new science that will transform your sex life by emily nagoski / feb. 17-mar. 5 / 4.5 stars
pucked by helena hunting / mar. 5-11 / 3 stars
legendborn by tracy deonn / mar 12-23 / 4.5 stars
unadulterated something by m.j. duncan / mar. 23-25 / 4 stars
the fifth season by n.k. jemisin / mar. 26-apr. 15 / 4 stars
how to fake it in hollywood by ava wilder / apr. 16-19 / 3.5 stars
sharp objects by gillian flynn / apr. 19-22 / 4 stars
the homewreckers by mary kay andrews / apr. 22-25 / 3.5 stars
the kiss curse by erin sterling / apr. 25-26 / 3.5 stars
the wedding crasher by mia sosa / apr. 26-27 / 3 stars
let’s get physical: how women discovered exercise and reshaped the world by danielle friedman / mar. 25-apr. 27 / 4 stars
mile high by liz tomforde / apr. 27-may 6 / 1.5 stars
happy place by emily henry / may 6-7 / 5 stars
carrie soto is back by taylor jenkins reid / may 7 / 4 stars
the spanish love deception by elena armas / may 8 / 2 stars
neon gods by katee robert / may 8-9 / 1 star
love in the time of serial killers by alicia thompson / may 9-11 / 4 stars
the bodyguard by katherine center / may 11 / 4 stars
the intimacy experiment by rosie danan / may 11-12 / 3 stars
upgrade by blake crouch / may 12-13 / 4 stars
by any other name by lauren kate / may 13 / 3 stars
the dead romantics by ashley poston / may 15-17 / 4 stars
the ballad of songbirds and snakes by suzanne collins / may 19-28 / 3.5 stars
so many ways to lose: the amazin’ true story of the new york mets—the best worst team in baseball by devin gordon / may 13-jun. 4 / 4 stars
iron widow by xiran jay zhao / jun. 5-7 / 3 stars
the grace year by kim liggett / jun. 7-8 / 4 stars
the last magician by lisa maxwell / jun. 9-11 / 4.5 stars
little fires everywhere by celeste ng / jun. 12-14 / 4 stars
not a happy family by shari lapena / jun. 14-17 / 2.5 stars
the familiars by stacey halls / jun. 17-21 / 3 stars
the girls i’ve been by tess sharpe / jun. 21-22 / 3.5 stars
once more with feeling by elissa sussman / jun. 23 / 3 stars
the cheat sheet by sarah adams / jun. 24-25 / 1 star
how to sell a haunted house by grady hendrix / jun. 26-29 / 3 stars
little thieves by margaret owen / jul. 1-3 / 4.5 stars
this is how you lose the time war by amal el-mohtar and max gladstone / jul. 3-6 / 3 stars
the very secret society of irregular witches by sangu mandanna / jul. 11-12 / 4 stars
the lies of locke lamora by scott lynch / jul. 13-27 / 4.5 stars
seven days in june by tia williams / jul. 28-30 / 4 stars
bloodmarked by tracy deonn / jul. 31-aug. 2 / 4 stars
something wilder by christina lauren / aug. 3-4 / 3 stars
howl’s moving castle by diana wynne jones / aug. 4-5 / 4 stars
dark matter by blake crouch / aug. 12-13 / 3 stars
eat up! food, appetite, and eating what you want by ruby tandoh / jul. 30-aug. 14 / 4 stars
the silent companions by laura purcell / aug. 5-18 / 4 stars
mr. wrong number by lynn painter / aug. 19-20 / 2 stars
romantic comedy by curtis sittenfeld / aug. 20-21 / 4 stars
the last tale of the flower bride by roshani chokshi / aug. 21-23 / 4 stars
the hating game by sally thorne / aug. 23-25 / 2 stars
lessons in chemistry by bonnie garmus / aug. 25-26 / 2.5 stars
the godparent trap by rachel van dyken / aug. 27 / 2 stars
i’m glad my mom died by jennette mccurdy / aug. 27-29 / 4 stars
the atlas six by olivie blake / aug. 29-sep. 9 / 3 stars
wordslut: a feminist guide to taking back the english language by amanda montell / sep. 1-9 / 4 stars
practice makes perfect by sarah adams / sep. 10-11 / 3 stars
all systems red by martha wells / sep. 13-14 / 3 stars
do i know you? by emily wibberly and austin siegemund-broka / sep. 14-16 / 4 stars
same time next summer by annabel monaghan / sep. 17 / 3.5 stars
Ounder the influence by noelle crooks / sep. 18-22 / 4 stars
burn for me by ilona andrews / sep. 22-23 / 4 stars
the littlest library by poppy alexander / sep. 24 / 3 stars
the neighbor favor by kristina forest / sep. 25-27 / 3 stars
satisfaction guaranteed by karelia stetz-waters / sep. 28-oct. 5 / 3 stars
the ex talk by rachel lynn solomon / oct. 5-7 / 4 stars
change of plans by dylan newton / oct. 8-9 / 2 stars
coraline by neil gaiman / oct. 9 / 4 stars
you, again by kate goldbeck / oct. 9-11 / 3 stars
mrs. caliban by rachel ingalls / oct. 12 / 3 stars
summer sons by lee mandelo / oct. 12-19 / 4 stars
the death of jane lawrence by caitlin starling / oct. 19-24 / 3 stars
house of hollow by krystal sutherland / oct. 25-29 / 4 stars
white hot by ilona andrews / oct. 28-nov. 2 / 4.5 stars
twice shy by sarah hogle / nov. 4-5 / 3 stars
sexed up: how society sexualizes us, and how we can fight back by julia serano / nov. 2-10 / 4 stars
artificial condition by martha wells / nov. 11-14 / 4 stars
wildfire by ilona andrews / nov. 14-16 / 4.5 stars
between a fox and a hard place by mary frame / nov. 18 / 3 stars
revolting prostitutes: the fight for sex workers’ rights by molly smith and juno mac / nov. 18-20 / 4 stars
emily wilde’s encyclopaedia of faeries by heather fawcett / nov. 21-24 / 4.5 stars
love and other words by christina lauren / nov. 24-25 / 3 stars
the boyfriend candidate by ashley winstead / nov. 26 / 3.5 stars
the seven year slip by ashley poston / nov. 27-28 / 5 stars
how to fall out of love madly by jana casale / dec. 3-10 / 3 stars
ordinary monsters by j.m. miro / dec. 10-21 / 3 stars
rogue protocol by martha wells / dec. 22-23 / 4 stars
what you wish for by katherine center / dec. 25 / 3 stars
the blonde identity by ally carter / dec. 25-26 / 2.5 stars
just my type by falon ballard / dec. 26-31 / 2 stars
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fictionkin-hell · 1 year
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Masc/Neutral names for an SCP-079!
Overboard is an illusion and so is death :p
- Artie (as in "artificial")
- Cable
- Poiesis (a suffix meaning making, or creation)
- Pixel
- Brutus
- Cassius
- Otto (as in "automatic")
- Rune
- Code/Cody
- Text
- Rae/Ray
- Archie
- Reed
- Wright
- Atlas
- Steel
- Venn
- Watson (as in "Watt")
- Core
- Sterling (as in silver)
- Binary
- Lestat
- Argo
- Deus
- Kalon
- Fract/Fractal
- Sibyll
- Cord
- Cassette
- Watch
- Hyde
- Wynn
- Data
- Wyatt
- Bo
- Pan (meaning "all")
- Chip
- Bet
- Statistic
- Cal
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Fairy Names Pt. 2
Fly with you! It’s been a while hasn’t it? Anyway, I’m here for a second part of one of my most popular posts.
The first post listed fairy names that were used in the DS game “Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue” in the create-a-fairy section of the game. While the names provided were feminine, I have pulled all of the masculine fairy names from the original Pixie Hollow game. Some names are repeats from the original post, but I kept them in as I wanted to get this out as soon as possible. I hope you enjoy. Here’s the original post.
~🧚🏻‍♀️🔥 Foxglove 
First
Aaron
Ace
Acorn
Agate
Ajay
Alabaster
Alder
Alec
Aleron
Alex
Anchor
Andrew
Archer
Axel
Badger
Bailey
Baker
Bale
Banjo
Barclay
Basil
Benjy
Bert
Bevel
Birch
Bo
Boomer
Boone
Brock
Bruce
Brynn
Buddy
Burr
Burton
Buster
Calder
Casper
Cecil
Cedar
Chance
Chase
Chip
Clay
Cliff
Coal
Cog
Comet
Cosmo
Cote
Covey
Crag
Crane
Cyan
Dale
Dane
Darius
Darrin
Dawson
Decker
Deon
Devlin
Dewey
Donner
Drake
Dug
Dunn
Dustin
Dusty
Echo
Eddy
Edward
Elk
Emery
Erik
Ernie
Errol
Fennel
Fincher
Finn
Fir
Flint
Ford
Francis
Garnet
Glen
Gourd
Gourdie
Grove
Grub
Gull
Hale
Hare
Harris
Hawk
Henry
Heron
Hob
Jacob
James
Jasper
Jay
Kernal
Koto
Lance
Lark
Leaf
Lore
Lute
Lyric
Martin
Maze
Mica
Michal
Nadir
Nester
Oak
Ollie
Onyx
Otter
Peat
Pier
Pine
Quake
Quarry
Quinn
Rain
Ranger
Reed
Richard
River
Robin
Rook
Rusty
Rye
Sage
Sam
Scout
Sean
Seth
Shale
Shoal
Skimmer
Skyler
Spike
Spruce
Sterling
Stone
Tad
Teak
Thatcher
Thistle
Timber
Tiny
Toadstool
Tobey
Todd
Topher
Torn
Torrey
Vail
Valiant
Vern
Vic
Wedge
Wes
Wren
Wynn
Zak
 Middle
Air
Almond
Apple
Aspen
Autumn
Badger
Bark
Beacon
Bear
Bitter
Brave
Bright
Brisk
Broom
Bumble
Candle
Cedar
Chilly
Citrus
Cloud
Cloudy
Clover
Cocoa
Copper
Cricket
Crow
Cub
Dapple
Dash
Day
Drift
Eagle
Elm
Evening
Falcon
Far
Fern
Fig
Fire
Fleet
Flicker
Foggy
Fox
Frost
Frozen
Funny
Garlic
Green
Hail
Hasty
Hawk
Hickory
Holly
Hurry
Ice
Ivy
Jelly
Jumpy
Lemon
Light
Lightning
Lime
Little
Lock
Lotus
Magic
Mango
Maple
Merry
Misty
Moon
Morning
Moss
Mossy
Mountain
Muddy
Never
Nickel
Night
Nimble
Oak
Orange
Otter
Parsley
Pear
Pebble
Pepper
Pine
Plum
Pollen
Pumpkin
Purple
Quick
Rain
Rainy
Rock
Rumble
Sage
Sandy
Sea
Shy
Silk
Slight
Snow
Sour
Speedy
Spider
Spring
Squall
Star
Storm
Stout
Strong
Sugar
Summer
Sun
Swift
Tangle
Thunder
Tiny
Toad
Tumble
Twisty
Water
Whiffle
Wild
Wind
Winter
Wrinkle
 Last
Beam
Bee
Bell
Berry
Breath
Breeze
Bug
Button
Buzz
Chill
Chime
Cliff
Cloud
Clove
Crash
Curl
Dale
Dance
Dash
Dew
Din
Drop
Dust
Ear
Elbow
Eye
Feather
Field
Fig
Flame
Flap
Flash
Fleck
Flight
Flip
Flipper
Fly
Fog
Foot
Forest
Freeze
Fruit
Garden
Gem
Glade
Glimmer
Glow
Gourd
Grace
Griddlee
Gust
Heart
Hill
Hop
Horn
Hush
Jewel
Knee
Lake
Light
Lock
Loop
Lull
Meadow
Mello
Mint
Mist
Moon
Muddle
Muse
Newt
Noise
Nose
Peal
Pebble
Petal
Pin
Plume
Pond
Pool
Ray
Ripple
River
Roar
Root
Row
Ruckus
Rumble
Sand
Shadow
Sky
Smash
Song
Spark
Sparkle
Sparrow
Speck
Spirit
Splash
Spring
Sprite
Sprout
Stem
Stone
Storm
Stream
Stripe
Swamp
Swirls
Thistle
Thorn
Toad
Tree
Twill
Twist
Vale
Valley
Vine
Weather
Web
Whirl
Whisk
Whisper
Willow
Wind
Wing
Wings
Wink
Wish
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thealmightyemprex · 7 months
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VOyage Through the Disney Canon(1950-1959)
Now we enter the 50's looking at films 12-16
5.Cinderella-While this fiolm has grown on me this is not a movie I love .I like Cinderella herself finding her to be a sympathetic chararacter,Lady Tremain is a subtle yet creepy villain with how manipulative she is ,Verna Felton is fun as the Fairy Godmother,Lucifer is a fun secondary villain and the animation is pretty ......Problem is I dont like most of the side character and unfortunately they take up most of the movie.The prince is barely a character ,the king is a psychopath who I find more frightening then funny ,and ogh GOD ,I cant stand the mice,they are so grating to me and they are in so much of the movie I kind of wanted the cat to eat them .I get their are people who love this film,glad you like it,but their are better Cinderella films to me
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4.Alice in Wonderland :I debated how high to put this film cause I do like it but I dont love it like others do .I love Alice herself who is played brillaintly by Katheryn Beaumont ,the Mad Tea Party scene is one of the funniest scenes of the Walt era due to the animation and vocal performances ofEd Wynn and Jerry Colona ,This is a great showcase for Disney regulars ,like J PAt O Malley showing his range as Tweedledee and Tweedle Dum/Walrus and Carpenter ,Bill Thompson is wonderfully pompous as the Dodo ,Sterling Holloway is great as the Cheshire Cat,and Verna Felton is scene stealingly good as the Queen of Hearts .As a film it is fun to see Disney get weird with great visuals (Hasts off to Mary Blaire ).....However I dont like the songs ,I never liked this takeon the Carterpiller,and while Bill Thompson is great as the Dodo I never thought his voice for the White Rabbit worked .I also think as an adaptation of the Alice stories go,its just a good version and not my favorite (the 99 TV movie is probably the winner there )
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3.Peter Pan:So this was one of my favorites as a kid ,then I had a backlash to it ,now I like it but acknowledge it is flawed .Flaws first,the depiction of Native American ,specifically their song is really cringy and racist .....But now that I think about it,that is my biggest issue.I used to have a problem with Peter himself ,findinhim too unlikeable.....But honest this maybe my favorite version of Peter,now that I realize Peter isnt supposed to be likeable ,and in fact I think Bobby DRiscoll does a fine job balancing being both impishly charming and being smugly arrogant ,and I love the animation of him,how he will just float around.Katheryne Beaumont grounds the movie as Wendy,and I kind of love that Tinkerbell who has become a mascot for the company is a murderous little sociopath .I love the character animation of Nana the Dog ,the action is great,Smee maybe bBill Thopmpsons best role and the film has many great jokes.The scene stealer of the film has to be Captain Hook who is one of my absolute favorite Walt era villains ,he is threatening,he is stylish,he is funny and he is marveolusly voiced by the great Hans Conried ,I love his scenes with Smee,his duels with Peter and the hilarious chase scenes between him and Tick Tock the Croc who wants to gobble him up .I'll admit part of me might be putting this film this high for a mix of the villain and nostalgia....But I really like it
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2.Lady and the Tramp:This canine romance is higher then I thought it would be but I love this movie ,bioth Lady and Tramp are likeable ,I love the side characters like Jock,Trusty,Boris (Whos played by Alan Reed AKA Fred Flinstone ),Peg,Joe and Tony .The songs are all good,the animation is solid ,voice acting is good and yeah the speghetti scene is iconic.I dont like the fake out near the end and yeah Si and Am suck .However the main love story make this one enjoyable for me
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1.Sleeping Beauty-....SO this is my second favorite Film of Walts era ,and might be my favorite of the Princess movies .I like the trivk it pulld by the film being basically about the fairies instead of the Princess .I actually like Aurora and Phillip ,I love the ballet score ,the art style is beautiful,the kings are funny,Once Upon A DReam is one of my favorite Disney songs and the final battle against the dragon is awesome .Maleficent is a MAGNIFICENT VILLAIN voiced wonderfully by Elanore Audley whose true plan is one oif my favorite evil plans ever and she is wonderfully designed and animated by Marc Davis .My favorite characters however are the heroes ,that is to say the fairies,Flora,Fauna and Merryweather who are so fun and lovable (Though Merryweather is my favorite )
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Agree ,disagree,comment and share your oppinion
@ariel-seagull-wings @amalthea9 @theancientvaleofsoulmaking @princesssarisa @the-blue-fairie @makingboneboy @themousefromfantasyland @filmcityworld1
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Round 2 matchups
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Results of round 1 can be found here.
Full list of matchups under the cut
Jesse White vs Ed Wynn
Lionel Barrymore vs Charlie Ruggles
Frank Morgan/Frank Jenks vs Betty Garrett
Mischa Auer vs S.Z. Sakall
Patsy Kelly vs Margaret Hamilton
Hans Conried vs Hattie McDaniel
Leonid Kinskey vs Eve Arden
Edward van Sloan/Jack Oakie vs Butterfly McQueen
Zasu Pitts vs Charlotte Greenwood
Marjorie Main vs Bert Lahr
Marie Dressler vs Una O'Connor
Dwight Frye vs Esther Muir
Thelma Todd vs Christian Rub
Gail Patrick vs Sydney Greenstreet
John Carradine vs Verna Felton
Una Merkel vs Conrad Veidt
Scatman Crothers vs Guy Kibbee/Walter Brennan
Nat Pendleton vs Raymond Massey
Erich von Stroheim vs Eddie Anderson
Reginald Gardiner vs Joseph Calleia
Sam Levene vs Edna May Oliver
Charles Laughton vs Gabby Hayes
Elsa Lanchester vs Lionel Atwill
Bill Robinson vs Andy Devine
Ernest Truex vs Edward Arnold
Sterling Holloway vs Nancy Kulp
Jean Adair vs Grady Sutton
Glenda Farrell vs Lillian Yarbo
Marjorie Gateson vs Joy Hudges
George E. Stone vs Donald Meek
Warner Baxter/Jerry Colonna vs Spring Byington
Felix Bressart vs Eric Blore
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byneddiedingo · 10 months
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A Lon Chaney Double Feature
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Norma Shearer and Lon Chaney in He Who Gets Slapped
He Who Gets Slapped (Victor Sjöström, 1924)
Cast: Lon Chaney, Norma Shearer, John Gilbert, Ruth King, Marc McDermott, Ford Sterling, Tully Marshall. Screenplay: Carey Wilson, Victor Sjöström; titles: Marian Ainslee; based on a play by Leonid Andreyev. Cinematography: Milton Moore. Art direction: Cedric Gibbons. Film editing: Hugh Wynn.
He Who Gets Slapped is not a film for coulrophobes (people with a fear of clowns). It's crawling with them, performing antics that are supposed to be, to judge from the hilarity they induce in the audiences shown in the film, side-splittingly funny. The film seems to be based on the highly dubious premise that watching someone get slapped repeatedly is one of the funniest things ever. (There may be people who think so, to judge from the perennial popularity of the Three Stooges.) The whole movie is an artificial concoction, anyway, and only the brilliance of Lon Chaney gives it some grounding in real-life feeling. It was one of the films that launched the MGM studios on the road to Hollywood dominance, and the first one to feature Leo the Lion in the credits. It's also a film that contemporary audiences should watch to see the young Norma Shearer, when she was at her freshest and most natural. In He Who Gets Slapped, her love interest is John Gilbert. It was only after the advent of sound that Shearer's husband, MGM's creative director Irving G. Thalberg, decided to make her into a great lady, the cinematic equivalent of Katharine Cornell, putting her into remakes of Broadway hits like The Barretts of Wimpole Street (Sidney Franklin, 1934), which had starred Cornell, or Strange Interlude (Robert Z. Leonard, 1932), which had featured another theatrical diva, Lynn Fontanne. She is barely in her 20s in He Who Gets Slapped, however, and she's delightful, with no trace of the diva to come.
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Lon Chaney and Loretta Young in Laugh, Clown, Laugh
Laugh, Clown, Laugh, Herbert Brenon, 1928
Cast: Lon Chaney, Bernard Siegel, Loretta Young, Cissy Fitzgerald, Nils Asther, Gwen Lee. Screenplay: Elizabeth Meehan; titles: Joseph Farnham; based on a play by David Belasco and Tom Cushing. Cinematography: James Wong Howe. Art direction: Cedric Gibbons. Film editing: Marie Halvey.
Laugh, Clown, Laugh puts him in clown makeup again, but the film is a grand showcase for Chaney, whose reputation as the man of a thousand faces was somewhat misleading. He had one well-worn face that, no matter how much he distorted or disguised it, shone through. Here he's given an opportunity to perform without disguise through much of the film, and the range of expressions available to him is astonishing. The leading lady is 14-year-old Loretta Young. That she often looks her age is one of the more disturbing things about the film, in which she's supposed to be in love with both Chaney, who was 45, and the improbably pretty Nils Asther, who was 31. The cinematography is by James Wong Howe. Laugh, Clown, Laugh was eligible for Oscar nominations in the first year of the Academy Awards, and Chaney should have received one. The closest the film came to an award was the one that Joseph Farnham received for title writing (the one and only time the award was presented). But Farnham's award was for the body of his work over the nomination period, and not for a particular film.
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alexlacquemanne · 1 year
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Mai MMXXIII
Films
Quand la Panthère rose s'emmêle (The Pink Panther Strikes Again) (1976) de Blake Edwards avec Peter Sellers, Herbert Lom, Leonard Rossiter, Colin Blakely, Lesley-Anne Down, André Maranne, Michael Robbins et Burt Kwouk
Le Dimanche de la vie (1967) de Jean Herman avec Danielle Darrieux, Jean-Pierre Moulin, Olivier Hussenot, Françoise Arnoul, Berthe Bovy, Anne Doat, Hubert Deschamps et Jean Rochefort
Romance inachevée (The Glenn Miller Story) (1954) de Anthony Mann avec James Stewart, June Allyson, Henry Morgan, Charles Drake, George Tobias et Barton MacLane
La Canonnière du Yang-Tsé (The Sand Pebbles) (1966) de Robert Wise avec Steve McQueen, Richard Attenborough, Richard Crenna, Candice Bergen, Marayat Andriane et Makoto Iwamatsu
Deux Heures moins le quart avant Jésus-Christ (1982) de Jean Yanne avec Coluche, Michel Serrault, Jean Yanne, Michel Auclair, Françoise Fabian, Mimi Coutelier et Darry Cowl
Le Dernier Voyage (2020) de Romain Quirot avec Hugo Becker, Paul Hamy, Lya Oussadit-Lessert, Jean Reno, Bruno Lochet et Émilie Gavois-Kahn
Le Dernier Métro (1980) de François Truffaut avec Catherine Deneuve, Gérard Depardieu, Heinz Bennent, Jean Poiret, Andréa Ferréol, Paulette Dubost, Jean-Louis Richard et Maurice Risch
Les cadavres ne portent pas de costard (Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid) (1982) de Carl Reiner avec Steve Martin, Rachel Ward, Carl Reiner, Reni Santoni, George Gaynes, Barbara Stanwyck, Ava Gardner, Burt Lancaster, Humphrey Bogart, Cary Grant et Ingrid Bergman
Docteur Folamour ou : comment j'ai appris à ne plus m'en faire et à aimer la bombe (Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb) (1964) de Stanley Kubrick avec Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Keenan Wynn, Slim Pickens, Peter Bull et Tracy Reed
Un homme est passé (Bad Day at Black Rock) (1955) de John Sturges avec Spencer Tracy, Robert Ryan, Anne Francis, Dean Jagger, Walter Brennan, John Ericson, Ernest Borgnine et Lee Marvin
Le Monde, la Chair et le Diable (The World, The Flesh and the Devil) (1959) de MacDougall avec Harry Belafonte, Inger Stevens et Mel Ferrer
La Belle Saison (2015) de Catherine Corsini avec Izïa Higelin, Cécile de France, Noémie Lvovsky, Kévin Azaïs, Lætitia Dosch et Benjamin Bellecour
Le Grand Embouteillage (L'ingorgo) (1979) de Luigi Comencini avec Annie Girardot, Fernando Rey, Miou-Miou, Gérard Depardieu, Ugo Tognazzi, Marcello Mastroianni, Stefania Sandrelli, Alberto Sordi, Orazio Orlando, Gianni Cavina, Harry Baer et Ángela Molina
Ariane (Love in the Afternoon) (1957) de Billy Wilder avec Gary Cooper, Audrey Hepburn, Maurice Chevalier, Van Doude, John McGiver et Lise Bourdin
Voici le temps des assassins (1956) de Julien Duvivier avec Jean Gabin, Danièle Delorme, Gérard Blain, Lucienne Bogaert, Germaine Kerjean, Gabrielle Fontan et Jean-Paul Roussillon
Séries
Castle Saison 1, 2
Des fleurs pour ta tombe - Jeunes Filles au père - Amis à la vie, à la mort - Sexe, Scandale et Politique - Calcul glacial - La Piste du vaudou - Crimes dans la haute - Mémoires d’outre-tombe - Où est Angela ? - Double face - La Mort à crédit - Quitte ou Double - L'Enfer de la mode - L'Escroc au cœur tendre - L'auteur qui m'aimait - Pour l'amour du sang - Dernières paroles
Coffre à Catch
#113 : Unforgiven 2008 : Matt Hardy will not die ! - #114 : Matt Hardy champion, les débuts de Jack Swagger ! - #115 : La ECW, c'est bien, mais avec Vianney c'est mieux ! - #116 : Maryse : Pourquoi es-tu si belle? - # 117 : All Star Main Event + Gérard Lenorman !
James May : Notre Homme au Japon
Allez ! - Chou farci - Déodorant - Salut Bim ! - Le garçon de la pêche - Prune salée
Friends Saison 8
Celui qui venait de dire oui - Celui qui avait un sweat rouge - Celui qui découvrait sa paternité - Celui qui avait une vidéo - Celui qui draguait Rachel - Celui qui perturbait Halloween - Celui qui voulait garder Rachel - Celui qui engageait une strip-teaseuse - Celui qui avait fait courir la rumeur - Celui qui défendait sa sœur - Celui qui ne voulait pas aller plus loin - Celui qui passait une soirée avec Rachel - Celui qui découvrait les joies du bain - Celui qui découvrait le placard secret - Celui qui visionnait la vidéo de l'accouchement - Celui qui avouait tout à Rachel - Celui qui voyait dans les feuilles de thé - Celui qui était trop positif
Inspecteur Barnaby Saison 8
Un cri dans la nuit - Les Régates de la vengeance - Requiem pour une orchidée - Pari mortel - Double vue - Le Saut de la délivrance - L'assassin est un fin gourmet - Rhapsodie macabre
L'agence tous risques Saison 4, 5
Qui est qui ? - Cowboy George - La roue de la fortune - Services en tous genres - Club privé - Harry a des ennuis - Un monde de fou - La mission de la paix - Les orages du souvenir - Un témoin capital : 1re partie - Condamnation : 2e partie - Exécution : 3e partie - Match au sommet - Théorie de la révolution - Mort sur ordonnance - Une vieille amitié
Columbo Saison 2
Rançon pour un homme mort - Requiem pour une star
Les Petits Meurtres d'Agatha Christie Saison 3
Jusqu'à ce que la mort nous sépare - Meurtres du troisième type
Affaires Sensibles
Algues vertes : le danger qui empoisonne la Bretagne - James Jesus Angleton : paranoïa à la CIA - THE GRIM SLEEPER : Le faucheur en embuscade 1985-2007 - La création du festival de Cannes - 2000, les Jeux paralympiques de Sydney : la fraude des basketteurs espagnols
Bardot
Une enfant sage - B.B - La Madrague - Le papillon - Bébé - La vérité
Les Enquêtes de Morse saison 9
Mascarade - Prélude - Sorties de scène
James May's Cars of the People Saison 1, 2
Transports et totalitarisme - Rien n'arrête les nouilles - Les voitures qui nous ont toujours fait rêver - La puissance de la vapeur - 4x4 - Boom (et effondrement) d'après-guerre
The Grand Tour Saison 4, 3, 1, 2
The Grand Tour présente… Seamen - The Grand Tour présente… La Chasse au trésor - Eaux salées et eaux douces - The Grand Tour: A Scandi Flick - Virée à l’Italienne - Spéciale Colombie : Première partie - Spéciale Colombie ; Deuxième partie - Oh, Canada - Coup de vieux
Livres
Orage de chaleur de Richard Castle
Cinq Gars pour Singapour de Jean Bruce
Lucky Luke, tome 27 : Le 20ème de cavalerie de Morris et René Goscinny
Garôden de Jirô Taniguchi et Baku Yumemakura
Une enquête du commissaire Dupin : Etrange printemps aux Glénan de Jean-Luc Bannalec
Détective Conan, tome 9 de Gôshô Aoyama
Il était une fois… Le cinéma, Tome 1 : Des frères Lumière à Charlie Chaplin de Jean-Pierre Georges et Dentiblu
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