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lawleonard · 20 days ago
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𝐌𝐚𝐲 𝐢𝐬 𝐌𝐨𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐜𝐲𝐜𝐥𝐞 𝐒𝐚𝐟𝐞𝐭𝐲 𝐀𝐰𝐚𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐬𝐬 𝐌𝐨𝐧𝐭𝐡 𝐢𝐧 𝐍𝐞𝐰 𝐉𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐞𝐲
With warmer Spring weather, more motorcyclists are hitting the roads in New Jersey. To prevent accidents, drivers and motorcyclists both need to be aware of each other on New Jersey roads to ensure safety. At a May 1st event in Asbury Park, Wendy Berk, CEO for the Brain Injury Alliance of New Jersey (BIANJ) stated, “May is Motorcycle Safety Awareness Month, a time to highlight the importance of sharing the road and staying alert." Safety tips include:
*Drivers need to check their blind spots *Provide enough space between your vehicle and a motorcyclist, especially during wet and windy conditions *Always use turn signals *Avoid “lane-splitting” as motor vehicles may not see your motorcycle or anticipate your sudden presence
Driver inattention, unsafe speed, and alcohol use are typically noted as contributing circumstances in fatal motorcycle crashes. Indeed, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) “Motorcycle riders continue to be overrepresented in fatal traffic crashes. In 2023, there were 6,335 motorcyclists killed — 15% of all traffic fatalities. NHTSA data show that this is the highest number of motorcyclists killed since at least 1975.”
Todd’s team of experienced personal injury lawyers are relentless, and will not stop until their clients get the justice and compensation they deserve. Todd and his team take great pride in doing their best to help their clients when they need us the most.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐧𝐜𝐞𝐝 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐑𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐥𝐞𝐬𝐬 𝐏𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐥 𝐈𝐧𝐣𝐮𝐫𝐲 𝐋𝐚𝐰𝐲𝐞𝐫𝐬
If you are seriously injured in a car accident, or lost a loved one, our team of experienced personal injury attorneys can offer the advice you can trust and need during this uncertain and difficult time. Todd and his team have over 35 years of experience handling all types of serious accidents, including truck and car accidents, motorcycle accidents, slip and fall accidents, pedestrian accidents, Uber accidents, Lyft accidents, wrongful death, and workers' compensation claims. Our firm will fight to make sure your rights are fully protected and you obtain the maximum compensation you deserve. Todd has been privileged to represent thousands of seriously injured clients and their families throughout New Jersey, and has successfully recovered over $100 Million on their behalf. Please call us now for a FREE, confidential consultation at our Headquarters in Denville, NJ at (973) 920-7900. To read more about our law firm's results, please visit https://www.lawleonard.com/results. 𝐎𝐔𝐑 𝐂𝐋𝐈𝐄𝐍𝐓𝐒 𝐂𝐎𝐌𝐄 𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐒𝐓!!
𝐑𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐥𝐞𝐬𝐬. 𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐧𝐜𝐞. 𝐑𝐞𝐬𝐮𝐥𝐭𝐬.™
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jaztice · 1 year ago
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Villainous Violence and Purposeful Power: An Essay On Child Abuse In Superhero Stories
So I wrote an essay a while ago and posted it on my website here, but I figured all y'all tumblr girlies might enjoy it too, so I've decided to post it to the hellsite as well. Enjoy my angry ramblings <3 CWs: mentions and descriptions of child abuse, mentions and descriptions of murder, mentions of rape
There’s a trend I often see in popular superhero media that has always rubbed me the wrong way. Specifically, in movies and TV shows, superheroes, if abused as children, are rarely if ever abused by their biological parents. Supervillains, on the other hand, as well as many antiheroes and even some non-villain antagonists, often are. It’s a trend I first noticed in the TV show Daredevil, which premiered on Netflix in 2015 and can currently be viewed on Disney+, but since noticing it, I’ve been unable to stop noticing it in other popular pieces of superhero media. I’ve seen it in the Jessica Jones TV show, the popular Batman movie The Dark Knight, in other less popular characters from the Batman mythos, the first season of The Umbrella Academy TV show, and even in J. Jonah Jameson of the Spider-Man stories. Even when considering examples of heroes suffering child abuse, like Bruce Banner (a.k.a. The Hulk), something always felt amiss to me in these representations. So naturally, I decided to dig deeper.
It’s important to note that trauma has been used in superhero media as an inciting incident for both heroes and villains since the genre’s inception. Popular superheroes like Bruce Wayne and Peter Parker often become heroes due to witnessing the unjust death(s) of their caretakers or people important to them. Child abuse, however, is a very specific sort of trauma, and child abuse from specifically one’s biological/birth parents even moreso. Natasha Romanov/Black Widow of the MCU’s Avengers certainly suffers child abuse, but it’s not perpetrated by her birth parents—instead, she’s abused by the mysterious organization that created her as a living weapon. All the kids in The Umbrella Academy are undoubtedly emotionally abused and neglected by their father, but he is very specifically their adopted father. To reference yet another Marvel Netflix TV show, Danny Rand from Iron Fist does suffer from child abuse; however, it comes at the hands of the monks who rescued him from a plane crash, not his own parents.
In terms of villains being abused as children by their biological parents, on the other hand, there are quite a few that come to mind. Wilson Fisk from Daredevil is a prime example, suffering from emotional and implied physical abuse from his father, until Wilson kills Fisk Sr. by beating him to death with a hammer. Kilgrave from the first season of Jessica Jones is experimented on by his parents until he develops the power to control people with vocal commands (and then uses it to escape their grasp). Trish Walker from Jessica Jones—who, granted, doesn’t become a true “villain” until season 3—is abused in a multitude of ways by her mother and acting agent. Leonard Peabody, the villain of season 1 of The Umbrella Academy, has a physically abusive father who he, similar to Wilson Fisk, beats to death before being imprisoned for 12 years for the murder. Even the Joker claims to have had an abusive father in Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight (though his actual past and the veracity of any of his statements in the movie are up for debate).
Even more interesting are the instances in which superheroes (or at least non-supervillains) are abused as children. The most notable, of course, is Bruce Banner, though this may come as a surprise to anyone unfamiliar with his character from the comics. After all, only one of the movies about him, Hulk (2003), really addressed the child abuse aspect of his past, and most movies about the Hulk aren’t very popular in the first place. Other instances include some members of the Batfamily, Jason Todd and Cassandra Cain, who both had fraught childhoods due to the actions and abuse of their biological parents, and J. Jonah Jameson, the notorious head editor of the Daily Bugle in the Spider-Man mythos (and a real piece of work), who, according to Wikipedia, had an abusive father who was also a war hero in the U.S. military. In the cases of Jason Todd and Cassandra Cain, both of these characters often vacillate between hero and villain status in the comics, and additionally, they have almost no appearances in popular superhero media (and certainly not as a main character). Jameson’s history is even more curious; his father’s hero status and abusive behavior towards his son and wife explains Jameson’s hesitation in fully believing Spider-Man is a hero, and yet in later editions of the Spider-Man storyline, it’s clarified that his abusive father is in fact his uncle and foster father (his biological father had to, quoting from the J. Jonah Jameson Wikipedia page, “leave his son behind for undisclosed reasons”).
Bruce Banner, however, I found to be a fascinating case study for this topic. According to the Wikipedia page for the Hulk, “As a child, Banner's father Brian often got mad and physically abused both Banner and his mother, creating the psychological complex of fear, anger, and the fear of anger and the destruction it can cause that underlies the character.” In the aforementioned 2003 movie, Bruce’s father tries to kill his young son, believing him to be a danger, but instead kills Bruce’s mother when she tries to stop him, causing Bruce to repress most of his childhood memories. In both instances, this abuse is considered one of the driving forces behind the Hulk, a monstrous, destructive, and very green force within Bruce Banner that reveals itself when Bruce becomes too emotional, excited, or angry. However, the Hulk is almost always considered a wild factor in situations, both out of control and often unable to be fully controlled. It is useful and even heroic, yes, and Bruce does manage to control it in some stories, but the Hulk is ultimately violent and destructive. That is what makes Bruce’s superpower useful. The Hulk is considered dangerous, volatile, and sought after by other violent factions like the military (and even, that one time, a gladiatorial ring). The result of Bruce’s abuse is a violent, uncontrollable, rage-filled monster, and only in controlling this monster can Bruce be considered a hero; otherwise, he is simply considered a threat.
Compare this to Wilson Fisk in the Daredevil TV show, who is depicted as a soft-spoken, deeply traumatized, and terrifyingly violent man in charge of a criminal empire. Wilson, like Bruce, has developed emotional and aggression issues as a result of his child abuse, and though he uses these issues throughout the course of the show to both his own benefit and detriment, he is always cast in the role of a villain. Additionally, Wilson only attacked and killed his father to stop him from beating his mother, and one possible reading of his character might be that both his need for safety and control and his drive to protect others are what drove him to become the leader of a criminal empire with the intention of reshaping Hell’s Kitchen.
What, you might ask, is the point of listing all these different depictions of abuse in superhero stories? To that, I ask you to examine the trend of agency in these depictions. In the case of those cast in more heroic lights (Bruce Banner, perhaps even J. Jonah Jameson), these children suffered from abuse but had little to no hand in stopping or escaping from that abuse. The more extreme the action taken to stop or escape the abuse, however, the more likely the individual is to be cast in the role of villain. Jason Todd and Cassandra Cain both ran away from their abusers, but the former was killed as a child, came back to life, and became a crime lord, while the latter eventually killed her own parents and then became a notorious assassin. In both these instances, Jason and Cassandra are cast as villains in their respective storylines. Trish Walker, though she doesn’t start out as a villain by any means, ultimately becomes one due to her desperation to prove she can save not only herself, but also others, due to her childhood abuse. Kilgrave develops his powers and immediately uses them to perform absolutely heinous acts, including repeatedly raping the main and titular character, Jessica Jones, as well as killing his own parents as an adult. And of course, Leonard Peabody and Wilson Fisk kill their abusive fathers as young children in brutal, violent ways.
Let me make something clear; I think the Daredevil TV show is a fantastic piece of superhero media. But it still falls prey to this trend I’m describing even in its attempt to deconstruct it. Wilson Fisk is not painted in a purely villainous light during the show, at least not for the murder of his father. Even though the heroic protagonist hopes to use this fact (once he discovers it) to put him away in jail, the other protagonists argue that Fisk was, perhaps, justified in his actions. Fisk is a character we’re meant to understand and even sympathize with; the juxtaposition of his motivations against the hero’s motivations are what make the story so compelling. And yet, Wilson Fisk is undeniably a villain, because even though his violent rages and desire to help others allowed him to save his mother, they have also led him to murder innocents in the name of creating a better Hell’s Kitchen. Despite his “good” intentions, he is a villain. He is the villain of this story. And the abuse he suffered at the hands of his father isn’t the reason he is considered a villain, but it is the driving force behind how he became one.
Perhaps it’s easier for people to give a backstory of child abuse to villains. Most people have no knowledge or understanding of what it’s like to grow up in a home where your parents, your birth parents, the people society claims should love and care for you and keep you safe, hurt and scream at and scare you. Perhaps these people cannot fathom how someone wholly good can be created in such an environment. In this way, attaching child abuse to villains is viciously puritanical in its narrative efficiency. When this is the story you see, the implied lesson is that good people always come from good parents (from “good stock”), and bad people come from those who are themselves bad. It is simple and easy to stick to the black and white tale of good vs. evil, hero vs. villain, to repeat (even unknowingly) the idea that good people beget heroes, and bad people beget villains. To show a superhero as flawed is compelling, and to show a supervillain as virtuous is revolutionary. In fact, even in today’s world of superhero story reimaginings (e.g., The Boys TV show, the Invincible TV show), it is far more common for heroes to live safe and healthy home lives before being thrust into their trauma, and it is far more likely for villains to have suffered abuse from their earliest moments.
I would argue it’s also more “tasteful” to write off those suffering from abuse as villainous if they kill their abusers. Suffering and being saved, like Bruce Banner, creates someone who could become a hero, as long as the emotional results of their abuse remain monitored and controlled. Suffering and daring to rise up, to take your power back from those who have hurt you and save yourself, on the other hand? That is the mark of a villain. Villains wrest power from those that hurt them with bloody hammers and bruised fists. And because in so many pieces of superhero media, heroes do not kill, they are doomed by that very action to be the villains of an inherently violent story.
It is a sign of great and unrealized privilege to write stories that center around violence and immediately villainize those that kill. Especially those that kill as children, and especially those that kill their abusers and tormentors. Superheroes have always been larger-than-life figures, bastions of hope and justice that people are meant to admire, so it makes sense that killing others would not be something they do with abandon. But these abused children were not killing with abandon. For those who have been abused by the very people society claims should love them, there are few depictions of how to survive such abuse in superhero media. Either victims of child abuse are meant to stay helpless and sad, props to be saved and then to be regulated and controlled lest their violent, traumatized urges hurt others too, or they are doomed to become villains from the start for daring to deliver a child’s justice to their abusers. After all, in these kinds of stories, killing is wrong, no matter what.
Perhaps now you can see why this would rub me the wrong way.
The world is not black and white. The world is not good vs. evil. It is a privilege to grow up loved and safe and happy and accepted, and most people don’t even realize this because it’s more common for that to already be the case. And for the world to be so safe and happy is a truly wonderful thing. But when the people who grow up without realizing their own privilege then saturate the popular superhero mythos with images of children murdering their abusive parents and becoming villains for heroes to fight, what do they expect to happen? What would you do if your favorite stories said your only two choices were “suffer in silence and control your violent urges” or “take action and become an unforgivable villain?” How is that message any better than the rhetoric used by abusers everywhere to keep those they hurt in line?
I implore those writing superhero stories to read this and think. Think about violence, about killing and murder, about abuse, in the stories you are crafting. Think before you create your heroes and villains, and have empathy for those who were, perhaps, not as lucky as you growing up. Think about the reality being created in your story, where problems can and are often encouraged to be solved with violence, and then consider what it means to villainize those who are violent and suffer violence from their earliest moments. Think about how you use abuse in your story, with your supers and their powers, between your heroes and villains. And think about why suffering abuse at the hands of your birth parents seems to be so different from suffering abuse at the hands of someone or something external, and why it’s alright for heroes to attack and target their abusers, but damning if villains do it to theirs.
Think about what it means to take your power back in a world where violence is not only commonplace, but a viable option for solving problems, and then examine why a child killing their abusive parent is considered a villainous act. Are you afraid of what children in this situation will learn if such an act is not considered evil?
Should you be?
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denimbex1986 · 1 year ago
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'It can be said that Christopher Nolan has always known how to end a movie. From Leonard Shelby concluding his journey where it began and asking “now where was I?” in Memento to the topper that wouldn’t stop spinning in Inception, this is a filmmaker who looks for the most potent image that will burrow its way into audiences’ heads.
Yet the final scene of his most ambitious film to date is something more impressive, if altogether disquieting. Oppenheimer definitely implants a grim idea in the viewer’s mind, but it does so by giving the uncanny impression that we are seeing it through J. Robert Oppenheimer’s eyes first. Standing by the duck pond that Albert Einstein (Tom Conti) has been consigned to by posterity, and where Oppie will be joining him in exile sooner than he realizes, the man credited with fathering the atomic bomb asks if Albert recalls Edward Teller’s theory about a nuclear explosion triggering the end of the world.
“I remember it well, what of it?” Einstein asks. “I believe we did,” Oppenheimer says while an IMAX camera plummets so deeply into Cillian Murphy’s blue eyes that the viewer feels like we are being left to drown in his despair—despair at the prospect of nuclear war, despair at self-annihilation, and the lingering, eternal despair that comes with the realization that for the rest of time on this planet, these weapons will be at humanity’s disposal. It’s a chilling signoff for a film that plumbs the ambiguities of Oppenheimer’s life without offering easy answers. While Nolan made a picture accessible to almost any viewer, he refused to provide any degree of comfort, reassurance, or easily memeable sentiment and message.
Which is one of the many reasons I’ve long been skeptical of the common criticism about Oppenheimer being too long or that “the trial” in the last hour dragged on and on. More than once, I’ve been told the movie could have ended after Trinity, the first successful detonation of a nuclear weapon on July 16, 1945 which is shot and edited with all the tension of a thriller in Nolan and Jennifer Lame’s hands. It should be noted that the Trinity test, and the exuberant satisfaction Oppenheimer briefly feels toward his accomplishment as fellow scientists hoist him on their shoulders before the American flag, occurs at exactly the two-hour mark in the film.
The implication, therefore, seems to be that Oppenheimer should have ended on a note of triumph—a disastrous choice, to put it mildly, for the story of engineering a doomsday weapon—or that the movie could have glossed over Oppenheimer’s later years. Why should we care if Oppenheimer’s security clearance with the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) was revoked, or that the architect of his downfall, Lewis Strauss (Robert Downey Jr.), suffered his own public humiliation?
The answer, of course, is that it is these turns of events which elevate a riveting piece of biographic storytelling into a cinematic prophecy of doom that on its own will likely be with us for many years to come.
Living with the Bomb
The most crucial thing to understand about why Oppenheimer went on for a full third hour after World War II concluded in the shadow of a mushroom cloud is that there is no credible way to discuss this man without delving into the fact that the government which entrusted him to build the device also pillared and besmirched his name to the point of infamy.
During a panel with Meet the Press’ Chuck Todd on the 78th anniversary of the Trinity test, Nobel Prize Laureate and theoretical physicist Kip Thorne said he knew scientists early in his career who demurred from pursuing a public life in government service or policy-making because of how Oppenheimer was treated.
Said Thorne, “I was as much influenced by my father who dealt with McCarthyism as the chair of a faculty in Utah at the time. We had a governor who was dictating to the board of trustees to fire faculty with left wing tendencies. So I went through this in my own family.”
The implication that Oppenheimer was a traitor, or at least untrustworthy with American secrets due to his political leanings, sent a chill through academia and government institutions that lasted for generations. With a simple letter speciously raising doubts about Oppenheimer’s loyalty to his country, William L. Borden (who was working as a proxy for Strauss) was able to discredit and muzzle the most respected scientific mind of the 20th century in American life; the man who ended World War II and brought our boys home. If the far-right could do that to him because he expressed vocal opinions about the hydrogen bomb, no one was safe.
So any biopic about Oppenheimer legitimately needed to cover a life that eerily matched the arc of Greek tragedy to a tee. After all, historians Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin named their definitive biography on the man American Prometheus, and what is a Promethean tale if you skip the part where the gods condemn him to be chained to a rock so his guts will be pecked out each morning?
Oppenheimer dramatizes these elements, and does so with spectacular detail and specificity. Even biographer Bird remarked with astonishment at the same Trinity anniversary panel that Nolan did something he and Sherwin had not: he went through the transcript of Lewis Strauss’ failed confirmation hearing and discovered a surprise witness named Dr. David Hill (Rami Malek in the movie), who was called on to essentially smear an unprepared Strauss with the same kind of one-sided testimony Strauss used to decimate Oppenheimer in his security clearance hearing five years earlier. The dramatic irony that this was done as revenge by the scientific community against the political class’ most envious party was not lost on Nolan.
In fact, it creates one-half of the climactic crescendo wherein Strauss raves after his Cabinet post begins slipping away that “I gave [Oppenheimer] exactly what he wanted: to be remembered for Trinity! Not Hiroshima! Not Nagasaki! He should be thanking me!” Of course Strauss’ fury also articulates why the film is so much richer and, ultimately, ambiguous. It explores part and parcel the facts of Oppenheimer’s life, and in doing so invites you to descend down into the pits of Hades.
A Trial Without a Jury or a Verdict
The most powerful sequence in Oppenheimer arguably occurs at the top of the third hour. After an exhilarating taste of success and triumph, Oppenheimer is left out of the final, gruesome moments of World War II. Two nuclear bombs fell on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in the span of three days in August 1945. Two hundred twenty thousand lives were snuffed out in biblical fire or the lingering, years-long horror of radiation poisoning. And J. Robert learns about it just like every other American—by listening to the radio.
Then comes Nolan’s cinematic flourish. He lets you live in Oppie’s nightmare just as it is beginning to coalesce. While giving a patriotic speech crowing about the success of the nuclear weapons’ use on Japanese cities, Oppenheimer’s unconvincing stabs at jingoism fade away as he can only hear the sound of a woman screaming; then comes a bright light as the face of a young girl melts away. It is a new world for Oppenheimer, America, and the whole the human species. But only after he has let the genie out of the bottle does the film’s interpretation of Oppenheimer begin to seriously grapple with the long term ramifications of that release.
There is an argument to be made that Oppenheimer should have shown the nuclear holocaust inflicted on the Japanese people. I respect this opinion, although Nolan’s choice to trap you in Oppenheimer’s large, yet still limited, vantage point is the dramatically right one. It took this scientist years to come to terms with the horror of what he wrought on Japan, and the movie lets it slowly seep in.
There is also the uncomfortable fact that this story is bigger than just World War II. In the film, Oppenheimer considers the irony that his former tutor opined in the press that the nuclear bomb not so much ended World War II as it began what we now call the Cold War with the Soviet Union (which really happened). But the point of the Oppenheimer film is that what those scientists at Los Alamos did was bigger than just World War II or the Cold War—or even the 20th century itself.
Oppenheimer built, sharpened, and fastened a global Sword of Damocles above our collective heads, and it hangs there still. It will, in fact, hang there forever, unless one nation finally pushes the button and invites the inevitable response.
The last hour is about Oppenheimer, as a character and a film, coming to terms with that legacy. This is not a typical biopic about a great man, but a portrait of a soul damned by unspoken regrets and second-guesses that he never articulated to anyone. The film even posits Oppenheimer went through the humiliation of an unwinnable security clearance hearing as some form of penance for fathering the bomb.
“Did you think if you let them tar and feather you that the world will forgive you?” his wife Kitty (Emily Blunt) asks. “It won’t.”
“We’ll see” is Oppenheimer’s cryptic response. While we suspect Oppenheimer’s fight for political survival was not quite so history book-minded, the reality is he truly did tell the President of the United States “I have blood on my hands,” and spent the rest of his brief public life attempting to steer the United States away from the infinitely more deadly hydrogen bomb and the arms race it inevitably courted. He was then banished to the duck pond next to Einstein for his troubles.
Dramatically seeing that destruction is as cathartic as it is disturbing, with Jason Clarke’s government attorney Roger Robb embodying Zeus’ hungry eagle which is always eager to feast on Prometheus’ liver. It should be noted, this context also is what allows Kitty Oppenheimer, a brilliant woman whose mind is left to curdle by the oppressive expectations of her era, to finally speak candidly in one of the best scenes in the movie.
In the end though, the finale asks the audience to interrogate Oppenheimer the man. Can you forgive him? Should you even bother entertaining the idea? The real man never publicly admitted remorse over what happened in Japan, and whether he felt profound guilt or not, he still ushered in a nuclear age without end. There is no escape from the future Oppenheimer has wrought—not even for J. Robert Oppenheimer, who is professionally and spiritually destroyed by the legacy he pursued with wide open arms.
The last hour of Oppenheimer is not about the father of the atomic bomb; it’s about the father of our tomorrow and each and every one that will come after. Until one day, maybe it won’t.'
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incrediblyfastfilms · 6 months ago
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Let the Right One In (2008) written by John Ajvide Lyndqvist (from his novel) directed by Tomas Alfredson produced by Frida Asp starring Kare Hedbrant Lina Leandersson Per Ragnar Henrik Dahl Ika Nord cinematography by Hoyte Van Hoytema edited by Tomas Alfredson Dino Jonsater music by Johan Soderqvist
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W A R of the W O R L D S (2005) written by Josh Friedman David Koepp directed by Steven Spielberg produced by Kathleen Kennedy Damian Collier Paula Wagner Colin Wilson starring Tom Cruise Tim Robbins Dakota Fanning Miranda Otto Justin Chatwin Amy Ryan cinematography by Janusz Kaminski edited by Michael Kahn music by John Williams
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Hannibal (2001) written by Steve Zaillian David Mamet directed by Ridley Scott produced by Martha De Laurentiis Dino De Laurentiis Ridley Scott starring Anthony Hopkins Julianne Moore Ray Liotta Gary Oldman Frankie Faison Giancarlo Giannini Francesca Neri Zeljko Ivanek Hazelle Goodman cinematography by John Mathieson editing by Pietro Scalia music by Hans Zimmer
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The Hunger (1983) written by Ivan Davis Michael Thomas (from the novel by Whitley Strieber) directed by Tony Scott produced by Richard Shepherd starring Catherine Deneuve Susan Sarandon David Bowie Cliff De Young cinematography by Stephen Goldblatt edited by Pamela Power music by Michel Rubini Denny Jaeger
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DON'T LOOK NOW (1973) written by Allan Scott Chris Bryant (based on the novella by Daphne Du Maurier) directed by Nicholas Roeg produced by Peter Katz starring Donald Sutherland Julie Christie Hilary Mason Clelia Matania Renato Scarpa cinematography by Anthony Richmond editing by Graeme Clifford music by Pino Donnagio
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Prisoners (2013) written by Aaron Guzikowski directed by Denis Villeneuve produced by Broderick Johnson Kira Davis Andrew A. Kosove Adam Kolbrenner starring Jake Gylenhaal Hugh Jackman Maria Bello Viola Davis Melissa Leo Terrence Howard Paul Dano cinematography by Roger Deakins edited by Joel Cox Gary Roach music by Johann Johannsson
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The Company of Wolves (1984) written by Neil Jordan Angela Carter (from the short story in Angela Carter's book "The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories") directed by Neil Jordan produced by Chris Brown Stephen Woolley starring Sarah Patterson David Warner Angela Lansbury Micha Bergese Stephen Rea cinematography by Bryan Loftus edited by Rodney Holland music by George Fenton
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A Quiet Place (2018) written by Bryan Woods Scott Beck John Krasinski directed by John Krasinski produced by Michael Bay Andrew Form Brad Fuller starring Emily Blunt John Krasinski Millicent Simmonds Noah Jupe Cade Woodward cinematography by Charlotte Bruus Christensen edited by Christopher Tellefsen music by Marco Beltrami
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W O R L D W A R Z (2013) written by Matthew Michael Carnahan Drew Goddard & Damon Lindelof (from the novel novel by Max Brooks) directed by Marc Forster produced by Brad Pitt Dede Gardner Jeremy Kleiner Ian Bryce starring Brad Pitt Mireille Enos Daniella Kertesz James Badge Dale Peter Capaldi Pierfrancesco Favino Ludi Boeken Matthew Fox Fana Mokoena David Morse cinematography by Ben Seresin edited by Roger Barton Matt Chesse music by Marco Beltrami
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LOST H i g h w a y (1997) written by David Lynch Barry Gifford directed by David Lynch produced by Mary Sweeney Tom Sternberg Deepak Nayar starring Bill Pullman Patricia Arquette Balthazar Getty Natasha Gregson Wagner Robert Loggia Robert Blake Michael Massee Jack Nance Henry Rollins Gary Busey cinematography by Peter Deming edited by Mary Sweeney music by Angelo Badalamenti
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N e a r D a r k (1987) written by Kathryn Bigelow Eric Red directed by Kathryn Bigelow produced by Edward S. Feldman Steven-Charles Jaffe Charles Meeker starring Adrian Pasdar Jenny Wright Lance Henriksen Bill Paxton Jenette Goldstein Tim Thomerson cinematography by Adam Greenberg edited by Howard Smith music by Tangerine Dream
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S e c o n d s (1966) written by Lewis John Carlino (from the novel by David Ely) directed by John Frankenheimer produced by John Frankenheimer Edward Lewis starring Rock Hudson Salome Jens John Randolph Will Geer Jeff Corey Murray Hamilton Frances Reid cinemtography by Tak Fujimoto edited by David Newhouse Ferris Webster music by Jerry Goldsmith
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Nosferatu The Vampyre (1979) written by Werner Herzog w/ Tom Shachtman Martje Grohmann directed by Werner Herzog produced by Walter Saxer Werner Herzog Michael Gruskoff starring Klaus Kinski Isabelle Adjani Bruno Ganz Roland Topor Walter Landengast Martje Grohmann cinematography by Jorg Schmidt-Reitwein edited by Beate Mainka-Jellinghaus music by Florian Fricke Popol Vuh
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30 DAYS of NIGHT (2007) written by Steve Niles Stuart Beattie Brian Nelson (from the graphic novel by Steve Niles Ben Templesmith) directed by David Slade produced by Sam Raimi Robert Tapert starring Josh Hartnett Melissa George Danny Huston Ben Foster Mark Boone Jr. Amber Sainsbury Megan Franich Manu Bennett cinematography by Jo Willems edited by Art Jones music by Brian Reitzell
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f r e a k s (1932) written by Willis Goldbleck Leon Gordon (from the short story "Spurs" by Tod Robbins) directed and produced by Tod Browning starring Wallace Ford Leila Hyams Olga Baclanova Roscoe Ates cinematography by Merritt B. Gerstad edited by Basil Wrangell
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the M i s t (2007) written and directed by Frank Darabont (from the novella by Stephen King) produced by Frank Darabont Martin Shefer Liz Glotzer starring Thomas Jane Laurie Holden Marcia Gay Hardin Andre Braugher Toby Jones William Sadler Frances Sternhagen Jeffrey DeMunn cinematography by Rohn Schmidt edited by Hunter M. Via music by Mark Isham
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Invasion of the BODY SNATCHERS (1956) written by Daniel Mainwaring (from the novel by Jack Finney) directed by Don Siegel produced by Walter Wanger starring Kevin McCarthy Dana Wynter Larry Gates King Donovan Carolyn Jones Jean Willes Ralph Dumke cinematography by Ellsworth Fredericks edited by Robert S. Eisen music by Carmen Dragon
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ali3nter-selfships · 7 months ago
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f/o list
small notes ::
• not ok with sharing romantic f/os! ( srry :[ )
• romantic f/os will be mostly seperated by interests
• italicized = from my hyperfixation / special interest
• bolded = absolute favs, always #1 to me
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romantic
❥ Eloni / Green 1010 (No Straight Roads)
❥ Eve / Nadia (No Straight Roads)
❥ Mayday (No Straight Roads)
❥ Billy (Burn, 2019)
❥ Clapton Davis (Detention)
❥ David (Long Gone Heroes)
❥ Derek Danforth (The Beekeeper)
❥ Franklin Fox (57 Seconds)
❥ Josh Futturman (Future Man)
⤷ Other Timelines :: J-Futz, J26, Nut Face Josh
❥ Laser Allgood (The Kids Are All Right)
❥ Max (The Rusted [Short Film])
❥ Mike Schmidt (Five Nights At Freddy's)
❥ Nick Brady (Escobar: Paradise Lost)
❥ Sean Anderson (Journey 2)
❥ Steve Leonard (Cirque Du Freak: The Vampires Assistant [Movie])
❥ Teddy Atkins (7 Days In Havana)
❥ Toby Mitchell (Tragedy Girls)
❥ Todd (Best Buy SNL Skit)
❥ Travis Wilker (Ape [Short film])
❥ Boy Jerry (Hatchetfield Musicals)
❥ Gary Goldstein (Hatchetfield Musicals)
❥ Paul Matthews (Hatchetfield Musicals)
❥ Richie Lipschitz (Hatchetfield Musicals)
❥ Superman (Holy Musical B@tman!)
❥ Wiggog Y'rath / Wiggly (Hatchetfield Musicals)
❥ ? Gale Hawthorne (The Hunger Games) ?
❥ Katniss Everdeen (The Hunger Games)
❥ Peeta Mellark (The Hunger Games)
❥ Ickett Del La Rosa [Original Character, Village]
❥ John (FNAF Novels)
❥ Gideon Graves (Scott Pilgrim)
❥ Hunter (The Owl House)
❥ Kermit The Frog
❥ Mera Salamin (Epithet Erased)
❥ Principal Of The Thing (Baldi's Basics)
tags are "(character) coded" (ex : 'mike schmidt coded')
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platonic
☀︎ Finnick Odair (The Hunger Games)
☀︎Johanna Mason (The Hunger Games)
☀︎ Lucas Lee (Scott Pilgrim)
☀︎ Mischa Bachinski (Ride The Cyclone)
tags are "(character) is my best friend" (ex : 'mischa bachinski is my best friend')
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familial
☆~ Lefty (FNAF:PS) [Parent]
☆~ The Puppet/Marionette (FNAF) [Parent]
☆~ Roxie Richter (Scott Pilgrim) [Cousin]
☆~ Miguel O'Hara (Spiderman : Across the Spiderverse) [Father]
tags are "(character) is my (familial role)" (ex : 'miguel ohara is my dad')
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ivorydragoness44 · 2 years ago
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I guess I'm writing fanfictions in sets of three now??
So after Jack Frost, Doctor Leonard McCoy, and Seth Clearwater...
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fewbat · 1 year ago
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The Fourth Annual Davey Awards - The Nominees!
Hello! Every year I hold the annual Davey Awards for brilliance in motion pictures that move. This is our fourth year, and it promises to be one that is a year. Let's get to the nominees. Please note that there are some big movies (The Boy and the Heron, Poor Things, The Iron Claw, Ferrari, Wonka, The Taste of Things, for example) that I haven't been able to see and won't be able to see for a while. However, The Boy and the Heron's score was released to streaming services recently and I like the little impatient so-and-so that I am listened to it, and felt compelled to include it for consideration. Without further adieu:
THE 4TH ANNUAL DAVEY AWARDS® NOMINEES
BEST PICTURE
THE ADULTS
ASTEROID CITY
BARBIE
BLACKBERRY
THE HOLDOVERS
KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON
MAESTRO
MAY DECEMBER
OPPENHEIMER
PAST LIVES
BEST DIRECTOR
GRETA GERWIG - BARBIE
MATT JOHNSON - BLACKBERRY
MARTIN SCORSESE - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON
TODD HAYNES - MAY DECEMBER
CHRISTOPHER NOLAN - OPPENHEIMER
KELLY REICHARDT - SHOWING UP
BEST ACTOR - LEAD
MICHAEL CERA - THE ADULTS as ERIC
HANNAH GROSS - THE ADULTS as RACHEL
SANDRA HÜLLER - ANATOMY OF A FALL as SANDRA VOYTER
JASON SCHWARTZMAN - ASTEROID CITY as AUGIE STEENBECK/JONES HALL
PAUL GIAMATTI - THE HOLDOVERS as PAUL HUNHAM
LEONARDO DI CAPRIO - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON as ERNEST BURKHART
LILY GLADSTONE - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON as MOLLY KYLE
JONATHAN GROFF - KNOCK AT THE CABIN as ERIC
BRADLEY COOPER - MAESTRO as LEONARD BERNSTEIN
SALMA HAYEK-PINAULT - MAGIC MIKE’S LAST DANCE as MAXANDRA MENDOZA
NATALIE PORTMAN - MAY DECEMBER as ELIZABETH BERRY
GRETA LEE - PAST LIVES as NORA MOON
DAVID JONSSON - RYE LANE as DOM
VIVIAN OPARAH - RYE LANE as YAS
RUPERT FRIEND - THE SWAN as NARRATOR/PETER WATSON
TEYANA TAYLOR - A THOUSAND AND ONE as INEZ DE LA PAZ
BEST ACTOR - SUPPORTING
SOPHIA LILLIS - THE ADULTS as MAGGIE
MILO MACHADO-GRANER - ANATOMY OF A FALL as DANIEL MALESKI
RACHEL McADAMS - ARE YOU THERE GOD? IT’S ME, MARGARET as BARBARA SIMON
RYAN GOSLING - BARBIE as KEN
KATE McKINNON - BARBIE as WEIRD BARBIE
GLENN HOWERTON - BLACKBERRY as JIM BALSILLIE
KIEFER SUTHERLAND - THE CAINE MUTINY COURT-MARTIAL as QUEEG
DA’VINE JOY RANDOLPH - THE HOLDOVERS as MARY LAMB
DOMINIC SESSA - THE HOLDOVERS as ANGUS TULLY
HARRIET SANSOM HARRIS - JULES as SANDY
ROBERT DeNIRO - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON as WILLIAM KING HALE
DAVE BAUTISTA - KNOCK AT THE CABIN as LEONARD BROCHT
CHARLES MELTON - MAY DECEMBER as JOE YOO
JULIANNE MOORE - MAY DECEMBER as GRACIE ATHERTON-YOO
EMILY BLUNT - OPPENHEIMER as KITTY OPPENHEIMER
HONG CHAU - SHOWING UP as JO
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Dustin Guy Defa - THE ADULTS 
Wes Anderson, Story by Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola - ASTEROID CITY
David Hemingson - THE HOLDOVERS
Samy Burch, Story by Samy Burch & Alex Mechanik - MAY DECEMBER
Nathan Bryon & Tom Melia - RYE LANE
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Greta Gerwig & Noah Baumbach - BARBIE (Based on the toy brand by Mattel)
Matt Johnson & Matthew Miller - BLACKBERRY (Based on the book Losing Signal: The Untold Story Behind the Extraordinary Rise and Spectacular Fall of BlackBerry by Jacquie McNish and Sean Silcoff)
Eric Roth and Martin Scorsese - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON (Based on the book of the same name by David Grann)
Steve Desmond & Michael Sherman and M. Night Shyamalan - KNOCK AT THE CABIN (Based on the book The Cabin at the End of the World by Paul Tremblay)
Christopher Nolan - OPPENHEIMER (Based on the book American Prometheus by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin)
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY 
Simon Beaufils - ANATOMY OF A FALL
Jared Raab - BLACKBERRY
Jarin Blaschke, Lowell A. Meyer - KNOCK AT THE CABIN
Matthew Libatique - MAESTRO
Olan Collardy - RYE LANE
BEST EDITING
Laurent Sénéchal - ANATOMY OF A FALL
Lucy Donaldson - A HAUNTING IN VENICE
Thelma Schoonmaker - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON
Michelle Tesoro - MAESTRO
Jennifer Lame - OPPENHEIMER
BEST SCORE
Alexandre Desplat - ASTEROID CITY
Joe Hisaishi - THE BOY AND THE HERON
Robbie Robertson - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON
Ludwig Göransson - OPPENHEIMER
Christopher Bear, Daniel Rossen - PAST LIVES
Gary Gunn - A THOUSAND AND ONE
PRODUCTION DESIGN
Des. Adam Stockhausen, Set Dec. Xocas Montes, Kris Moran - ASTEROID CITY
Des. Sarah Greenwood, Set Dec. Katie Spencer - BARBIE
Des. Ryan Warren Smith, Set Dec. Markus Wittmann - THE HOLDOVERS
Des. Jack Fisk, Set Dec. Adam Willis - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON
Des. Anthony Stabley, Set Dec. Salinas Mazure Maria - SAW X
COSTUME DESIGN
Milena Canonero - ASTEROID CITY
Jacqueline Durran - BARBIE
Sammy Sheldon - A HAUNTING IN VENICE
Jacqueline West - KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON
Cynthia Lawrence-John - RYE LANE
MAKEUP
BEAU IS AFRAID
BLACKBERRY
JULES
SAW X
THE WONDERFUL STORY OF HENRY SUGAR
VISUAL EFFECTS
ASTEROID CITY
THE KILLER
OPPENHEIMER
SAW X
THE SWAN
SOUND
ASTEROID CITY
BEAU IS AFRAID
THE KILLER
MAESTRO
OPPENHEIMER
ANIMATED FILM
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: MUTANT MAYHEM SPIDER-MAN: ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE
SHORT FILM
Terrence Davies - PASSING TIME
Wes Anderson - THE SWAN
Warren Beatty - TRACY ZOOMS IN
Wes Anderson - THE WONDERFUL STORY OF HENRY SUGAR
---- We of course announced our honorary Davey winners earlier this month. The list of winners will be released next month. Happy movies.
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lawleonard · 3 months ago
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𝐓𝐨𝐝𝐝 𝐋𝐞𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐫𝐝 𝐀𝐧𝐧𝐨𝐮𝐧𝐜𝐞𝐬 $𝟓𝟓𝟎,𝟎𝟎𝟎 𝐏𝐞𝐝𝐞𝐬𝐭𝐫𝐢𝐚𝐧 𝐀𝐜𝐜𝐢𝐝𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐒𝐞𝐭𝐭𝐥𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭
Founding Partner, Todd Leonard, proudly announces he recently settled a pedestrian accident case for $550,000. Our client sustained serious injuries while walking in the crosswalk when she was struck by a vehicle. Our office settled the case against the defendants during mediation for $550,000.
Todd’s team of experienced personal injury lawyers are relentless, and will not stop until their clients get the justice and compensation they deserve. Todd and his team take great pride in doing their best to help their clients when they need us the most.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐧𝐜𝐞𝐝 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐑𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐥𝐞𝐬𝐬 𝐏𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐥 𝐈𝐧𝐣𝐮𝐫𝐲 𝐋𝐚𝐰𝐲𝐞𝐫𝐬
If you are seriously injured in a car accident, or lost a loved one, our team of experienced personal injury attorneys can offer the advice you can trust and need during this uncertain and difficult time. Todd and his team have over 35 years of experience handling all types of serious accidents, including truck and car accidents, motorcycle accidents, slip and fall accidents, pedestrian accidents, Uber accidents, Lyft accidents, wrongful death, and workers' compensation claims. Our firm will fight to make sure your rights are fully protected and you obtain the maximum compensation you deserve. Todd has been privileged to represent thousands of seriously injured clients and their families throughout New Jersey, and has successfully recovered over $100 Million on their behalf. Please call us now for a FREE, confidential consultation at our Headquarters in Denville, NJ at (973) 920-7900. To read more about our law firm's results, please visit https://www.lawleonard.com/results/. 𝐎𝐔𝐑 𝐂𝐋𝐈𝐄𝐍𝐓𝐒 𝐂𝐎𝐌𝐄 𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐒𝐓!!
𝐑𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐥𝐞𝐬𝐬. 𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐧𝐜𝐞. 𝐑𝐞𝐬𝐮𝐥𝐭𝐬.™
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[VoIr] Zone(s) de turbulence 2023 en Streaming Vostfr (FR) Complet en FRANÇAIS
Regarder Zone(s) de turbulence en streaming vf 100% gratuit, voir le film complet en français et en bonne qualité. Zone(s) de turbulence Streaming vf les films et les livres tiennent une partie de mon cœur. Et de cette façon, j’aime tout. Non, je ne parlerai pas de la scène entière, je pourrais finir avec un nouveau film si je le faisais,
Regarder ➡ https://class.redmovie25.org/fr/986843
Telecharger ➡ Zone(s) de turbulence | Film Complet [2023] Streaming vF Français
Sortie du film Zone(s) de turbulence : Date de sortie? La suite d’Zone(s) de turbulence, a été confirmé un mois après la sortie du premier film au cinéma. Le 19 mai 2023, Zone(s) de turbulence 2 avait été confirmé. Quand pourrons-nous le voir en salle ? Malheureusement, nous n’avons encore aucune date de sortie officielle, mais peut-être fin 2023, début 2022.
WEB SIP:: Zone(s) de turbulence 2023 Germany, Iceland, United Kingdom Comédie film réalisé Sol Bondy et joué par Lydia Leonard, Timothy Spall. Un groupe d'individus - ayant en commun une phobie de l'avion - se retrouve bloqué en altitude.
Sortie: Aug 09, 2023
Durée: 97 min.
Genre : Comédie
Étoiles : Lydia Leonard, Timothy Spall, Ella Rumpf, Emun Elliott
Réalisateur : Sol Bondy
Zone(s) de turbulence, le film sera là ! Le film Zone(s) de turbulence est sorti le mercredi 2 septembre 2023. Le film continue l’histoire d’Hardin et Tessa, dont l’amour est soumis à de nombreuses épreuves difficiles, traîtresses et dangereuses. Ces deux amoureux auront-ils une fin heureuse ? En attendant de savoir si le film a été acclamé par les fans, il y a de bonnes nouvelles : Zone(s) de turbulence va sortir ! Cela a été confirmé le 3 septembre 2023 par les deux stars de la série dans une vidéo postée sur le profil Instagram officiel d’Zone(s) de turbulence. Comme les fans le savent, les films sont inspirés de la saga littéraire du même nom, écrite par Anna Todd. La série Zone(s) de turbulence est composé de 4 livres.
L’intrigue du film Zone(s) de turbulence L’amour d’Hardin et Tessa est encore une fois mis à l’épreuve. Ces deux adolescents vont devoir affronter leur passé. Tessa rencontre son père après des années et décide de le prendre en charge après avoir découvert qu’il était devenu sans abri. Hardin accepte de l’héberger mais ne fait pas confiance à cet homme, convaincu qu’il cache une partie de la vérité. Mais ce n’est pas le seul obstacle. À travers une série de quiproquos, les deux amoureux vont s’éloigner l’un de l’autre après que Tessa ait découvert qu’Hardin a passé toute la soirée en compagnie d’une amie de la famille, appelée Lillian
Le manque de communication conduit le protagoniste à chercher du réconfort dans de vieilles amitiés, dont Zed et Steph, mais la sortie ne se déroule pas comme comme prévu. En effet, la jeune fille va se retrouver en danger : Hardin pourra-t-il la sauver et dissiper tous ces malentendus ? Concernant l’intrigue du film, Castille Landon, le réalisateur d’Zone(s) de turbulence nous assure qu’il sera fidèle au roman du même nom.
Le casting du film Zone(s) de turbulence : qui sera là ? Nous verrons probablement le retour de deux personnages principaux : Héro Fiennes-Tiffin et Josephine Langford, comme Hardin et Tessa, Zone(s) de turbulenceivement. Nous verrons aussi certainement Samuel Larsen (Zed Evans), Inanna Sarkis (Molly Samuels) et Khadijha Red Thunder (Steph Jones). Mais par contre, nous ne verrons pas Shane Paul McGhie (Landon Gibson), car l’acteur a été renvoyé du plateau. Dylan Sprouse, dont le rôle est Trevor ne revient pas non plus.
Mais il y a aussi une nouvelle de dernière minute : d’autres acteurs ne reviendront pas dans le troisième film, d’où la nécessité d’un renouvellement. Déjà dans Zone(s) de turbulence 2, on se rend compte que le père d’Hardin n’est plus joué par Peter Gallagher (Andy Cohen pourquoi es-tu parti ?) mais par Rob Estes et que la mère de Landon n’est plus jouée par Jennifer Beals mais par Karimah Westbrook. Nous verrons également beaucoup de changements dans Zone(s) de turbulence. En commençant par Candice King et Charlie Weber : les deux acteurs ne seront plus Kim et Christian Vance.
L’actrice que nous avons appris à aimer dans The Vampire Diaries comme Caroline est enceinte de son deuxième enfant ! Sa grossesse l’empêche donc de retourner sur le plateau pour filmer Zone(s) de turbulence. Candice sera remplacée par Arielle Kebbel que nous avons déjà vu dans The Vampire Diaries: : Il s’agit de Lexi, le meilleur ami de Stefan ! Charlie sera remplacé par Stephen Moyer. Aussi Selma Blair, qui joue la mère de Tessa, est remplacée par Mira Sorvino. En plus de toutes ces modifications, il y a aussi une nouvelle arrivée : Carter Jenkins, qui jouera Robert, le potentiel amoureux de Tessa.
La raison de tous ces changements est que le fait de tourner deux films ensemble empêche aussi certains des acteurs principaux de participer à d’autres engagements professionnels ou autres.
3 novembre 2023 en salle / 2h 37min / Science fiction, Fantastique, Action De Chloé Zhao Par Chloé Zhao, Patrick Burleigh Avec Gemma Chan, Richard Madden, Salma Hayek
Synopsis et détails : Environ un an après avoir affronté Riot, Eddie Brock « cohabite » toujours avec le symbiote Venom. Alors qu’il tente de relancer sa carrière de journaliste d'investigation, Eddie se rend en prison pour interviewer le tueur en série Cletus Kasady. Il ignore que ce dernier est lui aussi l'hôte d'un symbiote, Carnage.
. Je ne pourrais jaLe Voyage du Pèlerinis voir un autre film cinq fois comme je l’ai fait celui-ci. Retournez voir une seconde fois et faites attention. RegarderIp Man 4 : Le dernier combat Movie WEB-DL Il s’agit d’un fichier extrait sans erreur d’un serveur telLe Voyage du Pèlerin, tel que Netflix, ALe Voyage du Pèlerinzon Video, Hulu, Crunchyroll, DiscoveryGO, BBC iPlayer, etc. Il s’agit également d’un film ou d’une éZone(s) de turbulence ion télévisée téléchargé via un site web comme on lineistribution, iTunes. La qualité est assez bonne car ils ne sont pas ré-encodés. Les flux vidéo (H.264 ou H.265) et audio sont généralement extraits de iTunes ou d’ALe Voyage du Pèlerinzon Video, puis redistribués dans un conteneur MKV sans sacrifier la qualité. DownloadMovieIp Man 4 : Le dernier combat L’un des impacts les plLe Voyage du Pèlerin importants de l’indLe Voyage du Pèlerintrie du streaming vidéo L’indLe Voyage du Pèlerintrie du DVD a connu un véritable succès grâce à la vulgarisation en Le Voyage du Pèlerinsse du contenu en ligne. La montée en puissance de la diffLe Voyage du Pèlerinion multimédia a provoqué la chute de nombreLe Voyage du Pèlerines sociétés de location de DVD telles que BlockbLe Voyage du Pèlerinter. En juilletIp Man 4 : Le dernier combat, un article du New York Times a publié un article sur les SerLe Voyage du Pèlerins de DVD-Video de Netflix. Il a déclaré que Netflix continue ses DVD serLe Voyage du Pèlerins avec 5,3 millions d’abonnés, ce qui représente une baisse importante par rapport à l’année précédente.
étiquette : regarder Zone(s) de turbulence en streaming Zone(s) de turbulence film streaming Zone(s) de turbulence streaming film complet vf Zone(s) de turbulence streaming vf Zone(s) de turbulence streaming
étiquette :
Zone(s) de turbulence film complet
Zone(s) de turbulence 2023 film complet
Zone(s) de turbulence film complet en français
Zone(s) de turbulence streaming vostfr
Zone(s) de turbulence film streaming
Zone(s) de turbulence streaming vf HAPPY WATCHING “}
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englishmansdcc · 2 years ago
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SECOND COMING: TRINITY #1 review - Great start to a really fun series in general (Russell, Pace, Kirk, Troy, Steen, Finch, Valenzuela, Patrick, Catto) AHOY Comics
Out now from @AhoyComicMags is the 1st issue of Second Coming: Trinity with work from @Manruss, @rpace, Leonard Kirk, Andy Troy, Rob Steen, Tyrone Finch, @CayetanoKoala, @DarrickPatrick, @EdCatto, & more! Here's @Corevnll's review of the issue.
Second Coming: TrinityStory: Mark RussellLayouts: Richard PaceFinishes: Leonard KirkColors: Andy TroyLetters: Rob Steen Extra Credit 3: The GroundskeeperWriter: Tyrone FinchIllustrator: Cayetano Valenzuela Ingredients of MatterWriter: Darrick PatrickIllustrator: Ed Catto Design: John J. HillProduction: Rob SteenLogo: Todd KleinEditor: Sarah Litt Thanks to Superfan Promotions LLC and AHOY…
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chloe-skywalker · 4 years ago
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DC Masterlist
~
By ~ @chloe-skywalker​
* = Requested
Main Masterlist
⭐️ = Favorites
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Wonder Woman - Batman - Batfam (Jason Todd) - Superman (Both from Justice League & Superman & Lois) - Arrow-verse (from CWTV) - Suicide Squad
* Wonder Woman~ I have a good amount of Wonder Woman Imagines coming out lately so it has it’s own Masterlist. Mainly because it already did before i made this masterlist for DC. 
Wonder Woman Masterlist
* Harley Quinn & Joker’s Daughter Imagines still have their own masterlist because I love writing for it and i love writing the reader as their daughter.
HQ & MR.J’s Daughter Masterlist
BatFam
Jason Todd: (Redhood)
⭐️~ Secrets (HQ & J Daughter!reader)
~ Surprises *
~ Breakfast In Bed *
⭐️~ New Christmas Plans (HQ & J Daughter!reader)
⭐️~ I Gave You My Heart (HQ & J Daughter!reader)
~ Meeting The Family (Ft. Avengers)
Bruce Wayne: (Batman)
⭐️~ Police Station (HQ & J Daughter!reader)
⭐️~ Solutions
SuperMan
*Both From “The Justice League” & “Superman & Lois”
Clark Kent: (Superman)
~ Time (x Daughter)
~ Boys?! (x Daughter)
~ Sneak Out (x Daughter)
Gotham
*Don’t Really Write For This TV Show Anymore
{How They Hug You
Jerome Valeska:
~ What Do You Want Now?
~ Temper Tantrums *
(I do have a series on my other account that I was going to post all my writings on. But now this is where I put all my stuff. Its a Jerome one a series on @sociopathic-winchester​ its not finished but its another one of my writings)
* I don’t write on that account at all anymore Just FYI
Birds Of Prey
Roman Sionis:
~ Bad This Time
Arrow-verse
*Don’t Really Write For CW Arrow-Verse Shows Anymore
{How They Hug You (Arrow)
{How They Hug You (Supergirl)
{How They Hug You (Containment)
*Thats There because I have no Imagines for it, don’t write for it anymore, and it’s also from the CW
Arrow
No Pairing
Outcome 1 & Outcome 2
Oliver Queen: (Green Arrow)
~ A-Z NSFW Headcanon *
~ Queen Christmas Party
~ Shy Love *
The Flash
Leonard Snart: (Captain Cold)
~ Didn’t Know
~ Your Sister?
Barry Allen: (The Flash)
~ Called Over (Oliver’s Sister!reader)
~ Criminal Record (Snart!reader)
~ Not Meant To Be *
{Dating Barry Allen Would Include...
Savitar Barry:
~ Don’t Kill Anymore *
{Dating Savitar Barry Would Include...
{A-Z NSFW Headcanon
Supergirl
Mon-El:
{A-Z NSFW Headcanon *
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afaims100arrowversefavs · 3 years ago
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250 Favorite Arrowverse-Episodes: Part 6: 125-101
Picked from Arrow, Supergirl, Black Lighting, The Flash E1.1-8.5, Legends of Tomorrow E1.1-7.7, Batwoman S1 and Superman & Lois S1. Shows and Seasons that are not in here were either never seen by me or are not considered part of the Arrowverse but rather the DC-TV-Multiverse.
 125.The Present (The Flash 3x9)
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55, Written by: Aaron and Todd Helbing, Lauren Certo, Directed by: Rachel Talalay
 Christmas and shadows of the Future.
 124.The Book of War: Chapter Three: Liberartion (Black Lightning 3x16)
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45, Written by: Charles D. Holland, Directed by: Salim Akil
 The Finale of Season 3 was not the end of the show, even if you thought so.
 123.The Book Markovia: Chapter Three (Black Lightning 3x12)
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41, Written by: Adam Giaudrone, Lynelle White, Directed by: Bille Woodruff
 Jen goes into Khalil’s mind.
 122. Who is Harrison Wells? (The Flash 1x19)
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19, Written by: Ray Utarnachitt, Cortney Norris, Directed by: Wendey Stanzler
 Wells is not Wells and he is not the only one who is not who he seems to be in this one.
 121. Medusa (Supergirl 2x8)
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28, Written by: Jessica Queller, Derek Simon, Directed by: Stefan Pleszczynski
 Thanksgiving would be nicer if Mon-El wasn’t dying.
 120. The Man in the Yellow Suit (The Flash 1x9)
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9, Written by: Todd and Aaron Helbing, Directed by: Ralph Hemecker
 It’s Christmas and Barry meets his Arch Nemesis.
 119. Reign (Supergirl 3x9)
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51, Written by: Paula Yoo, Caitlin Parrish, Directed by: Glen Winter
 Reign beats Kara up at Christmas.
 118.Turncoat (Legends of Tomorrow 2x11)
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27, Written by: Grainne Godfree, Matthew Maala, Directed by: Alice Troughton
 Oh, no. Rip, what are you doing?
 117. Running to Standstill (The Flash 2x9)
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32, Written by: Andrew Kreisberg, Directed by: Kevin Tancharoen
 The Rogues team up to kill the Flash but Leonard has other plans.
 116.The Book of Apokalypse: Chapter 2: The Omega (Black Lightning 2x16)
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29, Written by: Charles D. Holland, Directed by: Salim Akil
 The Season 2 Finale.
 115. Lawanda: The Book of Burial (Black Lightning 1x3)
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3, Written by: Jan Nash, Directed by: Mark Tonderai
 Anissa meets Grace and comes into her own.
 114.The Book of Markovia: Chapter 4 (Black Lightning 3x13)
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42, Written by: Charles D. Holland, Asheleigh O. Conley, Directed by: Salim Akil
 Black Lightning and his allys descend upon Markovia.
 113. Dead to the Rights (Arrow 1x16)
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16, Written by:Geoff Johns, Directed by: Glen Winter
 Tommy learns that Oliver is the Hood.
 112.Star City 2046 (Legends of Tomorrow 1x6)
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6, Written by: Marc Guggenheim, Ray Utarnachitt, Directed by: Steve Shill
 Old Man Oliver and the New Green Arrow meet the Legends in this one.
 111. It’s a Super Life (Supergirl 5x13)
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100, Written by: Robert Rovner, Jessica Queller, Derek Simon, Nicki Holcomb, Directed by: Jesse Warn
 Kara tries to change her life to make things better, it does not work.
 110. Broken Trust (Superman & Lois 1x6)
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6, Written by: Katie Aldrin, Directed by: Sudz Sutherland
 Tag is confused and angry and Jordan learns a lesson.
 109. Take your Choice (Batwoman 1x12)
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8, Written by: Ebony Gilbert, Directed by: Tara Miele
 There can only be one!
 108. An Un-Birthday Present (Batwoman 1x11)
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11, Written by: Chad Fiveash, James Stoteraux, Directed by: Mairzee Almas
There are two of her!
107. Deathstroke Returns/Promise Kept (Arrow 6x5-6)
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120/121, Written by: Ben Sokolowski, Spiro Skentos, Oscar Balderrama, Rebecca Belotto, Directed by:  Joel Novoa,  Antonio Negret
 Slade has problems with his spawn.
 106.The Magnificent Eight (Legends of Tomorrow 1x11)
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11, Written by: Marc Guggenheim, Greg Berlanti, Directed by: Thor Freudenthal
 Jonah Hex is introduced in this one.
 105. Back from the Future 1-2 (Supergirl 511-12)
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98-99, Written by: Dana Horgan, Katie Rose Rogers; Rob Wright, J. Holtman, Directed by: David Harewood, Alexis Ostrander
An evil Winn is making mayhem.
104. Girls Night Out (The Flash 4x5)
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74, Written by: Lauren Certo, Kristen Kim, Directed by: Laura Belsey
 Iris‘ Bachelorette Party did take a wrong turn and the boys did get locked up.
 103.The Ex-Factor (Legends of Tomorrow 6x3)
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85, Written by: Grainne Godfree, Tyron B. Carter, Directed by: David Geddes
 Who can win Da Throne and sing his or her way out of an Alien Invasion?
 102. A Girl Named Sue (The Flash 6x12)
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126, Written by: Thomas Pound, Lauren Certo, Directed by: Chris Peppe
 Look. Ralph, it’s your future wife!
 101.The Satanist’s Apprentice (Legends of Tomorrow 6x5)
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87, Written by: Keto Shimizu, Ray Utarnachitt, Directed by: Caity Lotz
 Astra hates her life and gets a Disney Moment.
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dancing-on-the-waves · 4 years ago
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How Many Have You Read?
1 The Red and the Black - Stendhal 2 Penguin Island - Anatole France 3 Main Street - Sinclair Lewis 4 Babbitt - Sinclair Lewis 5 Absalom, Absalom! - Wm. Faulkner 6 As I Lay Dying - Wm. Faulkner 7 The Sound and the Fury - Wm. Faulkner 8 The Divine Comedy - Dante 9 The Aeneid - Virgil 10 One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich -  Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 11 We -  Yevgeny Zamyatin 12 Brave New World - Aldous Huxley 13 1984 - George Orwell 14 Mother Night -  Kurt Vonnegut 15 Fearless -  Eric Blehm 16 Les Miserables - Victor Hugo 17 The Idiot -  Fyodor Dostoyevsky 18 The Brothers Karamazov-  Fyodor Dostoyevsky 19 Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy 20 The Bible - God 21 Dead Souls - Gogol 22 Of Mice and Men - John Steinbeck 23 East of Eden - John Steinbeck 24 Canterbury Tales - Chaucer 25 The Lord of the Rings - J. R. R. Tolkein 26 Plague Dogs - Richard Adams 27 Little Dorrit - Charles Dickens 28 Bleak House - Charles Dickens 29 The Last of the Mohicans - James Fenimore Cooper 30 The Deerslayer - James Fenimore Cooper 31 Of Human Bondage - W. Somerset Maugham 32 Black Beauty -  Anna Sewell 33 Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austin 34 The City of God - Augustine 35 The Gulag Archipelago -  Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 36 Don Quixote -  Miguel de Cervantes 37 Bonhoeffer -  Eric Metaxas 38 The Federalist Papers -  Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay 39 Common Sense - Thomas Payne 40 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich - Wm. L. Shirer 41 Macbeth - Shakespeare 42 Hamlet - Shakespeare 43 Frankenstein - Mary Shelley 44 The Good Earth - Pearl S. Buck 45 The War of the Worlds - H. G. Wells 46 The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells 47 The Time Machine - H. G. Wells 48 Lenore, or the Raven by E. A. Poe 49  The Fall of the House of Usher - E. A. Poe 50 A Descent into the Maelström - E. A. Poe 51 The Masque of the Red Death - E. A. Poe 52 Giants in the Earth -  Ole Edvart Rolvaag 53 Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad 54 Charge of the Light Brigade - Alfred Lord Tennyson 55 Paradise Lost - John Milton 56 Faust - Goethe 57 The Red badge of Courage - Stephen Crane 58 Maggie: A Girl of the Streets - Stephen Crane 59 The Jungle - Upton Sinclair 60  Germinal by Emile Zola 61 Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand 62 The Book of the Just by Eric Silver 63 The Rape of Nanking by Iris Chang 64 The Wave by Todd Strasser 65 Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown 66 The Republic of Plato 67 Rolling Pennies in the Dark by MacKinnon 68 Witness by Whitaker Chambers 69 Foxe Voices of the Martyrs 70 The Ugly American by Lederer and Burdick 71 In His Steps by Charles Sheldon 72 The Mouse That Roared by Leonard Wibberley 73 Democracy in America By Alexis de Tocqueville 74 Aesop’s Fables 75 The Dark Room by Rachel Seiffeert 76 The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald 77 The Call of the Wild by Jack London 78  Moby Dick by Herman Melville 79 The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain 80 The Iliad by Homer 81 The Odyssey by Homer 82 Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray 83 Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev 84 You can’t Go Home Again by Thomas Wolfe 85 The Red Badge of Courage  by Stephen Crane 86 The Devil and Daniel Webster by Stephen Vincent Benet 87 The Diary of a Madman by Gogol 88 The Crucible by Arthur Miller 89 Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad 90 The Turn of the Screw and Daisy Miller by Henry James 91 Mutiny on the Bounty by Nordhoff and Hall 92 War and Peace by Tolstoy 93 The Octopus by Frank Norris 94 All Quiet on the Western Front by Remarque 95 Animal Farm by George Orwell 96 To Hell and Back: The Last Train from Hiroshima by Charles Pellegrino 97 Dresden 1945: The Devil’s Tinderbox by Alexander McKee 98 The Ox Bow Incident by Walter Van Tilburg Clark 99 The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder 100 A journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne 101 The Year of the Rat - by Mladin Zarubica
50 notes · View notes
quierorodarnojodan · 4 years ago
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Estábamos bromeando con un amigo @mcdonneeli sobre que tenemos muchos ships similares si no casi todos, pero que irónicamente ambos nos peleamos por el mismo pj a usar y por eso jamás podemos rolear las ships xDD entonces me puse hacer la lista a ver que dice mi compatriota desalmado.
Anime/Manga
Axis Power Hetalia
Alemania x Norte De Italia
Austria x Hungría [♥]
Dinamarca x Noruega
España x Sur De Italia
Prussia x Hungría
Prussia x Austria [♥]
Bleach
Ichigo Kurosaki x Uryuu Ishida [♥]
Ikkaku Madarame x Yumichika Ayasegawa
Kyouraku Shunsui x Ukitake Jyuushirou [♥]
Carole & Tuesday
Carole Stanley x Tuesday Simmons
Cyborg 009
Jet Link (002) x Albert Heinrich (004)
Digimon
Ishida Yamato x Yagami Taichi [♥]
Dragon Ball
Goku x Vegeta
Durarara!!
Celty Sturluson x Kishitani Shinra
Kadota Kyohei x Izaya Orihara
Fairy Tails
Levy McGarden x Gajeel Redfox
FullMetal Alchemist
Maes Hughes x Roy Mustang [♥]
Get Backers
Kakei Juubei & Fuuchouin Kazuki
Haikyuu!!
Ooikawa Tooru x Iwaizumi Hajime
Haru wo Daiteita
Kato Youji x Iwaki Kyosuke [♥]
Hunter x Hunter
Hisoka x Illumi Zoldyck
Leorio Paladiknight x Kurapika [♥]
Jojo's Bizarre Adventure
Joseph Joestar x Caesar Zeppeli
Jotaro Kujo x Noriaki Kakyoin [♥]
Mohammed Abdul x Jean Pierre Polnareff
Kuroko no Basket
Atsushi Murasakibara x Tatsuya Himuro
Kiyoshi Teppei x Makoto Hanamiya [♥]
Midorima Shintaro x Takao Kazunari [♥]
Naruto
Uzumaki Naruto x Uchiha Sasuke
Hatake Kakashi x Umino Iruka [♥]
Haruno Sakura x Yamanaka Ino
One Piece
Eustass Kid x Trafalgar D. Law
Roronoa Zoro x Vinsmoke Sanji
Saint Seiya
Manigoldo x Albafika [♥]
Hyoga x Shun
Sailor Moon
Kunzite x Zoisite
Michiru Kaiō x Haruka Tenou
Sakura Card Captor
Touya Kinomoto x Yukito Tsukishiro [♥]
Shingeki no Kyojin
Erwin Smith x Levi Rivaille
Marco Bott X Jean Kirstein
The Prince of Tennis
Inui Sadaharu x Kaidou Kaoru [♥]
Tiger & Bunny
Kotetsu Kaburagi x Barnaby Brooks Jr.
Uragiri wa Boku no Namae wo Shitteiru
Hotsuma Renjou x Shusei Usui [♥♥♥]
Cartoons
Adventure Time
Marceline Abadeer x Princess Bubblegum
Marshall Lee x Prince Gumball
Avatar: the Last Airbender
Jet x Zuko [♥]
Ed, Edd n Eddy
Kevin x Edd (Doble D)
Generador Rex
Rex Salazar x Noah Nixon [♥]
Happy Tree Friends
Lumpy x Russell
Shifty x Lifty
Splendid x Flippy
Scooby-Doo
Daphne Blake x Velma Dinkley
The Dragon Prince
Rey Harrow x Viren
The Legend of Korra
Korra x Asami Sato
Iroh II x Bolin
Voltron
Takashi "Shiro" Shirogane x Adam [♥]
Xiaolin Showdown
Chase Young x Jack Spicer
Series
9-1-1
Edmundo "Eddie" Diaz x Evan "Buck" Buckley [♥]
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Angel (Angelus) x Spike (William) [♥]
Willow Rosenberg x Tara Maclay
Carmilla
Carmilla Karnstein x Laura Hollis
Class
Matteusz Andrzejewski x Charlie Smith
Common Law
Travis Marks x Wes Mitchell [♥]
Cobra Kai
Daniel LaRusso x Johnny Lawrence
Deadwind (Karppi)
Sofia Karppi x Sakari Nurmi
Downton Abbey
Tom Branson x Thomas Barrow
Richard Ellis x Thomas Barrow
Eyewitness
Lukas Waldenbeck x Philip Shea
Grey's Anatomy
Mark Sloan x Derek Shepherd
Hannibal
Hannibal Lecter x Will Graham
Hawaii Five-0
Danny Williams x Steve McGarret [♥]
Hemlock Grove
Peter Rumancek x Roman Godfrey [♥]
How to Get Away with Murder
Oliver Hampton x Connor Walsh
Iron Fist
Danny Rand x Ward Meachum [♥♥]
Julie and the Phantoms
Alex x Willie
Las chicas del cable
Francisco Gómez x Carlos Cifuentes [♥]
LazyTown
Sportacus x Robbie Rotten
London Spy
Alex x Danny
Merlin
Arhur Pendragone x Merlin
Once Upon a Time
Regina Mills x Emma Swan
Regina Mills x Robin Hood
Shadow and Bone
Aleksander / The Darkling x Kaz Brekker
Jasper Fahey x Kaz Brekker
Star Trek
James T. Kirk x Spock
Leonard MCCoy x Spock
Malcolm Reed x Charles "Trip" Tucker III
Stranger Things
Billy Hargrove x Steve Harrington
Teen Wolf
Derek Hale x Stiles Stilinski
The Alienist
Laszlo Kreizler x John Moore
The Boys
Billy Butcher x Homelander (John)
The Irregulars
Billy x Leopold
Sherlock Holmes x John Watson
The Order
Hamish Duke x Randall Carpio
The Umbrella Academy
Diego Hargreeves x Klaus Hargreeves
The Walking Dead
Daryl Dixon x Rick Grimes
The Witcher
Geralt de Rivia x Jaskier
Torchwood
Jack Harkness x Ianto Jones [♥]
Travelers
Trevor Holden x Philip Pearson
Vampire Diaries
Alaric Saltzman x Damon Salvatore
Warehouse 13
Helena G. Wells x Myka Bering
Películas
Cloud Atlas
Rufus Sixsmith x Robert Frobisher
Sonmi-451 x Hae-Joo Chang
Inception
Eames x Robert Fischer
Dom Cobb x Robert Fischer
IT
Richie Tozier x Eddie Kaspbrak
James Bond
James Bond x Q [♥]
Rise of the Guardians
Sandman x Pitch Black
Star Wars
Baze Malbus x Chirrut Îmwe
Poe Dameron x Armitage Hux​ [♥]
The Old Guard
'Joe' Yusuf Al-Kaysani x 'Nicky' Nicolo di Genova
The Road to El Dorado
Tulio x Miguel
U.N.C.L.E.
Napoleon Solo x Illya Kuryakin
Libros
Harry Potter
Albus Dumbledore x Gellert Grindelwald [♥]
Harry Potter x Draco Malfoy
Blaise Zabini x Theodore Nott [♥]
Pansy Parkinson x Daphne Greengrass [♥]
James Potter x Severus Snape [♥]
Sirius Black x Remus Lupin
Shadowhunters
Magnus Bane x Alexander G. Lightwood
The Raven Cycle
Ronan Lynch x Adam Parrish
Richard Gansey III x Blue Sargent
Comics
DC Comics
Apollo x Midnighter
Clark Kent x Bruce Wayne [♥]
Diana Prince x Steve Trevor
Garfield Logan x Rachel Roth
Hal Jordan x Barry Allen
Pamela Isley x Harleen Quinzel
Jason Todd x Dick Grayson [♥]
Maggie Sawyer x Kate Kane
Roy Harper x Dick Grayson
Cassandra Cain x Stephanie Brown
Hernan Guerra x Kirk Langstrom
Michael Jon Carter x Ted Kord
Marvel
America Chavez x Kate Bishop
Azazel x Janos Quested
Gambit x Rogue
Erik Lehnsherr & Charles Xavier
Logan x Scott Summers [♥]
Natasha Romanoff x Bruce Banner
Shatterstar x Julio Richter (Rictor) [♥]
Steve Rogers x James B. Barnes [♥]
Theodore Altman x William Kaplan
Tony Stark x Loki Laufeyson [♥]
Vision x Wanda Maximoff
Wade Wilson x Peter Parker
Videojuegos
Assassin's Creed
Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad x Malik Al-Sayf [♥]
Ezio Auditore da Firenze x Leonardo Da Vinci
Bayonetta
Bayonetta x Jeanne
Detroit: Become Human
Captain Allen x Gavin Reed
Connor, RK800 x Gavin Reed [♥]
Elijah Kamski x Gavin Reed
Elijah Kamski x Leo Manfred [♥]
Kara, AX400 x Luther, TR400 [♥]
Markus, RK200 x Simon, PL600 [♥]
Nines, RK900 x Gavin Reed
North, WR400 x Chloe, ST200
Ralph, WR600 x Jerry, EM400
Simon, PL600 x Gavin Reed
Devil May Cry
Dante x Vergil [♥]
Nero x V
Final Fantasy VII
Cid Highwind x Vincent Valentine
Final Fantasy XII
Basch fon Ronsenburg x Balthier [♥♥♥]
Kingdom Hearts
Saïx x Axel
Metal Gear
Solidus Snake x Raiden
Overwatch
Gabriel Reyes x Jack Morrison
Resident Evil
Chris Redfield x Leon S. Kennedy [♥♥♥]
Claire Redfield x Moira Burton
Jake Muller x Leon S. Kennedy
Jill Valentine x Chris Redfield
Jill Valentine x Carlos Oliveira [♥♥]
Jill Valentine x Claire Redfield
Rebecca Chambers x Billy Coen
The Evil Within
Sebastian Castellano x Joseph Oda
Podcast
Welcome to Night Vale
Carlos x Cecil Palmer
Crossovers
Samurai Jack/Johnny Bravo
Johnny Bravo x Samurai Jack
Canon x Oc
Deadwind (Karppi)
OMC x Sakari Nurmi
Downton Abbey
OMC x Thomas Barrow
Locke & Key
Tyler Locke x OMC
OMC x Duncan Locke
Lost in Space
OMC x Don West
Pokemon
OMC x x James
The Dragon Prince
Soren x OMC
The Irregulars
OMC x John Watson
The Lord of the Rings
OMC x Legolas
Political Animals
OMC x Thomas James "T.J." Hammond
Resident Evil
Jake Muller x OMC
Star Trek
OMC x Julian Bashir
Warehouse 13
OMC x Steve Jinks
Wizards: Tales of Arcadia
OMC x Hisirdoux "Douxie" Casperan
Duplas de Actores
Aaron Paul x Hugh Dancy
Bradley James x Colin Morgan
Chris Evans x Sebastian Stan
Daniel Craig x Ben Whishaw
Daniel Sunjata x Aaron Tveit
Dominic Purcell x Wentworth Miller
Edward Holcroft x Ben Whishaw
Gabriella Pession x Richard Flood
Gabriel Macht x Patrick J. Adams
Hanno Koffler x Max Riemelt
Jamie Dornan x Cillian Murphy
Jensen Ackles x Jared Padalecki
Landon Liboiron x Bill Skarsgård
Mads Mikkelsen x Hugh Dancy
Matt Davis x Ian Somerhalder
Michael Fassbender x James McAvoy
Rami Malek x Martin Wallström
Scott Caan x Alex O'Loughlin
Shemar Moore x Matthew Gray Gubler
Tom Hardy x Cillian Murphy
47 notes · View notes
stripesandrockers · 4 years ago
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In rememberance today, of those that died in the explosion of turret 2, the USS Iowa held a roll call and memorial ceremony.
Tung Thanh Adams
Robert Wallace Backherms
Dwayne Collier Battle
Walter Scot Blakey
Pete Edward Bopp
Ramon Jarel Bradshaw
Philip Edward Buch
Eric Ellis Casey
John Peter Cramer
Milton Francis Devaul Jr.
Leslie Allen Everhart Jr.
Gary John Fisk
Tyrone Dwayne Foley
Robert James Gedeon III
Brian Wayne Gendron
John Leonard Goins
David L. Hanson
Ernest Edward Hanyecz
Clayton Michael Hartwig
Michael William Helton
Scott Alan Holt
Reginald L. Johnson Jr.
Nathaniel Clifford Jones Jr.
Brian Robert Jones
Michael Shannon Justice
Edward J. Kimble
Richard E. Lawrence
Richard John Lewis
Jose Luis Martinez Jr.
Todd Christopher McMullen
Todd Edward Miller
Robert Kenneth Morrison
Otis Levance Moses
Darin Andrew Ogden
Ricky Ronald Peterson
Mathew Ray Price
Harold Earl Romine Jr.
Geoffrey Scott Schelin
Heath Eugene Stillwagon
Todd Thomas Tatham
Jack Ernest Thompson
Stephan J. Welden
James Darrell White
Rodney Maurice White
Michael Robert Williams
John Rodney Young
Reginald Owen Ziegler
37 notes · View notes
lawleonard · 4 months ago
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𝐓𝐨𝐝𝐝 𝐉. 𝐋𝐞𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐫𝐝 𝐑𝐞𝐜𝐞𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐟𝐢𝐞𝐝 𝐚𝐬 𝐚 𝐍𝐞𝐰 𝐉𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐞𝐲 𝐂𝐢𝐯𝐢𝐥 𝐓𝐫𝐢𝐚𝐥 𝐀𝐭𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐧𝐞𝐲
The Todd J. Leonard Law Firm is proud to announce that, founding partner, Todd J. Leonard, has recently been recertified as a Civil Trial Attorney. For an attorney to become recertified, they must meet the New Jersey Supreme Court’s Civil Certification Committee’s requirements, which confirms Mr. Leonard’s “substantial involvement in civil trial litigation” and that he “possesses the requisite level of knowledge, experience, and skill” to fulfill the necessary criteria. Only 3% of the attorneys in New Jersey are Certified. This accomplishment by Attorney Todd Leonard clearly demonstrates his excellence in personal injury litigation. Todd has dedicated his entire legal career, spanning 36 years, representing thousands of clients in all types of serious personal injury and wrongful death cases, and has recovered over $100 million on their behalf.
The Board on Attorney Certification was established by the Supreme Court of New Jersey in 1980 for the purpose of helping consumers find attorneys who have a recognized level of competence in particular fields of law. The Supreme Court, through recommendation by the Board, certifies attorneys in five areas: civil trial law, criminal trial law, matrimonial law, municipal court law, and workers’ compensation law.
An attorney must meet the following requirements to become certified: has been a member in good standing of the New Jersey Bar for at least five years; has taken a specific number of continuing legal education courses in the three years prior to filing an application; demonstrates substantial involvement in preparation of litigated matters; demonstrates an unblemished reputation by submitting a list of attorneys and judges who will attest to the applicant’s character and ability; and passes a written examination covering various aspects of practice in the designated specialty.
“It’s a great honor to be recertified by the New Jersey Supreme Court as a Civil Trial Attorney. I have dedicated my entire legal career to helping my clients,” Leonard said.
In 2024, Todd was also selected to the New Jersey Super Lawyers® list. That marked the thirteenth time Todd achieved this recognition, as he was previously honored by this accolade in 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024. Todd was also honored to be selected to the National Trial Lawyers list of Top 100 Trial Lawyers for Civil Litigation in New Jersey for 2024. Todd has been chosen to be on this list since 2013.
Todd is also appointed to the Board of Trustees for Trial Attorneys of New Jersey (TANJ) and holds a lifetime membership of the Multi-Million and Million Dollars Advocates Forum. Todd is a member of the New Jersey Council on Safety and Health (NJ COSH), an organization comprised of lawyers, doctors and union members, “working together to protect the rights of injured workers.”
𝐓𝐨𝐝𝐝 𝐋𝐞𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐫𝐝’𝐬 𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐦𝐮𝐧𝐢𝐭𝐲 𝐈𝐧𝐯𝐨𝐥𝐯𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭
Todd also feels it is vitally important to be actively involved in the community and to give back. Todd launched The Todd Leonard Show, which focuses on those that lift up the community and help others in need. He also founded The Leonard Foundation, whose mission is to help those “battling pediatric cancer, those in need of food assistance, families depending on the security of women’s shelters, and other important social services.” Todd was the head basketball coach for Special Olympics Sports in Morris County for over 20 years. He was honored to be selected by the Arc of Morris County and the State of New Jersey as the Volunteer of the Year in 2005.
He also is a proud supporter of numerous charitable and civic organizations. Todd is a Member of The 200 Club of Morris County and platinum sponsor Hank, an organization which supports and honors police officers, first aid squad members, firefighters, the New Jersey State Police, and other first responders and their families. Todd also supports many local Police Benevolent Associations (PBA), and Police Athletic Leagues (PAL) throughout the area.
Todd also sponsors many local youth sports teams, including Denville’s Baseball, Softball, Basketball, and HUB soccer teams, Denville PBA & PAL, the Chester-Mendham Little League, Mendham PBA, the Mount Olive Baseball & Softball Association (MOBSA), the Parsippany PAL Basketball team, and Roxbury soccer teams. Additionally, he has sponsored the American Cancer Society, the V Foundation for Cancer Research, Goryeb Children’s Hospital, Roxbury Social Services, the Roxbury Food Pantry, the Precious Jules Childhood Cancer Foundation, CASA of Morris and Sussex Counties, Chai Lifeline, and many more worthy charities.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐧𝐜𝐞𝐝 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐑𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐥𝐞𝐬𝐬 𝐏𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐥 𝐈𝐧𝐣𝐮𝐫𝐲 𝐋𝐚𝐰𝐲𝐞𝐫𝐬
If you are seriously injured in a car accident, or lost a loved one, our team of experienced personal injury attorneys can offer the advice you can trust and need during this uncertain and difficult time. Todd and his team have over 35 years of experience handling all types of serious accidents, including truck and car accidents, motorcycle accidents, slip and fall accidents, pedestrian accidents, Uber accidents, Lyft accidents, wrongful death, and workers' compensation claims. Our firm will fight to make sure your rights are fully protected and you obtain the maximum compensation you deserve. Todd has been privileged to represent thousands of seriously injured clients and their families throughout New Jersey, and has successfully recovered over $100 Million on their behalf. Please call us now for a FREE, confidential consultation at our Headquarters in Denville, NJ at (973) 920-7900. To read more about our law firm's results, please visit https://www.lawleonard.com/results. 𝐎𝐔𝐑 𝐂𝐋𝐈𝐄𝐍𝐓𝐒 𝐂𝐎𝐌𝐄 𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐒𝐓!!
𝐑𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐥𝐞𝐬𝐬. 𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐧𝐜𝐞. 𝐑𝐞𝐬𝐮𝐥𝐭𝐬.™
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