- SuicideShill : i still dont know what happens to godzilla at the end of the each movie and how come the basturd ret
- KangThaConquered : repeat that pls
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GODZILLA 8mm Found Footage // Analog Horror, 1954 pic.twitter.com/jjBYP8aSfj
— Danny Donahue (@dannyfdonahue) March 17, 2024
!kino do you agree?
Also:
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This made me feel more emotion than anything by Disney in a decade. so sweet
I've been following this guy's work for the last year and it turned out so good.
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Actor Sir Michael Gambon has died peacefully in hospital aged 82, according to his family.
The legendary star of stage and screen – who over a stellar six-decade career received three Olivier Awards, two Screen Actors Guild Awards, and four BAFTA Awards – was best known to younger audiences as Hogwarts headmaster Albus Dumbledore in the Harry Potter series.
Sir Michael, who in 1999 was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for services to drama, died with his wife and son by his side in Essex following a bout of pneumonia.
The Dublin-born star, who began his acting career in 1960, was one of the original members of the Royal National Theatre, alongside Laurence Olivier.
He also played French detective Jules Maigret in the ITV series Maigret, as well as starring in the BBC series The Singing Detective, and crime kingpin Eddie Temple in the noughties thriller Layer Cake.
A statement on behalf of his wife Lady Gambon and son Fergus Gambon, issued by publicist Clair Dobbs, said: “We are devastated to announce the loss of Sir Michael Gambon.
“Beloved husband and father, Michael died peacefully in hospital with his wife, Anne, and son, Fergus, at his bedside, following a bout of pneumonia. Michael was 82.
“We ask that you respect our privacy at this painful time and thank you for your messages of support and love.”
Sir Michael made his first appearance on stage in a production of Othello at the Gates Theatre, Dublin, in 1962 when he returned to Ireland following his move to the UK.
His theatre career included appearances in Alan Ayckbourn's The Norman Conquests, The Life Of Galileo and Nicholas Hytner's National Theatre production of Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2.
He was knighted for his contribution to the entertainment industry in 1998, and put in a memorable performance in the BBC's 2015 adaptation of JK Rowling's The Casual Vacancy.
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90% of the jon hamm stuff was corny as all heck but darn the last 20 minutes owned and was the most Catholic television I've seen in ages.
It really is a parable of the prots (Roy Tillman ) vs Christ's True Church (ole munch) over veneration of the Virgin Mary (Dot). Love how the last part puts the entire story in perspective.
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"They have one thing in common: They're commies and they hate your guts."
He's an ordinary citizen but also secretly a communist but also secretly an informant for the FBI. This was the favorite show of all high IQ kids in the 1950s, like my parents and Lee Harvey Oswald. It's the most realistic depiction I've ever seen of being a commie in that era, where there's fanatical loyalty to World Communism but also the needs of your ordinary life and petty backstabbing jealousy. (No this wasn't invented by The Americans.)
Commies don't care about children because that's "bourgeois".
Some episodes have been lost as is common from the early '50s but many have survived so you can relive the thrill of being a boomer.
Rich college kids aren't just annoying, they're also communists.
It's hilarious for being a product of it's time (and has a lot of intentional dark comedy) but also informative. It's an exaggerated version of the real threats that Americans faced at that time and gives you some idea of what everyone was so afraid of during that era. (Which was not the McCarthy era, that was several years later after the real communists had been rounded up.)
The pilot. Zoomers, "tracking" is something you did to align the read heads on a VHS tape. VHS like... have you seen those brick shaped objects in old movies?
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Just watched this cyberpunk cinematic masterpiece starring Mick Jagger and the guy who played Mike from Breaking Bad, somehow Anthony Hopkins has some screen time too. Mike apparently exists in a parallel universe or something because even though it's from 1992 he's already old and grizzled. It's basically a Gibson fanfic, and somehow ends up more true to the source material than Johnny Mnemonic. Lots of references to the other two books in the sprawl trilogy, Hopkins does a phenomenal job playing the antagonist from Count Zero and it's neat to see some of Gibson's more hallucinatory computer scenes put to film. The pacing is not good neither is the plot and the writing is cringe, but it's still miles ahead of Johnny Mnemonic. Mick Jagger is an awful actor but seems to have a great time throughout.
out of but on a B movie scale where Troll 2 is the