@dailyshoot: 2010/02/05: More fun on a Friday: Make a photo that goes with the title of a movie you've seen, interpreted any way you like! #ds82
You have to see it for yourself. This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back.
You take the brown pill and the story ends. You wake in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe about your health. You may experience lower blood pressure, decreased triglycerides, and possible lower chances of suffering from Rheumatoid arthritis.
You take the yellow pill and you stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the vitamin-hole goes. Your skin is healthier, you catch colds less often, and your breath is more attractive to the opposite sex.
Remember -- all I am offering is the truth, nothing more.
--key scene from The Vitamin Matrix
My sister Leslie
Image by keatssycamore
Dirty Dancing had just come out and she loved that movie. I'm proud to say that I have never seen it all the way through. I'd say I've seen about 30 minutes of it total. I've seen at least two dance scenes in their entirety (the mashed potato one and some other one they are practicing alone) and I've scene some of the family at their camp, or whatever the hell place it is that they go and I saw Swayze get in a fight. Oh and I saw the first Swayze dance scene with some non-Jennifer grey woman. But that's pretty much all. I've never really seen the romance part with Swayze and Grey and I don't really know any plot details. Is there some kind of "Dance Off" at the end of summer or something, and the winners would get to have sex with each other? But Baby's dad doesn't belive in contests. Or dancing. Or sex. Right?
January 15th: Cineaste Magazine: Jim McBrideâs Pictures from Lifeâs Other Side & My Girlfriendâs Wedding
Pictures from Lifeâs Other Side by Jim McBride USA, 1971, 45 minutes, digital projection The third film of McBrideâs âdocumentaryâ trilogy, Pictures follows Jim and Clarissa in a journey across the U.S., waiting for a baby and looking for a place to settle. Crude, witty or plain scenes of everyday life compose a moving portrait of early-70s America â" an uncharted country, a generation with no direction home.
My Girlfriendâs Wedding by Jim McBride 1969, 60 minutes, digital projection A fascinating profile of McBrideâs English girlfriend, Clarissa Ainley. With his camera almost entirely trained on her, McBride explores Clarissaâs life and loves, her feelings about her parents and children, and documents her greencard marriage to a man she has only known for a week. However, as the film progresses, the most revealing truths are about the person behind the camera. Originally intended as a short, itâs a fascinating record of a turbulent time, and highlights the subjective nature of the filmmaking process. âAt the time I made it, I was fond of referring to it as a fiction film, because it was very much my personal idea of what Clarissa was like, and not at all an objective or truthful view.â â"J.M.
Jed Rapfogel is an Associate Editor at Cineaste Magazine and a Film Programmer at Anthology Film Archives.
Dan Sallitt is a filmmaker and film writer living in New York. He was the film critic for the Los Angeles Reader, and his writings have appeared in the Chicago Reader, Slate, Wide Angle, Senses of Cinema, and other venues. His movies include Honeymoon (1998) and All the Ships at Sea (2004). He blogs at Thanks for the Use of the Hall.
Marriage, Samesex, About, Street, feel, word, Maryland
Word on the Street: How do you feel about same-sex marriage in Maryland?
Nadia Natafgi - Marriage is an oppressive and obsolete expression of property, not love. I think we should abolish it completely. Lilia Farmanara- People make this so much more complicated than it needs to be. If you donât wanna marry someone of the same sex, then donât. Besides that, get the hell over yourself. Itâs [...]
Thai "red shirts" mass in push for leaders' release
BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thai anti-government "red shirts" mobilised tens of thousands of supporters to seek the release of detained leaders on Saturday, underlining festering problems in the ...
Thousands of Thai Red Shirts gathered in Bangkok Saturday to mark nine months since a bloody crackdown on their anti-government rally and to demand the release of detained leaders.The protesters ...
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