Cinema Verite · 7:28pm Sep 20th, 2019
I don't exactly have a lot of followers so it seems a bit silly of me to boost someone who has more, but... go read Cinema Verite. It's really good, it stands alone, and I enjoyed the heck out of it.
I don't exactly have a lot of followers so it seems a bit silly of me to boost someone who has more, but... go read Cinema Verite. It's really good, it stands alone, and I enjoyed the heck out of it.
(No Spoilers)
After a really long time it’s finally here, and I gotta say it is what Mario fans have been looking for. The story although simple is interesting, the animation is stunning with lots of detail and the Characters are really charming with Great personality.
Crazy to think that we're heading into a period of noteworthy films becoming a century old.
"The Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari" (1919) has hit the century mark.
"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1920).
"The Phantom Carriage" (1921).
"Nosferatu" (1922).
"Haxan: Witchcraft Through The Ages" (1922).
"The Hunchback Of Notre Dame" (1923).
"The Phantom Of The Opera" (1925).
The best Western in history is the result of irony, a genre born in Italy that gave the genre founded by Ford, a change of style, narrative and timing in what was called "spaghetti", qualifying that curiously laid the foundations of said evolution through Sergio Leone.
Just letting you know, you don't have to have read Beautiful Night to appreciate my new story, which should stand on its own. Kind of similar to how Estee did the Triptych continium.
I'm very proud of this one, and I hope you enjoy.
So as you can see, 'A Trip to Luna's Moon, or the Equestrian Dream Factory' finally got that wonderful green "completed" placed on it. If you haven't read it and are interested, go give it a read, give it a like, a nice comment, a rude comment, a dislike, whatever you want really. Or don't, I can't tell you what to do.
Original Release Date: November 13, 1940
(Yes I'm now aware I'm 3 days late)
Oh, hello again! I'm back to give you a new update. I believe this'll be my sixth blog post on this site? Yay me! anyway, back on track. It hasn't been long since I've woken up (about two hours to be exact) but I already know what I'll be doing next week, well on one of the days anyway. I'll probably be going to the cinema on Wednesday and having a wonder around town with some friends, if I can persuade them to come that is! *fingers crossed*.
Peppered throughout my stories are various references to films and movies, as I'm sure several of you guys noticed (A Dare's Truth has several ponified versions of movies, and Scootaloo and The Cabinet of Seers has a few references as well). I love movies - I go once, sometimes twice, a week to the local theater to see a new movie! It's gotten to the point where the Tuesday staffer recognizes me and knows exactly how I like my popcorn.
Cataloged in all rankings as one of the best films of all time, beyond its cult, the film premiered at the premiere of the prizes and criticism in the screenwriting category despite its transgressive anti-social proposal that challenged good habits.
Yesterday I wrote about the impressive attention to scientific accuracy in the film The Martian. Today is the day to celebrate the other end of the science-themed cinema spectrum, being Back to the Future Day – 21 October 2015, the date visited by time travellers Marty McFly and Doc Brown in the second instalment of that series.
Emma Stone's most recent movie, The Favorite, is probably the movie that deserves the most awards this season (alongside Roma), and since I never lose a moment where I can admire this beauty that I've been following since 2012, it's time I share with all of you the movie that made me love her.
Yes, Ladies and Gentlemen, it's Nos' super-concise foreign film review time! (Spoiler-free, of course.)
Rashomon - Akira Kurosawa - 1950