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  • Autumn in Colonia del Sacramento, Uruguay

    No Responders Left Behind

    Directed by Rob Lindsay. No Responders Left Behind is a feature documentary following 9/11 responder & activist John Feal who, along with comedian Jon Stewart and FDNY hero Ray Pfeifer, fought the U.S. Congress to ensure that thousands of terminally ill 9/11 First Responders got the health care

    This was released back in 2021, but I just now found a stream of it, and I promise you, I’ve been looking! It’s every bit as emotionally frustrating as I expected it to be, with the same obvious players making life difficult for everyone around them, using morally corrupt reasoning to cause pain, suffering, and uncertainty to people that gave their good health to help clear the destruction that the terrorist attacks on 9/11 left if it’s wake.

    There’s two obvious solution to the problems that are talked about in this film: universal healthcare and the dismantling of the Republican party. Which of those is more likely though?

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    short hair, don’t care

    Jan 6 panel promises ‘previously unseen material’ on coordinated, multi-step effort to overturn the results of the presidential election

    Batman and Robin

    Superman: Son of Kal-El #14 Super Kite

    auroras on different planets

    Sign in the front of the elementary school down the road

    Futurist city

    My first vape

    Death dragon

    SEXY

    Hot & Unbothered

    Jennifer Lopez

    Emmanuelle Chriqui

    GUITAR

    Vampirella

    Ignazio Gardella, Church of S. Nicolao della Flue, Milan, Italy. (1965-1969)


  • I Am Curious

    I Am Curious (Blue): Directed by Vilgot Sjöman. With Maj Hultén, Vilgot Sjöman, Lena Nyman, Börje Ahlstedt. Told in a quasi-documentary style, this companion piece to Jag är nyfiken – en film i gult (1967) deals with topics such as class society, religion, sex, contraceptives, and the Swedish prison Kumla.

    Still a controversial film to anyone that would care about it, this is the other side of the coin to the “I Am Curious: Yellow” version of the film, which I’m somewhat uncomfortable calling “versions” because they’re completely different and are unique and separate films. They’re more like companion pieces than versions or sequels, both of them touching on politics, religious, or sexual topics that are just as relevant today as they were in 1968. The version I watched was a borrowed copy of the Criterion release which comes with some minor director’s commentary that enlightens the audience to some of the more subtle portions of the film. The entire thing is done in Swedish with English subtitles, with the commentary in English, which is nice to hear the director’s stance on things in his own voice.

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    I Give You Marvel Phase 0

    BACKWARDS

    FUTURE CAR

    Average Republican

    Cortana drawing finished!

    Supergirl by SugoiKate

    Carla Gugino

    Marilyn Monroe

    Katheryn Winnick

    Next Level

    Such a beauty

    Purple Blue Mushrooms

    Alec Baldwins “Prop Gun”

    Raquel Welch & Ringo Starr 1969

    Mission Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One

    amazing spider-man 2

    Aftermath “Daniel Danger”

    NRA Conference

    Princess Leia by @mynessielife

    That look

    Looking gorgeous at 2022 Met Gala

    The Kids in the Hall

    The Kids in the Hall: Created by Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney, Scott Thompson. With Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney. The iconic Canadian sketch comedy troupe The Kids in the Hall return from the dead with a reboot of their ground-breaking sketch series.

    Remember these guys? They had a tv show back in the day, then did absolutely nothing since then. Sure, there was a fever dream in which people thought there was a movie or something, but that never happened.

    I’m glad they’re back, this renewed series is on Amazon is well worth the wait, they’re still at the top of their mid tier abilities. They’ve gone off and done solo projects that have been pretty good, but having them back together feels like a blessing. That blessing is doubled because they’re on a network that doesn’t care about full frontal nudity, cursing, or corporate backslapping.

    It’s worth your time, check it out!

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    Cyclops solo mission X-Men

    Jennifer Aniston

    Club Paradise

    Club Paradise: Directed by Harold Ramis. With Robin Williams, Peter O’Toole, Rick Moranis, Jimmy Cliff. A retired Chicago firefighter partners with a reggae singer to turn a seedy Caribbean nightclub into a resort for affluent tourists.

    Another movie from early in Robin William’s career, this is much better than the last couple I checked out. Weird thing about this one is that I don’t think there was a single brassiere in the entire film. It’s only rated pg-13, but if brassiere-less women is your thing, this is the place to be.

    As a PS, a few hours after I wrote this I remembered that Broken Lizard has a film named “Club Dredd” that follows a suspiciously close plot to “Club Paradise” though theirs goes way off script with a slasher on the island.  I wonder if there was any inspiration there?

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    I might’ve scared some kids who thought I was a statue.

    TRANSPORT

    Andrea Veresova

    The Princess

    The Princess: Directed by Le-Van Kiet. With Joey King, Veronica Ngo, Ivo Arakov, Martin Taskov. When a strong-willed princess refuses to wed the cruel sociopath, she is kidnapped and locked in a remote tower of her father’s castle. With her vindictive suitor intent on taking her father’s throne, the princess must save the kingdom.

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    happy spartan without a helmet on