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#alice in wonderland 1972
clownery-blog · 7 months
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Working on my frog footman design
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^___^
Insp dump
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(maxim mitrofanov - aiw 1949 - aiw 1972)
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hhyperfixblog · 1 year
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Alice sketch of the day
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(my favorite movie Alice :])
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redpanther23 · 6 months
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Recommended Reading List:
Magick in Theory and in Practice - Aleister Crowley
Principia Discordia - Malaclypse the Younger
Zen Without Zen Masters - Camden Benares
Cosmic Trigger: Final Secrets of the Illuminati - Robert Anton Wilson (fill out the captcha and click "download original pdf" - the other link seems to be fake)
Black Elk Speaks
The Mohawk Warrior Society - Louis Karioniaktajeh Hall
Fiction:
The Void Captain's Tale - Norman Spinrad
Tailchaser's Song - Tad Williams
The Magicians - Lev Grossman
Illuminatus - Bob Shea and Robert Anton Wilson
The Man Who Folded Himself - David Gerrold
The Three Imposters - Arthur Machin
Comics:
Cerebus - Dave Sim
Elfquest - Wendy Pini
Pogo - Walt Kelly
Little Nemo in Slumberland - Winsor McKay
Fritz the Cat - R. Crumb
Scott Pilgrim - Bryan Lee O'Malley
Maus - Art Spiegelman
Live Action Movies/shows:
The 5000 Fingers of Dr. T (1953) <- to my knowledge the only feature that Dr. Seuss worked on
Dementia (or Daughter of Horror) (1955) <- experimental horror movie with no dialogue
The Prisoner (1967-68) <- like if you combined James Bond with Alice in Wonderland
Head (1968)
Lucifer Rising (1972) <- watching this movie summons lucifer, so we should all do it lots
Pink Flamingos (1972)
The Wicker Man (1973)
Zardoz (1974)
The Forbidden Zone (1979)
The Great Rock and Roll Swindle (1980)
The Decline of Western Civilization (1981)
Roar (1981)
The Young Ones (1982-84)
Stop Making Sense (1984)
This is Spinal Tap (1984)
24 Hour Party People (2002)
Electric Apricot: The Quest for Festeroo
Scott Pilgrim vs. The World
Sorry to Bother You
(For animated movies I have a whole separate blog and list here)
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Stats from Movies 301-400
Top 10 Movies - Highest Number of Votes
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The Blair Witch Project (1999) had the most votes with 3,139.
The 10 Most Watched Films by Percentage
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Pan's Labyrinth (2006) was the most watched film with 62.85% of voters saying they had seen it.
The 10 Least Watched Films by Percentage
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Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter (2012) was the least watched film with 67.15% of voters saying they hadn't seen it.
The 10 Most Known Films by Percentage
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The Blair Witch Project (1999) was the best known film with only 2.07% of voters saying they'd never heard of it. A Quiet Place (2018) was in an incredibly close second with only 2.08% of voters saying they'd never heard of it.
The 10 Least Known Films by Percentage
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Playdurizm (2020) was the least known film with 95.5% of voters saying they'd never heard of it.
The movies part of the statistic count and their polls below the cut.
The Entity (1982) The Lighthouse (2019) Hellbent (2004) Joy Ride (2001) No One Lives (2012) Night of the Creeps (1986) Silent Hill (2006) Society (1989) The Black Phone (2021) Lo (2009)
Pet (2016) Evil Toons (1992) The Innocents (1961) Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (1975) Vacancy (2007) Jeepers Creepers (2001) Dawn of the Dead (2004) Land of the Dead (2005) The Menu (2022) Mandy (2018)
Anna and the Apocalypse (2017) Apostle (2018) The Changeling (1980) Don't Look in the Basement (1973) Goodnight Mommy (2014) House on Haunted Hill (1959) The Invitation (2015) Kwaidan (1964) Last Night in Soho (2021) Marrowbone (2017)
The Old Dark House (1932) The Perfection (2018) Relic (2020) Session 9 (2001) The Similars (2015) Willy's Wonderland (2021) Willard (2003) Mansion of the Doomed (1976) Bloodbath at the House of Death (1984) Cockneys vs Zombies (2012)
Dolls (1986) Holidays (2016) Benny Loves You (2019) Stitches (2012) Afflicted (2013) The Banana Splits Movie (2019) Rare Exports (2010) Hell Fest (2018) 31 (2016) The Devil's Carnival (2012)
Brain Damage (1988) All About Evil (2010) Alice Cooper: The Nightmare (1975) The Craft (1996) The Frighteners (1996) As Above, So Below (2014) 28 Weeks Later (2007) A Quiet Place (2018) A Quiet Place Part II (2020) Night of the Comet (1984)
Tremors (1990) The Sixth Sense (1999) The Others (2001) Wolf Creek (2005) Wolf Creek 2 (2013) Little Monsters (2019) The Girl with All the Gifts (2016) Green Room (2015) Abraham Lincoln vs. Zombies (2012) Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (2012)
The VelociPastor (2018) Theater of Blood (1973) The Cursed (2021) The Rift (1990) Terror Firmer (1999) Class of Nuke 'Em High (1986) The Man Who Laughs (1928) Vampire Hunter D (1985) Dark Skies (2013) The Twilight People (1972)
Alleluia! The Devil's Carnival (2016) Playdurizm (2020) Swallowed (2022) Exploited (2022) Deadstream (2022) The Brotherhood (2001) The Borderlands (2013) Pan's Labyrinth (2006) Penda’s Fen (1974) A Field in England (2013)
In the Earth (2021) Resolution (2012) Terrifier 2 (2022) The Blair Witch Project (1999) Battle Royale (2000) Hostel (2005) Critters (1986) The Collector (2009) M3GAN (2022)
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justforbooks · 4 months
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The actor Michael Jayston, who has died aged 88, was a distinguished performer on stage and screen. The roles that made his name were as the doomed Tsar Nicholas II of Russia in Franklin Schaffner’s sumptuous account of the last days of the Romanovs in Nicholas and Alexandra (1971), and as Alec Guinness’s intelligence minder in John Le Carré’s Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy on television in 1979. He never made a song and dance about himself and perhaps as a consequence was not launched in Hollywood, as were many of his contemporaries.
Before these two parts, he had already played a key role in The Power Game on television and Henry Ireton, Cromwell’s son-in-law, in Ken Hughes’s fine Cromwell (1969), with Richard Harris in the title role and Guinness as King Charles I. And this followed five years with the Royal Shakespeare Company including a trip to Broadway in Harold Pinter’s The Homecoming, in which he replaced Michael Bryant as Teddy, the brother who returns to the US and leaves his wife in London to “take care of” his father and siblings.
Jayston, who was not flamboyantly good-looking but clearly and solidly attractive, with a steely, no-nonsense, demeanour and a steady, piercing gaze, could “do” the Pinter menace as well as anyone, and that cast – who also made the 1973 movie directed by Peter Hall – included Pinter’s then wife, Vivien Merchant, as well as Paul Rogers and Ian Holm.
Jayston had found a replacement family in the theatre. Born Michael James in Nottingham, he was the only child of Myfanwy (nee Llewelyn) and Vincent; his father died of pneumonia, following a serious accident on the rugby field, when Michael was one, and his mother died when he was a barely a teenager. He was then brought up by his grandmother and an uncle, and found himself involved in amateur theatre while doing national service in the army; he directed a production of The Happiest Days of Your Life.
He continued in amateur theatre while working for two years as a trainee accountant for the National Coal Board and in Nottingham fish market, before winning a scholarship, aged 23, to the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London, where he was five years older than everyone else on his course. He played in rep in Bangor, Northern Ireland, and at the Salisbury Playhouse before joining the Bristol Old Vic for two seasons in 1963.
At the RSC from 1965, he enjoyed good roles – Oswald in Ghosts, Bertram in All’s Well That Ends Well, Laertes to David Warner’s Hamlet – and was Demetrius in Hall’s film of A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1968), with Warner as Lysander in a romantic foursome with Diana Rigg and Helen Mirren.
But his RSC associate status did not translate itself into the stardom of, say, Alan Howard, Warner, Judi Dench, Ian Richardson and others at the time. He was never fazed or underrated in this company, but his career proceeded in a somewhat nebulous fashion, and Nicholas and Alexandra, for all its success and ballyhoo, did not bring him offers from the US.
Instead, he played Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1972), a so-so British musical film version with music and lyrics by John Barry and Don Black, with Michael Crawford as the White Rabbit and Peter Sellers the March Hare. In 1979 he was a colonel in Zulu Dawn, a historically explanatory prequel to the earlier smash hit Zulu.
As an actor he seemed not to be a glory-hunter. Instead, in the 1980s, he turned in stylish and well-received leading performances in Noël Coward’s Private Lives, at the Duchess, opposite Maria Aitken (1980); as Captain von Trapp in the first major London revival of The Sound of Music at the Apollo Victoria in 1981, opposite Petula Clark; and, best of all, as Mirabell, often a thankless role, in William Gaskill’s superb 1984 revival, at Chichester and the Haymarket, of The Way of the World, by William Congreve, opposite Maggie Smith as Millamant.
Nor was he averse to taking over the leading roles in plays such as Peter Shaffer’s Equus (1973) or Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa (1992), roles first occupied in London by Alec McCowen. He rejoined the National Theatre – he had been Gratiano with Laurence Olivier and Joan Plowright in The Merchant of Venice directed by Jonathan Miller in 1974 – to play a delightful Home Counties Ratty in the return of Alan Bennett’s blissful, Edwardian The Wind in the Willows in 1994.
On television, he was a favourite side-kick of David Jason in 13 episodes of David Nobbs’s A Bit of a Do (1989) – as the solicitor Neville Badger in a series of social functions and parties across West Yorkshire – and in four episodes of The Darling Buds of May (1992) as Ernest Bristow, the brewery owner. He appeared again with Jason in a 1996 episode of Only Fools and Horses.
He figured for the first time on fan sites when he appeared in the 1986 Doctor Who season The Trial of a Time Lord as Valeyard, the prosecuting counsel. In the new millennium he passed through both EastEnders and Coronation Street before bolstering the most lurid storyline of all in Emmerdale (2007-08): he was Donald de Souza, an unpleasant old cove who fell out with his family and invited his disaffected wife to push him off a cliff on the moors in his wheelchair, but died later of a heart attack.
By now living on the south coast, Jayston gravitated easily towards Chichester as a crusty old colonel – married to Wendy Craig – in Coward’s engaging early play Easy Virtue, in 1999, and, three years later, in 2002, as a hectored husband, called Hector, to Patricia Routledge’s dotty duchess in Timberlake Wertenbaker’s translation of Jean Anouilh’s Léocadia under the title Wild Orchids.
And then, in 2007, he exuded a tough spirituality as a confessor to David Suchet’s pragmatic pope-maker in The Last Confession, an old-fashioned but gripping Vatican thriller of financial and political finagling told in flashback. Roger Crane’s play transferred from Chichester to the Haymarket and toured abroad with a fine panoply of senior British actors, Jayston included.
After another collaboration with Jason, and Warner, in the television movie Albert’s Memorial (2009), a touching tale of old war-time buddies making sure one of them is buried on the German soil where first they met, and a theatre tour in Ronald Harwood’s musicians-in-retirement Quartet in 2010 with Susannah York, Gwen Taylor and Timothy West, he made occasional television appearances in Midsomer Murders, Doctors and Casualty. Last year he provided an introduction to a re-run of Tinker Tailor on BBC Four. He seemed always to be busy, available for all seasons.
As a keen cricketer (he also played darts and chess), Jayston was a member of the MCC and the Lord’s Taverners. After moving to Brighton, he became a member of Sussex county cricket club and played for Rottingdean, where he was also president.
His first two marriages – to the actor Lynn Farleigh in 1965 and the glass engraver Heather Sneddon in 1970 – ended in divorce. From his second marriage he had two sons, Tom and Ben, and a daughter, Li-an. In 1979 he married Ann Smithson, a nurse, and they had a son, Richard, and daughter, Katie.
🔔 Michael Jayston (Michael James), actor, born 29 October 1935; died 5 February 2024
Daily inspiration. Discover more photos at Just for Books…?
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gawsby · 5 months
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Alice's Adventures In Wonderland (1972)
(it's on YouTube so you can watch it for nothing!)
Directed by William Sterling
Starring Fiona Fullerton as Alice
with Spike Milligan as the Gryphon
Michael Hordern as the Mock Turtle
Roy Kinnear as the Cheshire Cat
Peter Bull as the Duchess
Ralph Richardson as the Caterpillar
Happy New Year everybody
why not celebrate by watching the wonderful 1972 Alice and singing your heart out!
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maudeboggins · 5 months
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Favourite stuff from the past year:
I was tagged by @norashelley and @womansfilm for best films and books of the year but i was already putting together some lists and I can't contain it to just 9! Here are my favourite things of the year, in chronological order:
Films:
The Great Gabbo (1929)
Madam Satan (1930)
Min and Bill (1930)
Hell's Angels (1930)
Street Scene (1931)
Million Dollar Legs (1932)
Hoopla (1933)
Alice in Wonderland (1933)
I'm No Angel (1933)
Death Takes a Holiday (1934)
Hips, Hips, Hooray! (1934)
The Old Fashioned Way (1934)
First a Girl (1935)
Ruggles of Red Gap (1935)
Poppy (1936)
It's Love I'm After (1937)
Give Me a Sailor (1938)
Never Say Die (1939)
Hellzapoppin' (1941)
Stage Fright (1950)
Richard III (1955)
The Curse of Frankenstein (1957)
Carry On Cleo (1964)
A Warning to the Curious (1972)
Favourite actors: Sylvia Sidney, W.C. Fields, Bert Wheeler, Marie Dressler, Joan Blondell, Dirk Bogarde, Greta Garbo, Fredric March, Jessie Matthews, Harpo Marx, Martha Raye, John Barrymore, Vivien Leigh & Laurence Olivier
Books:
Dream Story (Arthur Schnitlzer, 1926)
Ex-Wife (Ursula Parrott, 1929)
Deep Water (Patricia Highsmith, 1957)
Groucho and Me (Groucho Marx, 1959)
Listening Walls (Margaret Millar, 1959)
Harpo Speaks! (Harpo Marx, 1961)
The Collector (John Fowles, 1963)
The Sunne in Splendour (Sharon Kay Penman, 1982)
Eleven (Patricia Highsmith, 1994)
I Who Have Never Known Men (Jacqueline Harpman, 1995)
Empress (Shan Sa, 2003)
Junji Ito’s Cat Diary (2009) (a re-read but truly one of the greatest books about cats)
Dark Matter: A Ghost Story (Michelle Paver, 2010)
A Head Full of Ghosts (Paul Tremblay, 2015)
I’ve read 73 books this year. Many many books I did not finish and abandoned (i always get between 50-200 pages in to give it a real chance but I don’t believe in reading things I don’t enjoy), so ive actually consumed quite a bit more than 73 books. I did read a lot of dumb, trashy horror and thriller novels. Sometimes I don’t have the energy to read something intelligent and just need something easy. But that really bumps up my read count.
Favourite Albums:
Every year all I listen to are the same albums on repeat and I have a really hard time getting into new music. But this year I was especially into:
Joanna Newsom - Divers (previously I did not enjoy this album of hers but I have come around to it)
Shirley Collins - Adieu to Old England
Shirley Collins - Sweet England
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uwmspeccoll · 1 year
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Christmas Greetings from Lewis Carroll
Barry Moser included these Christmas greetings in the front (in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland) and back (inThrough the Looking Glass) matter of the Pennyroyal Press Sesquicentennial Editions of Lewis Carroll’s iconic works, both published in 1982. The text is reproduced in each edition but the diligent Moser cut a new wood engraving for each book. 
From the Addenda to the Pennyroyal editions:
“the text [of the Christmas greetings] is taken from the final version published in the 1897 edition of Through the Looking Glass, but with two changes present in the 1897 edition of Alice’s Adventures, plus the signature (the bibliography of this item is complicated -- see “Bibliographical notes on ‘Christmas-Greetings’,” Jabberwocky, Summer 1972)
Master printer Harold McGrath finished the printing for Alice on New Year’s Eve of 1981, and printing for Looking Glass was completed on Christmas Eve of 1982, so these beautiful books themselves are like holiday miracles in their own right. 
Read more about the Pennyroyal Alice here (our very first Tumblr post!)
Read our prior post on Through the Looking Glass here. 
You can find more posts about Barry Moser here.
And more from Lewis Carroll can be found here. 
View posts from Christmases past.
Wishing you “the happiness of making others happy too” this holiday season.
-Olivia, Special Collections Graduate Intern
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vtgbooks · 8 months
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Vintage LEWIS CARROLL Alice in Wonderland Book 1972 Illustrated Sir John Tenniel
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clownery-blog · 7 months
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I went as her for Halloween (with fangs ^_^)
(pictures of me under the cut bc I don't want the post to be long )
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hhyperfixblog · 2 years
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The frog footman — Alice's adventures in wonderland (1972 film)
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protagonistpolling · 1 year
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POLL ENDING NOTICE!!
THESE ARE GONNA END IN 3 DAYS!!!! make sure to vote or do one last push to ensure your blorbo victory!!
Kirby [Kirby] vs Micah [Rune Factory 3]
Anne Boonchuy + Sprig Planter [Amphibia] vs Iruma [Welcome to Demon School! Iruma-Kun]
Chell [Portal] vs Alice Liddell [Alice in Wonderland/Alice Madness Returns]
Shigeo “Mob” Kageyama [Mob Psycho 100] vs Akira Fudo (Devilman 1972 Manga)
Ciel Phantomhive [Black Butler] vs Hitori “Bocchi” Gotoh [Bocchi the Rock!]
Hat Kid [A Hat in Time] vs Neil Watts [To the Moon, Finding Paradise, Impostor Factory]
Rincewind [Discworld Series] vs Ellie Williams [The Last of Us 2]Rapunzel [Tangled (the Series)] vs Ib [Ib]
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kaftan · 2 years
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Narratology recs for the followers who asked (at long last)
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[ID: meme image of an elderly woman saying “it’s been 84 years...”]
(SORRY!)
Firstly, I should specify that when it comes to narratology, 90% of my focus is on one very specific concept within it. "Focalization" was termed by narratologist Gerard Genette in his 1972 essay "Narrative Discourse" as (to put it simply) a replacement for "point of view"/"perspective," intended to answer a question that POV often cannot: who sees, and who speaks? Perception and voice are the main concerns within this theory.
There is another, occasionally overlapping analysis of focalization employed by narratologists that uses simple equations to distinguish between different narrator-character relationships. Genette referenced them to build his theory. From here we get the following terms:
“internal focalization” (narrator = character; the narrator only says what the focal character knows)
“external focalization” (narrator < character; narrator says less than the focalizer knows / is “objective”)
“zero focalization” (narrator > character; narrator says more than the focalizer or other characters know)
Now, the reading list:
Focalization Reading Recs
This web page very thoroughly describing focalization and its history (with many citations), as well as elaborating on its shortcomings, controversies, etc
Narrative Discourse by Gerard Genette
Focalization in Graphic Narrative, which is what it says on the tin but provides a lot of insightful background in addition to the actual literary analysis of graphic novels (Persepolis, Maus, and Watchmen). It's on JSTOR so let me know if you need help accessing it!
Focalization and Digital Fiction, which to be honest I’m mostly including for this line:
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[image text: “Focalization,” perhaps one of the sexiest concepts to surface from narratology's lexicon, still garners considerable attention nearly four decades after its coinage.]
If you can’t already tell, I’m very keen on taking theories of narratology beyond the simple context of paper-printed novels and applying them to newer kinds of media, so that has naturally affected the materials I gravitate toward. But Genette’s essay is a solid enough background, I think, and all of his contemporaries are in dialogue with his ideas.
Some More General Narratology Content
Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory (always handy)
Narrative Fiction: Contemporary Poetics (book)
YouTube video on narrative distance AKA “psychic distance.” It’s a concept somewhat related to focalization/POV. This specific video is structured as advice for writers, but it’s a great way for anyone to learn about the concept!
I made a post, once, on my old blog, about focalization and narrative distance in Alice in Wonderland. I am now fatally embarrassed of the way I wrote it, so I won’t be linking it. But it’s out there if you want to dig.
... and that’s all! Possibly more to come; I’ll update this as I come across more papers and resources, but I hope it can be helpful as a starting off point. Let me know if you have any questions, thanks for reading, etc, etc, 🧡
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voluptuarian · 11 months
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An expansion for my 365(ish) Days watch list featuring 100+ more movies from 100+ years of film, offering increasingly obscure titles and focus on world cinema.
The link above goes to the Letterboxd list, while the text list can be found below the cut. Happy viewing!
The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926)
Un Chiene Andalou (1929)
Bambi (1942)
Ivan the Terrible pt. I and II (1944, 1958)
Alice in Wonderland (1951)
The White Reindeer (1952)
House of Wax (1953)
Carmen Jones (1954)
Night of the Hunter (1955)
Sayonara (1957)
Elevator to the Gallows (1958)
The Innocents (1961)
Carnival of Souls (1962)
The Leopard (1963)
The Great Escape (1963)
The Ipcress File (1965)
Persona (1966)
Le Samouraï (1967)
Witchfinder General (1968)
The Lion in Winter (1968)
La Piscine (1969)
The Color of Pomegranates (1969)
Satyricon (1969)
Midnight Cowboy (1969)
Donkey Skin (1970)
Don't Deliver Us From Evil (1971)
Brother Sun, Sister Moon (1972)
Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)
Immoral Tales (1973)
Penda's Fen (1974)
Murder on the Orient Express (1974)
Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975)
Salo (1975)
Hedgehog in the Fog (1975)
The Mirror (1975)
Marie Poupee (1976)
In the Realm of the Senses (1976)
The Black Stallion (1979)
The Blue Lagoon (1980)
Heavy Metal (1981)
An American Werewolf in London (1981)
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Son of the White Mare (1981)
The Nine-Colored Deer (1981)
Evil Dead trilogy (1981- )
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne (1981)
Possession (1981)
The Return of Martin Guerre (1982)
The Living Dead Girl/La Morte Vivante (1982)
Top Gun (1986)
Little Shop of Horrors (1986)
Jean de Florette/Manon of the Spring (1986- )
Maurice (1987)
Hellraiser (1987)
Dirty Dancing (1987)
Jan Švankmajer's Alice (1988)
Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988)
Heathers (1988)
Tetsuo: The Iron Man and Tetsuo II: The Body Hammer (1989, 1992)
The Juniper Tree (1990)
Daughters of the Dust (1991)
My Own Private Idaho (1991)
The Lover (1992)
Like Water for Chocolate (1992)
The Scent of Green Papaya (1993)
Sankofa (1993)
The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)
La Reine Margot (1994)
The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994)
The Usual Suspects (1995)
Empire Records (1995)
To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar (1995)
Hackers (1995)
The Watermelon Woman (1996)
Event Horizon (1997)
Starship Troopers (1997)
Kirikou and the Sorceress (1998)
The Virgin Suicides (1999)
Chocolat (2000)
Pitch Black (2000)
American Psycho (2000)
Memento (2000)
Ghost World (2001)
Irreversible (2002)
Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner (2001)
Russian Ark (2002)
Hero (2002)
A Tale of Two Sisters (2003)
Kung Fu Hustle (2004)
Blood Tea and Red String (2006)
Curse of the Golden Flower (2006)
Mongol (2007)
Repo! The Genetic Opera (2008)
Thirst (2009)
Never Let Me Go (2010)
Kick-Ass (2010)
American Mary (2012)
Skyfall (2012)
The Lobster (2015)
Kubo and the Two Strings (2016)
Loving Vincent (2017)
Annihilation (2018)
Mandy (2018)
Mad God (2021)
Hatching (2022)
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derekfoxwit · 1 year
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Every Film I nominated for the National Film Registry for the 2023 inductions (later this year)
Enchanted Drawing, The (1900)
Squaw Man, The (1914)
Tramp, The (1915)
Tantalizing Fly, The (1919)
Blood and Sand (1922)
Alice’s Wonderland (1923)
Trolley Troubles (1927)
Skeleton Dance, The (1929)
Swing Your Sinners! (1930)
Tarzan, The Ape Man (1932)
Mad Doctor, The (1932)
Band Concert, The (1935)
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936)
Way Out West (1937)
Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939)
You Ought To Be in Pictures (1940)
Superman (1941)
Dover Boys, The (1942)
Red Hot Riding Hood (1943)
Cat Concerto, The (1947)
Limelight (1952)
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954)
Lady and the Tramp (1955)
Witness of the Prosecution (1957)
One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)
Carnival of Souls (1962)
It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963)
Jason and the Argonauts (1963)
Haunting, The (1963)
Doctor Zhivago (1965)
Jungle Book, The (1967)
Husbands (1970)
Fritz the Cat (1972)
Heartbreak Kid, The (1972)
F for Fake (1973)
Mikey & Nick (1976)
Midnight Express (1978)
Kramer vs Kramer (1979)
Elephant Man, The (1980)
Friday the 13th (1980)
Evil Dead, The (1981)
Karate Kid, The (1984)
Full Metal Jacket (1987)
Home Alone (1990)
Baraka (1992)
Aladdin (1992)
Nightmare Before Christmas, The (1993)
Fight Club (1999)
Spider-Man (2002)
Incredibles, The (2004)
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julictcapulet · 2 years
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hi! i hope this doesn't sound random or weird but what are some of your favorite books and/or movies?
Not weird at all!
Favorite Movies: 1917 (2019), Alice in Wonderland (1951), Almost Famous (2000), Anastasia (1997), Atonement (2007), Barbie: Swan Lake (2004), Black Swan (2010), Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961), Charlie’s Angels (2000), Clueless (1995), The Dark Knight (2008), Dead Poets Society (1989), The Departed (2010), The Devil Wears Prada (2006), Dirty Dancing (1987), The Godfather (1972), Gone Girl (2014), Hercules (1997), The Incredibles (2004), Inglourious Basterds (2009), Jojo Rabbit (2019), The King of Comedy (1982), Lady Macbeth (2016), Little Miss Sunshine (2006), Little Women (2019), Mamma Mia! (2008), Midsommar (2019), Moulin Rouge! (2001), Parasite (2019), Pride and Prejudice (2005), The Princess Bride (1987), Prisoners (2013), Romeo & Juliet (1996), Shrek 2 (2004), Sleeping Beauty (1959), Tangled (2010), Titanic (1997), Uncut Gems (2019), The VVitch (2015), Whiplash (2014), Zodiac (2007)
Favorite Books: And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie, Antony and Cleopatra by William Shakespeare, Atonement by Ian McEwan, The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath, Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine, Emma by Jane Austen, Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt, Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn, If We Were Villains by M.L. Rio, Les Misérables by Victor Hugo, Normal People by Sally Rooney, Othello by William Shakespeare, Persuasion by Jane Austen, Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen, The Princess Bride by William Goldman, Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, The Secret History by Donna Tartt, Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn, Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo, A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare, Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë, Yolk by Mary H.K. Choi
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