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cinemaocd · 1 hour
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cinemaocd · 1 hour
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ab. 1580-1610 Jerkin
suede (deer?), cotton, linen, silk
(Germanisches Nationalmuseum)
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cinemaocd · 2 hours
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Dolores del Rio, 1930s
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cinemaocd · 19 hours
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Thief (1981) dir. Michael Mann
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cinemaocd · 22 hours
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PRIDE AND PREJUDICE (1995)
dir. simon langton
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cinemaocd · 22 hours
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hey, uh, there's a huge difference between pirating (stealing and selling) and archiving (preserving possibly while allowing free public access). even interpol's website clarifies that selling the stuff is the main problem—while also warning about "data theft" and "who is behind the piracy site?" as though these issues don't happen on everyday social media as policy.
like, your local library is not "pirating" media by having copies for you to borrow and use. i wasn't "pirating" when i downloaded music from borrowed cds to make mix cds for a friend.
despite what netflix and other big companies with more money than moral sense say, SHARING is not PIRATING.
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cinemaocd · 23 hours
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Atomic Blonde (2017) Directed by David Leitch
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cinemaocd · 23 hours
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I think that moment was meant to show how random and volatile Henry was after the accident, but it also shows the way that Anne just fails to handle Henry properly. From Cromwell's POV, not realizing that the accident has changed the game, he merely sees Anne's request as another example of her using "weak women's weapons" trying to pressure Henry into giving up jousting and also, implying vaguely that Henry's accident was responsible for the miscarriage. When you look at the show of humility--which Henry I think rightly sees as false humility from Anne, combined with the fact that it's a very public encounter, it seems like a terrible blunder. She gives him a choice between either looking weak and giving up the jousting or basically admitting that the jousting puts his kingdom at risk and he is not doing his duty.
Coming to him with the male members of her family as protection was actually baiting him. It's really confrontational and assumes a kind of pre-judgement that she needs to have her male relatives with her as backup because presumably Henry might lash out at her or dismiss her out of hand because she's a woman.
And of course, it's completely unnecessary as well. Henry is rendered incapable of jousting by the accident and it just never is going to come up again. Had Anne spoken to Cromwell or Henry's doctors she might have gotten this news without exposing herself the way she did.
Cromwell observes it and thinks it's perhaps an over-reaction, more than unusually fiery and cruel, but Henry's anger is understandable in that moment. Where it completely blindsides him is later, in the Chapuys incident, where Henry goes from triumph, to irritation with Chapuys to white hot rage with Cromwell over seemingly nothing. I have scoured the book for any behind the scenes context that explain his rage and it just isn't there. It's out of character and that's why it's important. It shows that Henry's personality has changed. In that case, I really don't think there's anything Cromwell could have done differently, except perhaps looking quite so visibly pleased with himself at getting Chapuys to bow to Anne. There is just a brief moment when Henry sees Cromwell, look up from kneeling in prayer. He knows he should be more solemn than he is but he can't help himself. Had Cromwell literally kept his head down and not taken any delight and therefore credit for his manipulation of Chapuys, Henry's rage might have landed on some other hapless courtier that day.
perhaps because it is before the injury but I almost always realized the stark contrast in Thomas and Anne confronting Henry about jousting.
When Thomas asks Henry not to harm Gregory, Henry responds kindly, well in a Henry way. Thomas was potentially asking Henry, a victor and somewhat of a prodigy at jousting to lower his skill and to potentially, if it came to it, lose to spare Gregory. And if not lose, certainly not win. Henry of course didn't promise Thomas anything, but rather than lash out at him, attempt to comfort him.
On the other hand when Anne asked, for his own wellbeing, for him to stop jousting not only did he yell at her, but he did so publicly, and she was shamed for it.
The contrast and the similarities of Anne and Thomas, and their parallels toward their proximity with Henry are very intriguing to me.
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cinemaocd · 1 day
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“When the handle has snapped off the basket that held all your eggs…” gone girl tier monologue
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cinemaocd · 1 day
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cinemaocd · 1 day
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you should be able to say "line" if you don't know what to say in a social situation
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cinemaocd · 1 day
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Having a bridge phobia on days when a bridge actually collapses:
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cinemaocd · 1 day
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"And you don't have to pretend you'll miss me." "Of course, I'll miss you. You're my mother." "Well, that's very dutiful of you considering that I've never been very loving towards you. And I'm sorry for that but you've always been a great disappointment to me, Claudius."
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cinemaocd · 1 day
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An interesting essay that I found available online. I always thought that Fanny has been disliked absolutely unfairly in the world of able-bodied and extraverted people. I'm glad I found people who agree that Fanny's character is treated unfairly and without due respect both in the novel and in the real world of readers.
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cinemaocd · 2 days
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cinemaocd · 2 days
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something lgbtq was happening in this movie
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cinemaocd · 2 days
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this is MY brokeback mountain
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