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#marie lindfors
dozydawn · 7 months
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Brooksfield, 1989.
Model: Marie Lindfors.
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zerox77660 · 7 months
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Marie Lindfors
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bearterritory · 6 days
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Amari Turner was one of three Cal athletes to set program records.
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WALNUT – California track & field saved its best performances for its third and final day of competition at the Mt. SAC Relays, re-setting the program record books once again with three new all-time No. 1s and a trio of additional top-10s.   Junior David Foster, already one of the NCAA's top sprinters, lowered his wind-legal 100m PR to 10.16 in the men's elite section and toppled the 34-year-old Golden Bear record set by Atlee Mahorn in 1990; that time tied him for the ninth-fastest wind-legal time in Division I this season.   Later, senior Amari Turner bettered her own program record with a second-place leap of 4.40m (14-5.25) in the women's pole vault elite competition, improving her old personal best by two inches; meanwhile, classmate Rowan Hamilton was posting a PR of his own in the hammer cage, launching an NCAA-leading throw of 77.16m (253-1) to improve his own Cal record by nearly seven feet and take first place in the men's elite hammer contest. With that mark, Hamilton is now the eighth-ranked men's hammer thrower in collegiate history.
In the women's elite discus section, junior Caisa-Marie Lindfors added another win to her season with a mark of 60.15m (197-4), while senior teammate Jasmine Blair added two inches to her program No. 2 entry by throwing the platter 58.59m (192-2). Rounding out the women's elite field events was high jumper Toby Lai, who cleared the bar at 1.82m (5-11.5) for the fourth-best mark in program history and Cal's highest in 13 years. Over on the track, a pair of seniors – Jada Hicks and Jazlynn Shearer – competed in the elite 100m hurdles; Hicks finished the race in 13.27, while Shearer improved her wind-legal best to 13.36, fourth-fastest on Cal's all-time list.   Other top finishers for the Bears included junior Aysha Shaheed (11.41) in the women's 100m elite, senior Michael Gupta (62.68m/205-7) in the men's collegiate hammer and redshirt freshman Nick Godbehere (18.28m/59-11.75) in the men's shot put elite.
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byneddiedingo · 7 months
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George C. Scott in The Exorcist III (William Peter Blatty, 1990)
Cast: George C. Scott, Ed Flanders, Brad Dourif, Jason Miller, Nicol Williamson, Scott Wilson, Nancy Fish, Tracy Thorne, Barbara Baxley, Harry Carey Jr., Mary Jackson, Zohra Lampert, Viveca Lindfors. Screenplay: William Peter Blatty, based on his novel. Cinematography: Gerry Fisher. Production design: Leslie Dilley. Film editing: Peter Lee-Thompson, Todd C. Ramsay. Music: Barry De Vorzon. 
I am no great fan of The Exorcist (William Friedkin, 1973), so I couldn't be expected to like The Exorcist III very much. It's an inchoate movie, made by a writer-director who has a lot of interesting ideas, which he sometimes accomplishes, but he doesn't quite know how to put them together. The premise is that a priest, Father Dyer (Ed Flanders), and a police lieutenant, William Kinderman (George C. Scott), who were close to Father Karras (Jason Miller), the exorcist of the first film, meet on the 15th anniversary of his death. Within a few days Father Dyer is hospitalized and then murdered in a peculiarly unusual way, neatly drained of his blood while in his hospital bed. Investigating the death of his friend, Kinderman interviews hospital staff, including the chain-smoking head of the psychiatric ward, Dr. Temple (Scott Wilson), who gives him access to the most securely guarded inmates. One of them has been institutionalized there for 15 years after being found wandering the streets of the city. After claiming amnesia and lapsing into catatonia, he suddenly turned violent and began to claim that he was James Venamun, who had been executed 15 years earlier as the serial killer known as Gemini. There have been recent murders that strikingly resemble those of Gemini, so Kinderman is allowed to interview the patient, whom he recognizes as the long-dead Father Karras. During the course of the interview, however, the patient changes form to resemble Venamun (Brad Dourif). Further deaths follow, and Kinderman's own family is threatened before he begins to figure out what in the literal hell is going on. The problem is that there are two or three movies going on here at once. One involves the mystery of Father Karras, and another the story of Gemini, and of course the whole thing is tied back to the demonic possession premise of the original The Exorcist. Blatty hadn't planned to include an exorcism in the film, which is based on his novel Legion, but the producers insisted, so a priest called Father Morning (Nicol Williamson) is awkwardly inserted into the story to do a big effects-laden exorcism scene. It fits oddly with the slow, moody pace of much of Blatty's film, and finally turns out to be the wrong way to deal with the problem anyway. There's a good deal of overacting in the movie -- Scott was nominated for a Razzie as worst actor, though Williamson, Dourif, and Miller do their share of hamming it up too. Blatty does accomplish one good jump scare scene in the film, effectively using sound and camera placement, and there's a well-done sequence in which Kinderman races to save the lives of his family, so it's not a total misfire.    
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3080ti · 3 years
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The Exorcist III (1990), dir. William Peter Blatty
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letterboxd-loggd · 2 years
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The Best Little Girl in the World (1981) Sam O’Steen
February 5th 2022
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utilityclassic · 3 years
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‘Party Lines’ | MARIE LINDFORS | Australian Vogue | December 1986 | Photos: Barry McKinley
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borisbubbles · 2 years
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Btw~
1963
01. DENMARK - Grethe & Jörgen Ingmann - "Dansevise" 02.  ITALY - Emilio Pericoli - "Uno per tutte" 03.  SWITZERLAND - Ester Ofarim - "T'en va pas" 04. GERMANY - Heidi Brühl - "Marcel" 05. UNITED KINGDOM - Ronnie Carroll - "Say wonderful things to me"
1964
01. ITALY - Gigiola Chinquetti - "Non ho l'eta" 02. LUXEMBOURG - Hughues Aufray - "Dès que le printemps revient" 03. NETHERLANDS - Anneke Grönloh - "Je bent mijn leven" 04. AUSTRIA - Udo Jürgens - "Warum, nur warum?" 05. UNITED KINGDOM - Matt Monro - "I love the little things"
1965
01. LUXEMBOURG - France Gall - "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" 02. NETHERLANDS - Conny Vandenbos - "'t Is genoeg!" 03. SPAIN - Conchita Bautista - "Que bueno, que bueno" 04. UNITED KINGDOM - Kathy Kirby - "I belong" 05. SWEDEN - Ingvar Wixell - "Absent friend"
1966.
01. NORWAY - Ase Kleveland - "Intet er nytt under solen" 02. BELGIUM - Tonia - "Un peu de poivre, un peu de sel" 03. SWEDEN - Lill Lindfors & Svante Thuresson - "Nygammal vals" 04. SPAIN - Raphael - "Yo soy aquél" 05. NETHERLANDS - Milly Scott - "Fernando & Filippo"
1967.
01. MONACO - Minouche Barelli - "Boum badaboum" 02. UNITED KINGDOM - Sandie Shaw - "Puppet on a string" 03. LUXEMBOURG - Vicky Leandros - "L'amour est bleu" 04. SPAIN - Raphael - "Hablamos del amor" 05. NETHERLANDS - Thérèse Steinmetz - "Ring-dinge-ding"
1968
01. SWEDEN - Claes-Göran Hederström - "Det börjar verka kärlek, banne mig" 02. YUGOSLAVIA - Luco Capurso & Hamo Hadjadhodzic  "Jedan dan" 03. NORWAY - Odd Börre - "Stress" 04. GERMANY - Wenche Myhre - "Ein Hoch der Liebe" 05. FINLAND - Kristina Hautala - "Kun kello käy"
1969
01. UNITED KINGDOM - Lulu - "Boom bang-a-bang" 02. NETHERLANDS - Lenny Kuhr - "De troubadour" 03. SPAIN - "Salomé- "Vivo cantando" 04. PORTUGAL - Simone de Oliveira - "Desfolhada" 05. NORWAY - Kirsti Sparboe - "Oj, oj, oj, så glad jeg skal bli"
1970
01. UNITED KINGDOM - Mary Hopkin - "Knock knock, who's there?" 02. SWITZERLAND - Henri Des - "Retour" 03. MONACO - Dominique Dussault - "Marlène" 04. YUGOSLAVIA - Eva Srsen - "Pridi, dala ti nom cvet" 05. GERMANY - Katja Ebstein - "Wunder gibt es immer wieder"
1971
01. PORTUGAL - Tonicha - "Menina do alto da serra" 02. LUXEMBOURG - Monique Melsen - "Pomme, pomme, pomme" 03. MONACO - Severine - "Un banc, un arbre, une rue" 04. NORWAY - Hanne Krogh - "Lykken er" 05. AUSTRIA - Marianne Mendt - "Music"
1972
01. NETHERLANDS - Sandra & Andres - "Als het om de liefde gaat" 02. UNITED KINGDOM - The New Seekers - "Beg, steal or borrow" 03. AUSTRIA - "Milestones - "Falter im Wind" 04. FINLAND - Päivi Paunu & Kim Floor - "Muistathan" 05. YUGOSLAVIA - Tereza Kesovija - "Muzika i ti"
1973
01. UNITED KINGDOM - Cliff Richard - "Power to all our friends" 02. BELGIUM - Nicole & Hugo - "Baby, baby" 03. PORTUGAL - Fernando Tordo - "Tourada" 04. SWEDEN - The Nova - "You're summer" 05. NORWAY - Bendik Singers - "It's just a game"
1974
01. SWEDEN - ABBA - "Waterloo" 02. NETHERLANDS - Mouth & MacNeal - "I see a star" 03. SPAIN - Peret - "Canta y sé feliz" 04. GREECE - Marinella - "Krasi, Thalassa ke t' agori mou" 05. YUGOSLAVIA - Korni Grupa - "Generacija 42"
1975
01. GERMANY - Joy Fleming - "Ein Lied kann eine Brücke sein" 02. NETHERLANDS - Teach-in - "Ding-a-Dong" 03. MALTA - Renato - "Singing this song" 04. SWITZERLAND - Simone Drexel - "Mikado" 05. ITALY - "Wess & Dori Ghezzi" - "Era"
1976
01. LUXEMBOURG - Jürgen Marcus - "Chansons pour ceux qui s'aiment" 02. FINLAND - Fredi & Ystävät - "Pump-pump" 03. FRANCE - Cathérine Ferry - "Un Deux Trois" 04. NORWAY - Anne-Karine Strom - "Mata Hari" 05. ITALY - Al Bano & Romina Power - "We'll live it all again"
1977
01. BELGIUM - Dream Express - "A million in 1-2-3" 02. UNITED KINGDOM - Mike Moran & Lynsey dePaul - "Rock bottom" 03. AUSTRIA - Schmetterlinge - "Boom boom boomerang" 04. SPAIN - Mickey - "Ensename a cantar" 05. GREECE - Paschalis, Marianna, Robert & Bessy - "Mathima solfege"
1978
01. ISRAEL - Izhar Cohen & Alphabeta - "A-ba-ni-bi" 02. LUXEMBOURG - Bacchara - "Parlez-vous francais?" 03. GREECE - Tania Tsanaklidou - "Charlie Chaplin" 04. GERMANY - Ireen Sheer - "Feuer" 05. PORTUGAL - Gemini - Dai li dou"
1979
01. GERMANY - Dzinghis Khan - "Dzinghis Khan" 02. SWITZERLAND - Peter, Sue & Marc ft Pfuri, Gorps & Kniri - "Trödler & Co." 03. GREECE - Elpida - "Sokrati" 04. DENMARK - Tommy Seebach - "Disco Tango" 05. BELGIUM - Micha Marah - "Hey nana"
1980.
01. LUXEMBOURG - Sophie & Magaly - "Papa Pingouïn" 02. FRANCE - Profil - "Hé, hé m'sieurs, dames" 03. GREECE - Anna Vissi - "Autostop" 04. BELGIUM - Telex - "Euro-Vision" 05. IRELAND - Johnny Logan - "What's another year?"
1981
01. BELGIUM - Emly Starr - "Samson" 02. PORTUGAL - Carlos Paiao - "Playback" 03. DENMARK - Tommy Seebach & Debbie Cameron - "Kroller eller ej" 04. IRELAND - Sheeba - "Horoscopes" 05. UNITED KINGDOM - Bucks Fizz - "Making your mind up"
1982.
01. GERMANY - Nicole - "Ein Bißchen Frieden" 02. ISRAEL - Avi Toledano - "Hora" 03. SPAIN - Lucia - "El" 04. TURKEY - Neco - "Hani?" 05. AUSTRIA - Mess - "Sonntag"
1983
01. ISRAEL- Ofra Haza - "Chai" 02. LUXEMBOURG - Corinne Hermes - "Si la vie est un cadeau" 03. BELGIUM - Pas-de-Deux - "Rendez-Vous" 04. SPAIN - Remedios Amaya - "Quién maneja mi barca?" 05. YUGOSLAVIA - Daniel - "Dzuli"
1984
01. IRELAND - Linda Martin - "Terminal 3" 02. DENMARK - Hot Eyes - "Det' lige det" 03. ITALY - Alice & Battiato - "I treni di Tozeur" 04. LUXEMBOURG - Sophie Carle - "100% d'amour" 05. FINLAND - Kirka - "Hengaillaan"
1985.
01. TURKEY - MFÖ - "Didai, didai dai" 02. ISRAEL - Izhar Cohen - "Olé, olé" 03. FINLAND - Sonja Lumme - "Elakoon Elama" 04. SWEDEN - Kikki Danielsson - "Bra vibrationer" 05. NORWAY - Bobbysocks - "La det swinge"
1986
01. BELGIUM - Sandra Kim - "J'aime la vie" 02. PORTUGAL - Dora - "Não sejas mau p'ra mim" 03. SWEDEN - Lasse Holm & Monica Törnell - "E' de' det här du kallar kärlek?" 04. NETHERLANDS - Frizzle Sizzle - "Alles heeft een ritme" 05. NORWAY - Ketil Stokkan - "Romeo"
1987
01. BELGIUM - Liliane St. Pierre - "Soldiers of love" 02. IRELAND - Johnny Logan - "Hold me now" 03. TURKEY - Seyyal Taner & Lokomotif - "Sarkim sevgi ustune" 04. YUGOSLAVIA - Novi Fosili - "Ja sam za ples" 05. NETHERLANDS - Marcha - "Rechtop in de wind"
1988.
01. SWITZERLAND - Celine Dion - "Ne partez pas sans moi" 02. TURKEY - MFÖ - "Sufi" 03. DENMARK - Hot Eyes - "Ka' du se hva' jeg sa'?" 04. SPAIN - La Decada - "Made in Spain" 05. GREECE - Afroditi Frida - "Clown"
1989
01. DENMARK - Birthe Kjaer - "Vi maler byen röd" 02. TURKEY - Pan - "Bana bana" 03. FINLAND - "Anneli Saaristo" - "La dolce vita" 04. PORTUGAL - Da Vinci - "Conquistador" 05. AUSTRIA? - Thomas Forstner? - "Nur ein Lied"? ??? I guess (but really, don't bother with this garbage year.)
1990.
01. YUGOSLAVIA - Tajci - "Hajde da ludujemo" 02. SPAIN - Azucar Moreno - "Bandido" 03. FRANCE - Joëlle Ursull - "Black & White blues" 04. ICELAND - Stjornin - "Eitt lag enn" 05. CYPRUS - Haris Anastasiou - "Milas poli"
1991.
01. SWEDEN - Carola - "Fångad av en stormvind" 02. FRANCE - Amina - "C'est le dernier qui a parlé qui a raison" (beyond the shadow of a doubt, the best top 2 in any Eurovision year ever) 03. UNITED KINGDOM - Samanta Janus - "A message to your heart" 04. ISRAEL - Duo Datz - "Kan" 05. GREECE - Sophia Vossou - "I anixi"
1992.
01. DENMARK - Lotte Nilsen & Kenny Lübke - "Alt det som ingen ser" 02. PORTUGAL - Dina - "Amor d'agua fresca" 03. ISRAEL - Dafna Dekel - "Ze rak sport" 04. FRANCE - Kali - "Monté la riviè" 05. BELGIUM - Morgane - "Nous, on veut des violons"
1993.
01. SLOVENIA - 1XBand - "Tih dezeven dan" 02. NETHERLANDS - Ruth Jacott - "Vrede" 03. GREECE - Katy Garbi - "Ellada, hora tou fotos" 04. SPAIN - Eva Santamaria - "Hombres" 05. BOSNIA/HERZEGOVINA - Fazla - "Sva bol sveta"
1994
01. GERMANY - MeKaDo - "Wir geben 'ne Party" 02. RUSSIA - Youddiph - "Vyechni Stranik" 03. SLOVAKIA - Tublatanka - "Nekoniecna piesen" 04. FINLAND - CatCat - "Bye, bye baby" 05. FRANCE - Nina Morato - "Je suis un vrai garçon"
1995
01. CYPRUS - Alexandros Panayi - "Sti fotia" 02. DENMARK - Aud Wilken - "Fra Mols til Skagen" 03. SPAIN - Anabel Conde - "Vuelve conmigo" 04. FRANCE - Nathalie Santamaria - "Il me donne rendez-vous" 05. AUSTRIA - Stella Jones - "Die Welt dreht sich verkehrt"
1996.
01. CROATIA - Maja Blagdan - "Sveta ljubav" 02. PORTUGAL - Lucia Moniz - "O meu coracao nao tem cor" 03. ESTONIA - Maarja-Liis Ilus & Ivo Linna - "Kaelakee hääl" 04. NORWAY - Elisabeth Andreassen - "I evighet" 05. SWEDEN - One more time - "Den vilda"
1997.
01. POLAND - Anna-Maria Jopek - "Ale jestem" 02. CYPRUS - Hara & Andreas Konstantinou - "Mana mou" 03. TURKEY - Sebnem Paker & Ethnik - "Dinle" 04. UNITED KINGDOM - Katrina & The Waves - "Love shine a light" 05. ICELAND - Paul Oscar - "Minn hinsti dans"
1998.
01. NETHERLANDS - Edsilia - "Hemel en aarde" 02. GERMANY - Guildo Horn - "Guildo hat euch lieb'" 03. MALTA - Chiara - "The one that I love" 04. BELGIUM - Melanie Cohl - "Dis oui" 05. CYPRUS - Michael Hayiyannis - "Genesis"
1999
01. CROATIA - Doris Dragovic - "Marija Magdalena" 02. GERMANY - Sürpriz - "Reise nach Jerusalem" 03. ICELAND - Selma - "All out of luck" 04. UNITED KINGDOM - Precious - "Say it again" 05. LITHUANIA - Aiste - "Strazdas"
2000.
01. LATVIA - Brainstorm - "My star" 02. RUSSIA - Alsou - "Solo" 03. N-MACEDONIA - XXL - "100% te Ljubam" 04. ROMANIA - Taxi - "The moon" 05. DENMARK - Olson Brothers - "Fly on the wings of love"
2001.
01. FRANCE - Natasha St. Pier - "Je n'ai que mon âme" 02. GREECE - Antique - "Die for you" (and after those two have ALREADY breached the "trash that is only enjoyable with irony" tier. fantastic year.) 03. LATVIA - Arnis Mednis - "Too much" 04. RUSSIA - Mumiy Troll - "Lady Alpine Blue" 05. POLAND - Piasek - "2Long"
2002
01. SPAIN - Rosa - "Europe's living a celebration" 02. BOSNIA/HERZEGOVINA - Maja - "Na jastuku za dvoje" 03. MALTA - Ira Losco - "7th wonder" 04. ESTONIA - Sahlene - "Runaway" 05. CROATIA - Vesna Pisarovic - "Everything I want"
2003
01. GERMANY - Lou - "Let's get happy" 02. ROMANIA - Nicola - "Don't break my heart" 03. BELGIUM - Urban Trad - "Sanomi" 04. CROATIA - Claudia Beni - "Nise visam tvoja" 05. ICELAND - Brigitta - "Open your heart"
2004
01. ALBANIA - Anjezha Shahini - "Image of you" 02. UKRAINE - Ruslana - "Wild dances" 03. MALTA - Julie & Ludwig - "Off again, on again" 04. BELARUS - Aleksandra & Konstantin - "My Galileo" 05. ESTONIA - Neiokoso - "Tii"
2005
01. ROMANIA - Luminita Aghell & Sistem - "Let me try" 02. NORWAY - WigWam - "In my dreams" 03. HUNGARY - NOX - "Forogj, vilag!" 04. ISRAEL - Shiri Maimon - "Hashek'et Shenish'ar" 05. "SWITZERLAND" - Vanilla Ninja - "Cool vibes"
2006
01. ICELAND - Silvia Night - "Congratulations" 02. SWEDEN - Carola - "Invincible" 03. FINLAND - Lordi - "Hard Rock Hallellujah" 04. NORWAY - Christine Gulbrandsen - "Alvedansen" 05. CROATIA - Severina - "Moja stikla" (yes my fave is an NQ. Fittingly in the only year where the semifinal was better than the grand final.)
2007
01. GEORGIA - Sopho - "Visionary Dream" 02. SERBIA - Marija Serifovic - "Molitva" 03. CYPRUS - Evridiki - "Comme ci, comme ça" 04. SLOVENIA - Alenka Gotar - "Cvet z juga" 05. HUNGARY - Magdi Rusza - "Unsubstantial Blues"
2008
01. ICELAND - Euroband - "This is my life" 02. FRANCE - Sébastien Tellier - "Divine" 03. BOSNIA/HERZEGOVINA - Laka - "Pokusaj" 04. UKRAINE - Ani Lorak - "Shady Lady" 05. SLOVENIA - Rebeka Dremelj - "Vrag naj vzame"
2009
01. ICELAND - Yohanna - "Is it true?" 02. ESTONIA - Urban Symphony - "Rändajad" 03. ALBANIA - Kejsi Tola - "Carry me in your dreams" 04. UKRAINE - Svetlana Loboda - "Be my valentine" 05. ARMENIA - Inga & Anush - "Jan jan"
2010
01. ALBANIA - Juliana Pasha - "It's all about you" 02. TURKEY - MaNga - "We could be the same" 03. ROMANIA - Paula Seling & Ovi - "Playing with fire" 04. FRANCE - Jessy Matador - "Allez, ola, olé!" 05. FINLAND - Kuunkuiskaajat - "Työlki ellää"
2011
01. GERMANY - Lena - "Taken by a stranger" 02. BOSNIA/HERZEGOVINA - Dino Merlin - "Love in rewind" 03. BULGARIA - Poli Genova - "Na inat" 04. SLOVENIA - Maja Keuc - "No one" 05. SERBIA - Nina - "Caroban"
2012
01. SWEDEN - Loreen - "Euphoria" 02. MOLDOVA - Pasha Parfeny - "Lautar" 03. ESTONIA - Ott Lepland - "Kuula" 04. ICELAND - Greta Salomé & Jonsi - "Never forget" 05. BELARUS - Litesound - "We are the heroes"
2013.
01. GREECE - Koza Mostra & Agathonas Iakovidis - "Alcohol is free" 02. UKRAINE - Zlata Ognevich - "Gravity" 03. MONTENEGRO - Who see & Nina Zizic - "Igranka" 04. FINLAND - Krista Siegfrids - "Marry me" 05. BULGARIA - Elitsa & Stoyan - "Samo shampioni"
2014.
01. SLOVENIA - Tinkara Kovac - "Round and round" 02. AUSTRIA - Conchita Wurst - "Rise like a phoenix" 03. POLAND - Cleo & 'Donatan' - "My slowianie" 04. SWITZERLAND - Sebalter - "Hunter of stars" 05. SPAIN - Ruth Lorenzo - "Dancing in the rain"
2015.
01. LATVIA - Aminata - "Love injected" 02. ESTONIA - Stig Rästa & Elina Born - "Goodbye to yesterday" 03. SERBIA - Bojana Stamenov - "Beauty never lies" 04. SWEDEN - Mans Zelmerlow - "Heroes" 05. RUSSIA - Polina Gagarina - "A million voices"
2016.
01. ARMENIA - Iveta Mukuchyan - "LoveWave" 02. BULGARIA - Poli Genova - "If love was a crime" 03. GEORGIA - Nika Kocharov & Y.G.L - "Midnight Gold" 04. BELGIUM - Laura Tesoro - "What's the pressure" 05. UKRAINE - Jamala - "1944"
2017.
01. BELGIUM - Blanche - "City lights" 02. HUNGARY - Joci Papai - "Origo" 03. BELARUS - Naviband - "Story of my life" 04. NORWAY - JOWST - "Grab the moment" 05. N-MACEDONIA - Jana Burceska - "Dance alone"
2018
01. LITHUANIA - Ieva Zasimauskaite - "When we're old" 02. SLOVENIA - Lea Sirk - "Hvala, ne!" 03. ESTONIA - Elina Nechayeva - "La Forza" 04. FRANCE - Madame Monsieur - "Mercy" 05. MOLDOVA - DoReDoS - "My lucky day"
2019
01. SLOVENIA - ZalaGasper - "Sebi" 02. AUSTRALIA - Kate Miller-Heidke - "Zero Gravity" 03. ITALY - Mahmood - "Soldi" 04. NORWAY - KEiiNO - "Spirit in the sky" 05. ICELAND - Hatari - "Hatrið munn sigra"
2020
01. ICELAND - “Daði & Gagnamagnið - “Think about things” 02. UKRAINE - Go_A - “Solovey” 03. LITHUANIA - The Roop - “On fire” 04. BELARUS - VAL - “Da vidna” 05. BULGARIA - VICTORIA - “Tears Getting Sober”
To be continued...?
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esc-gleek · 4 years
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Eurovision Time Capsule: 2020
60 years ago: The United Kingdom hosts the contest for the first time, and the “eternal underachiever” Norway makes its debut.  France wins for the second time in 3 years when Jacqueline Boyer charms the juries with the song "Tom Pillibi"
55 years ago: Luxembourg gets its second victory with France Gall and her song "Poupée de Cire, Poupée de Son".  Ireland, which would go on to become the most victorious nation in the contest, makes its debut.
50 years ago: Following the chaos of the 4-way win a year prior, tiebreaker rules are introduced to the contest in Amsterdam.  The pre-song postcards are also introduced.  Despite only 12 nations competing, Ireland emerges victorious for the first time thanks to Dana and her charming performance of "All Kinds of Everything".
45 years ago: Turkey makes its debut as Stockholm hosts the contest.  The phrase "Douze Points" is heard for the first time as the 12-point scoring system is introduced (the first 12 points is given to Luxembourg) and is still used to this day.  The Netherlands takes its 4th victory with "Ding-a-Dong" by Teach-In.  It would remain their last known victory until 2019.
40 years ago: The Hague graciously offers to host the silver anniversary contest.  Israel withdraws for the time being, and Morocco makes its first and only appearance.  A decade after its first victory, Ireland gets its second win with "What's Another Year", and the legend of Johnny Logan begins.
35 years ago: The contest returns to Sweden, hosted in Gothenburg.  Host Lill Lindfors pulls off a staged "wardrobe malfunction" prior to the start of the voting that remains an iconic moment to this day.  And finally, after coming last so many times in the past, Norway gets its first victory with "La Det Swinge" by Bobbysocks.
30 years ago: The theme of change in Europe dominates the landscape in Zagreb.  Another rule change is introduced, where one must be at least 16 years old to participate in the contest.  Italy gets its second victory with "Insieme: 1992" by one of Italy's leading stars, Toto Cutugno.
25 years ago: For the third year in a row, Ireland hosts the contest.  Mary Kennedy would be the last solo presenter until 2013.  Norway wins for the second time with the song "Nocturne" by Secret Garden.
20 years ago: Stockholm welcomes the 21st century and the new millennium.  The Big Four (now Big Five) rule is now officially introduced.  Latvia makes an impressive debut by finishing in 3rd place, but it's longshots Denmark and the Olsen Brothers who take the victory with "Fly on the Wings of Love".
15 years ago: Eurovision celebrates its 50th anniversary with a gala event in Copenhagen, where "Waterloo" by ABBA is named the greatest entry of the first 50 years.  Meanwhile in Kiev, Moldova and Bulgaria make their debuts.  After 31 years of waiting, Greece gets its first victory with the coincidentally-titled "My Number One" by Helena Paparizou.
10 years ago: The 50:50 voting system proved to be so well-received that it is now extended into the semifinals at the contest in Oslo.  Germany gets its second win (and first since Nicole in 1982) thanks to Lena and "Satellite".  As of today, it is the only country among the Big Five to win since the rule was introduced in 2000.
5 years ago: Eurovision reaches its diamond anniversary.  To celebrate, it puts on a special concert in London and invites Australia, which has had a massive fan following since 1983, to debut.  The Land Down Under doesn't disappoint in Vienna, finishing in the top 5.  However, it is Sweden that gets its 6th victory (and second of the 2010s) with "Heroes" by Måns Zelmerlöw.  Unfortunately for host country Austria and Germany, they each score the dreaded "nul points" for the first time since 2003.
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kultguy · 4 years
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A young girl, Cenci (Mia Farrow), sees Leonora (Elizabeth Taylor), a middle-aged prostitute, visiting the grave of her child in a London cemetery. Struck by the resemblance to her own dead mother, Cenci takes Leonora to the opulent mansion where she lives alone and installs her in her mother’s old bedroom, dressing her in the dead woman’s clothes.
Leonora, in turn, humours the neurotic girl by adapting to her fantasies and rituals. But their private masquerade is interrupted by two strange aunts, Hannah (Peggy Ashcroft) and Hilda (Pamela Brown), and Cenci’s abusive stepfather Albert (Robert Mitchum)…
In between his collaborations with Harold Pinter – 1963’s The Servant, 1967’s Accident (both starring Dirk Bogarde) and 1971’s The Go-Between, UK-based American director Joseph Losey helmed a trio of cinematic curiosities – the campy 1966 cartoon strip spy thriller Modesty Blaise (again with Bogarde), the spectacular bomb that was 1968’s Boom! (based on Tennessee Williams’ play The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore) and the baffling ritualistic 1968 psychological thriller, Secret Ceremony, which is now getting a world Blu-ray premiere release from Indicator.
Having already worked with her on Boom!, Losey felt Elizabeth Taylor was ideal for role of Leonora. She ended up not only being a dream to work with (unlike Mitchum, who was somewhat a handful), she also took a vulnerable young Mia Farrow under her wing. Farrow had just completed Rosemary’s Baby, which had yet to be released, and had Frank Sinatra’s minders watching her every move as they went through their messy split.
Interestingly, Farrow wasn’t Losey’s original choice for the role. He wanted Vanessa Redgrave, but she proved too expensive, and his other choice, Marianne Faithfull, was unavailable. But it was Viveca Lindfors, the wife of the film’s screenwriter George Tabori, who recommended Farrow. But Farrow is a great choice as she brings a genuine amount of fragile vulnerability to her role as the disturbed girl trapped in her own imaginings. And she and Taylor make for a winning combination.
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Boasting exquisite production design (by Richard MacDonald), opulent cinematography (from Gerry Fisher), an elegant Victorian music box inspired score (Richard Rodney Bennett) and some wonderful gowns for Taylor (by Marc Bohan, the chief designer for Christian Dior, who based his palette on the mansion’s colourful mosaics and Taylor’s own iconic violet eyes), Losey’s psycho-thriller is a darkly decadent offering from the normally naturalistic director that’s so hypnotic that even the most baffled viewer will be left dazzled.
DID YOU KNOW? The mansion used in the film is Debenham House in Addison Road, Holland Park. Also known as Peacock House, this extraordinary romantic stew of sensual, Victorian oriental fantasy built in the Arts and Crafts Style by architect Halsey Ricardo (in 1905) was chosen by Losey because he had walked past it every day while taking his young son Gavrik to school.
Losey also makes excellent use of some other London locations, including Kensal Green’s All Souls Cemetery (which was extensively used in 1973’s Theatre of Blood0, the streets around Chepstow Road, W2 (and St Mary Magdalene church), and the historic Grand Hotel Huis ter Duin in Noordwijk aan Zee in the Netherlands (a favourite of the Dutch royals, and also of Taylor and Burton).
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AND ALSO… NBC TV paid US$1.5m for the TV rights, and without consulting the film makers, Universal fatally edited 18 minutes of the film for its showing on TV in September 1970. They cut some footage to substitute a discussion between Robert Douglas and Michael Strong playing a lawyer and psychiatrist who analyse the motivation of the film’s characters. In doing so, they bizarrely changed Leonora from being a prostitute to being an assistant in a wig shop. Losey was so incensed that he demanded that his name be struck from the credits of the edited TV version. These sequences are included as an extra on the Indicator release.
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INDICATOR’S SPECIAL FEATURES • High Definition re-master • Original mono audio • Audio commentary with author/critics Dean Brandum and Alexandra Heller-Nicholas (2019) • Archival Interview with Joseph Losey (1969, 15 mins): extract from the French television programme Cinéma critique • The Beholder’s Share (2019, 25 mins): interview with Gavrik Losey • TV version: additional scenes (1971, 18 mins): the epilogue and prologue produced for US television screenings • Original theatrical trailer • Larry Karaszewski trailer commentary (2015, 3 mins): short critical appreciation • Image gallery • New and improved English subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing • Collectors booklet with a new essay by Neil Sinyard, an archival location report, Joseph Losey on Secret Ceremony, a look at the source novella, an overview of contemporary reviews, and film credits
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Secret Ceremony | Joseph Losey’s darkly decadent 1968 psychological thriller dazzles on Blu-ray A young girl, Cenci (Mia Farrow), sees Leonora (Elizabeth Taylor), a middle-aged prostitute, visiting the grave of her child in a London cemetery.
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dozydawn · 7 months
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La Perla, 1988.
Model: Marie Lindfors.
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obotligtnyfiken · 7 years
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I can't help it. Mary's death makes me think of Lill Lindfors' comedy classic "Ich sterbe"
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tachtutor · 4 years
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» Two DON JUAN Movies Reviewed by Dan Stumpf.
» Two DON JUAN Movies Reviewed by Dan Stumpf.
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REVIEWED BY DAN STUMPF:
    DON JUAN. Vitaphone/Warners, 1926. John Barrymore, Mary Astor, Warner Oland, Estelle Taylor, Montagu Love and Nigel de Brulier. Screenplay by Estelle Taylor. Directed by Alan Crosland.
THE ADVENTURES OF DON JUAN. Warners, 1948. Errol Flynn, Viveca Lindfors, Robert Douglas, Alan Hale, Romney Brent, Robert Warwick, Una O’Connor and Raymond Burr. Screenplay by…
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goalhofer · 6 years
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2018 Olympics Finland Roster
Alpine Skiing
Andreas Romar (Korsholm)
Samu Torsti (Vaasa)
Biathlon
Tero Seppala (Ristijarvi)
Tuomas Gronman (Kouvola)
Olli Hiidensalo (Nummi-Pusula)
Venla Lehtonen (Kontiolahti)
Suvi Minkkinen (Lapinlahti)
Mari Laukkanen (Eno)
Kaisa-Leena Makarainen (Ristijarvi)
Laura Toivanen (Joensuu)
Cross Country Skiing
Matti Heikkinen (Vantaa)
Perttu Hyvarinen (Kuopio)
Lari Lehtonen (Imatra)
Iivo Niskanen (Oulu)
Lauri Vuorinen (Rovaniemi)
Ristomatti Hakola (Jami)
Martti Jylha (Helsinki)
Johanna Matintalo (Rovaniemi)
Laura Mononen (Hiihtoseura)
Kerttu Niskanen (Oulu)
Krista Parmakoski (Urheilijat)
Aino-Kaisa Saarinen (Kisa)
Freestyle Skiing
Joona Kangas (Levi)
Jussi Penttala (Helsinki)
Jimi Salonen (Muurame)
Anni Karava (Helsinki)
Nordic Combined
Arttu Makiaho (Kaajani)
Ilkka Herola (Siilinjarvi)
Eero Hirvonen (Laukaa)
Hannu Manninen (Rovaniemi)
Leevi Mutru (Lahti)
Ski Jump
Antti Aalto (Sotkamo)
Janne Ahonen (Lahti)
Andreas Alamommo (Helsinki)
Jarkko Maatta (Iisalmi)
Eetu Nousiainen (Helsinki)
Julia Kykkanen (Lahti)
Curling
Oona Kauste (Espoo)
Tomi Rantamaki (Helsinki)
Figure Skating
Emmi Peltonen (Helsinki)
Speed Skating
Pekka Koskela (Mantta)
Mika Poutala (Helsinki)
Elina Risku (Seinajoki)
Hockey
Lauri Marjamaki (Tampere)
Mikko Koskinen (Vantaa)
Karri Ramo (Asikkala)
Juha Metsola (Tampere)
Mikko Lehtonen (Turku)
Tommi Kivisto (Vantaa)
Lasse Kukkonen (Oulu)
Sami Lepisto (Espoo)
Juuso Hietanen (Hameenlinna)
Miro Heiskanen (Espoo)
Miika Koivisto (Vaasa)
Atte Ohtamaa (Nivala)
Marko Anttila (Lempaala)
Julius Junttila (Oulu)
Eeli Tolvanen (Vihti)
Joonas Kemppainen (Kajaani)
Jani Lajunen (Espoo)
Jonas Enlund (Helsinki)
Petri Kontiola (Seinajoki)
Mika Pyorala (Oulu)
Jarno Koskiranta (Paimio)
Oskar Osala (Vasaa)
Sakari Manninen (Oulu)
Teemu Hartikainen (Kuopio)
Jukka Peltola (Tampere)
Veli-Matti Savinainen (Espoo)
Eveliina Suonpaa (Kiukainen)
Meeri Raisanen (Tampere)
Noora Raty (Espoo)
Isa Rahunen (Kuopio)
Rosa Lindstedt (Ylojarvi)
Jenni Hiirikoski (Lempaala)
Mira Jalosuo (Lieksa)
Ella Viitasuo (Lahti)
Minnamari Tuominen (Helsinki)
Ronja Savolainen (Helsinki)
Venla Hovi (Tampere)
Linda Valimaki (Ylojarvi)
Anniina Rajahuhta (Helsinki)
Riikka Valila (Jyvaskyla)
Petra Nieminen (Tampere)
Emma Nuutinen (Vantaa)
Sara Sakkinen (Tampere)
Saila Saari (Alavus)
Michelle Karvinen (Espoo)
Tanja Niskanen (Juankoski)
Susanna Tapani (Laitila)
Snowboarding
Kalle Jarvilehto (Vuokatti)
Rene Rinnekangas (Vuokatti)
Janne Korpi (Vihti)
Markus Malin (Lahti)
Peetu Piiroinen (Hyvinkaa)
Roope Tonteri (Valkeala)
Anton Lindfors (Porvoo)
Enni Rukajarvi (Kuusamo)
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babaalexander · 6 years
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Great Birthday greetings to Actresses Born on December 29 Alison Brie Mary Tyler Moore (1936-2017) Naomi Sequeira Polly Allen Jane Levy Kate Ford Katherine Moennig Twinkle Khanna Patricia Clarkson Kristel Fulgar Tori Anderson Dina Merrill (1923-2017) Leonor Varela Charlotte Riley Cyrina Fiallo Janice Man Jennifer Ehle Ali Hillis Rolexis Delaney Aimee Richardson Inga Swenson Ally Maki Shireen Crutchfield Susie Garrett (1929-2002) Katie Sheridan Barbara Steele Viveca Lindfors (1920-1995) Morgan Lambert Maria Dizzia Clara Khoury Javeria Abasi Sandra Nelson Claire Dodd (1911-1973) Alexandra Kamp Ina Feleo #AlisonBrie #NaomiSequeira #PollyAllen #JaneLevy #KateFord #KatherineMoennig #TwinkleKhanna #PatriciaClarkson #KristelFulgar #ToriAnderson #LeonorVarela #CharlotteRiley #CyrinaFiallo #JaniceMan #JenniferEhle #AliHillis #RolexisDelaney #AimeeRichardson #IngaSwenson #AllyMaki #ShireenCrutchfield #KatieSheridan #BarbaraSteele #MorganLambert #MariaDizzia #ClaraKhoury #JaveriaAbasi #SandraNelson #AlexandraKamp #InaFeleo
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t-baba · 7 years
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This week's JavaScript news, issue 320
This week's JavaScript news — Read this e-mail on the Web
JavaScript Weekly
Issue 320 — February 2, 2017
Exploring ES2016 and ES2017
A book by Dr. Axel Rauschmayer on the latest versions of ECMAScript that’s free to read online, but possible to buy in PDF format. Axel has also updated his ECMAScript 2017 post with the final feature set.
Dr. Axel Rauschmayer
JSMpeg: A Pure JavaScript MPEG 1 + MP2 Decoder
Includes a MPEG-TS demuxer, MPEG1 video and MP2 audio decoders, with WebGL and Canvas renderers and Web Audio API sound out. Even works at 30fps on an iPhone 5S.
Dominic Szablewski
What 'async' Support in ES2017 Means For JavaScript Developers
TC39’s Brian Terlson and Naveed Ihsanullah of Mozilla explain why ‘async’ are a big deal for both JavaScript and TypeScript developers.
Mary Branscombe
Track errors in your JavaScript apps with Sentry
Don’t wait for users to tell you when your gnarly code inevitably breaks. Sentry’s open source error tracking and notifications for JavaScript, Node.js - and every other major language in your stack - will let you know exactly when and where you went wrong.
Sentry   Sponsor
A Brief History of JavaScript Standards
Extracted from the first chapter in Practical ES6 and reviewed by the creator of JavaScript himself, Brendan Eich, amongst others.
Nicolás Bevacqua
Mithril 1.0 Released: A Compact Framework for SPAs
At 3 years old, Mithril has reached its 1.0 milestone. It clocks in at under 8KB after gzip and the homepage shows off its basic feature-set well.
Service Mocker: An API Mocking Framework for Frontend Developers
Uses Service Workers in the browser to let you set up a mock API without using any servers.
Service Mocker
Formatting 'console.log' with CSS and String Template Tags
In Chrome’s console you can format log messages with CSS. This 5 minute video walks through creating a template tag function for a more reusable formatting approach.
John Lindquist
JS1k 2017: A New Round of the JS Golfing Competition
The goal is simple: write something clever/fun/interesting in 1024 bytes of JavaScript. Entries due by end of February.
JS1K
Jobs
Frontend Developer @ Poki (Amsterdam, the Netherlands)Refactoring our entire frontend, and all the impact around it. Join us building the ultimate online playground for kids of all ages. Poki
Senior JavaScript Developer (Seattle)Love a challenge? Help us ship the fastest retail experience on the web. We value collaboration, passion for delivery, and work life balance.  Nordstrom
Can't find the right job? Want companies to apply to you? Try Hired.com.
In Brief
A Look at Meteor in 2017 news Matt DeBergalis
Announcing 'Learning Aurelia' from Packt Publishing news
Got Node Skills? Soon, There Will Be a Certification for That news node Michelle Gienow
Using terminal to view test results is a productivity killer.  It's like browsing the web in a text-based browser. We deliver test results in realtime to your editor. Wallaby.js  Sponsor
6 Great Uses of the ES6 Spread Operator tutorial David Walsh
A (Very) Beginner's Guide to JavaScript Variables and Datatypes tutorial Tania Rascia
Amazon-Like Popover Trigger Behaviors in Angular tutorial Nathan Meyers
Implementing async/await with ES6 Generators and Promises tutorial Chris Chares
What is Angular? tutorial If you’ve not used Angular at all and want a high level explanation, this is as good as any. TJ VanToll
A Look at ES7 (ES2016) and ES8 (ES2017) Features tutorial Azat Mardan
Create data-intensive, feature-rich web and mobile apps with Sencha Ext JS  Learn how to design, develop and test data-intensive web apps that run on desktops, tablets, and smartphones with Sencha Ext JS Sencha, Inc.  Sponsor
10 Reasons Why I Moved From Angular to React opinion Robin Wieruch
CSS in JS: The Argument Refined opinion Daniel Steigerwald
The Fine Art of the Webpack 2 Config opinion Alexander Flenniken
gotem: 'Copy to Clipboard' for Modern Browsers in Under 1KB tools Michael Cavalea
multi.js: A User-Friendly Replacement for 'select' Boxes with the 'multiple' Attribute Enabled code Fabian Lindfors
injection-js: A Dependency Injection Library Extracted From Angular code Minko Gechev
HyperApp: 1KB JavaScript Library for Building Modern UI Applications code Jorge Bucaran
Gridtab: A jQuery Plugin to Build Grid Based Responsive Tabs code
Avoriaz: A Vue.js Testing Utility Library code Edd Yerburgh
vanilla-tilt.js: A 3D Element Tilting Library (without the jQuery Dependency) code A fork of tilt.js that we linked last week.
React-Redux Grid: A Grid + Tree Component using the Redux Pattern code Benjamin Cripps
fast-memoize.js: The 'Fastest Possible' JS Memoization Library code Caio Gondim
Curated by Peter Cooper and published by Cooperpress.
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