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#marybeth medina
darlingshane · 9 months
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big bad wolff
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Pairing: Braxton Wolff x Marybeth Medina
Summary: Passing on a contract is a first for Brax, but there's something pulling at his heartstrings that is far more interesting than the money he was offered.
Content/Warnings: 18+, Explicit, Smut, Vaginal Sex, Dom/Sub Undertones, Alcohol, Associates with Benefits (or something like that).
Word Count: 2k (precisely)
— You can read below or at AO3.
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“Hard pass,” Braxton slides the envelope across the table after taking a quick look at his new target. “I don't fuck with law enforcement.”
“That's the line you draw? Thought you were all about the money.”
“I love money. But a man gotta have a code, too. 'Sides Treasury? It'd put a target on my back.”
“She’s an analyst.”
“Still. Working for the federals.”
“What if I double the offer?”
Braxton raises a brow and opens the envelope again to see the beautiful Marybeth Medina in the photo inside.
As tempting as the offer is…
“I'm sorry, Mr. Calhoun. I'm afraid the answer is still no. What did she do anyway?”
“She's got her nose in my client's business like a rabid dog after a buried bone. The only way to stop her from digging further would be to gently put her down.”
“Hm, I've met women like that.”
“I thought you guys were professionals. Can't you make it look like an accident? What would you say if I added another 50 grand?”
“It’s possible, but accidents can get the wrong people asking the right questions, and I can't have that in my line of business.”
“You're a hitman.”
“And you're a two-time slimy lawyer that scours a six-figure representing the scum of the earth that make me look like the Easter Bunny.”
“I have to say, Mr. Wolff, your reputation does not precede you. Mr. Davenport won't be pleased to know you have refused to do your job.”
“Davenport is not my boss. Tell him I said hi.”
He watches Calhoun like a hawk as the lawyer retrieves his cellphone from Braxton's assistant.
“Did you tap it?” He asks once Calhoun has left the premises.
“Who do you think I am? Of course, I tapped it.”
“Good. You tell H to get a detailed list of all his calls, meetings, texts… I need to know where this asshole eats, when he shits, where he does his dry cleaning…”
“The whole gist. Got it.”
“Put a couple of guys on Medina, too. Just in case.”
“I thought that was your job.”
“Yeah, but I'm afraid they're going to double down now. I can't take those chances.”
“You had to piss him off, didn't you?”
“You know me, sweetheart. My mouth runs faster than my brain. I'm a lost cause.”
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Later that night, Braxton sneaks into Medina's building. His guys are already staking the place per his orders.
Medina is not home yet when he breaks into her apartment. It wouldn't be the first time he's done it.
In the dark, he pulls out a mini flashlight and RF detector and checks every nook of her place for hidden bugs.
Given their history, he kinda owes her this one. Even if he didn't, what he said to Calhoun is right, he doesn't fuck with law enforcement. At least not in that sense.
He's going through her desk when Marybeth opens the door.
She’s not surprised one bit to find him there when she turns on the light.
“Look what the cat dragged in. Do you ever just wait for people to invite you in, Mr. Wolff?” She watches Braxton, clad in back, putting his gadgets away.
“Hm, sometimes. But it's not as fun.”
“Business or pleasure?” her frown remains firm as she puts her case down, removes her blazer and steps out of her uncomfortable shoes.
“How about both?”
“Some things never change.”
Marybeth rolls the sleeves of her dress shirt and pulls out a bottle of scotch and two ball glasses from the cabinet, as he takes off his leather gloves and sits at the dining table.
That's how their meetings always start – with a bottle of Lagavulin and a formal debrief that follows with them handling their pressing business between sheets.
“I think I have a mole,” Marybeth realizes after hearing Brax's warning.
“How do you figure?”
“Because only me and my boss know about Davenport LLC. We're still gathering evidence.”
“Is your boss dirty?”
“Ray King?” She chuckles a little, “not a chance in hell.”
“Well, whatever you have on Davenport is making them shit their panties.”
“Davenport doesn’t scare me,” she throws back her glass, taking a big gulp of her drink.
“He should. I’ve seen what he does with pretty faces like yours.”
“You think he’d be that dumb to go after me?”
“He came to me, honey. He is that dumb.”
“You could've just called, you know?”
“Had to make sure nobody was listening.”
“Are they?”
“No.”
“Good. Can we move on now to the pleasure part? I had a long day.”
“I just told you one of the most dangerous men on the planet is after you and you’re not worried at all?”
“Oh, I am worried. But he’s not going to show up tonight, is he? Uh-uh. Not as long as I have The Big Bad Wolff on my side.”
“Gotta say, Medina. You were not like this when we met. You went quickly from little lamb to lion.”
“Maybe I was never a lamb. And, you weren't like this, either. It seems that you actually care about what happens to me, Mr. Wolff.”
“Well, perhaps I do. Would that be so bad?”
“Hm, no. Not at all.” She stands up, offering a hand in his direction. “You coming, Big Wolff?”
“Rock ‘n Roll, girl.”
Braxton downs the rest of his drink and takes her hand, letting her lead the way to her bedroom.
Under the warm glow of the night lamp, and Brax’s brazen stare, her hands undo one by one the buttons of her shirt. As her skin comes to view, he pulls out his boots and slips out of his jacket without letting her out of his sight.
There’s no rush, but the thrill is palpable. It lingers in the air. They’ve already gone through this more times than he can count, and watching her undress her body is just as exciting as all those times he’s ripped her clothes apart.
When they're both stripped to his underwear, his hands automatically are drawn to frame her hips, pulling her body flush against his. Marybeth tilts her head, tentatively seizing his mouth slowly, letting her fingers draw the toned slopes of his arms.
Her tongue moves past his lips as her skin comes alive, buzzing under his palms, as his fingertips sink at the curve of her ass.
Brax tries to take control of the kiss, but Marybeth doesn't waver, and brings one of her hands to hold his chin still. She nibbles his bottom lip before sucking it between her teeth to see it turn dark pink after releasing it.
Usually, she lets him be the one in charge, but tonight she's in the mood for something different. There are things outside this room that escape her control, and here with him is the only thing she can get a semblance of power.
“Thought you wanted the big bad Wolff.”
“I want him on a leash,” her hand curls around his throat without squeezing.
“Yeah? What do I get in return?”
“Me.”
He scoffs and licks his lips, “okay, lil lion, show me what you got.”
Marybeth keeps her hold around his neck, guiding him backwards toward the bed until the back of his legs meet the mattress. He lays down on his back, and she crawls on top of him. She braces her palms on his chest, straddles his lap, allowing her hips to gently circle over his crotch.
His hands are automatically called to hold those beautiful hips that shamelessly grind, earning themselves a good hard-on to enjoy.
Behind layers of underwear, she rubs herself over and over, a little faster each time, letting that sweet spot revel in the friction he provides as the inner side of her panties quickly gets coated in her juices.
Locking eyes with her, he’s utterly mesmerized by the unbearable beauty of Marybeth as she bites her bottom lip. From above, she watches him exhale and buck up like an animal between her legs, trying to drill his way into her.
It's a torturous deed, she's aware. There's a fine line between playing with Brax or riling him up, and she's just lightly tapping on it. If she pressed any harder, it'd be like poking that ravenous wolf.
After a long moment, she brings her hips to a halt and reaches back with her fingers to unclasp her bra. As she tosses it aside, she leans forward to gently bite on his lip.
“Good, Wolff,” she grins, tracing the shape of his lips with the tip of her tongue as her fingers slip under the elastic of his boxers to feel his erection. It fills up her fist, throbs as her hand squeezes just a little harder to have his precum wetting the head.
“Hmm,” his lip curls, showing those teeth he's marked on her skin many times before.
Getting him to a point of perfection, she finally rids herself of her panties and pulls down his boxers. His cock jolts on its own when her knuckles graze his shaft. Propped on her knees, she lifts her ass, lines the blunt tip of his cock with her entrance, and sinks onto him.
In less than a second, as usual, he forgets altogether why he came here as her wet ass pussy slides up and down his hardness.
“Fuck me, girl,” he pants as she sinks all the way down, having her divinely, tight opening pressing around him.
Once she's comfortable enough, she angles her body forward, propping her hands on either side of his head, and moves a little faster. First, just rocking back and forth, and then bouncing with practiced ease as Brax fills his eager palms with her ass. Her breasts are so perfectly round and perked, bouncing dangerously close to his face, he can't help but stick his head up to nibble one of them.
Marybeth, smiling mid-moan, holds his head with one hand as he viciously wraps his lips around her nipple. His grunts ripple all over her skin, making her core ache, as he moves to the other boob.
He uses his teeth this time, there's so much she can do to tame that wild beast beneath her, she wouldn't even stop it if she wanted to. After crossing that line, he's all lips, tongue, and paws claiming her body.
His arms curl around her, and before she realizes, he's turning the tables to get himself on top of her and charge the rest of the way. He desperately pushes into her at full force, coaxing her body into submission. The most beautiful cries come out of her as he drives her into madness when his fingers find their way to her clit.
Having his fingers working furiously on that spot, he bites her neck, scrapes his teeth on her jaw before devouring her mouth. He can't bring himself to stop until he's poured every drop inside her. Braxton gasps for air as he comes undone. His cock is still twitching inside her, trying to ride the wave of his orgasm, when her sweet opening flutters around him. All her muscles seize up for a second as a lightning of pleasure travels through her body.
Holding her jaw, he keeps his mouth open against her lips as his breathing catches and the room suddenly goes quiet below the sound of their shared pants. His stomach presses softly on hers, as he lays completely limp and flat on top of her. If someone were to attack right now, he wouldn't be able to even pick up his gun to defend himself or even stand up. He can think of a million ways worse to die than this, to be honest. Given the opportunity, if he had to choose a way to go, this would be it – post-orgasm, still tucked inside the fine depth of her tender walls, as her fingers softly comb the damp hairs at his nape.
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'The Accountant 2' A Go At Amazon MGM
A sequel to Ben Affleck’s 2016 starrer The Accountant has moved from Warners to Amazon MGM and is finally about to start production later this month. The film has been in development since 2017. Affleck will return along with J.K. Simmons, Jon Bernthal and Cynthia Addai-Robinson who all featured in the original. When her former boss is killed by unknown assassins, Treasury Agent Marybeth Medina…
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cynthiaaddairob · 7 years
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All due respect, Director King, what the fuck do you know about rough?
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daleisgreat · 5 years
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The Accountant
I have been anticipating doing today’s entry for awhile, but held off to put some distance behind my initial theatrical viewing two and a half years ago to see if 2016’s The Accountant (trailer) was still worthy of being ranked as my 2016 film of the year. After re-watching it yesterday I can safely assure it absolutely does. Another reason I was a little reluctant going back to it was being trepid of having rose-colored glasses for the time and place I originally saw The Accountant. I was on my last day of work before starting a vacation in fall of 2016 and on break I was skimming through the local paper’s entertainment section and it had a little write-up of The Accountant and its risks taken of doing a movie centered around a person with autism and making them a professional assassin. I somehow missed previews for it and it was the first I heard of the film. A couple friends who knew I was heading out of town the next day gave me a buzz after work to see if I wanted to join them to see The Accountant, and I was intrigued by the brief summary in the paper I read and have been a huge fan of Affleck for the better part of his career to jump on the opportunity. It turned out being a great decision and a perfect way to kickoff a vacation.
The film grabbed me right away with the opening scene where one Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) is at his front, ‘ZZZ Accounting,’ doing the taxes for a down-on-their-luck farming couple. The way it plays out almost instantly made Christian affable for pulling the farmers out of a tough hole. The opening scenes proceed to introduce how Christian copes with his day-to-day lifestyle while we are introduced to a pair of FBI agents Ray King (JK Simmons) and Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) who is tasked with tracking down Wolff throughout the film. There are so many great little exchanges early in the film, especially when Wolff is getting acquainted with the rest of the cast. He is introduced to Lamar Blackburn (John Lithgow) who hires him to track down missing money recently reported to his company. Wolff’s scenes with the adorably aloof Dana Cummings (Anna Kendrick) steal the film every time they share the screen. Cummings is Wolff’s assistant in tracking down the missing money, and naturally their digging gets too deep and assassins are sent after them with the primary one going by Brax (a pre-Punisher Jon Bernthal). Little did the assassins know who they were targeting as their attempts at laying waste to the accountants is the catalyst that yields several thrilling action/chase sequences as a result.
Interspersed throughout the film is a series of flashbacks with Christian and his family coping with Christian’s condition and how his father put him through some grueling home therapy and training that lead him to become the ‘accountant’ he is in the film’s present day. It was fascinating watching these flashbacks play out and piecing The Accountant’s greater over-arching plot together along with the FBI in some excellent deducing scenes as everything falls into place. Most films have twists that we can predict or see coming from a mile away, but I loved how they played out in multiple ways in the closing moments to wrap a tidy bow on this. I do not want to overhype this as the quintessential brain-buster, but for me The Accountant provided the perfect balance of detective work, exposition, high-tempo chases and action that combined for the killer formula and make it my favorite film of 2016. There are only three quick bonus features on the BluRay totaling up to 25 minutes, but worth going out of your way to see. Both Inside the Man and Behavioral Sciencedeal with the cast and crew’s research that went into the film and how they strived to give a faithful portrayal of Autism. They both provided great insight on their experiences and sessions on doing their background for the film. Accountant in Action is all about the stunts and choreography for the movie. What is here is good, but the extra features felt they were missing one or two things to make the bonuses collectively pop like a commentary track with Affleck, Kendrick, Simmons and director Gavin O’Connor, but it was not meant to be!
On a final note I want to make sure to applaud the casting for this film as O’Connor got excellent performances out of everyone. When doing research for this film I became giddy to see a sequel was announced with most of the headlining cast returning and O’Connor coming back to direct, but that was two years ago and when checking IMDB the sequel is still listed as merely ‘announced.’ Here is hoping the sequel comes to fruition, and if you cannot tell by now The Accountant gets my highest of recommendations to check out if you have not done so already. Other Random Backlog Movie Blogs 3 12 Angry Men (1957) 12 Rounds 3: Lockdown 21 Jump Street Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie Atari: Game Over The Avengers: Age of Ultron Batman: The Killing Joke Batman: Mask of the Phantasm Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice Bounty Hunters Cabin in the Woods Captain America: Civil War Captain America: The First Avenger Captain America: The Winter Soldier Christmas Eve Clash of the Titans (1981) Clint Eastwood 11-pack Special The Condemned 2 Countdown Creed Deck the Halls Die Hard Dredd The Eliminators The Equalizer Dirty Work Faster Fast and Furious I-VIII Field of Dreams Fight Club The Fighter For Love of the Game Good Will Hunting Gravity Guardians of the Galaxy Hercules: Reborn Hitman Indiana Jones 1-4 Ink The Interrogation Interstellar Jobs Joy Ride 1-3 Man of Steel Man on the Moon Marine 3-6 Metallica: Some Kind of Monster Mortal Kombat National Treasure National Treasure: Book of Secrets The Replacements Reservoir Dogs Rocky I-VII Running Films Part 1 Running Films Part 2 San Andreas ScoobyDoo Wrestlemania Mystery The Secret Life of Walter Mitty Shoot em Up Skyscraper Small Town Santa Steve Jobs Source Code Star Trek I-XIII Take Me Home Tonight TMNT The Tooth Fairy 1 & 2 UHF Veronica Mars Vision Quest The War Wild Wonder Woman The Wrestler (2008) X-Men: Days of Future Past
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caredogstips · 7 years
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The Accountant: Ben Afflecks Autistic Assassin Balances Taxes, Busts Skulls, Confounds Us All
This is far and away the strangest Hollywood movie of its first year. “>
In the nearly unclassifiable thriller The Accountant , Ben Affleck trades the Bat-armor for another crime-fighting outfit: sights, a sensible suit, and a pocket shield. By period he crunches tax returns for tribes out of his strip-mall agency in the suburb. On the side, we rapidly memorize in this audaciously serious category cavort, hes a stone-cold killer with numbersor a sniper rifle, or a knife, or his bare hands, or even the loop he wears looped through his sensible slacks. Afflecks titular auditor, you might allege, is a CPA with a extremely particular change of skills.
Theres as much Taken as here i am Rain Man to be found in The Accountant , a regularly frustrating but amazingly witty category mishmash thats at least upfront about its center vanity: Ben Affleck is clearly, 100 percent going for it as Hollywoods first autistic assassin. Thats not enough to make it a good movie, exactly, but it certainly prevents The Accountant watchable in dribbles and fells of eccentric, fleeting magnificence, in a truly spooky various kinds of papa thriller that never met an accounting gag it didnt like.
Directed by Warrior helmer Gavin OConnor from a Black List screenplay by Bill Dubuque ( The Judge ), The Accountant has such a fearles high-concept premise, its a disgrace how far it is from being cohesive. Affleck stars as Christian Wolff, a quiet and tidy recluse whose high-functioning autism stirs him a natural at the accounting artsparticularly when his shady cartel and crime-lord buyers necessitate him to sieve through hopeless amounts of files and fleshes to piece together the riddle when cash goes missing.
A lifetime of harsh hand-to-hand combat and artilleries improving too stirs him the easy-going choice when those chaotic books necessitate resolving. His Screech rating, one reckons, must be impeccable. Afflecks Wolff is nothing if not efficient at his place, slicing and shooting his path through entire builds of bad people with the same cool precision he uses to solve complex numerical equations. In The Accountant , Afflecks targets are conceded no mercy, only enough speedy and destructive retribution to settle the score. No Marthas can save these men. The only mistake we ever hear of him making, quite literally, is that he registered his taxes properly and on time.
The mystery of Wolffs identity unspools in all areas of the cinemas opening act as gritty U.S Treasury Director Ray King( J.K. Simmons) ropes loath specialist Marybeth Medina( Cynthia Addai-Robinson) into hunting him down through the only breadcrumbs he has: photos of an unidentified person in a dres and the nagging suspicion that hes the key to something large-hearted . Meanwhile, Wolffs taken his latest gig tracking $61 million thats gone missing from the ledgers of a major cybernetic robotics make run by Lamar Black( John Lithgow ).
But just as Wolff starts to math his road toward figuring out the villain, executives start croaking and his campaign is cut short, wreaking hell on its capability to cope with the chaos. Ordinarily hed fastening himself in the dark and pulsate his shins with a wooden dowel while listening to metal, as you do.( If youre looking for any deep understanding of how tribes on the spectrum actually live, you wont find it here .) Instead, this time, he goes on the run with Dana( a charmingly chatty Anna Kendrick ), the junior numbers-cruncher also privy to the fiscal infringement, setting a collision course with a shadowy-but-flashy bravo( Jon Bernthal) and the feds hot on his trail.
Once The Accountant s story get leading, it stupefies with bullet-flying war and winking humor. One of its most entertaining moments steams down to a simple wave of the handa tiny throwaway gesticulate that manages to be the best-timed punchline in the entire movie. Other highlightings happen when Afflecks reclusive Wolff begrudgingly makes his picket down with the spunky Dana, and shares with her his most sacred seat: a 34 -foot Airstream trailer filled with priceless art and all his getaway currency, his superspy drawer of passports and faux identities next to a meticulously targeted Star Wars lightsaber.
All the while, unfortunately, were yanked out of the present to flash back to Wolffs past. Some parents school their boys to throw a schoolyard punch. Realise his sons ailment would differentiate him as different, Wolffs Army vet single father subjected him to years of brutal martial-arts training so hed become a fighter , not a prey. Its a provocative idea and one whose franknes is underscored by the X-Men-style school for children with developmental disorders that plays a key role in the plot. One in 68 children placed in America are diagnosed as on the spectrum, the cinema teaches its captive gathering. We should learn “childrens issues” its what realizes them different that obligates them specialeven if that lesson is autistic girls can grow up to be stone-cold bravoes, too.
Admirably enough, OConnor doesnt seem to care that his head-spinning mlange of categories and ambiances is bound to try the patience of his audience. It is what it is: a hit man drama-thriller-mystery that champs autism as a figure of underappreciated superheroism. The flaws dont contradict that bold raison detre , even if The Accountant suffered from too many of them. For one, it has more attributes than it was able to administer. It turns between droning exposition, bone-crunching action, too many flashbacks, and brief instants of fiction and feeling. And its steadfast demand on trumpeting itself as a organize of R-rated hyperviolent autism advocacy is uncharted cinematic country, to say the least.
Its actually more like The Bourne Identity satisfies A Beautiful Mind so much so that Affleck even gets to furrow his countenance and converge real hard through a montage scribbling fleshes on the windows and openings of an office, just like John Nash. Tragically, the last circumstance the already flat Affleck requires is to play a humorless boulder of a character who struggles to communicate and read psychological clues. You can see Affleck patently trying to give his high-functioning hero a sense of legitimacy, but it predominantly happens off as unintentionally wooden where reference is not applying his laser focus on humbling his adversaries to demise. Afflecks an actor best suited to more outwardly emotional douchebag personas that tap into his innate bro-iness. But his painfully penalty Wolff speaks in a stilted soft-spoken silence, and gulps methodically at his hands before doing anythingwhether its dining dinner or performing an scrutiny. But Affleck fights to transmit how viscerally discomfited the person is by most social locations and how longingly he would love to feel the human rights communications that evade him. Its not a good look for him since he manages to muster simply a few variances on the same stoic gape through two hours and change onscreen.
And hitherto the times he actually does stumble a self-aware flute, the strangest studio movie of the yearinclusive felony thriller, advocacy actioner, the only movie youll ever should be noted that big-ups both 19 th -century German mathematician Carl Gauss and Dogs Playing Poker with equal reverencebegs even more of Afflecks autistic war hero. I did not expect to miss his awkward person shtick on screen when he wasnt on it, but that very unlikely occasion happened during one heinously wearisome situation of third-act explanation. OConnors niftiest ruse is that he manages to pull The Accountant back from the verge at least long enough to make a speciman for meeting more of Afflecks Accountant in future sequels. He contacts his full capacity while scrapping his acces through a climactic panorama set inside a sprawling indulgence dwelling under siege, acquiring psychological catharsis in the middle of a gunfight. Jason Bourne might have been able to do that, very, but could he likewise get you fund back on your tax return?
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Online Reviews From Amazon Sunday March 12, 2017
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Public Reviews Written by You Show:   Most recent reviews  Most recent comments    Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11-20 More From Pitch Perfect Price: $7.99 Great If You Like a Diverse Range of Pop Music, March 11, 2017 Verified Purchase(What's this?)This review is from: More From Pitch Perfect (MP3 Music)The More From Pitch Perfect (original motion picture soundtrack ) has a strong collection of upbeat and spirited hits. I was already previously familiar with the cheerful tune Cups (Pitch Perfect’s When I’m Gone) by Anna Kendrick (from the summer of 2013) and the ebullient Keep Your Head Up by Andy Grammer. However, it is also great to see an interesting mix of songs from various artists on this collection (Martin Solveig, Nicki Minaj, Outfit etc.). Comment | Permalink Divide (Deluxe Version) Price: $14.88 32 used & new from $10.87 Contemporary Pop?, March 11, 2017 Verified Purchase(What's this?)This review is from: Divide (Deluxe Version) (Audio CD)I admit that Sheeran’s affiliation with Taylor Swift and an online mention of being connected before to Ellie Goulding indirectly influenced me to give this collection a chance (due to me enjoying some songs by both women).The Divide Deluxe Music Collection by Ed Sheeran is perfect to get if you enjoy the Shape of You song due to the romantic vibe of the songs on Divide. The only catch is that it would be beneficial to have an eclectic music interest due a multiple number of the songs being a musical genre departure from a tune from one of his previous collections (Sing). For instance, How Would You Feel (Paen), Barcelona, and Supermarket Flowers are some of the multiple well thought out tunes on this collection, just with quieter overtones. Comment | Permalink Deep South Price: $9.49 Songs of Great Depth, March 11, 2017 Verified Purchase(What's this?)This review is from: Deep South (MP3 Music)I admit that I already understand that I am probably different from what the intended target audience is for this Deep South music collection by Josh Turner. Yet, for me getting this collection is worth it because of the range of meaningful songs on this collection that I can keep in mind as a writer. For instance, the songs Never Had A Reason and One Like Mine appear to touch on the perspective of a person having an enduring and strong love for someone. All About You reminds me of the Your Man song (each of these songs are original in their own way, what I mean by the similarity is the seeming message of a person romantically in love with someone at least temporarily blocking out a portion of their time to spend with that special someone). Hometown Girl appears to be about wanting a down to earth female that reminds the singer of home in a happy way. Of course, there are also other worthwhile songs on this collection that touch on the varied facets of love and life. Comment | Permalink By Your Side (Abbey Road Live Version) Price: $1.29 An Exquisite Love Song, March 11, 2017 Verified Purchase(What's this?)This review is from: By Your Side (Abbey Road Live Version) (MP3 Music)As mentioned on some of my past online writings, I utilize Amazon music, Pandora radio, iheartradio, local radio, and various online sources for new and past music. I unintentionally/unexpectedly heard of the song By Your Side by Jonas Blue feat. Raye (Abbey Road live version)just this past Thursday night on my personalized favorites radio station on iheartradio. This song caught my attention right away because of the beautiful vocals and upbeat pop music to go with what appears to be a meaning of communicating how much a person means to you in your life. Comment | Permalink This Is Love [feat. Eva Simons] Price: $1.29 Romantic Club Love Song?, March 11, 2017 Verified Purchase(What's this?)This review is from: This Is Love [feat. Eva Simons] (MP3 Music)I remember first hearing the song This is Love by Will.i.am feat. Eva Simmons around the spring/summer season of 2012. The music to This is Love has a fun club feel and has the vocals of a woman who is also featured in the entertaining club song Take Over Control by Afrojack. It is an easy choice for me to buy This is Love by Will.i.am feat. Eva Simmons because of the fact that I have previously enjoyed and reviewed the That Power song feat. Justin Bieber on November 26, 2015 on Amazon and the Scream and Shout song feat. Britney Spears (February 3, 2013) on Amazon. Comment | Permalink Lydia [Explicit] Price: $1.29 This Song Lydia grew on me after multiple radio listens, March 11, 2017 Verified Purchase(What's this?)This review is from: Lydia [Explicit] (MP3 Music)This catchy rock riff Lydia by Highly Suspect grew on me after multiple times of listening to it on the radio (local rock radio station in the Washington D.C. area). The mp3 song version that I am reviewing has an image of what looks to be a military officer being embraced by a female (my husband showed me the shoulderboard clue). Anyhow, I admit that I am still in the process of figuring out the full meaning of this song yet I enjoy this song because of the terrific vocals and quality background music go to with a song that obviously appears to be about some woman who had a significant impact on the meaning of this song. Comment | Permalink The Accountant DVD Price: $4.99 More Than Just His Job Title, March 11, 2017 Verified Purchase(What's this?)This review is from: The Accountant (Amazon Video)I disclose that I decided to take a chance on seeing the Accountant after I noticed it was available through a notification on my Amazon kindle. This Accountant film turned out to be both multi-faceted and much to my surprise showed the humanity of the character of Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck). Obviously, the plot is carefully crafted to show why Wolff is as complex and distant to even other people around him who show friendliness and warmth. Emotional plot sequences are created to illustrate the people and events that shaped the early lives of Christian Wolff and his brother Brax (Jon Bernthal). For instance, there was an incident involving both of Wolff’s parents that influenced the character development of him and his brother throughout their lives. There is also a glimpse on how a character by the name of Francis Silverberg (Jeffrey Tamboor) influences how he knows some of what Christian Wolff knows. Additionally, the characters of Raymond King (J.K. Simmons) and Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) are looking into Christian Wolff’s life for certain reasons. However, both the lives of Wolff and Dana Cummings (Anna Kendrick) change when they cross paths with each other (not in the way one would expect). Wolff happens to be very gifted in his accountant job, which helps him get hired by Lamar Blackburn (John Lithgow) for an important project. The Accountant film also shows how Christian Wolff is much more than what he appears to be on the initial surface. Comment | Permalink Love Price: $1.29 Vintage Love Song?, March 11, 2017 Verified Purchase(What's this?)This review is from: Love (MP3 Music)The Love song by Lana Del Rey appears to touch on the carefree quality of being in love and enjoying the carefree aspects of life. I do also like that the vocals shine through superbly in this song and the music genre of this song is very unique as it sounds like it would go on a vintage pop list. Comment | Permalink Gods and Monsters (Widescreen Collector's Edition) DVD ~ Ian McKellen Price: $6.02 62 used & new from $1.56 Dramatic Film With Poignant Acting, March 11, 2017 This review is from: Gods and Monsters (Widescreen Collector's Edition) (DVD)I unexpectedly spotted this Gods and Monsters dvd less than a week ago at a Family Dollar store near my apartment. The movie turned out to be more heartstring pulling than I thought yet also a high quality movie. The beginning of the dvd lists that this film is in association with Lions Gate Films, Showtime, BBC, Flashpoint, and is inspired by the novel “Father of Frankenstein” by Christopher Bram. The beginning of the film shows both the character of Clayton Boone (Brendan Fraser) and James Whale (Ian Mckellen) going about their daily routine. Clayton Boone is getting ready to go to work while James Whale is shown going about his house and interacting with his housekeeper Hanna (Lynn Redgrave). Less than a half hour into the film, Whale shows a shocking side to him that even raises the eyebrow of one of the professionals named Edmund Kay (Jack Plotnick) who is visiting to interview him about his work involving Frankenstein. Of course, there are more pivotal plot points in the movie and more actors/actresses that also contribute (such as the scene where one of Boone’s ex girlfriends has him thinking of the direction that his life has taken). The ending took me by surprise, which was one of the few caveats that I had about the film, yet it is just a small caveat because I understand that this film is based on a true story. Some of the dvd bonuses accompanying the dvd version; Director’s commentary, the making of Gods and Monsters, Theatrical Trailer. Comment | Permalink NOW That's What I Call Music Vol. 27 Price: $0.00 A Brilliant Range of Tunes From Various Genres, March 11, 2017 This review is from: NOW That's What I Call Music Vol. 27 (MP3 Music)This collection of Now 27 has a wide range of tunes on this collection. Clumsy by Fergie, Piece of Me by Britney Spears, Feedback by Janet Jackson,Just Fine by Mary J Blige, Into The Night by Santana feat. Chad Kroeger, Teardrops On My Guitar by Taylor Swift, and Don’t Stop the Music by Rihanna are among the multiple tunes that are available on the Now 27 collection
Now That's What I Call Music Vol. 28 Price: $0.00 Something For Many People on Now 28, March 11, 2017 This review is from: Now That's What I Call Music Vol. 28 (MP3 Music)I confess that I am previously familiar with this range of tunes across the dance, pop, and rock genres due to the fact that I heard many of them through local radio and television when my husband and I were living in Norfolk, Virginia (through the U.S. Navy). Songs such as Shake It by Metro Station represent the pop/dance genres, In Love With A Girl by Gavin DeGraw represents the pop/rock genre, the Beat It song by Fall Out Boy feat. John Mayer represents the rock genre, Pocketful of Sunshine by Natasha Bedingfield represents the pop genre, Lollipop by Lil Wayne feat. Static Major represents the R&B/hip-hop genre, Break the Ice by Britney Spears (dance genre), Bleeding Love by Leona Lewis (pop genre) etc. Now 28 is a fantastic varied artists music collection for eclectic music listeners.
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darlingshane · 9 months
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could I request a fic with Braxton wolf? I just recently watched that movie and he was one of the best parts and also I really liked the actress cynthia Robinson too she plays marybeth medina and I wish her and Braxton would've hooked up;) so maybe you could write a fic about them please? With sexy smut :)
There you go, anon! I hope this is sexy enough for you :)
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cynthiaaddairob · 7 years
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cynthiaaddairob · 7 years
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cynthiaaddairob · 7 years
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