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#movie is kung pow: enter the fist
tripleboy · 1 year
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mysticusfreeze · 6 months
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i need everyone to know every time I say so cute I am directly quoting this.
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writebackatya · 1 year
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Rewatched Kung Pow: Enter the Fist, happy to say that it is still one of my favorite “So stupid it’s funny” movies
But I can’t get over the fact that the movie has a scene where they parody that one scene from The Lion King just out of nowhere. And I love it
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vintagewarhol · 2 years
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jamieaiken919 · 6 months
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I saw this and thought I was funny so you must see it too
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NOOOOOOOOOOOO
HE HAS BEEN HOLED😭😭😭
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On March 8, 2005, Kung Pow: Enter the Fist debuted on television in Hungary.
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rat-tomago · 8 months
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i have been called bad before. many have said i do things that are not , correct to do. i dont believe in such talk as this. i am nice man , with happy feelings , all of the time!
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serenity-song · 1 year
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Not sure why this random moment from Kung Pow entered my head (heh). This was such a running joke (sorry) back in high school. Can’t believe this movie is actually streaming on Disney+. I was worried I was going to have to break out a VCR.
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New episode out now! My favorite movies to have on in the background...
Listen wherever you get your podcasts. Also includes a little update and look ahead.
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atlasllm · 1 year
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love and poison all the same they share these interchangable names
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stenka-razin · 5 months
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in 2023 I watched some movies
I was gonna catch up on all those best picture nominees from the last 5 years, but watched crap like Caligula 2 instead
The 1989 World Tour - Live (2015, dir. Jonas Åkerlund) Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (2022, dir. Rian Johnson) Flight 666 (2008, dir. Scot McFayden and Sam Dunn) Dracula (1931, dir. Todd Browning) Moonraker (1979, dir. Lewis Gilbert) The Pez Outlaw (2022, dir. Bryan Storkel and Amy Bandlien Storkel) Encino Man (1992, dir. Les Mayfield) Star Trek: Insurrection (1998, dir. Jonathan Frakes) Once Upon a Time in… Hollywood (2019, dir. Quentin Tarantino) Cleopatra (1963, dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz) The Alligator People (1959, dir. Roy Del Ruth) The Silence of the Lambs (1991, dir. Thomas Demme) Godzilla vs. Megalon (“ゴジラ対メガロ” 1973, dir. Jun Fukuda) Invasion of Astro-Monster (“怪獣大戦争” 1965, dir. Ishirō Honda) Breaking a Monster (2015, dir. Luke Meyer) Terror at Orgy Castle (1971, dir. Zoltan G. Spencer) Wake in Fright ("Outback" 1971, dir. Ted Kotcheff) m.A.A.d. (2014, dir. Khalil Joseph) Reservoir Dogs (1992, dir. Quentin Tarantino) Kung Pow! Enter the Fist (2002, dir. Steve Oedekerk) House (1977, dir. Nobuhiko Obayashi) Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981, dir. Steven Spielberg) Dunkirk (2017, dir. Christopher Nolan) Final Destination (2000, dir. James Wong) Glitch: The Rise & Fall of HQ Trivia (2023, dir. Salima Koroma) Basic Instinct (1992, dir. Paul Verhoeven) Pee Wee’s Big Adventure (1985, dir. Tim Burton) Caligula 2: The Untold Story (“Caligola: La storia mai raccontata” 1982, dir. Joe D’Amato) La noche del terror ciego (1972, dir. Amando de Ossorio) Rocky IV (1985, dir. Sylvester Stallone) Saw IV (2007, dir. Darren Lynn Bousman) House of Wax (1953, dir. Andre DeToth) Thir13en Ghosts (2001, dir. Steve Beck) Kashchey the Immortal (“Кащей Бессмертный” 1944, dir. Aleksandr Rou) Ghost Ship (2002, dir. Steve Beck) The Blood on Satan’s Claw (1971, dir. Piers Haggard) The Face of Fu Manchu (1965, dir. Don Sharp) The Brides of Fu Manchu (1966, dir. Don Sharp) The Vengeance of Fu Manchu (1967, dir. Jeremy Summers) The Blood of Fu Manchu (1968, dir. Jesús Franco) April Fool's Day (1986, dir. Fred Walton) It's Pat 1994, dir. Adam Bernstein) The Castle of Fu Manchu (1969, dir. Jesús Franco) Adam and Eve Meet the Cannibals ("Adam ed Eve, la prima storia d'amore" 1983, dir. Enzo Doria & Luigi Rosso) The Mountain of the Cannibal God (“La montagna del dio cannibale” 1978, dir. Sergio Martino) When Harry Met Sally… (1989, dir. Rob Reiner) Beetlejuice (1988, dir. Tim Burton) Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring (2001, dir. Peter Jackson, Long as Shit Version) The Hobbit (1977, dir. Arthur Rankin Jr. & Jules Bass) The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920, dir. Robert Wiene) The Wicker Man (1973, dir. Robin Hardy) The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974, dir. Tobe Hooper) House of 1000 Corpses (2003, dir. Rob Zombie) Chopping Mall (1986, dir. Jim Wynorski) Basket Case (1982, dir. Frank Henenlotter) Cube (1997, dir. Vincenzo Natali) Cube 2: Hypercube (2002, dir. Andrzej Sekula) Practical Magic (1998, dir. Griffin Dunne) Tropic Thunder (2008, dir. Ben Stiller) Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015, dir. J.J. Abrams) Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017, dir. Rian Johnson) Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019, dir. J.J. Abrams) Eyes Wide Shut (1999, dir. Stanley Kubrick) Superbad (2007, dir. Greg Mottola) Bruce Almighty (2003, dir. Tom Shadyac) House of Flying Daggers (“十面埋伏” 2004, dir. Zhang Yimou) Saltburn (2023, dir. Emerald Fennell) Grandma’s Boy (2006, dir. Nicholaus Goossen) Five Nights at Freddy's (2023, dir. Emma Tammi) Caligula and Messalina (“Caligula et Messaline” 1981, dir. Bruno Mattei) The Wizard of Oz (1939, dir. Victor Fleming, King Vidor, George Cukor, and Norman Taurog) A Christmas Prince (2017, dir. Alex Zamm) A Christmas Prince: The Royal Wedding (2018, dir. John Schulz) The Knight Before Christmas (2019, dir. Monika Mitchell) Goldfinger (1964, dir. Guy Hamilton) Total Recall (1990, dir. Paul Verhoeven)
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boobpancakes · 8 months
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people you'd like to get to know better
i was tagged by my lovelies: @faestelle @sims4thehoes @nefarrilou and @sumiileii thank you angels <;33♡
last song: lmao i'm back in my leonard era this week: this one to be exact favorite color: green! i'm basic and i DON'T CARE! currently watching: UnnnhHh with Trixie and Katya last movie: i showed my friends kung pow: enter the fist the other day currently reading: some random book i found at barnes and nobles on palmistry HAHAHA sweet/spicy/savory: i LOVE savory and sweet. spicy is good too but i'm a sucker for something savory last thing i googled: "who played juno's dad," bc i was arguing with my friend over who the dad was LMAO (JK Simmons BTW) current obsession: ball's gate the third, i can't stop playing it currently working on: i am working out a machinima idea i've wanted to execute for a while but keep losing the motivation on. hoping to keep the momentum going to finally see it through!~
i'm tagging: @elysiantrait @buttertrait @salemssimblr @apricote @shadowcursedballs @druidberries and whoever is reading this! i feel like i do these so late so i feel bad tagging a bunch of folks LMAO
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lilithvibeplace · 2 months
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do NOT let @they-see-me-rolling-dice choose the movies for movie night. he WILL choose something that makes you lay on the floor crying while stoned out of your mind. do NOT. you will have the time of your LIFE and then fucking DIE. 5/5 film, kung-pow enter the fist is peak satire-cinema idc the editing was horrid the writing was stellar and the french exist
https://letterboxd.com/thatq/film/kung-pow-enter-the-fist/
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On April 8, 2003, Kung Pow: Enter the Fist was released on DVD in Singapore.
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bookthroneking · 5 months
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Book Review: Horror in Architecture by Joshua Comaroff and Ong Ker-Shing
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Horror, despite being a very contested genre, emotion and aesthetic category, is pervasive and diverse. Anything can be made horrifying... or horrible. But what happens if two academics discuss horror in purely aesthetic terms, through the lens of a discipline not considered especially scary: architecture? Results may vary.
I found Horror in Architecture at times fascinating, insightful... or utterly infuriating. The authors discuss horror as an aesthetic and its possible meanings throughout the ages, from Romanticism to the era of mass entertainment. The problem is that they constantly show an utterly dismissive attitude towards horror as a genre. To Ong and Comaroff, horror as an aesthetic stands above horror as entertainment... which is a valid, if irritating (and in my opinion, very wrong) viewpoint. What is less forgivable to me is the amount of easy-to-correct mistakes in the book, such as attributing a segment of the movie Planet Terror to Quentin Tarantino, or embarrassingly calling Steve Oedekerk, the director of Kung Pow: Enter the Fist, Bob Odenkirk. Come the hell on. Pay some attention.
That being said! This book still proved a very interesting read when it came to discussing the aesthetics and art of horror. The authors sorted architectural horror into several broad subcategories, such as disproportion, doubling and the Trojan Horse (something that conceals something else) among others, with plenty of discussion of the origin and meaning of each, as well as illustrated examples from architecture throughout history. The buildings in this book are awe-inspiring, hideous, disorienting, weird or mesmerizingly beautiful, but they're all uncommon, reflective of larger cultural trends that were mapped and explained fascinatingly. I have ambivalent feelings on modern architecture, but it's always important to try on a new viewpoint, and examining buildings through the lens of my favorite aesthetic was at once challenging and deeply rewarding. If the authors hadn't repeatedly shown little understanding of my favorite genre, I would have absolutely adored this book. As it stands, it was a good enough and thoroughly informative read.
StoryGraph rating: 4
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blacktabbygames · 1 year
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Everyone always asks about your favorite horror movies, but what are some of your favorite comedies or romance films (or rom coms)?
abby: i like mystery men and labyrinth those are foundational to my personality tony: kung pow enter the fist gang represent
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