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#roy lewis
garadinervi · 11 months
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Gwendolyn Brooks, June 7, 1917 / 2023
(image: Roy Lewis (photograph), Gwendolyn Brooks, Gwendolyn Brooks Collection, Rare Book & Manuscript Library, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL)
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the---hermit · 2 years
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The Evolution Man by Roy Lewis
Apparently this book has many different titles including Once Upon An Ice Age, but after looking into it I think The Evolution Man is the most popular. I've had this book on my wishlist for years, and finally I found it and read it. I have contrasting opinions on it.
A bit on the plot. This book is set during the late Pleistocene era, and it's all about a family of prehistoric men and their technological discoveries. It's mean to be a funny book, and it is, and for this reason it's quite anachronistic. It is a lighthearted and funny read, but I wasn't as captured by it as I had hoped. I was looking forward to reading this book so much, but for some reason it took me a long time to really get into the story. I think this is mainly due to the fact that I have probably picked this book up in the wrong moment. Aside from this it is quite funny, and surely a great way to read something even if you are low on energies. It could work very well if you are in a reading slump as it's also quite short.
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gregor-samsung · 2 years
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“ Amore! Dolce amore! Sosterrò sempre che fu una delle massime scoperte del Pleistocene medio, periodo quanto mai ricco e fertile di invenzioni e sviluppi culturali. All'epoca, ne fui colto assolutamente di sorpresa. D'un tratto fui una creatura nuova, come il serpente che ha appena cambiato pelle: libero, aperto, ebbro di delizia. Ero una libellula che dispiegava le ali dopo la lunga notte trascorsa nella crisalide! Suonano ormai logore e banali, queste metafore: la generazione moderna ha perduto quel primo dolce, spensierato rapimento. I giovani d'oggi sanno bene che cosa aspettarsi; troppo gli è stato detto; essi pregustano, con ambizione eccessiva. Ma, per me, fu una metamorfosi, proprio perché non avevo la minima idea di che cosa stesse per accadermi. Sì, è un privilegio incomparabile essere proprio il primo a provare una nuova esperienza umana, qualunque sia; e se poi è l'amore!… Pensate! L'amore, che oggi si compiace se i giovani sembrano ancora apprezzarlo quando lo incontrano nella giungla, sulla sponda di un lago o in cima a una montagna… Oggi è cosa di normale amministrazione, che ha opportunamente preso il suo posto nel processo evolutivo; ma, ah!, quando era appena nato!… Non avevo né la capacità né il desiderio di analizzare ciò che mi accadeva; a ripensarci, mi accorgo che l'amore spuntò, come un frutto non premeditato, da quella prima inibizione che papà ci aveva imposto a fini puramente sociologici. Le nostre più facili inclinazioni erano state tarpate; ne era scaturito, senza che alcuno l'avesse cercato, questo appassionante, sconvolgente, straordinario banchetto di sensazioni. Non che fossimo inibiti, Griselda e io, quando ci mostravamo al mondo insieme; al contrario, non solo ci sentivamo liberi da vincoli nei nuovi reami scoperti dentro di noi, ma trattavamo la natura intera come una propaggine o dipendenza della nostra camera nuziale. Ci sentivamo invulnerabili: come se l'unione di due fragili e delicate metà avesse formato una creatura destinata a dominare, invincibile, la terra. Ridevamo irriverenti davanti al covo del leone; tiravamo la coda al gattopardo addormentato; ci rincorrevamo negli stagni, saltando, come da un masso all'altro, sulla groppa di coccodrilli disorientati e ippopotami perplessi; risalivamo le cascate gareggiando con persici e pesci tigre; ci gettavamo giù per le rapide con le anguille. Giocavamo a prenderci con gli aironi, tra le zampe degli elefanti infastiditi, che barrivano protestando ma tentavano invano di calpestarci; ornavamo con festoni di asparagus e di convolvolo i corni di rinoceronti corrucciati; spaventavamo i cervi al pascolo lanciandogli fra le corna serti fioriti di gelsomino e di vite che poi, nel vento della fuga, si alzavano come aquiloni. Di sorpresa prendevamo per la mano le scimmie, trascinandole in un vorticoso girotondo. Da struzzi, fenicotteri, pavoni, insomma da tutti gli uccelli che mi capitavano a tiro rubavo piume multicolori per adornarne la chioma di Griselda; a me, un mezzo guscio di uovo di aepyornis serviva da casco contro il sole. Le nostre allegre risate risuonavano nel folto e tra gli alberi intrecciati di liane, increspavano la superficie dei grandi laghi che le trasmettevano alle montagne, e da qui riecheggiavano sulle pianure. Fu la gioia più piena, anche se una o due volte quasi passammo il limite. “
Roy Lewis, Il più grande uomo scimmia del Pleistocene, traduzione di Carlo Brera, Adelphi (collana Gli Adelphi n° 185), 2003⁴; pp. 113-115.
[Edizione originale: The Evolution Man, 1960]
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lolochaponnay · 1 month
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krautjunker · 3 months
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Edward - Roman aus dem Pleistozän
Buchvorstellung »Wenn ein scharfer Nordwind blies und sein eisiger Atem uns daran erinnerte, daß die große Gletscherkappe weiter vorrückte, stapelten wir unsere Holz- und Reisigvorräte vor der Höhle, zündeten ein prasselndes Feuer an und sagten uns, daß die Gletscher och so weit gegen Süden wandern mochten – sogar bis nach Afrika -, uns konnten sie nichts anhaben, denn wir waren jetzt…
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irreflexion · 6 months
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Títulos
“Primavera con una esquina rota”. Bien Mario Benedetti, vaya pedazo de título para un libro, ¿no? Luego lo leí y, bueno, no está mal, un libro duro ambientado en la dictadura del Urugay de los 70, pero la verdad es que no estuvo a la altura de las expectativas de ese título. Otros títulos que también me han gustado: “Memoria de la Melancolía”, de María Teresa León. Del estilo poético del de…
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letture2013 · 1 year
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she-wolf09231982 · 4 months
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Chapter 1- The Age of Chivalry
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Summary: You're reassigned to Easy Company when one of their medics was injured pre D-Day. You expect some sass from the Company since you'll be the only female soldier in 100 miles but never expected for any of them to befriend you.
Author Note: Mature audience, Joe LiebgottxFemMedic, WW2, Character introduction, Pre D-Day, She/Her Pronouns, Y/N, L/N, Cursing/Swearing, Derogatory Slurs, Womanizing Comments, Military Terminology, Inappropriate Nicknames, Band of Brothers References, Mentions of Weaponry, Smoking, Story takes place Episode 1- Currahee
*These stories may not fall entirely in accordance with the TV series timeline. I do not know the real soldiers the actors portray in this series, so please understand I show no disrespect. Some or most of historical events and character interactions in my fanfics are fabricated purely for the sake of the enjoyment of fiction*
~~~~~~~
October 1943
It was never a good idea to mix a single female with a Company of deprived men in the Army...but here you are. You found out you were assigned to Easy Company 2nd Battalion 101st Airborne Division in Fall 1943 when they lost one of their medics to an injury. Although you trained separately from the males at Toccoa in the Divisional medical unit and were one of very few females allowed to work alongside men, you got along quite well with most of the guys. You held your own never asking for special treatment or never played the ‘damsel in distress’ card, so Easy Company learned rather quickly that you can keep up.  
~~~~~~~
You remember the day you arrived at Aldbourne, England to make contact with the boys of Easy Company. With your reassignment order in hand, you approach a group of soldiers sitting at a picnic bench outside a building. All of them looking a bit rough, but nonetheless smoking and joking with eachother. They take a pause as they notice you approaching them. Some of them sizing you up and down as you carry your duffel full of medical supplies and wearing fatigues that have yet to see the battlefields like theirs have.  
“Hey, you lost there, lady?” Private Roy Cobb called out to you, sizing you up again as you continued to walk towards them without faltering. 
You shoot the mouthy Private a look of disdain before responding. 
“I’m looking for Corporal Roe. I was told to make contact with him as soon I arrived.” You speak to the group as a whole. 
They all exchanged looks and a few whispers. 
Corporal George Luz stood up. 
“Why, I’m Eugene Roe. But around here they call me, ‘Doc.’” He declared confidently with a cocky grin. 
The others started to snicker. One laid a heavy pat on his shoulder showing his appreciation of the joke. 
You rolled your eyes, releasing an exasperated sigh. 
Sergeant Denver Randleman stood from the bench, then walked towards you pushing Luz aside shaking his head as he passed him. He was a larger man. Like a bear. Never removing the cigar hanging out of the corner of his mouth as he spoke to you.  
“He’s across the way this way, I’ll take ya to him.” He said, motioning you along in the opposite direction. 
“Thank you, Sergeant.” You reply. 
“No problem. And it’s just ‘Bull,’ ma’am.” He said politely in his thick Southern accent as he passed you leading the way.  
You turn on your heel and proceed to follow Bull, ignoring the distant whistles you heard from some of the men you just met behind you. 
~~~~~~~
“I hope the guys haven’t given you too much trouble so far?” stated the actual Eugene ‘Doc’ Roe when you crossed into the designated aid station. 
“Nothing I haven’t dealt with before, Doc.” You say with conviction.  
Bull chuckled, finding your response amusing. 
“Yeah, I bet.” Doc replied before continuing. 
“Well, let’s get you in processed here, and squared away. Thanks for bringing her here, Bull. I’m sure those other idiots would’ve just sent her to their barracks.” he said with a roll of his eyes. 
Bull nodded with a small wave.  
“See you at chow, L/N.” Bull called back to you before he left. 
When Bull returned to where the others were still gathered, they bombarded him with questions. 
“Did you catch her name??” Sergeant (Sgt) Don Malarkey prodded. 
“-is she coming to Easy Company??” Sgt Bill Guarnere interrupted before Bull could answer. 
“-did she say anything about me?” Luz questioned. 
As the interrogation got heavier, he threw his hands up and removed the cigar from his mouth. 
“GUYS!! Take it easy, will ya? You’ll see her later at chow, just don’t attack her with all of these questions right away, k? We don’t want to scare her off now, do we?” He explained as he replaced his cigar and walked away.  
They all swapped looks of excitement.  
“Well, I don’t know about you guys, but I’m going to have me a shower before dinner this evening.” Corporal Joe Liebgott stated while flicking his cigarette butt, rising from the picnic bench, shouldering his rifle. 
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“Ok, Liebgott, like you have a shot.” Malarkey teased. 
Liebgott turned to him. 
“Oh contrare, I feel you underestimate me, Don.” He shot back at Malarkey while walking backwards, then turning back around. 
The group scoffed at him collectively. 
~~~~~~~
You got to chow early before any of the other men started to show up. You tucked yourself way in the back at a long table in the corner. You made sure to keep your head down, hanging over a tray trying to swallow some of the Army’s finest slop.  
“Should’ve just stuck to a dinner roll with margarine.” You whispered to yourself as you grimaced from the last mouthful of mystery meat from your plate. 
“Not exactly a high-end dish from The Ritz, now, is it?” Sgt Carwood Lipton joked as he sat down across from you with his own serving of slop. 
“Yeah, not quite.” You respond while poking at a hard, clay-like mound on your plate that was supposed to be mashed potatoes. 
“You’ll get used to it.” Bull stated as he sat next to you with his tray. 
You ‘psh-ed’ at Bull’s statement. 
“I highly doubt that. But I’ll make do.” You convinced yourself. “Surprisingly not the worst food I’ve had.” You added. 
“Really, there’s something out there worse than this?” Lipton asked astonished as he stirred his cold soup that looked like ketchup and water. 
“Oh yeah! Pixley and Ehler’s Diner on Clark Street in Chicago has some questionable selections.” You explained. 
“Is that where you’re from?” Corporal Frank Perconte queried as he sat next to Lipton. 
“I am.” You replied with pride. 
“You Italian then?” Guarnere asked, inviting himself to the conversation, sitting next to Perconte. 
“Italian and Irish.” You clarified. 
“Ssshh, a goddam Mick-Deigo.” Guarnere sneered crinkling his nose in disgust. 
“Leave’er alone, Gonorrhea.” Liebgott interjected sitting next to Bull. 
“I’m guessing you're Italian?” You directed at Guarnere. 
“Sicilian, actually.” He retorted. 
“Hm, you know that Sicilians aren’t real Italians, right? Sicily is just like Australia. All the criminals of Britain were shipped there to be ostracized from the mainland. Sicily is just an island of Italy’s delinquents.” You taunted. 
The others “ooooo-ed” in unison. Even Perconte who was the other Italian of Easy company. 
“She got you there, Guarnere.” Bull teased. 
Everyone laughed. Except Guarnere. 
“You think you’re funny?” Guarnere challenged. 
You sighed and looked at him deadpan in the face without an ounce of fear to show. 
“Come on, Guarnere, she was only dishing out what you gave her.” Perconte defended. 
“Shut your trap, Perconte, you should be on my side!” he said slamming a fist onto the surface of the table then pointing at him.  
The rest of the table filled up with remaining members of Easy Company that could fit that wanted to see the fight unfold. 
You folded your arms in front of you on top of the table and leaned forward, making sure you got Guarnere’s attention, then spoke with distinct fire in your voice. 
“You think I’m some dame just showing up here straight out of basic training not knowing how to handle myself with soldiers? I’ve been whistled at, barked at, howled at, catcalled, pinched, ass slapped, and manhandled by the worst of them, pal. You labeling me because of my heritage ain’t gonna do shit to me. But I’ll be damned you disrespect me like I haven’t earned the right to be respected. Just remember, I’m the one that’s going to be tending to you if you get shot in the field, sergeant.”  
You glare at him, then rise harshly from your seat, leaving the rest of the table in a state of awe and shock. 
“Good job, Gonorrhea. You pissed her off now.” Liebgott pointed out with an audible tsk. 
“Fuck her.” Guarnere spit back. 
~~~~~~~
As soon as you left the chow hall, you found a spot out of sight to catch your breath and slow your heart rate. You leaned against a post looking up towards the night sky taking deep controlled breaths. 
“Corporal L/N?” You’re startled by the voice of Lieutenant (LT) Richard Winters. You snap to attention ready to render a salute, but he waves you down. 
“As you were. Are you alright?” He asked as you relaxed your stance. 
“Yessir, just getting some fresh air.” You reassured. 
He looked at you with skepticism, not believing you were telling him the entire truth.  
You continued. 
“A room full of men who haven’t showered in a few days can make a gal lightheaded.” You joked. 
The corner of LT Winters’ mouth started to curl into a slight grin, trying his best not to laugh outloud at your quick wit. 
“I see, L/N. Well rest up, we’ll need you to be ready when we move out for the next mission.” He explained. 
“Yes, sir. Have a good night.” You replied. 
Winters gave a nod and entered the chow hall. 
LT Winters bee lined for his company’s table. His men all greeted him cheerfully as he approached the table. 
“Lieutenant, got a seat open right here.” Bull called out, gesturing to your vacant spot. 
“No thanks, Bull, I’ve eaten already.” Winters responded. He paused before he continued. 
“Just ran into Corporal L/N on the way in-” He paused again to assess the men’s reaction. 
Some continued eating, pretending like they hadn’t really heard. Lipton, Bull and Liebgott looked up at Winters waiting for him to continue. 
“She seemed somewhat troubled.” Winters finished. He waited for anyone to speak up, looking at the group expectantly. 
“Maybe her panties got all up in a twist, sir.” Guarnere offered up sarcastically. 
Some of the men chortled in response. 
Winters, Bull, Lipton, and Liebgott weren’t amused. 
“Well, she only said a room full of foul-smelling males made her dizzy and she needed fresh air.” Winters relayed, while looking at Guarnere suspiciously. 
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The men all started to smell their armpits self-consciously. 
“Corporal Liebgott.” Winters called out. 
“Sir?”
“Get out there and escort L/N to her tent.” Winters instructed. 
“Yes, sir.” Liebgott acknowledged. 
“L/N will not walk around alone at night, gentlemen. I don’t care who goes with her, but make sure she always has a battle buddy in the hours of darkness. Tracking?” Winters asked, raising his voice authoritatively. 
The table responded “yes, sir” simultaneously. 
Liebgott rushed out excitedly and hustled down the street to catch you before you got too far. 
~~~~~~~
You were aways a bit ahead before Liebgott found you. 
“Hey, L/N! Wait up!” He called after you. 
You turned around looking for the voice calling your name. 
You stopped walking, waiting for Liebgott trotting over to catch up to you. 
“Can I help you?” You asked with a little more harshness in your voice than you intended. 
“As a matter of fact, I’m here to help you. I have the honor of accompanying you to your barracks.” He responded with enthusiasm and a smile. 
You were taken aback. You raised an eyebrow at him. 
“Oh?” You questioned before continuing. “That’s quite unexpectedly chivalrous of you.” 
“Well, you have Winters to thank for that, it was his idea.” He responded quite bluntly. 
You rolled your eyes.  
“Hm, I see.” You reply briskly.  
Liebgott realized he sounded like an asshole right then. 
“Of course, if you approve, I’ll appoint myself your permanent battle buddy from now on.” He extended with his signature smirk as you resumed walking together. 
You felt your face heat up. You averted your eyes to the ground so he wouldn’t see you blush. But Joseph Liebgott doesn’t miss a thing. He grinned wider. 
“If those are the LT’s orders, then have at it, Liebgott.” You replied coldly. 
“Nah, that last part was my idea.” He stated proudly. 
You shot him a confused expression, then he winked at you. 
You laughed nervously, looking away quickly to break the awkwardness you felt in the pit of your stomach. 
He smiled at you affectionately.
“And call me Joe.” He added.
“Y/N.” You reply looking up at him through your lashes.
“Look, sorry if I’m making it weird. And don’t listen to Gonorrhea. He’s just a jackass with a height deficiency. The kid always has some stupid shit to say.” He explained. 
You nod trying to suppress a giggle. 
“This is me.” You announce as you approach the entrance to your sleeping quarters. You turn to face Joe. “Thank you for the chat, and the company, Liebgott…I mean Joe.” You say dotingly. 
“Forget it. So?” He asked. 
You were genuinely confused. 
“Sooo?” You reply. 
“Am I your permanent evening escort?” he asked with a grin and a wink. 
This time you laugh outwardly at his attempt at a flirty sexual inuendo. 
“If by ‘evening escort’ you mean my nightly walk to and from one location to another, I’d have to say....I’ll think about it.” You respond flirtatiously with a wink in return. 
His face lit up. 
“Well alright then. We’ll take another test run tomorrow night.” He proposed. 
You shook your head smiling, astounded by the level of confidence this man had. 
“Good night, Joe.” You finalized as you disappear beyond the threshold of the tent entrance. 
~~~~~~~
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jesuistrestriste · 9 months
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this is a small glimpse into my type in guys and idk what it says about me.. such a mixed bag of vibes..
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cazzyf1 · 24 days
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Gif collection of drivers that featured in Shell's 1958 British GP video
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In order of apperance: Mike Hawthorn, Stirling Moss, Roy Salvadori, Stuart Lewis-Evans, Jo Bonnier, Jack Fairman, Alan Stacey, Wolfgang von Trips, Harry Schell, Peter Collins
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cantsayidont · 4 months
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August 1984. This won't change anyone's feelings about cult movie perennial THE ADVENTURES OF BUCKAROO BANZAI: ACROSS THE EIGHTH DIMENSION one way or the other, but if you're wondering what the hell the deal is supposed to be with Buckaroo Banzai and his team, the answer is, "It's an obvious pastiche of the pulp hero Doc Savage."
Launched in 1933, Doc Savage was one of the leading adventure heroes of the pulp magazines. Doc (whose full name was Clark Savage Jr.) was scientifically trained from childhood to the peak of human perfection, singularly adept in everything from mechanical engineering to medicine to martial arts. He had a secret headquarters called the Fortress of Solitude and a whole array of specially designed vehicles and equipment, but he was also a public figure, with offices in the Empire State Building. Doc had a team of eccentric, highly specialized aides — Monk Mayfair, Ham Brooks, Renny Renwick, Long Tom Roberts, and Johnny Littlejohn — who each had a particular skill and a couple of distinctive personality traits (for instance, Monk was a skilled industrial chemist, but also an "ape-like" brute with a ferocious temper). They were sometimes aided by Doc's cousin, Pat Savage, who was almost as capable as Doc, although he tried to keep her out of the fray because she was (gasp) a girl.
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This was a fairly common pattern for pulp heroes. For instance, the pulp version of the Shadow (who was distinctly different from the radio incarnation) relied on a whole network of agents, some appearing only once or twice, some recurring across many of his published adventures. From a narrative standpoint, the agents and assistants had two principal purposes: The first was to offset the rather overpowered heroes — pulp heroes didn't necessarily have superhuman powers, but even those who didn't tended to be preternaturally skilled at nearly everything, so it was convenient to limit their direct involvement in an adventure to crucial moments, and let the assistants (who could be much more fallible) do much of the legwork. The second object was to beef up the characterization. Doc Savage was morally irreproachable as well as absurdly multi-talented, so there wasn't a lot to be done with him character-wise, while maintaining the mystique of a character like the Shadow required him to remain a fairly closed book.
Although the pulp heroes were a huge influence on early comic book superheroes like Superman and Batman, some of these conventions didn't translate well to other media: In a 13-page comic book story or half-hour radio episode, having too many characters was cumbersome (and expensive, where it meant hiring extra actors), and comic book readers normally expected to follow their four-color heroes quite closely, even before the breathless internal monologue became a genre staple. So, Superman inherited Doc Savage's Fortress of Solitude, but not his "Fabulous Five" assistants, while heroes like Batman and Captain America generally stuck with a single sidekick rather than a team of aides. Even the late Doc Savage pulp adventures (which ended in 1949) de-emphasized the assistants to keep the focus more on Doc himself. Ultimately, the pulp heroes didn't really have the right narrative center of gravity for visual media, which is why they've become relatively obscure, despite repeated revival attempts. The 1975 Doc Savage movie with Ron Ely, for instance, was a notorious commercial flop, and elements like Doc's childishly bickering assistants seemed odd and dated, even taking into account the film's nostalgia-bait '30s period setting.
What BUCKAROO BANZAI tried to do was to bring that old pulp hero formula into the modern era with a big infusion of '80s style and humor. Like Doc Savage, Buckaroo is a wildly gifted polymath (in the opening scenes, he rushes from performing brain surgery to test-driving his Jet Car through a mountain), so famous and important a personage that he puts the president of the United States on hold, and he surrounds himself with an array of brilliant, eccentric aides with silly nicknames who play in his rock band when they're not fighting crime or doing advanced scientific experiments.
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Alas, judging by the poor box office returns, general audiences were no more amenable to the '80s version of this formula than they had been to DOC SAVAGE: MAN OF BRONZE nine years earlier, even with the 1984 film's extraordinary cast and memorably witty dialogue. Granted, even many of the movie's most diehard fans are baffled by the convoluted plot — a crucial expository scene where the leader of the Black Lectroids (Rosalind Cash) explains much of what's going on is nigh-incomprehensible without subtitles or closed captioning — but beyond that, THE ADVENTURES OF BUCKAROO BANZAI is essentially an extended riff on a particular slice of pop culture that had long since dropped out of the public consciousness, which is both part of its charm and also its commercial undoing, at least as mainstream entertainment.
(Also, if you're wondering, yes, the TOM STRONG series by Alan Moore and Chris Sprouse is also an obvious Doc Savage pastiche, although at least some of its plot and character concepts were probably retoolings of unused ideas from Moore's earlier Maximum Press/Awesome Comics SUPREME series, which was an extended pastiche of the pre-Crisis Superman.)
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garadinervi · 1 year
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Phillis Wheatley Poetry Festival, The Margaret Walker Center, Jackson State University, Jackson, MS, November 1-4, 2023
(image: Roy Lewis, (photograph), 1973 Phillis Wheatley Poetry Festival, Jackson State University, Jackson, MS: Mari Evans, Sonia Sanchez, Margaret Walker (pointing), and June Jordan. © Roy Lewis Photography)
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adhdslugcrimes · 23 days
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Stardew valley au (back at it again because of the update... THAT I HAVEN'T PLAYED YET 😭😭🤧)
Mayor Lewis: I remember your dad, he used to get in a lot of trouble when he was younger your grandfather didn't know what to do with him, nor your aunt, how is he, by the way?
Wally, in the saloon holding a beer after farming all day: uh, I don't know haven't spoken to him in a while.
Mayor Lewis: how long?
Wally: since I was six and he put me in critical condition, it's why I have a subtle limp. *Laughs at his horrible joke*
Mayor Lewis:... Are you okay?
Wally, smiles: dandy mayor, besides my husbands keep me safe from him and the hired hit men.
Mayor Lewis and the whole towns folks: what—
Wally, looks at his watch: ah look at the time I have to go, my farm babies are gonna need me bright and early, goodnight guys! *Leaves*
Shane: damn... And I thought I was the only fucked up person here.
Elliott, frantically writing: EVERYONE SHUT UP THIS IS GOING INTO MY NOVEL.
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npdclaraoswald · 10 months
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Another cross post from my Instagram!
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kdo-three · 5 months
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𝐉𝐞𝐫𝐫𝐲 𝐋𝐞𝐞 𝐋𝐞𝐰𝐢𝐬 - 𝐖𝐡𝐨𝐥𝐞 𝐋𝐨𝐭𝐭𝐚 𝐒𝐡𝐚𝐤𝐢𝐧' 𝐆𝐨𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐎𝐧 (𝟏𝟗𝟓𝟕) Dave "Curlee" Williams / James Faye "Roy" Hall from: "Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On" / "It'll Be Me"
Rock 'n' Roll | Rockabilly | 1st Wave Rock and Roll
𝐉𝐮𝐤𝐞𝐇𝐨𝐬𝐭𝐔𝐊 (left click = play) (320kbps)
Personnel: Jerry Lee Lewis: Vocals / Piano Roland Janes: Guitar J.M. Van Eaton: Drums
Engineered by Jack "Cowboy" Clement Produced by Jack "Cowboy" Clement
Recorded: @ Sun Records Studios Memphis, Tennessee USA February, 1955
Released: on April 15, 1957
Sun Records
♫♫♫ ♫♫♫ ♫♫♫
Ranked the 61st greatest song of all time by Rolling Stone magazine.
In 2005, "Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On" was selected for permanent preservation in the National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress.
"Perhaps the quintessential rockabilly anthem" - Charles L. Ponce de Leon
♫♫♫ ♫♫♫ ♫♫♫
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AD: "Cash Box" Magazine July 20, 1957
♫♫♫ ♫♫♫ ♫♫♫
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esqueletosgays · 1 month
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DR. JEKYLL AND SISTER HYDE (1971)
Director: Roy Ward Baker Cinematography: Norman Warwick
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