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scarymovies101 · 2 years
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Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (1988)
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helena-bottom-farter · 5 months
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slimewalk · 1 year
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mariocki · 1 year
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Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (Friday the 13th VII: The New Blood, 1988)
"Okay, you big hunk of a man, come and get me!"
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duranduratulsa · 7 months
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Now showing on my Spooktober Friday The 13th movie 🎥 marathon...Friday The 13th, Part VII: The New Blood (1988) on glorious vintage VHS 📼! #movie #movies #horror #fridaythe13th #fridaythe13thpart7 #fridaythe13thpart7thenewblood #seanscunningham #johncarlbuechler #jasonvoorhees #jason #kanehodder #larparklincoln #kevinspirtas #susanjennifergrace #TerryKiser #susanblu #heidikozak #jeffbennett #stacigreason #WilliamButler #jonrenfield #dianealmeida #larrycox #deborakessler #dianabarrows #elizabethkaitan #vintage #vhs #80s #spooktober #halloween #october
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thewolfisawake · 9 months
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Muses' Voice Claims
Kesil: Troy Baker
Artemis: Ryota Osaka
Samir: Nolan North (also fits that he changes voice too)
Bijou: Susan Egan
Aspis: Max Schneider
Crowe: Yuma Uchida
Noita: Jennifer Hale (Renegade Shep is literally their whole mood)
Kirika: Ryoka Yuzuki
Sullivan: Colin O'Donoghue
Sorin: Jay Baruchel
Yukina: Salli Saffioti
Biserka: Charlize Theron
Hijiri: Jaymes Young
Jasper: Will Friedle
Reyes: Zach Callison
Altyn: C.alliope Mori
Ceilidh: Aoi Koga (this is her professionally or 'serious' vs like...any other time you see her)
Eiji: Saito Soma
Eriskyne: Minami Takayama (Both are their tone)
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thoraway125 · 2 years
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Every book/movie/show Sara Quin has recommended.
and some reviews at the bottom, not the ones on skq reads 
Books
Abandon Me by Melissa Febos
After the Tall Timber: Collected Nonfiction by Reneta Adler
Against Everything by Mark Grief
A Gate at the Stairs by Lorrie Moore
Air Guitar: Essays on Art & Democracy by Dave Hickey
Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & and Clay by Michael Chaboan
A Lover’s Discourse by Roland Barthes
A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway 
A Natural History of the Senses by Diane Ackerman
*An Education by Susan Choi
*Anything That Moves, Dana Goodyear
*Are You My Mother? By Alison Bechdel
*Artful by Ali Smith
*A Sport and a Pastime by James Salter
Asymmetry by Lisa Halliday
Asterios Polyp by David Mazzucchelli 
Atmospheric Disturbances by Rivka Galchen
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
*A Widow for One Year by John Irving
A Zine Yearbook by Jason Kucsma
Barbarian Days Surfing Life by William Finegan
Bark by Lorrie Moore
Barney’s Version by Mortecai Richler 
Behind The Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity by Katherine Boo
Berlin Stories by Robert Walser
Borne by Jeff VadnerMeer
Bossy Pants by Tina Fey
Blood Horses by John Jeremiah Sullivan
By Blood by Ellen Ullman
By Grand Central Station by Elizabeth Smart
Call Me By Your Name by Andre Aciman
Can’t and Won’t by Lydia Davis 
Cats & Plants by Stephen Eichhorn
Changed my Mind by Zadie Smith
Cleopathra: A Life by Stacy Schiff
Colour by Icons by Never Apart
*Conversations With Friends by Sally Rooney 
Death & Co by Alex Day and more
Dept. of Speculation by Jenny Offill 
Diary of a Bad Year by J.M Coetzee
Don’t Get Too Comfortable by David Rakoff
Do What You Want by Ruby Tandoh
Dykes to Watch Out For by Alison Bechel
Einstein’s Dreams by Alan Lightman
Empire Of Illusion by Chris Hedges
Empty Nest End of Eddy by Edouard Louis
Epilectic by David Beauchard Essays Against Everything by Mark Grief
Essex County by Jeff Lemire
Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned by Wells Tower
*Far From the Tree by Andrew Solomon
Farther Away: Essays by Jonathan Franzen
Fear of Music by Jonathan Lethem
Feeding My Mother by Jane Arden
Fifteen Dogs by Andre Alexis 
*Flutter by Jennie Wood
Forty One False Starts by Janet Malcolms
Forgive Me if I’ve Told You This Before by Karelia Stetz Waters
Fosse by Sam Wasson
Fraud Essays by David Rakoff
Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechel
Getting A Life: Stories by Helen Simpson
Girls in the Moon by Janet McNally
Go Ask Alice by Beatrice Sparks *Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
Groomed by Jess Rona
*Habibi by Craig Thompson
Half Empty by David Rake
Helter Skelter by Curt Gentry and Vincent Bugliosi
Her Body And Other Parties by Carmen Machado
Here Comes the Sun by Nicole Dennis Benn
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the II by Christopher Warwick
*H is For Hawk by Helen Macdonald
*Hotel New Hampshire by John Irving
Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
I Am a Camera by John Van Druten
I Love Dick by Chris Kraus
Important Artifacts and Personal Property from the Collection of Lenore Doolan and Harold Morries, Including Books, Street Fashion, and Jewelry by Leanne Shapton
*Independence Day by Richard Ford
Independent people by Halldor Laxness
Intimacy by Jean-Paul-Satre
I Pass Like Night by Jonathan Ames
I Want To Show You More by Jamie Quatro
Jamilti and Other Stories by Rutu Modan
Juliet Takes a Breath by Gabby Rivera 
*Kramers Ergot by Sammy Harkham
Krazy! By Bruce Grenville
Leaving the Atocha Station by Ben Lerner
*Let’s Explore Diabetes With Owls- David Sedaris
Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann
*Light Years by James Salter
Likewise by Ariel Shrag
Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng
Love Dishonor Marry Die Cherish Perish by David Rakoff
Love In Infant Monkeys by Lydia Millet
Making Nice by Matt Sumell 
Margaret Fuller: A New American Life by Megan Marshall
May We Be Forgiven by A.M Homes
Mean by Myriam Gurba
Me before You by Jojo Moyes
Monkey Grip by Helen Garner
Mother of All Questions by Rebecca Solnit Music for Torching by A.M Homes
*My Education by Susan Choi
My Father’s Tears and Other Stories by John Updike
My Lifte in France, Julia Child and Alex Prud’homme
My Misspent Youth by Meghan Daum
Mourning Diary by Roland Barthes
My Struggle by Karl One Knausgaard
My Struggle 2 by Karl One Knausgaard
Mythologies by Roland Barthes
Nasty Woman by Heather McDaid
Netherland by Joseph O’Neill 
Nightfilm by Marisha Pessl
Nobody Is Ever Missing by Catherine Lacey
No Straight Lines: Four Decades of Queer Comics by Justin Hall
Notes on a Foreign Country by Suzy Hansen 
Nothing to be Frightened of by Julien Barnes
On Boxing by Joyce Carol Oates
Open City by Teju Cole
Opposite of Hate by Sally Kohn
*Paper Lantern: Love Stories by Stuart Dybek
Pauline Kael: A Life In The Dark by Brian Kellow
Paying For It by Chester Brown
*Pirates and Farmers by Dave Hickey
*Pitch Dark by Renata Alder
Political Fictions by Joan Didion
Polyamorous Love Song by Jacob Wren
Priestdaddy by Patricia Lockwood
*Provence 1970 by Luke Barr
Pulphead-Essays by John Jeremiah Sullivan
*Random Family by Adrian NicoleLeBlanc
Senselessness by Horacio Castellanos Moya
She believed she could so she did by Julie ‘Hesta Prynn’ Slavin
She of the Mountains by Vivek Shraya
Somebody with a Little Hammer by Mary Gaitskill
Speedboat by Renata Adler
Special Exits by Joyce Farmer
State of Wonder by Ann Patchet
Stoner by John Williams
Summertime by J.M Coetzee
Sweet Tooth by Jeff Lemire
Swing Time by Zadie Smith
**Tenth of December by George Saunders
That Summer Time Sound- Matthew Specktor (sara narrates a part in the audio version)
The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach
The Association of Small Bombs by Karan Mahajan
The Best American Comics 2007 by Charles Burns
The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2009 by David Eggers
The Cement Garden by Ian McEwan
The Children of Palomar by Gilbert Hernandez
The City and the Pillar by Gore Vidal
The Birth House by Ami McKay
The Book of Laughter and Forgetting by Milan Kundera
The Dark Room by Susan Faludi
*The Days of Abandonment by Elena Ferrante
The Disappointment Artist by Jonathan Lethem
The Doors Of Perception and Heaven and Hell by Aldous Huxley
The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions by Jonathan Lethem
The End of The Story by Lydia Davis 
The Essential Elle Willis by Ellen Willis
The Fight by Norman Mailer
*The Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner
The Folded Clock by Heidi Julavits
The Forgotten Waltz by Anne Enright
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
*The Guest Cat by Takashi Hiraide
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins 
The Idiot by Elif Batumam
The Informed Air by Muriel Spark
The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail by Clayton M. Christensen
The Interestings by Meg Wolitzer
*The Invention of Solitude by Paul Auster
The Irresponsible Self by James Woods
The Journalist and the Murderer by Janet Malcom
**The Last Word: Reviving the Dying Art of Eulogy by Julia Cooper 
The Little Red Chairs by by Edna O’Brien
The Man Without Qualities by Robert Musil
The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides
The Missing Piece by Shel Silverstein
The Missing Piece Meets The Big O by Shel Silverstein 
The Moronic Inferno by Martin Amis
The Mother of All Questions by Rebecca Solnit
The Neopolitan Novels by Elena Ferrante
The Nobody by Jeff Lemire
The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression by Andrew Solomon
The People in the Trees- Hanya Yanagihara
The Notebooks of Malte Laurid’s Brigge by Rainer Maria Rilke
The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith
The Property by Rutu Modan
The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro
The Road by Cormac McCarthy
The Rules Do Not Apply by Ariel Levy
This life by Martin hagglund
The Sense Of An Ending by Julian Barnes
The Slow Man by J.M Coetzee
The Spirit catches you and you fall down by Anne Fadiman
The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
The Topeka School by Ben Lerner65
The War Against Cliche by Martin Amis
The Yiddish Policemen’s Union by Michael Chabon
Things Are What You Make Of Them by Adam J. Kurtz
Thinking, Fast And Slow’ by Daniel Kahneman
*This is How You Lose Her by Junot Diaz
Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay by Elena Ferrante
To my Trans Sisters by Charlie Croggs 
Tranny by Laura Jane Grace 
True Stories by Helen Garner
Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice by Janet Malcolm 
Unless by Carol Shields
Versed by Rae Armantrout
Visiting Mrs. Nabokov by Martin Amis
Vitamin PH: New Perspectives in Photography by Rodrigo Alonso
Waiting for the Barbarians by J.M Coetzee
WACK! Art and The Feminist Revolution by Cornelia Butler
*Wake In Fright by Kenneth Cook
Wanderlust A History of Walking by Rebecca Saint
Ways of Seeing by John Berger
*We Are All Completely Besides Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler
Whatever happened to Interracial Love by Kathleen Colleens 
What Happened by Hillary Rodham Clinton
What I Talk About When I Talk About Running by Haruki Murakami
When Things Go Missing by Kathryn Schulz
*White Girls by Hilton Als
Winter by Ali Smith
Women by Charles Bukowski
(Woman) Writer: by Joyce Carol Oates
Works of Love by Søren Kierkegaard
1Q84 by Haruki Murakami
*100 Essays I don’t Have Time To Write by Sarah Ruhl
-Any works written by Renata Adler, Edward Albee, Roland Barthes, Alison Bechel, Beverly Cleary, J.M Coetzee, Susan Faludi, David Hickey, Elena Ferrante, Stephen King, John Irving, Jeff Lemire, and Lorrie Moore, and David Rakoff, Anne Rice, Donna Tartt, and John Updike
Magazines  Harper’s Lapham’s Quarterly Rolling Stones SPIN The Believer (August 2003, September 2004, November 2004, October 2008, November/December 2008, March/April 2009, June 2009) The New Yorker 
Bookstores Drawn and Quarterly in Montreal Sam Wellers Zion in salt lake LA Strand Books  Housingworks Mcleods in Vancouver Powells
Sara wrote something short in ‘do what you want’ by ruby tandoh
also wrote the preface to jess rona’s book
Movies, Documentaries, Shows, Podcasts etc
Adventures in Babysitting 
Arrested Development
*Bachelorette
Beauty is EmbarrassingBlack Power Mix Tape
*Bojack Horsemen (same artist as the Hang On music video)Broadchurch
Brothers and Sisters
Brown Girls
Bugsy Malone
Call me By Your Name
Luca Guadagnino
Cameraperson by Kirsten Johnson
 *Charlie Rose
*ChungKing Express
*Dan Savage Lovecast
***DeadWood
Drinking Buddies
Fresh Air with Terry Gross
Friday Night Lights
Full House
Game of Thrones
GarfieldGolden Girls Goonies
*Holy Motors
Home ImprovementI
nside Out
In The Loop
Lake
Legion
Little Shop of Horrors
L.O.V.E (tv series)
Madmen
Milk 2008
Moonlight
Nashville
Neon Bull
Orange Is The New BlackPhantom of The Paradise Rocky Horror Picture Show Sense8ShamelessShort Cut because 1992 Julianne Moore
Simon Killer
Sopranos Talk
RadioSpeed the Plow by David Mamet
Still Processing
Terminator 2
Terry Gross Fresh air NPR
The Bridge
The Crown
The Fall
The Fugitive
The Leftovers
The Minipops
The Thick of It
The Office (UK)
The Property Brothers
The Real Housewives of (anywhere)
The Wire
*This American Life
Tom Petty- Running Down A Dream
 Trueblood
WALL-E
War of the Worlds
War Witch
Weiner-Dog
West Wing
2Dope Queens
13 Monkeys
30 Rock
and here’s some more book reviews from Sara
Outline
by Rachel Cusk
The truth is that I struggled to pick my favorite book or writing from Rachel Cusk. All three novels in her
Outline series
are fantastic, and I’ve reread each of them first with passion and then again with a studious eye. For me there is the lonely, yet pragmatic, keen observational protagonist that appeals to me deeply. But also, a woman traveling, forever on the receiving end of looping conversation with strangers. I find her writing extremely romantic. What I’d most like to include on this list, is a piece of her writing from the
New York Times Magazine
: "Making House: Notes on Domesticity." It is a perfect piece of writing about the struggle of making a home and living it in comfortably. “Like the body itself, a home is something both looked at and lived in, a duality that in neither case I have managed to reconcile. I retain the belief that other people’s homes are real where mine is a fabrication, just as I imagine others to live inner lives less flawed than my own.
 ”
Fire Sermon
by Jamie Quatro 
Jamie Quatro’s novel about devotion, longing, lust and god was impossible to put down. I read it in one giant gulp. While male writers are given ample opportunity to write about these ideas, it still feels rare and thrilling when women do.
 Sing, Unburied, Sing
by Jesmyn Ward
Everything Jesmyn Ward has written has haunted me afterward. Unblinking, brutal, heartbreaking stories. Her writing feels both modern and like something from a masterpiece that every student is meant to read in high school or college. 
The Topeka School
by Ben Lerner
I love a hook, a melody that on first listen gives you goosebumps, or makes your stomach lurch up to your throat. Sometimes I hear one and I think, “that is a smash,” and then settle in to envy that I didn’t write the song myself. That was the feeling I had reading
I couldn’t help but compare our memoir because both books center adolescence and high school at their core. While Ben writes dazzlingly about masculinity and violence and the bubbling rage of teenage boys, I thought about the way we wrote about the paralysis and fear of being a queer girl in that same kind of world. While his boys turn their rage outward, we focused our violence inward, on the most tender parts of ourselves. Ben’s writing opens a door to understanding something about my own experience of those adolescent years. He sheds light on the parents and teachers whose complicated lives indelibly haunt our own, in ways we don’t realize until we become adults. It seems much of our public conversation revolves around what to do about and with men,
The Topeka School is a thrilling response. All of that to say, I think Ben’s book is a smash. 
JUNE 3, 2009 1. The Flamethrowers by Rachel KushnerI was so captivated there was no choice but to finish it entirely in one long stretch of days. Passages so beautiful that I found myself re-reading them over and over again in amazement. I think it was in the Harpers Magazine review that they called it feminist and sexy. It’s true. An entirely fresh and inspiring heroine. 2. Light Years by James SalterSo many tears; on the tarmac, on the subway, tucked in my bus bunk. I will cherish this book forever. It is 40 years old and that made the discovery so much more powerful. It’s also a good reminder that I am sentimental and a romantic no matter how hard I try to resist those urges. I’ll cozy up with my tears any day, you can’t shame me! 3. Tenth of December by George SaundersThere aren’t very many writers with a body of work I love so completely.  But, I think this is my absolute favourite. I have total admiration/awe for a mind this strange and wonderful
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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I Married a Witch (René Clair, 1942)
Cast: Fredric March, Veronica Lake, Robert Benchley, Cecil Kellaway, Susan Hayward, Elizabeth Patterson, Robert Warwick. Screenplay: Robert Pirosh, Marc Connelly, based on a novel by Thorne Smith and Norman Matson. Cinematography: Ted Tetzlaff. Art direction: Hans Dreier, Ernst Fegté. Film editing: Eda Warren. Music: Roy Webb. This somewhat over-frantic supernatural romantic comedy was the product of much friction during its preparation and filming, and it shows. At various points, Preston Sturges (as producer), Dalton Trumbo (as screenwriter), and Joel McCrea (as the male lead) were involved with it and left because of conflicts with director René Clair and actress Veronica Lake (who also fought with Fredric March after he took over the lead from McCrea, who had hated working with her a year earlier on Sturges's Sullivan's Travels). The premise is that two witches, Jennifer (Lake) and her father, Daniel (Cecil Kellaway), burned at the stake in 17th century Salem, have returned from the dead to haunt the descendant of the man who had them burned. He happens to be a gubernatorial candidate in Massachusetts, Wallace Wooley (March), who is also on the verge of marrying a shrewish snob played by Susan Hayward. Daniel casts a spell to give Jennifer a mortal form, whereupon she puts an end to the wedding but also falls in love with Wallace. Complications ensue in a brittle and occasionally rather cruel comedy in which no one either in front of or behind the camera seems to be working at top form.
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kovryata · 1 year
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The Battle - The Salvation Army from Moth on Vimeo.
The Battle is an edit of the three films we created for The Salvation Army's Christmas campaign which tells three different stories about hardship and the grace that comes from individual generosity.
Directed by: Moth Studio
Designed by: Moth Studio, Léonie Després, Manddy Wyckens
Produced by: Hornet & Moth Studio
Executive Producer: Hana Shimizu Head of Production: Sang-Jin Bae Development Producer: Kristin Labriola Producer: Eva Dahlqvist & Dez Stavracos Editor: Daniele Baiardini & Stephanie Andreou
2D Animation: Carlos De Faria, Tyler DiBiasio, Anne-Louise Erambert, Anne Escot, Freya Hotson, Reg Isaac, Tucker Klein, Jennifer Zheng Cleanup: Bianca Beneduci Assad, Carlos De Faria, Tyler DiBiasio, Marguerite Dumans, Lior Wolff-Epshtein, Anne-Louise Erambert, Anne Escot, Freya Hotson, Tucker Klein, Matt Lloyd, Harry Slinger-Thompson, Mick O’Sullivan, Jennifer Zheng CG Animation: Luke Carpenter, Luke Doyle, Lindsay Horner Compositing: Daniele Baiardini, Qian Shi Editing Assitance: Stef Roberts
Music composed, conducted and arranged by: Pierre O'Reilly
Orchestra contractor: James Fitzpatrick Session Producer: James Fitzpatrick Orchestra: The City Of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra Recording Engineer: Jan Holzner
Vocals: Triona O'Neill Piano: Pierre O'Reilly Recording Engineer: Tom Bullen Mixed and Mastered by: Nick Taylor
Sound design: Box Of Toys Audio
Post Production: 3008 Audio Engineer: Matt Cimino Online Flame Artist: Mark Sullivan Senior Producer: Jennifer Brannon
Voice over artist: Susan Eisenberg - William Morris Endeavor Entertainment-LA
Agency: The Richards Group
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aimeaustin · 1 year
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@judithdcollins Coming March 2023! 📢 Mar Newsletter: bit.ly/Mar2023BookNewsJDC 🔗 in bio Reviews will be posted by pub date Mar 01 4⭐Stars LOVELY GIRLS ✍Margot Hunt 🔉 Kimberly Woods, Vivienne Leheny 3.5⭐Stars THE HOLIDAY HOME ✍Daniel Hurst 🔉 Zoe Mills, Richard Burnip Mar 06 4⭐Stars THE SUMMER HOUSE ✍Keri Beevis 🔉 Shakira Shute Mar 07 5⭐Stars WHAT HAVE WE DONE ✍ @alexfinlayauthor 🔉 @britpressley James Patrick Cronin, Jon Lindstrom, Maggie Thompson 5⭐Stars THE LOST ENGLISH GIRL ✍Julia Kelly 🔉Danielle Cohen, Raphael Corkhill 4⭐Stars ALL THAT IS MINE I CARRY WITH ME ✍William Landay 🔉David de Vries, Joyce Bean, Patrick Lawlor, Scott Merriman 4⭐Stars FAMILY BONES ✍Elle Marr 🔉Jesse Vilinsky, Sura Siu, Jennifer Jill Araya, Arnell Powell 4⭐Stars DON'T LET HER STAY ✍Nicola Sanders 🔉 Penelope Rawlins TBR THE KIND WORTH SAVING ✍Peter Swanson 🔉Keith Szarabaijka, Kathleen Early, Helen Laser, Micky Shiloah Mar 08 TBR WITHOUT CONSENT ✍Aime Austin #NicoleLong 3.5⭐Stars THE SURGEON ✍Leslie Wolfe 🔉 Gwendolyn Druyor Mar 09 5⭐Stars LETTERS TO A STRANGER ✍Sarah Mitchell Mar 14 5⭐Stars I WILL FIND YOU ✍Harlen Coben 4⭐Stars I LOVE IT WHEN YOU LIE ✍Kristen Bird 🔉 Susan Bennett, Megan Tusing, Ferdelle Capistrano, Karissa Vacker, Brittany Pressley 5⭐Stars HELLO BEAUTIFUL ✍Ann Napolitano 🔉 Maura Tierney 4⭐Stars 48 CLUES INTO THE DISAPPEARANCE OF MY SISTER ✍Joyce Oates 4.5⭐Stars HE SAID HE WOULD BE LATE ✍Justine Sullivan 🔉 Kelli Tager Mar 21 5⭐Stars POVERTY BY AMERICA ✍Matthew Desmond 🔉 Dion Graham 5⭐Stars A FLAW IN THE DESIGN ✍Nathan Oats 🔉 David Pittu 4.5⭐Stars EARTH'S THE RIGHT PLACE FOR LOVE ✍Elizabeth Berg Mar 28 5⭐Stars ++ THE LAST CAROLINA GIRL ✍ @mchurchwriter 💌 MARCH #AuthorElevatorSeries 🔉 @siriouslysusan 💙 5⭐Stars ++ THE MOSTLY TRUE STORY OF TANNER & LOUISE ✍ @writercolleenoakley 💌 MARCH #AuthorElevatorSeries 🔉 @hillaryoutloud 💙 4⭐Stars THOSE EMPTY EYES ✍Charlie Donlea 🔉 Vivienne Leheny 4⭐Stars HER DEADLY GAME ✍Robert Dugoni 🔉 Saskia Maarleveld #jdcmustreadbooks #mar2023books #netgalley #bookblogger #bookinfluencer #bookstagram #bookreview #audiobook (at Los Angeles, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CpWOthTvRi-/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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scarymovies101 · 3 years
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Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (1988)
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helena-bottom-farter · 4 months
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slimewalk · 7 months
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uncanny-xman · 4 years
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pierppasolini · 4 years
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Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (1988) // dir. John Carl Buechler
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trash-fuckyou · 6 years
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Heidi Kozak and Susan Jennifer Sullivan in Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (1988)
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