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    graffiti protection

    Soul

    Directed by Pete Docter, Kemp Powers. With Jamie Foxx, Tina Fey, Daveed Diggs, John Ratzenberger. A musician who has lost his passion for music is transported out of his body and must find his way back with the help of an infant soul learning about herself.

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    PLASMATICS

     

    IRONY

     

    SMUG MODE

     

    The 30 Foot Bride of Candy Rock

    Directed by Sidney Miller. With Lou Costello, Dorothy Provine, Gale Gordon, Jimmy Conlin. In one of his rare performances without Bud Abbott, Lou Costello plays a rubbish collector and inventor. When radiation in a nearby cave turns his girlfriend into a giantess, antics ensure as he tries to shrink her using one of his inventions.

    Trick photography with some left over props from a dozen other films, all filmed on the back lot of some abandoned forest. I mock it, but the last 20 minutes of this film are some of the most surreal content I’ve seen in a film. It’s obvious that the entire thing was written with no intent to tell a full story, but I do get a kick out of old comedy science fiction.

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    bubble kisser


  • LIVING ROOM

     

    JIMI HENDRIX

     

    open mouth dump

    Teen Spirit

    Directed by Max Minghella. With Elle Fanning, Agnieszka Grochowska, Archie Madekwe, Zlatko Buric. Violet is a shy teenager who dreams of escaping her small town and pursuing her passion to sing. With the help of an unlikely mentor, she enters a local singing competition that will test her integrity, talent and ambition. Driven by a pop-fueled soundtrack, Teen Spirit is a visceral and stylish spin on the Cinderella story.

    Elle Fanning looks like she’s constantly on the edge of crying for the entire film, justifiably so, considering the plot points. That’s not to say that there are horrible things going on, this is actually an enjoyable film that didn’t turn out to be the bad film that the trailer suggested it might have been.

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    sparks flying

    Low Boppin

    STOMPER

     

    BEAMS

     

    JEEP

     

    imagine all the people

    The Thing

    Directed by John Carpenter. With Kurt Russell, Wilford Brimley, Keith David, Richard Masur. A research team in Antarctica is hunted by a shape-shifting alien that assumes the appearance of its victims.

    I’ve never seen this before, if only because the original film completely broke my brain when I saw it at a young age.  John Carpenter’s version of the story works both as a retelling and as a sequel of sorts.  The effects were great and the acting pretty fun, but having a black man in the antarctic with roller skates and a ghetto blaster has not aged well.  Additionally, having actual dogs in movie made me feel somewhat shitty, cause it was obvious that most of them were straight up not having a great experience.

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    lolly girl

    noodle beast

    The Mortal Engines Quartet

    MORTAL ENGINES launched Philip Reeve’s brilliantly-imagined creation, the world of the Traction Era, where mobile cities fight for survival in a post-apocalyptic future. Now, in time for the film debut, the critically acclaimed MORTAL ENGINES quartet is repackaged in a boxset with fantastic and eye-catching covers featuring new artwork.

    I watched the fantastically ridiculous movie and figured that it had a number of cool ideas that I should check out the book series that the movie was based on. The first book was pretty verbatim what happened in the movie, so I moved onto the second book, it introduced more better aerial content, but still lacked a hook to keep me going. it was at this point that I gave up on the series for about a month, then picked it back up when I bought a couple other books that I figured I’d read after I finished this series.

    I finished the series and while I didn’t hate it, it was always on the cusp of being uninteresting. The final book is thankfully the best of the four, with much more of the back history of the world that came before the traction cities starting roaming the hunting grounds.

    If you happen to pick this up, be sure to get the version that has the index at the end of it, it has a timeline of things that I found incredibly interesting.

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    DICK TRACY

     

    The Invisible Man

    Directed by Leigh Whannell. With Elisabeth Moss, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Aldis Hodge, Storm Reid. When Cecilia’s abusive ex takes his own life and leaves her fortune, she suspects his death was a hoax. As a series of coincidences turn lethal, Cecilia’s works to prove that she is being hunted by someone nobody can see.

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    AIRPORTERS

     

    21 Bridges

    Directed by Brian Kirk. With Chadwick Boseman, J.K. Simmons, Sienna Miller, Taylor Kitsch. An embattled NYPD detective is thrust into a citywide manhunt for a pair of cop killers after uncovering a massive and unexpected conspiracy.

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