visenyaism:

john carpenter’s the thing is a movie about how the hyperindividualism and lack of emotional intimacy between men (specifically men in the united states military) immediately crystallizes into distrust and alienation in crisis. how kurt russel with an absurd callsign name and the goofiest hugest cowboy hat imaginable is the Man, running the whole show and managing the crisis until he fails because when faced with having to truly understand and connect with his last remaining ally he can’t, because all he knows how to do is sit in the snow and die next to him. It is a movie about losing control over your own body in the most horrific way possible. It is a movie about cold war paranoia and fear of bloodborne pathogens. It is a movie about how dread is an incredible force and even so sometimes what you CAN see is worse than what you can imagine. It is a movie about how the scariest thing men can conceive of is something that looks exactly like a man and acts exactly like a man but yet on some fundamental level…isn’t. It is a movie, as one of my eleventh graders pointed out this week, about “playing among us in real life.” but most importantly, john carpenter’s the thing is a movie about a dogy who is my friend and wants to become me 🙂

firstfullmoon:

“I wish everything had this much clarity. I wish I had always lived in this body, and you could have lived here with me, and I could have told you it’s all right, it’s all going to be all right.”

— Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

aconissa:

WRITERS + DIRECTORS ON THE POWER OF HORROR

Catriona Ward, interview for The Guardian
Mark Gatiss, in A History of Horror (2010)
Pascal Laugier, for Electric Sheep
Candyman (1992), dir. Bernard Rose
Colin Dickey, Ghostland
Carmen Maria Machado, for Paris Review
Kier-La Janisse, House of Psychotic Women
Possession (1981), dir. Andrzej Żuławski
Mariana Enríquez, ‘Notes on Craft’, Granta
Guillermo del Toro, Haunted Castles, Dark Mirrors

reasonsforhope:

Where can I find Free Palestine protests and Ceasefire protests?

A super international and continually updated list of actions can be found at Samidoun: Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network’s:

Calendar of Resistance for Palestine 2024

They list events by date, then alphabetically by country, then by city – and it’s common for them to have dozens of actions listed for a single date, especially on the weekends.

The United States especially often has 40+ events on a single day, especially on the weekends.

Events are posted with links to the event info posted by whoever’s hosting the vast majority of the time.

Look blow the read-more for a list of many of the countries that have been on this protest calendar, in alphabetical order, since I know so many websites/lists of actions are country-specific

*Obviously this isn’t the only good source of listings for protest events – there are many others. This is by far the biggest/most international roundup I’ve found, though, so I started with this. If you know another good place for finding ceasefire protests/events, please feel free to add it in the notes, bc I’m planning to put a bigger roundup together once I find enough other sites

Keep reading

commander-damneron:

mal-co-holic:

ankle-beez:

ankle-beez:

disney animation execs going on-record last year saying that they couldn’t do 2d animated movies anymore because of the supposed “limitations” of the medium and then immediately losing to a 2d animated movie on awards season is too perfect

an excerpt from an ign interview with disney animation studio ceo jennifer lee, done prior to the release of "wish". the excerpt reads,

“What happens in hand-drawn is that you have the incredible hand of the artist, but also limitations in what you could do on screen,” Lee explained. “What happened in CG is you'd have incredible, boundless opportunities, visually, that elevated it — even to the point for some — into realism, which is not what we wanted to do. The more important thing to us was to have a way to find technology that can do everything. Connect to the true vision of the artist, but bring in technology that could finally take away limitations.”ALT
another excerpt from the same interview:

Lee admitted that even after they committed to using computer animation to make Wish, they did consider using traditional animation to bring the character Star to life. Ultimately, she said 2D had too many limitations in terms of camera movements and characterization.ALT
the rotten tomatoes page for disney's "wish". it has a 48% critics score. the critics' consensus reads,

"Wish earns some tugs at the heartstrings with the way it warmly references many of the studio's classics, but nostalgia's no substitute for genuine storytelling magic -- no matter how beautifully animated it might be."ALT
the rotten tomatoes page for "the boy and the heron". it has a 97% critics score. the critics' consensus reads,

"Soulfully exploring thought-provoking themes through a beautifully animated lens, The Boy and the Heron is another Miyazaki masterpiece."ALT
the boy and the heron wins the golden globe for best animated featureALT

I just think this is funny

The real reason was they didn’t have any 2D animation folks on payroll anymore. They literally got rid of those folks since the release of Princess & the Frog. However they can’t just say that so they need to make up some BS about 2D being worse actually.

Figured I’d fix that first quote for them