EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert, 2025 - ★★★★
letterboxd.com/feelinglistl...
EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert, 2025 - ★★★★
letterboxd.com/feelinglistl...
Want to watch The Sensorites?
I am on a tram.
Thirty years ago they knew how to make proper television.
This is AWFUL. If you have any spare £, this poor lass is going through a dreadful time.
Yet public bodies continue to use the service: www.bbc.com/sport/footba...
I wonder if there's a genre yet of these stressful films which have many of the same effects on viewers as a horror film without actually obviously being a horror film.
Have you seen Shiva Baby?
On the Avenue, 1937 - ★★★★
letterboxd.com/feelinglistl...
Have you seen Big Ass Spider! ?
"DOCTOR WHO" - the struggles of addiction
He was also the guy who played the movie Diner in his head while he was on a date with Rachel.
Come back to when Claude starts doing things by itself without a human prompt and is able to also perpetuate itself without prompting either.
The Day the Earth Stood Still, 1951 - ★★★★★
letterboxd.com/feelinglistl...
From my point of view, growing up is hard enough without being burdened with how bad it *could* be. General pointers: yes. "Here's specific horrible stuff in my past that I dealt with": not unless it's directly relevant, and only if it will help.
The other thing to say about Scream 7 is that it knows its an heirloom although the self awareness subtler than usual. Opening in a museum to the events of the first film which one of the visitors finds incredibly passe it sets up the viewers expectations of what's to come.
I'm not a parent so I don't have any experience of this either way so I'm genuinely interested in these questions.
Like Tatum, in a social media saturated world, they're going to find out something of what it's like, but that's not the same as first person experience. But unlike Tatum, presumably loads of kids don't want to hear about the parent's trauma or don't talk to their parents in that way.
I wonder about the extent to which this mirrors how much parent's tell their children about the shit they're going to be dealing with as they grow older. Do you lay it all out for them or do you hope it well be better for them and they won't need to know how bad it can be?
That's left her daughter in the position she was at the start of the first Scream, if not a bit worse because she thinks she knows what's about to hit and that she can brave it out but end up being almost totally unprepared (also because the film needs her to be for suspense purposes).
Sydney has purposefully shielded her daughter from the trauma of her life which means the daughter has had to consume it through the books, podcasts and films about the events of the five films her mother's lived through. Which leaves her unprepared when the cycle begins again.
Still thinking about this a few days later and how it cleverly subverts the slasher element so that it's almost beside the point. It's about the extent we shield or reveal the truth of our own trauma to our kids and the lens through which they'll find out about it anyway.
Saw this on Nebula last week and it’s an astonishing, eye opening piece of work. Well worth a couple of hours of your time.
Everything fictional is only a #bluepolicebox away from a #doctorwho episode.
This guy is selling Doctor Who fan fiction on Amazon both Paperback and Kindle without a licence for silly prices. The covers look like AI slop. The introduction is a loooong disclaimer: www.amazon.co.uk/stores/Matth...
Coincidences.
Just checked and no it doesn’t. They’re still following you when you unblock them.