Hell yes.
I think it’s fair to say that this Teenwolf poster by Von is amazing, yes?
This man whom I don’t know, or his dedicated team of script writers, have my deepest respect. I love when someone deconstructs reality to its basic foundations, pouring light on the truth and leaving it bleeding on the table for those who want to see it.
Via Rob Sheridan.
The Onion:
After wasting an afternoon taking pictures of a broken tricycle, moss on trees, and the shadow of a wrought-iron fence, Churchill Alternative High School senior Jessica Ivers falsely informed family and friends Saturday that she was getting into photography. “I love the way real film looks,” said Ivers, who has owned the old single-lens reflex 35 millimeter camera for exactly one week, and named as her favorite photographers “probably Diane Arbus” and the French guy who took the picture of the boy with the wine bottle. “I’m really fascinated by textures, and I think I’ll be able to get some good shots of my grandma’s hands this weekend.” Sources close to Ivers expect the camera to join her clarinet and yoga mat under her bed once she pays $14.85 to develop the roll of clumsy, overexposed images.Ouch. I love me some texture — especially on banal non-subjects.
Immersion = a Red One camera + a 7th gen console + a bunch of videogame addicted pre-teens + the bloodiest titles in the market.
My favorite is the expressionless, deeply disturbing, blue-eyed girl. Talk about early blooming psychopathy.
(via yimmyayo)
Children + monsters + Spike Jonze + Arcade Fire + no cgi. Mark my words: I predict “no cgi” is going to be the new cgi.
“Physical changes, psychological changes and a craving for independence all seem to stay with us and shape us into who we are as adults. How we dealt with the issues at hand, who we were surrounded by and how we were lead all contribute to us as individuals. I feel these images are not only portraits of this age group and their surroundings but also an exploration of the emotional solitude we all seemed to have felt at this age.”
—Glen Erler, Age 13-18
(via)
No tengo claro cómo definir o presentar esta película que vi anoche, y tampoco encuentro subtituladas mis escenas favoritas, así que pongo el trailer que me ha parecido más decente. Como cualquier trailer no deja de ser engañoso, pero el avezado lector de este blog sabrá leer entre escenas.
Sobra decir que está más que recomendada.