1. joshpeck:

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    this coinciding with election day

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  2. illuminfae-ix:

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    Black Night Leopard Gecko 🖤

    (via cummy--eyelids)

     
  3. bob-belcher:

    The Mummy dir. Stephen Sommers (1999)

     
  4. thehauntingsource:

    THE HAUNTING OF BLY MANOR x character archetypes

    (via bob-belcher)

     

  5.  
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  7. ashleyodellart:

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    Celeste’s room 🌙⭐️☁️

    (via lapobrecita)

     
  8. hug-bees:

    Gotta make sure you’re prepped the night before the big day! Happy Halloween everybody!!

     

  9. moghedien:

    It’s like when making Hocus Pocus they told Bette Midler “this is camp just do whatever the fuck you want,” they told Sarah Jessica Parker that she could either drop acid or do a line of coke before every take but she had to do one, they told Kathy Najimy that her character is just an evil golden retriever, and then they told all the actors playing the kids that this was a very serious horror movie and if they didnt take all of this seriously they’d be in trouble

    (via joshpeck)

     

  10. siphersaysstuff:

    ladylenoragriffin:

    rubyvroom:

    its-pronounced-eye-gor:

    vaiyamagic:

    miss-arcadia:

    gothiethefairy:

    marvel: ‘infinity war is the most ambitious crossover event in history’ 

    me:

    image

    It’s true! Especially given a) the technology they had at the time to pull this off, and b) that they had characters from TWO separate companies as opposed to different characters from the same comics publisher.

    So yeah, Roger Rabbit wins the ambitious crossover award, hands down. Sorry Marvel.

    The agreement with Disney and Warner Bros was that they could only use their biggest characters (Mickey and Donald, Bugs and Daffy) if the other corrosponding character had the exact same amount of screentime. This is why, in the movie, Bugs and Mickey are sharing scenes, and Daffy and Donald are sharing scenes.

    It’s also worth mentioning that every single animator in the industry that wasn’t already working on something was called in to work on this film. EVERY. SINGLE. ONE.

    take a look at this crowd shot

    image

    that’s nuts! It’s also a legitimately great movie, a noir comedy that ties in the actual history of Los Angeles alongside the history of animation comfortably alongside the gratuitous silliness. And Bob Hoskins is a fucking CHAMP for his acting in this, one of the earlier examples of green-screen acting with characters who mostly aren’t there and he can make you totally forget that he can’t see what’s happening a lot of the time.

    Bob Hoskins is also a fucking champ because what he could see was Charles Fleischer (Roger Rabbit) delivering lines off-camera dressed like this:

    image

    This was his work environment.

    A casual reminder that this was LONG before inter-company crossovers became a thing. The very idea of Bugs and Mickey officially sharing screen time was UNTHINKABLE in the 80s. And then throw in Betty Boop, Droopy Dog, Woody Woodpecker, and Felix the Cat, all from different studios/rightsholders? Yowza. (If only King Features had let them put Popeye in.)

    (via transjemder)

     

  11. siphersaysstuff:

    ladylenoragriffin:

    rubyvroom:

    its-pronounced-eye-gor:

    vaiyamagic:

    miss-arcadia:

    gothiethefairy:

    marvel: ‘infinity war is the most ambitious crossover event in history’ 

    me:

    image

    It’s true! Especially given a) the technology they had at the time to pull this off, and b) that they had characters from TWO separate companies as opposed to different characters from the same comics publisher.

    So yeah, Roger Rabbit wins the ambitious crossover award, hands down. Sorry Marvel.

    The agreement with Disney and Warner Bros was that they could only use their biggest characters (Mickey and Donald, Bugs and Daffy) if the other corrosponding character had the exact same amount of screentime. This is why, in the movie, Bugs and Mickey are sharing scenes, and Daffy and Donald are sharing scenes.

    It’s also worth mentioning that every single animator in the industry that wasn’t already working on something was called in to work on this film. EVERY. SINGLE. ONE.

    take a look at this crowd shot

    image

    that’s nuts! It’s also a legitimately great movie, a noir comedy that ties in the actual history of Los Angeles alongside the history of animation comfortably alongside the gratuitous silliness. And Bob Hoskins is a fucking CHAMP for his acting in this, one of the earlier examples of green-screen acting with characters who mostly aren’t there and he can make you totally forget that he can’t see what’s happening a lot of the time.

    Bob Hoskins is also a fucking champ because what he could see was Charles Fleischer (Roger Rabbit) delivering lines off-camera dressed like this:

    image

    This was his work environment.

    A casual reminder that this was LONG before inter-company crossovers became a thing. The very idea of Bugs and Mickey officially sharing screen time was UNTHINKABLE in the 80s. And then throw in Betty Boop, Droopy Dog, Woody Woodpecker, and Felix the Cat, all from different studios/rightsholders? Yowza. (If only King Features had let them put Popeye in.)

    (via transjemder)

     

  12. siphersaysstuff:

    ladylenoragriffin:

    rubyvroom:

    its-pronounced-eye-gor:

    vaiyamagic:

    miss-arcadia:

    gothiethefairy:

    marvel: ‘infinity war is the most ambitious crossover event in history’ 

    me:

    image

    It’s true! Especially given a) the technology they had at the time to pull this off, and b) that they had characters from TWO separate companies as opposed to different characters from the same comics publisher.

    So yeah, Roger Rabbit wins the ambitious crossover award, hands down. Sorry Marvel.

    The agreement with Disney and Warner Bros was that they could only use their biggest characters (Mickey and Donald, Bugs and Daffy) if the other corrosponding character had the exact same amount of screentime. This is why, in the movie, Bugs and Mickey are sharing scenes, and Daffy and Donald are sharing scenes.

    It’s also worth mentioning that every single animator in the industry that wasn’t already working on something was called in to work on this film. EVERY. SINGLE. ONE.

    take a look at this crowd shot

    image

    that’s nuts! It’s also a legitimately great movie, a noir comedy that ties in the actual history of Los Angeles alongside the history of animation comfortably alongside the gratuitous silliness. And Bob Hoskins is a fucking CHAMP for his acting in this, one of the earlier examples of green-screen acting with characters who mostly aren’t there and he can make you totally forget that he can’t see what’s happening a lot of the time.

    Bob Hoskins is also a fucking champ because what he could see was Charles Fleischer (Roger Rabbit) delivering lines off-camera dressed like this:

    image

    This was his work environment.

    A casual reminder that this was LONG before inter-company crossovers became a thing. The very idea of Bugs and Mickey officially sharing screen time was UNTHINKABLE in the 80s. And then throw in Betty Boop, Droopy Dog, Woody Woodpecker, and Felix the Cat, all from different studios/rightsholders? Yowza. (If only King Features had let them put Popeye in.)

    (via transjemder)

     
  13. killdie:

    Kyle Montgomery 2015 crystal mary

    (via cummy--eyelids)

     
  14. expressions-of-nature:

    Tekirdağ, Turkey by Meriç Tuna

    (via charliezone)

     
  15. saddeus:

    glass of milk

    (via bisexualgambit)