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1000 results for “Krazov”
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Ah yes, "Shadow Man Remastered." I have been wanting to play the game since it was released, but it didn't happen at the time. Then, quite recently, I learned about Nightdive's remaster, and I had it on my list ever since. Over a quarter of the century after its release, I finally get to bit my teeth in it.
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Ah yes, "Shadow Man Remastered." I have been wanting to play the game since it was released, but it didn't happen at the time. Then, quite recently, I learned about Nightdive's remaster, and I had it on my list ever since. Over a quarter of the century after its release, I finally get to bit my teeth in it.
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Ah yes, "Shadow Man Remastered." I have been wanting to play the game since it was released, but it didn't happen at the time. Then, quite recently, I learned about Nightdive's remaster, and I had it on my list ever since. Over a quarter of the century after its release, I finally get to bit my teeth in it.
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I realised that I never wrote anything about "Curb Your Enthusiasm," now that I've finished the show finale. So, let's do a general review.
After having a blast with "Seinfeld," I wanted to follow up with similar vibes. Something appealing about those nihilist tones they had there. And Larry David, whose fictionalised life is the core of the show here, was a co-writer for the first 7 seasons.
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"Red Lights" from 2012 were a last moment choice when the other film didn't pan out. I got lured by the cast (Cilian Murphy, Sigourney Weaver, and Robert De Niro), but it was a bit of a dud. The first part is strong, but then the story goes into weird, and not in a good way, areas and developments. The end made the experience somewhat better, but it's 5/10 for me.
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"Red Lights" from 2012 were a last moment choice when the other film didn't pan out. I got lured by the cast (Cilian Murphy, Sigourney Weaver, and Robert De Niro), but it was a bit of a dud. The first part is strong, but then the story goes into weird, and not in a good way, areas and developments. The end made the experience somewhat better, but it's 5/10 for me.
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"Red Lights" from 2012 were a last moment choice when the other film didn't pan out. I got lured by the cast (Cilian Murphy, Sigourney Weaver, and Robert De Niro), but it was a bit of a dud. The first part is strong, but then the story goes into weird, and not in a good way, areas and developments. The end made the experience somewhat better, but it's 5/10 for me.
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"Red Lights" from 2012 were a last moment choice when the other film didn't pan out. I got lured by the cast (Cilian Murphy, Sigourney Weaver, and Robert De Niro), but it was a bit of a dud. The first part is strong, but then the story goes into weird, and not in a good way, areas and developments. The end made the experience somewhat better, but it's 5/10 for me.
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"Red Lights" from 2012 were a last moment choice when the other film didn't pan out. I got lured by the cast (Cilian Murphy, Sigourney Weaver, and Robert De Niro), but it was a bit of a dud. The first part is strong, but then the story goes into weird, and not in a good way, areas and developments. The end made the experience somewhat better, but it's 5/10 for me.
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I knew about the existence of "Barbarella" (1968) for long enough to say forever. It's a shamelessly erotic and silly, if not goofy, science-fiction bit. It's actually quite decent story-wise if you ignore that Barbarella changes her clothes every 10 minutes because the previous one were destroyed. It was a surprise to see the main actor from week-before "Blowup." I found the character of Pygar, a blind angel, to be the most interesting. No follow-up ever managed to emerge.
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I was actually curious how the script for "No Country For Old Men" would fare compared to the book. The book is better. The writing is actually surprisingly bland, but maybe brothers Coen was writing for themselves and they didn't need to impress anyone with it. There aren't many deviations from the movie, apart from a couple of things that were actually in the book, but were cut out of the screenplay. They ended up in the movie in the end.
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"Boy Swallows Universe" is a series adaptation of a book telling a story of growing up in 1980s Australia. There's a fair dose of magical realism, but in the right amounts, so the whole thing doesn't venture into gibberish. It's actually quite brutal as for a story of a child. A solid thing with an unexpected performance from Simon "The Mentalist" Baker, whom I didn't recognise at first. I am also a taste for Australia as a setting place for stories.
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I was wikiscrolling on WikiTok and I found an album from a band called Psyclon Nine ("Divine Infekt"). The description suggested something industrial, so I decided to give it a shot. And oh boy. If I ever had a picture of heavy music as a child, that would be it: heavy beat, walls of guitars, and vocals straight out of Cradle of Filth. Turns out someone had exactly the same idea for heavy music as 10-year-old me. It was an interesting experience.
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"Blowup" from 1966 is a movie about which I read regularly in the TV guide when I was a kid back in the 1990s, but I never actually saw it. It aged well, even if I'm not sure what is strange and what is normal there because the past truly is another country. A story of a photographer who captures *something* in the background when casually taking picture in a park. Mysterious by design and with a lot of flesh in it.
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Season 3 of "Wellington Paranormal" is at home with its jokes and the actors feel confident with their characters. And Parker, the season 2 addition, fits in just right. I am also getting better at understanding kiwi accent. It's fascinating how differently English can sound.
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Season 3 of "Wellington Paranormal" is at home with its jokes and the actors feel confident with their characters. And Parker, the season 2 addition, fits in just right. I am also getting better at understanding kiwi accent. It's fascinating how differently English can sound.
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Season 3 of "Wellington Paranormal" is at home with its jokes and the actors feel confident with their characters. And Parker, the season 2 addition, fits in just right. I am also getting better at understanding kiwi accent. It's fascinating how differently English can sound.
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Season 3 of "Wellington Paranormal" is at home with its jokes and the actors feel confident with their characters. And Parker, the season 2 addition, fits in just right. I am also getting better at understanding kiwi accent. It's fascinating how differently English can sound.
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As strange as it may sound, I have never seen "Fatal Attraction" (1987). Apart from love scenes, like the one in the elevator, the movie got old pretty well. It can be seen as a cautionary tale for married men or (probably) something about oppressive patriarchy, which shows the initial quality. Glen Close plays a role which usually is reserved for male characters, and she can have a very chilling impression when she's calmly scanning the environment.
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They updated "Sky," and it's no longer working smoothly on Switch. Shame. But I see they finally created the second starting island (when you play every couple of years, you're up for surprises). More vibrant this time. I liked the challenge with playing music.
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I read James Sallis' "Drive" over a decade ago, as a huge fan of the movie, but I always thought that I rushed through it without much of a thought, so when I was choosing a back-up book for flying, I decided to give it another shot. It's very different from the movie and feels like a pulp story written in much higher literary style, which creates an interesting effect. A story of a man who wants to be anonymous in the world. As such, it reminds me of "Perfect Days."
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"Perfect Days" from 2023 is Wim Wender's movie about a cleaner of public toilets in Shibuya in Tokyo. Slow-paced every-day’s routine of a middle-aged man turned out to be a very appealing lifestyle. Working, taking pictures of trees, listening to music, and reading books. And all by himself, not really talking to anyone, not even coworkers. Like a hermit in the middle of a crowded city.
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After reading a script to "There's Something About Mary," I decided to see the movie to have immediate comparison of effects. Firstly, it wasn't that funny knowing the puns, which I did not expect for some reason. Secondly, there were more gags than in the script. I think they were improvised during filming. The movie also had a different ending. Cameron Diaz plays Mary in a very subversive way; she's not your typical rom-com sweetheart. And it's positive.
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May I introduce you to Żółw Trafalgar Law (the name is a result of family's brainstorming).
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"Cien Años de Soledad" is an adaptation of a very famous book from Gabriel García Márquez. It seems that Netflix ran the first half of the season, but so far, so good. It treats the source material with respect and I read it 25 years ago, but it seems to be not taking unforgiving shortcuts. It was interesting to see this differently to how I imagined it. To think that a couple of decades ago, they would probably try to squish it into a 2-hour movie. Inconceivable!
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"Cien Años de Soledad" is an adaptation of a very famous book from Gabriel García Márquez. It seems that Netflix ran the first half of the season, but so far, so good. It treats the source material with respect and I read it 25 years ago, but it seems to be not taking unforgiving shortcuts. It was interesting to see this differently to how I imagined it. To think that a couple of decades ago, they would probably try to squish it into a 2-hour movie. Inconceivable!
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"Cien Años de Soledad" is an adaptation of a very famous book from Gabriel García Márquez. It seems that Netflix ran the first half of the season, but so far, so good. It treats the source material with respect and I read it 25 years ago, but it seems to be not taking unforgiving shortcuts. It was interesting to see this differently to how I imagined it. To think that a couple of decades ago, they would probably try to squish it into a 2-hour movie. Inconceivable!
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"Cien Años de Soledad" is an adaptation of a very famous book from Gabriel García Márquez. It seems that Netflix ran the first half of the season, but so far, so good. It treats the source material with respect and I read it 25 years ago, but it seems to be not taking unforgiving shortcuts. It was interesting to see this differently to how I imagined it. To think that a couple of decades ago, they would probably try to squish it into a 2-hour movie. Inconceivable!
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A screenplay for "There's Something About Mary" was the first comedy I've read. I recall reading somewhere years ago that if you don't laugh while reading it, you're not gonna laugh while watching it. So I was curious. And I laughed, but less than I would hope so. Funny how Pat Healy seemed to be written for Matt Dillon, albeit, not being the first choice.