bbook:

There’s a sort of evil out there. Something very, very strange in these  old woods. Call it what you want. A darkness, a presence. It takes many  forms but… its been out there for as long as anyone can remember and  we’ve always been here to fight it.

bbook:

There’s a sort of evil out there. Something very, very strange in these old woods. Call it what you want. A darkness, a presence. It takes many forms but… its been out there for as long as anyone can remember and we’ve always been here to fight it.

(Source: laurapalmerwalkswithme, via oldfilmsflicker)

(Source: picote, via goldenoise)

cracked:

misskatie:

kittykittybangbang:

clambistro:brown cardigan

and i just spit my tea everywhere.

That’s exactly the kind of reaction that would make these eels so very, very happy.

cracked:

misskatie:

kittykittybangbang:

clambistro:brown cardigan

and i just spit my tea everywhere.

That’s exactly the kind of reaction that would make these eels so very, very happy.

afternoonsnoozebutton:

jcsco:

Speaks for itself…

Priorities!

afternoonsnoozebutton:

jcsco:

Speaks for itself…

Priorities!

afternoonsnoozebutton:

“My relationship with Modern Family is pretty torturous  because I know I am just being fed comfortably middle-American ideas of  ‘edge’ that still sort of pander but I tend not to mind it because the  actors are all pretty flawless. Case in point, Julie Bowen and Ty  Burrell as goofy dad and perpetually irritated Phil and Claire Dunphy.  Ty Burrell is so gifted that his sensitive new age guy cum hapless  childish moron seems not only plausible but loveable. Julie Bowen is so  good that her Claire Dunphy – written as an unhappy, terrible,  mean-spirited, and paranoid wife and mother – transforms into a  soft-hearted goof who’s a bit more neurotic than she should be –  something runs in the family, just look at her brother Mitchell  (artfully played by Jesse Tyler Ferguson) as he manages to treat his  partner Cam with the same level of near perpetual disdain.
But good acting can’t cover up the nag – watch more than one episode  in a row and you find yourself wondering if you are, in fact, watching a  Looney Toon. With behavior this, well, unloving, it’s hard not to  visualize Modern Family the drama – where slammed doors and therapy sessions are the order of the day.”
Excerpted from FemPop’s article: “The TV Nagging Wife: Relished and Subverted”

afternoonsnoozebutton:

“My relationship with Modern Family is pretty torturous because I know I am just being fed comfortably middle-American ideas of ‘edge’ that still sort of pander but I tend not to mind it because the actors are all pretty flawless. Case in point, Julie Bowen and Ty Burrell as goofy dad and perpetually irritated Phil and Claire Dunphy. Ty Burrell is so gifted that his sensitive new age guy cum hapless childish moron seems not only plausible but loveable. Julie Bowen is so good that her Claire Dunphy – written as an unhappy, terrible, mean-spirited, and paranoid wife and mother – transforms into a soft-hearted goof who’s a bit more neurotic than she should be – something runs in the family, just look at her brother Mitchell (artfully played by Jesse Tyler Ferguson) as he manages to treat his partner Cam with the same level of near perpetual disdain.

But good acting can’t cover up the nag – watch more than one episode in a row and you find yourself wondering if you are, in fact, watching a Looney Toon. With behavior this, well, unloving, it’s hard not to visualize Modern Family the drama – where slammed doors and therapy sessions are the order of the day.”

Excerpted from FemPop’s article: “The TV Nagging Wife: Relished and Subverted

iwanttobelikearollingstone:

“Eraserhead is a nightmare vision of a world where men control all aspects of reproduction, turning sex into a mechanised process. The result is a world of industrial decay where life is more morbid than death itself. The infamous baby in Eraserhead is not naturally conceived but created by The Man on the Planet (Jack Fisk), a deformed monster who unnaturally creates life by pulling levers. Without love, life is an artificially created abomination.”

iwanttobelikearollingstone:

“Eraserhead is a nightmare vision of a world where men control all aspects of reproduction, turning sex into a mechanised process. The result is a world of industrial decay where life is more morbid than death itself. The infamous baby in Eraserhead is not naturally conceived but created by The Man on the Planet (Jack Fisk), a deformed monster who unnaturally creates life by pulling levers. Without love, life is an artificially created abomination.”

(via oldfilmsflicker)

dokuganryuu:

mmeeggaann:

welp

oh

Stephanie. 20. Journalism major, Entertainment writer. Cat lover, toast eater. Boulder, CO.