sorry for breaking my vow ~"~
will be on my best behavior no mo posts until 4-5pm pst to.morrow addios for real Yours truly, With love, Mo |
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Cool thing you discovered Orhan Pamuk :) I warmly recommend you "My name is red"!
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THANK YOU STEPHI B
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Mo is reading my name is red
THANKS AGAIN STEPHI B you made my day !! :) :) :) Can someone give me a movie tip ? Something sort of obscure that you would guess i have not seen? Here is something that I saw this week that I would recommend :: (if you enjoy foreign films and are interested in India) Vaanaprastham :: The Last Dance (1999) NR Kun was raised in a poor environment and never met his father, a wealthy lord who simply had a fling with a woman of a lower caste. Kun now dreams of becoming a master dancer. On a dance tour, he has an affair with and impregnates a woman of a higher caste; she has the baby and raises it, but never allows the lowly dancer to see his child. |
Mo is 53yo
i am guessing that i am your elder please try to be polite around me http://mojorisin.tumblr.com/ ^2yr old photo of Mo |
until we meet again
bye |
Quote:
INLAND EMPIRE |
:confused: ^ mo's lost
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Inland Empire - David Lynch's magnum opus, and perhaps his strangest film to date. Although if you do, be sure to use protection. I'm just sayin...
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Quote:
Wings of Desire |
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************************************************** **************
The Word of the Day for March 20 is: vatic \VAT-ik\ adjective : prophetic, oracular Example sentence: The vatic voice of these poems, untempered by humor or irony, sounds more pretentious than profound. Did you know? Some people say only thin lines separate poetry, prophecy, and madness. We don't know if that's generally true, but it is in the case of "vatic." The adjective derives directly from the Latin word "vates," meaning "seer" or "prophet." But that Latin root is in turn distantly related to an Old English word for "poetry," an Old High German word for "madness," and an Old Irish word for "seer" or "poet." ************************************************** ************** it was she who figured out how to preserve his stories (you know the crazy guys) |
"do not cleave unto it" aka "why all religions are wrong"
She fvvckin ruined his life??
*********************** Intro: On March 4, 1966, this quote of John's was printed in an interview by reporter (and friend of John's) Maureen Cleave in the London Evening Standard: "Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink. I needn't argue with that; I'm right and I will be proved right. We're more popular than Jesus now; I don't know which will go first - rock 'n' roll or Christianity. Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. It's them twisting it that ruins it for me." He was, as she reported, reading extensively about religion at the time. It was a small part of the article. No one took notice of it in Britai [/b][/font][/b][/size] |
^^^^ that movie is thought provoking
(the reason that actresses know the future is because they are told by the Director the day before waht scene will be happening ... ;) |
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