Its always been interesting to me how even though captain clark is the most violent still life to the point he scares other still lifes away, he has this face of perpetual sadness, kinda feels like a reflection to how clark portrays himself as victim even when attacking others
Everyone keeps talking about “giving grace to your parents” but you hardly hear them say give grace to your children. It’s embedded in our culture and religion. That is why we have so many parents repeating the cycle because they know the society will always back them up.
Unless you live in a Latino community, you are unlikely to grasp the terror so many in those communities have been experiencing-regardless of their immigration status. Not sending their kids to school, not even going to mass on Sundays. It really is unprecedented in our country.
Don’t call yourself a cinephile if you:
-don’t watch black cinema
-don’t take animated films seriously including anime
-don’t attempt to watch all genres even if you don’t like them
-don’t seek out female directors
Everyone says a parent’s love is unconditional but I think it’s the other way round. A child’s love for their parent is actually the unconditional one. As a child, you can never have another parent, but your parents can definitely have other children.
dystopian drama with a side of body horror anyone? 💃
In a world humans are treated like dolls—every part replaceable—Adisa, a struggling musician, faces pressure to buy a new voice before a career-defining gig. Desperate, he turns to the Body Shop, a chaotic underground clinic.
landback includes hawai’i by the way. nobody wants to bring it up with other indigenous struggles because you all want to vacation on indigenous lands violently stolen by the united states that just happen to be tropical islands