The Double Life of Veronique, 1991. Krzysztof Kieslowski.
(Hopefully what my next bedroom will look like..)
The Double Life of Veronique, 1991.
This movie has the best colors and puts you in the same restless, lethargic and wistful feeling as the main characters, who never feel like they’re quite there.
(via marzipandildo)
As You Like It, by Zoltán Huszárik, 1976. a Hungarian short documentary on death in visual forms and the holocaust. This 20 minute film is filled with beautiful, horrifying, and subtle images because that is reality.
It’s sometimes strange to be interested in fictional gore when you realize the vulgarity of which much of it was based on. After all, you can’t come up with an idea that has not been influenced by something real.
At the same time, maybe if we avoid fictional violence we’re lying to ourselves.
(via add-itup)
As You Like It, A Piacere. Zoltán Huszárik, 1976.
85 year old (1921-2007) prominent graffiti artist in Kowloon, Hong Kong, Tsang Tsou Choi.
His graffiti is said to include his name, family tree, and “title” the King of Kowloon.
Apparently, Tsang Tsou insisted that his family owned the majority of Hong Kong, and was so obsessed that his family disowned him and his wife left him.
sanford and sons
(Source: fuckyeahthedisneyclassics)
(Source: dopeart, via killjoanlee)
(via killjoanlee)
but he aint no son to me, he’s a piece of mutton, a blob of flesh
faster, pussycat! kill! kill!




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