I love this poorly synched prank video clip.
It speaks for itself in the intro set-up, so I won't repeat.
It's always a guaranteed cheer-up for me,
and maybe it will be something you too can add to your bag of tricks.
I admit to being a LotR geek.
What can I say?
I used to read the books by Tolkien every September, often aloud at college, and folks would come to hear.
Kind of like sitting around the fire pit and telling the stories of a journey taken, once and always.
This interview is worth it, even with the bobbly lips.
You probably wouldn't have been bothered so much by it
If I hadn't kept shoving it in your face.
Oh well.... enjoy.
What a great space? To work?
(Yes: See below!)
I hope you have a good connection.
It's a dubba day
Ah:
We did this video one night after work. We are a company called
Connected Ventures, a group of friends who work for: Vimeo,
CollegeHumor, Busted Tees, and Defunker.
... and, we're hiring: connectedventures.com/jobs.shtml
Once upon a time is hardly the way to begin a story. irregular flow from 4khz on Vimeo.
Start in the middle of the action.She ran out of the house like a bat out of hell.
No, don't use cliched phrases like that.
She ran and sprinted, than galloped over the threshold to safety.
Too redundant. I think you should start again.The visuals have no substance either;
the trick is not to look anywhere in particular
And unfocus your eyes.
imo.
- Johann von Goethe
Featuring the Walrus and the Carpenter
Where the Oysters get together and
Form a United Front,
Gathering whatever knowledge and tools to hand;
Have courage and use their innate geography of the watery Sea
To lure the two rapscallions
Down to meet the fate they had planned
For them.It has violence and death, strategy, philosophy, and heroics,
Don't forget location...
So I think it might do well. It all depends.
What do the two characters value more
Oyster meat or pearls.Or does it?
This is lovely and oh so clear. Need this today. Enjoy too!
RE:PLAY FILM FEST: Crush "Inspire" from F5 on Vimeo.
True, it was not 'fun' to watch, in the conventional entertainment sense, contained violence, and had long edits, but I think he had a point.
That the planet's other life forms have their own immune system as well...
Perhaps the planet itself.We tend to think trees and plants are docile and meant for our use.
I feel that too.
But too much could be too much.The point is we haven't all agreed that we know.Our outlook reminds me of one of my favoritely sad books, "The Giving Tree."
Below is the trailer and also a very short animated video by Holbrooks, entitled "Van Hystlen," with a similar take.If I were any kind of elf, I would be a wood elf... I feel a real connection to the forest and its inhabitants.
Maybe that's why these images and ideas really get to me.Not happy stuff, which everyone I talked to hated; watch at your own.... cognizance.I'd really like to know whether people think things like this movie are an art form... or if not, why they are bad.
Being born and raised in North America, I know best the four seasonal cycle of life, though I know it is different in many other countries and continents. With the shifting global weather change, here in the Northeast it seems like it's changing to primarily a tri-seasonal model... and perhaps down from there.
In literature the seasonal cycle is one way of structuring stories - those that deal with the challenges and gifts of youth, adulthood, middle age, and the end of life. Some tales deal with multiple seasonal storylines, and others with the entire cyle. Once again, Joseph Campbell's mythological work deals extensively with this format, as do many other literary analysts. For more information, you can start with The Joseph Campbell Foundation website, which links to many of his lectures and works: http://www.jcf.org/new/index.php