Just watched the movie the substance- and thought of your theme extraction of Life fits the film too. I do not recommend the substance, at least not while eating sushi, or anything really
In my favorite song of all time, Conor Oberst sings:
It comes to me in fragments, even those still split in two/ Under the eaves of that old Lime Tree I stood examining the fruit/ Some were ripe and some were rotten, I felt nauseous with the truth/ There will never be a time more opportune
If I recall correctly, which is an admission that I may have invented the following facts, It’s a wonderful life was panned when it originally came out, same as the Wizard of Oz. Too sentimental or something. The point being, the movies haven’t changed one iota but look at us; we must have changed and changed significantly to view these as enduring classics. What happened? And why?Is it purely nostalgia? That seems too easy an explanation. Life is not a matter for easy explanations. At any rate, my father, born in 1927, would not have described these two examples as movies at all. He would have said they were films.
Hi!
Hello, Harvey!
Just watched the movie the substance- and thought of your theme extraction of Life fits the film too. I do not recommend the substance, at least not while eating sushi, or anything really
Agree lol
In my favorite song of all time, Conor Oberst sings:
It comes to me in fragments, even those still split in two/ Under the eaves of that old Lime Tree I stood examining the fruit/ Some were ripe and some were rotten, I felt nauseous with the truth/ There will never be a time more opportune
Very cool!
Very nice!
If I recall correctly, which is an admission that I may have invented the following facts, It’s a wonderful life was panned when it originally came out, same as the Wizard of Oz. Too sentimental or something. The point being, the movies haven’t changed one iota but look at us; we must have changed and changed significantly to view these as enduring classics. What happened? And why?Is it purely nostalgia? That seems too easy an explanation. Life is not a matter for easy explanations. At any rate, my father, born in 1927, would not have described these two examples as movies at all. He would have said they were films.