when did you forget you were a flower? |
I like things that I like, but I love everything. there's more choice in like...I love things so much I feel I could float away. -Cassie Ainsworth |
Summer Finn : Sink’s broken..
Tom Hansen : Well that’s okay because that’s why we bought a home with two kitchens.
Summer Finn : You’re so smart. Race you to the bedroom..
- (500) Days of Summer
Reading the history behind this sign is incredibly haunting, and equally powerful.
This ubiquitous poster and indicator of substandard Caucasian interior decorating has a disturbing provenance. It was one of a series of three posters created by the British propaganda office during World War II, and the only one never displayed publicly.
“‘The others were ‘Freedom is in peril, defend it with all your might’ and ‘Your courage, your cheerfulness, your resolution will bring us victory.’ The government plastered Britain with those two posters. But it held back ‘Keep calm’ for even more upsetting circumstances.
“‘The plan was, it was to be displayed and it was to go up if Germany ever invaded [Britain].’”
It was actually a call for British citizens to submit peacefully to Nazi rule.
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Marion Cotillard. Photograph by Mark Seliger.
A lot is made of the influence on Hitchcock’s films of his father, “a rather nervous man” who once locked his six-year-old son in a local jail for misbehavior. Less is known about Hitchcock’s mother. We do know that they had a close relationship; so close, in fact, that she accompanied him on holidays with his wife. Older women in Hitchcock’s films are rarely treated with kindness, however, and tend to be scolding, obnoxious, doddering. But it was not until Psycho that a mother was treated as a homicidal maniac, even if by proxy.Original still:
Janet Leigh.
(from vanityfair)