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  1. Reporter Danielle Spoelstra
  2. Info: Spoelstra M&T | Blogger & | Bingewatcher | Boekenwurm | #esf | Lief van @Masai_op_n_HD | 2 dochters

 

Liked It=1683 Votes

User ratings=4,6 of 10 stars

Release Year=2019

When her younger brother Charlie unexpectedly disappears into the magical, animated universe of PLAYMOBIL®, unprepared Marla must go on a quest of a lifetime to bring him home. As she sets off on a fantastic journey across stunning new worlds, Marla teams up with some unlikely and heroic new friends - the smooth-talking food truck driver Del, the dashing and charismatic secret agent Rex Dasher, a wholehearted misfit robot, an extravagant fairy-godmother and many more. Through their vibrant adventure, Marla and Charlie realize that no matter how life plays out, you can achieve anything when you believe in yourself

Stars=Daniel Radcliffe

USA


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Playmobil 2c de film watch movie set. Playmobil 2c de film watch movie sale. Playmobil 2c de film watch movie system. Playmobil de film watch movies. Playmobil, de Film Watch movie page imdb. Children's animated adventure, introduced with a short live action backstory where Marla (a teenage girl) gets her own passport and wants to travel. Late one evening Marla is babysitting Charlie (her brother) there's a knock at the door, and the police are there. We realise their parents have been in a tragic road accident.
The plot jumps forward 4 years and Marla is responsible for Charlie, her traveling ambition has been shelved. Charlie has a squabble with Marla and runs off, Marla is able to track his whereabouts via a phone app. Marla finds Charlie at a games convention and they are both sucked into a colourful, animated Playmobil adventure.
They get separated, the plot switches to a rescue mission involving several characters in different action and chase scenes with some musical numbers.
This is aimed at very young audience, the movie won't appeal much to parents, especially as there are much better Lego movies to compare with.
I laughed twice. Mya (our granddaughter) liked it, she's 9 years old.
Stay in your seats for a short post credit scene, taster to a potential for a sequel.

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Playmobil 2c de film watch movie sets. Movie plot When her younger brother Charlie suddenly disappears into the magical, animated universe of PLAYMOBIL®, Marla embarks on the adventure of a lifetime to bring him home. Setting off on an incredible journey through new and exciting themed worlds, Marla teams up with various strange and heroic companions, including: Del, a crazed food truck driver; Rex Dasher, a suave and fearless secret agent; a loyal and endearing robot; a hilarious fairy-godmother, and many others! About the movie: PLAYMOBIL: THE MOVIE is the animated highlight of summer 2019. The first motion picture inspired by the popular and award-winning brand of toys, the movie takes the audience on an epic and hilarious adventure through the fantastic, limitless universe of Playmobil®. With hilarious and endearing characters, thrilling adventures and breathtaking landscapes, the animated story is uniquely fun and original. Director Lino DiSalvo is a Disney® veteran who spent 17 years at Walt Disney Animation Studios. Most recently he served as Head of Animation for the international hit ‘Frozen’. PLAYMOBIL: THE MOVIE is in UK cinemas from August 9th. Gallery.

 



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  1. Reporter: Richard Procter
  2. Resume: Editor-in-chief, SF Weekly. Will occasionally do a sports tweet.

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  1. Publisher: Simon Waite
  2. Resume: Film Lover/Reviews, Film Reviewer for ABC South East South Australia from 2014 to 2017, Travels to see films & sometimes rants. Views expressed here are my own.

 

brief=American security guard Richard Jewell saves thousands of lives from an exploding bomb at the 1996 Olympics, but is vilified by journalists and the press who falsely reported that he was a terrorist

Liked it=7124 votes

directors=Clint Eastwood

Paul Walter Hauser, Brandon Stanley

Rating=7,9 / 10

Richard jewell csfd. Olivia and her massive kills it for me! Love Eastwood films though, too bad. Credit... Greg Gibson/Associated Press, 1997 ATLANTA, Aug. 29 — Richard A. Jewell, whose transformation from heroic security guard to Olympic bombing suspect and back again came to symbolize the excesses of law enforcement and the news media, died Wednesday at his home in Woodbury, Ga. He was 44. The cause of death was not released, pending the results of an autopsy that will be performed Thursday by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. But the coroner in Meriwether County, about 60 miles southwest of here, said that Mr. Jewell died of natural causes and that he had battled serious medical problems since learning he had diabetes in February. The coroner, Johnny E. Worley, said that Mr. Jewell’s wife, Dana, came home from work Wednesday morning to check on him after not being able to reach him by telephone. She found him dead on the floor of their bedroom, he said. Mr. Worley said Mr. Jewell had suffered kidney failure and had had several toes amputated since the diabetes diagnosis. “He just started going downhill ever since, ” Mr. Worley said. The heavy-set Mr. Jewell, with a country drawl and a deferential manner, became an instant celebrity after a bomb exploded in Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta in the early hours of July 27, 1996, at the midpoint of the Summer Games. The explosion, which propelled hundreds of nails through the darkness, killed one woman, injured 111 people and changed the mood of the Olympiad. Only minutes earlier, Mr. Jewell, who was working a temporary job as a guard, had spotted the abandoned green knapsack that contained the bomb, called it to the attention of the police, and started moving visitors away from the area. He was praised for the quick thinking that presumably saved lives. But three days later, he found himself identified in an article in The Atlanta Journal as the focus of police attention, leading to several searches of his apartment and surveillance by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and by reporters who set upon him, he would later say, “like piranha on a bleeding cow. ” The investigation by local, state and federal law enforcement officers lasted until late October 1996 and included a number of bungled tactics, including an F. B. I. agent’s effort to question Mr. Jewell on camera under the pretense of making a training film. In October 1996, when it became obvious that Mr. Jewell had not been involved in the bombing, the Justice Department formally cleared him. “The tragedy was that his sense of duty and diligence made him a suspect, ” said John R. Martin, one of Mr. Jewell’s lawyers. “He really prided himself on being a professional police officer, and the irony is that he became the poster child for the wrongly accused. ” In 2005, Eric R. Rudolph, a North Carolina man who became a suspect in the subsequent bombing of an abortion clinic in Birmingham, Ala., pleaded guilty to the Olympic park attack. He is serving a life sentence. Even after being cleared, Mr. Jewell said he never felt he could outrun his notoriety. He sued several major news media outlets and won settlements from NBC and CNN. His libel case against his primary nemesis, Cox Enterprises, the Atlanta newspaper’s parent company, wound through the courts for a decade without resolution, though much of it was dismissed along the way. After memories of the case subsided, Mr. Jewell took jobs with several small Georgia law enforcement agencies, most recently as a Meriwether County sheriff’s deputy in 2005. Col. Chuck Smith, the chief deputy, called Mr. Jewell “very, very conscientious” and said he also served as a training officer and firearms instructor. Jewell is survived by his wife and by his mother, Barbara. Last year, Mr. Jewell received a commendation from Gov. Sonny Perdue, who publicly thanked him on behalf of the state for saving lives at the Olympics.

 

Richard jewell cause of death. Richard jewell clint eastwood. Went to see the movie "Richard Jewell" this evening.
Excellent telling of a riveting, modern tragedy by Clint Eastwood.
Highly recommended in light of recent events regarding the FBI and the Media.
Kathy Bates should win an Academy Award for her heart-rending performance as Bobi Jewell (Richard's Mom. Richard jewell real interview. Richard jewell recenze. Richard jewel box. The death of Alice Hawthorne haunted him until he died. He placed a rose for her at the location every year. He always blamed himself for not finding the bomb sooner. Of course he didn't do it. He's a Juggalo, a family united by music, love, fellowship, and camaraderie.

I want Clint to make a Jussie Smollett movie

Released December 13, 2019 R, 2 hr 11 min Drama Tell us where you are Looking for movie tickets? Enter your location to see which movie theaters are playing Richard Jewell near you. ENTER CITY, STATE OR ZIP CODE GO Fandango FANALERT® Sign up for a FANALERT® and be the first to know when tickets and other exclusives are available in your area. Also sign me up for FanMail to get updates on all things movies: tickets, special offers, screenings + more. Richard Jewell: Trailer 1 1 of 4 Richard Jewell Synopsis A security guard becomes the FBI's prime suspect when a bomb explodes during the 1996 Olympics. Read Full Synopsis Movie Reviews Presented by Rotten Tomatoes More Info Rated R | For Language, Brief Bloody Images and Some Sexual References.

What a heartbreaking story of an innocent man being railroaded by the FBI and the totally honest (NOT) media.
It was well acted with great emotion. The only reason I downgraded it is because of unneeded foul language. Sadly, this seems to be a regular thing for filmmakers these days which is why I rarely go to the movies any more. Richard jewell snl. Richard jewell sam rockwell. NETTVCATHOLIC. Man I remember this guy. The media crucified him.

Getty Photos from the real story of Richard Jewell. The above photos show Jewell and one of his real life attorneys, Lin Wood. The new Richard Jewell movie gets the broad outline of what happened to Jewell right – the FBI’s relentless pursuit of the hero security guard and the leak to a newspaper reporter that started a media frenzy – but some elements of the movie are fictionalized. The lead FBI agent in the movie, Tom Shaw, for example, is not a real person, although he’s likely a composite character who does things the real FBI agents did (agents really did lure Jewell to give an interview using a training video ruse, for example). Much has been made about the movie making it appear that the lead journalist character, Kathy Scruggs, offered to trade sex for the tip about the Jewell investigation. While Scruggs did break that story based on an FBI tip, there’s no evidence she ever traded sex for stories. Those who knew her hotly deny it. However, the broader strokes of what happened to Jewell are accurate. He was the target of an FBI investigation and subsequent media frenzy before being completely exonerated in the Atlanta Olympics bombing attack. Small details in the movie are also accurate. Jewell’s mom’s Tupperware really was confiscated by the FBI, for example, and he really did land a job at a local police department after being cleared. Here’s what you need to know: Richard Jewell’s Heroism Was Real & a Witness Said Immediately That He Didn’t Think Jewell Had Time to Perpetrate the Bombing & Make the Phone Call Attributed to the Bomber Getty The crime scene at the Atlanta Olympics. Richard Jewell really was the hero of the Olympic bombing. The movie’s account of the actual explosion, and Jewell’s role in discovering the suspicious knapsack containing the bomb closely follows real-life events. And it’s true, as the movie shows, that the timing pretty much exonerated Jewell from the start. Within two days of the bombing, the media was labeling Jewell a hero. An article in the Great Falls Tribune on July 29, 1996 reported that the “most important hero of the Atlanta Olympics is a man of modest height and stocky build. ” Jewell was described as the “security guard who noticed the knapsack, sitting alone by a tower. He asked the first questions about it, raised the first hue and cry to a Georgia Bureau of Investigation officer. ” The article said there were more than 150 people close to the bomb before they were moved, so it’s believed that Jewell, in real life, did save many lives. “I’m just one person who did their job the way they were trained to do with the support of everyone else, ” said Jewell, according to the newspaper. “I don’t really feel like I’m a hero. I’ve just thought, ‘I’m glad I was there. ’” Getty Richard Jewell (C) his mother Barbara (L) and attorneys Watson Bryant (R) and Wayne Grant (far R) look on during a press conference 28 October in Atlanta, Ga. Jewell was cleared as a suspect in the July 27 bombing of Centennial Olympic Park. According to an Associated Press story from July 29, 1996, the bomb killed a woman and injured more than 100 people. She was Alice Hawthorne, 44, of Albany, Georgia. Her daughter was also injured. A Turkish cameraman also died from a heart attack while rushing to the scene. It was described as a “crude pipe bomb. ” By July 30, 1996, news organizations were reporting that Jewell had emerged, in the words of an Associated Press story, “as the prime target” of the FBI investigation. The article said that Jewell was “mobbed by reporters as he returned home from FBI questioning. ” He declared, “I’m innocent. I didn’t do it. ” He lived in an apartment with his mother and their two dogs. The article called Jewell “a beefy 33-year-old with a checkered law enforcement career” who had appeared on the Today Show “to recount his heroic deeds. ” It reported that his name “was splashed across Page 1 of an extra edition of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: ‘FBI suspects ‘hero’ guard may have planted bomb. ’” The AP article said that Jewell worked for a security company that was hired by AT&T to provide guards for its Centennial Olympic Park pavilion. The AP story says that Jewell was credited with “spotting an unattended olive-drab knapsack near the AT&T pavilion. Bomb experts quickly determined that the knapsack contained a crude pipe bomb, and while police were clearing the area, the bomb exploded. ” Getty This dawn 27 July photo shows the five-story sound tower (L) in the Atlanta Centennial Olympic Park where a bomb exploded early 27 July during a rock concert. Indeed, a man did call 911 “from a pay phone three blocks from the park and said a bomb would go off in 30 minutes. ” That was 25 minutes before the bombing. It later turned out that the real bomber Eric Rudolph placed that call. Ron Leidelmeyer, an NBC technician, told AP at that time – three days after the bombing – that he saw Jewell before the bombing and believed it would have been “difficult, if not impossible” for Jewell to have time to both plant the bomb and make that call. He said that Jewell was looking at the knapsack at 12:53 a. m. and the 911 call was at 12:58 a. m., which gave Jewell five minutes to make it to the phone booth, which Leidelmeyer said was “just not possible. ” Leidelmeyer had log books to back up these times, but that didn’t stop the FBI, and subsequently the media, from fixating on Richard Jewell as a possible suspect. In 1998, the New York Times reported that Jewell’s lawyer Watson Bryant filed a lawsuit on behalf of Jewell’s mother against the FBI. It says that the FBI searched Bobi’s underwear and her Tupperware containers. They even took a Mary Poppins video. He obtained settlements from CNN and NBC after suing them. An Associated Press story from July 13, 1997 describes the effect on Jewell. “His career aspirations and social life are over and his good nature has been replaced with paranoia and distrust, ” it reads. He wasn’t cleared by the Justice Department until October 1996. That article says the NBC settlement was over comments Tom Brokaw made on air. It was said to be for $500, 000. Jewell bought a home with the money. He settled with CNN for an undisclosed amount. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution didn’t settle and eventually prevailed before an appellate court, which ruled that what the paper reported was substantially true at the time because it was true the FBI was focusing on Jewell. In 1997, it’s true as the movie shows, that Jewell landed a job as a police officer with Luthersville, a small town hear Atlanta. The police chief told the AP that Jewell was “well qualified. He has experience. He has training. And, most of all, he wants to be a police officer. ” A 2003 article in the New York Daily News reported that Jewell later worked for other departments in Georgia towns and got married. Sadly, Jewell died at age 44 of heart disease worsened by Diabetes. Watson Bryant Sam Rockwell and G. Watson Bryant Jr. attend the “Richard Jewell” screening at Rialto Center of the Arts on December 10, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. Jewell’s lawyer Watson Bryant is a real person. Watson Bryant told the AP in a July 30, 1996 article about the FBI search of Jewell’s mom’s apartment: “Quite frankly, we welcome this. ” He predicted nothing would be found. Asked if Jewell should be named as a suspect, Bryant said, “No but he should be along with everyone else that was in the area when the bomb exploded. ” The 1997 Vanity Fair article on which the movie is partly based described how Bryant, in real life, did have to navigate through a phalanx of reporters to get into Jewell’s apartment. “He wore a baseball cap, khaki shorts, and a frayed Brooks Brothers polo shirt. He was 45 years old, with strong features and thinning hair, a southern preppy from a country-club family, ” it reads. He is still working as a lawyer in the Greater Atlanta area. At the time, Vanity Fair reported, Watson Bryant “made a modest living by doing real-estate closings in the suburbs, but Jewell and his lawyer had formed an unusual friendship a decade earlier, when Jewell worked as a mailroom clerk at a federal disaster-relief agency where Bryant practiced law. ” The article added: “The simple fact was that Bryant had no qualifications for the job. He had no legal staff except for his assistant, Nadya Light, no contacts in the press, and no history in Washington. He was the opposite of media-savvy. ” Bryant really did go on to marry Nadya. G. Watson Bryant Jr., Barbara “Bobi” Jewell and Nadya Bryant attend the “Richard Jewell” premiere during AFI FEST 2019 Presented By Audi at TCL Chinese Theatre on November 20, 2019 in Hollywood, California. Even some of the tiny details in the movie are based on real life. For example, Jewell’s mother’s apartment really did prominently display a “portrait of Jewell in his Habersham County deputy’s uniform, ” the Vanity Fair article reported. An Associated Press story in the Scranton Times-Tribune, dated August 6, 1996, describes how Bryant explained to the news media that bombing fragments found in Jewell’s apartment were souvenirs. The lawyer’s full name is G. Watson Bryant. On August 7, 1996, the AP was reporting that Bryant had declared, “Enough is enough. It’s time to stop being nice. ” He explained that the FBI agents wanted Jewell to read the bomber’s statement from the call “12 different times. ” In real life, though, Bryant didn’t work alone for long. That article says that Jack Martin, “a more experienced criminal defense attorney, ” had joined the team. The Los Angeles Times reports that “Bryant and the Jewells remained close; for a time, Bobi even babysat for the lawyer’s two children. ” Bryant told the Times: “These bums [in the FBI] never had enough to arrest him — they had nothing but a bunch of BS taken out of context that they used to frame him up for a story that was too good to be true. Yet to this day people think he had something ugly to do with the bombing — when he’s the guy that, but for him, it would have been raining body parts when that bomb went off. I can’t imagine how many people are alive today and how many kids have been born just because Richard did his job. ” The FBI Agents & Their Investigation Getty Jon Hamm plays Tom Shaw, the FBI agent investigating Richard Jewell in the new Clint Eastwood movie. In the movie, Tom Shaw and Dan Bennett are the names given to the FBI agents relentlessly pursuing the former hero security guard turned suspect in the Atlanta bombing at the Olympics. Tom Shaw and Dan Bennett are not real. Those aren’t the names of the real FBI case agents who pursued Jewell, Diader Rosario and Don Johnson. And there’s no evidence that either of the real-life case agents was reporter Kathy Scrugg’s source because she died having never revealed it. However, it’s true she got a tip from an FBI agent that Jewell was under investigation. What is true, though, is that authorities in the FBI did aggressively pursue Jewell. Tom Shaw and Dan Bennett appear to be loosely based on Don Johnson and Diader Rosario but are also composite characters, and some of it is completely fictionalized. The Vanity Fair article on the case documents the FBI’s aggressive pursuit of Jewell. AJC says that the FBI kept Jewell under surveillance for months. The article says that Jewell was questioned by FBI agents but was never charged and the Justice Department ultimately apologized to him. In 1997, the FBI revealed that four FBI special agents in its Atlanta office were told they might face “possible disciplinary charges” for their roles in the Jewell case, according to The Washington Post. The four were accused of “poor judgment” but not criminal wrongdoing. The four were identified as “Woody Johnson, who runs the Atlanta office; his deputy, A. B. Llewellyn; and special agents Diader Rosario and Don Johnson. ” They were accused of trying to get Jewell to “star in a training video” that was really a ruse to see if he would incriminate himself. Paul Walter Hauser attends the “Richard Jewell” screening at Rialto Center of the Arts on December 10, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. The Vanity Fair article describes how FBI agents Don Johnson and Diader Rosario knocked on Jewell’s mother’s apartment door and told him, “We need your help making a training film. ” The next day, Rosario showed up with a search warrant. Rosario, the article says, was “known for his skills as a negotiator” and “once helped calm a riot of Cuban prisoners in Atlanta. ” But Johnson “had a reputation for overreaching” because of a 1987 Albany New York investigation of that community’s then mayor. The mayor was exonerated eventually but argued that the scrutiny cost him a federal judicial appointment, according to Vanity Fair. “I’ve been doing criminal defense work for 20 years, ” said Jewell’s lawyer, Jack Martin of the training video Jewell ruse to The New York Times, “and that was the most outrageous interviewing technique I’ve ever seen. It’s indefensible. It was obviously an invalid waiver. ” The bombing occurred July 27, 1996, and three days later, “On July 30, FBI agents Don Johnson and Diader Rosario asked Jewell to follow them to FBI headquarters to participate in a training film, ” the newspaper reported, citing Jewell’s lawyer. In real life, Louis Freeh, the former FBI Director, ordered the agents to read Jewell his rights, which ended the training video conversation. There is an actor who plays Rosario in the movie, but that’s not the Tom Shaw or Dan Bennett character, according to the IMDB cast list for the Eastwood film. According to Real Clear History, Rosario in real life was also the agent who obtained a search warrant to get Jewell’s hair for testing. Journalist Kathy Scruggs Getty/FindaGrave Kathy Scruggs cause of death is a sad one. The movie makes journalist Kathy Scruggs into a pretty one-note villain. In real life, she was a lot more complex than that. It’s true that she was a reporter for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution newspaper when the bombing occurred, and it’s true she broke the story that the FBI was looking at Jewell. “She was proud the FBI called her about Jewell. She was proud of the way she reported it to begin with, ” her brother Lewis Scruggs told AJC. But he said she never told him who the source was, either. Kathy Scruggs’ life is portrayed – falsely, her supporters say – in the movie. Today, she is not here to tell her side of the story, played on screen by Olivia Wilde. Scruggs’ newspaper has defended its reporting as accurately reflecting the state of the FBI’s investigation at the time; the FBI was investigating Jewell in the bombing, although he was completely exonerated. Relative Nancy Scruggs Dyleski wrote on Facebook: “It is shocking that not one person from this film reached out to anyone in Kathy’s family even after we reached out to them on a couple of different occasions. I guess that they knew that their false narrative would have been shot down by people that actually knew her best. Shame on Olivia Wilde and Clint Eastwood, way to lie about someone that isn’t alive to defend herself. Kathy may be gone, but she is still a vibrant part of our family and we love her very much. ” Newspaper hits out at 'Richard Jewell' movie over portrayal of reporter The Atlanta Journal-Constitution says the Clint Eastwood-directed film salaciously and falsely portrays former reporter Kathy Scruggs trading sex for FBI tips. 2019-12-10T11:32:08. 000Z In a book on the case called The Suspect, Scruggs is described as “a delightful throwback to the 1930s newspaper wars. Kathy never quietly entered a room, she exploded into it. ” A woman who knew her wrote on Kathy’s relative’s Facebook page, “I remember Kathy from Athens Academy days! She was a good bit older than me, but I admired her beauty, spunk, and charisma! Don’t let these Hollywood pretenders get you down!! ” Doug Monroe, who knew and worked with Scruggs, described her in a 2003 article in Atlanta Magazine as having a “raucous sense of humor. ” He wrote: “Cops still talk in amazement about her bravado. She once beat the police to a murder scene and brazenly crawled in through a back window. ” “Where have you been? ” she demanded to police, Monroe wrote, adding, “She was blonde and wore mini skirts and gaudy stockings. She smoked. She drank. She cursed. She flaunted her sexuality. She dated Lewis Grizzard. She dated an editor who allegedly beat her with a telephone. She dated cops, including one who was accused of stealing money from the pockets of the dead. ” Scruggs died five years after the controversy. Friends said she never recovered from it. Kathy Scruggs was born on September 26, 1958 and died September 2, 2001, age 42, in Cherokee County, Georgia. She is buried in Oconee Hill Cemetery in Athens, Georgia. obtained the coroner’s report. Scruggs died of a drug overdose, specifically, “acute morphine toxicity. ” Contrary to some other news reports, the coroner could not determine whether it was an accidental one or suicide. “Kathleen Scruggs died as a result of acute morphine toxicity, ” the report says. “…toxicological testing of chest fluid revealed a potentially lethal level of morphine. Also present in the chest fluid were paroxetine, mirtazapine, and ethyl alcohol. All of the ethyl alcohol may have been produced by the postmortem decomposition process. Findings at autopsy included severe coronary artery atherosclerosis (blockage of blood vessels that supply blood to the heart), which may have contributed to death…no acute traumatic injuries were identified. ” Kathy Scruggs autopsy report. The report concludes: “It is unclear whether the drug overdose leading to the acute morphine toxicity was suicidal or accidental, and thus the manner of death is listed as undetermined. ” An autopsy was performed in September 3, 2001. The items present with the body were a television remote control, a sheet, a blanket and a comforter. Scruggs was wearing a “gray short-sleeved tee shirt with the green inscription ‘ATLANTA MOTOR SPEEDWAY’” and a pair of panties. You can learn more about her cause of death here. Scruggs’ obituary in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution explained that she had “suffered a variety of health problems for the past year. ” “I would characterize her as a very good reporter who was very fair, ” Atlanta Police Chief Beverly Harvard told the newspaper. “She called the shots as they were, be it good or bad. She didn’t show favoritism. She was accurate. ” The newspaper’s publisher Roger Kintzel said in that story, “…nothing was ever found that indicated that what Kathy wrote was not the truth. She died knowing that what she wrote was accurate, and I think that was really important to her. She felt confident that that would be proven in court. ” Scruggs’ brother told AJC she was on medications for a variety of things, including Crohn’s disease. “Her heart gave away. It was just hard living, ” her brother said to the publication. Lewis Scruggs added, “Her choice of boyfriends was not great, ” he said. “She spent all the money she had and more and would go into the depths of depression. ” The headline on the original story was, “FBI suspects ‘hero’ guard may have planted bomb. ” The 1997 Vanity Fair article by Marie Brenner described in detail how the story happened. It reported that Scruggs had “good contacts in the Atlanta police, and she was tough” but one former staff member called her a “police groupie” to Vanity Fair, and an editor, while praising her talents, told Brenner: “Kathy has a hard edge that some people find offensive. ” The story also describes the subsequent media frenzy, which extended far beyond AJC, and the FBI’s initial pursuit of Jewell. It says that there was debate in the newsroom over the story and CNN had already decided to hold it. Meanwhile, Kathy Scruggs, a police reporter, “who had allegedly gotten a tip from a close friend in the F. I., got a confirmation from someone in the Atlanta police, ” Vanity Fair reported. One controversial line reported by AJC: “Richard Jewell... fits the profile of the lone bomber. ” The story had a double byline, Scruggs and Ron Martz. Scruggs has her defenders who are criticizing the Eastwood movie for falsely making it appear that Scruggs offered to have a sexual relationship with the FBI agent who tipped her off. In a bar, the FBI agent tells Scruggs, “Kathy, you couldn’t f*ck it out of them. What makes you think you could f*ck it out of me? ” There’s no evidence that ever occurred, and Scruggs’ supporters say it didn’t. wrote that “There is no evidence that Scruggs slept with anyone to get the story. Furthermore, Scruggs can’t defend herself. She died in 2001 at the age of 42 from an overdose of prescription pain pills for a chronic back problem. ” Riley said in a statement to IndieWire that “there is no evidence that this ever happened. ” Bobi Jewell, Richard’s Mom Getty Barbara “Bobi” Jewell and Paul Walter Hauser attend the “Richard Jewell” screening at Rialto Center of the Arts on December 10, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. Richard Jewell’s mom, Barbara “Bobi” Jewell is a prominent character in the movie, played by Kathy Bates. The portrayal tracks closely with real life, even down to the Tupperware that Bobi got back from the FBI with marks on it. Today, Bobi is still alive. She is 83 years old and still living in Georgia. In fact, she spoke to Paul Walter Hauser, the actor who plays Richard, before the movie was completed. A woman who knows her wrote recently on Facebook of Bobi Jewell: “Bobi Jewell is the nice lady at my church who works with the Operation Christmas Child shoeboxes. I am looking forward to seeing this movie although I am still saddened by the tragedy. ” The Hollywood Reporter spoke to Paul Walter Hauser, who plays Richard Jewell, about what it was like to meet Bobi Jewell. “The first time I met Bobi Jewell was on the Warner Bros. lot, ” he told THR. Getty Richard Jewell with his mother, Bobi Jewell. “I was more nervous about meeting Bobi than I was Clint, because Clint and I have a certain commonality based on what we do for a living. With Bobi, our commonality was telling the story of this tragedy. I was worried, but she gave me a lot of tidbits and little nuggets of Richard that were indicative of greater truths. ” Hauser says Bobi told him, “You look just like Richard. You’re doing things like him that you don’t even know you’re doing. ” She even brought treats to the set, THR added. The 1997 article in Vanity Fair on the Richard Jewell case gives extensive details on the effect on Bobi at the time. Once, the Vanity Fair article reports, her cat jumped on a window ledge and photographers camped outside “began frenetically shooting pictures. ” “If my mom and I had something we wanted to talk about that we didn’t want anyone to hear, we wrote it on pieces of paper. When she left to go to work the next day, she would take it with her, tear it up, and put it in the trash! That is how I kept my mother informed about what was going on with the case, ” Jewell told Vanity Fair. To Vanity Fair, Richard Jewell described how people would “holler obscenities at her (Bobi). They would yell, ‘Did he do it? Did he blow those people up? ’ They would yell, ‘You should both die. ’ All she was trying to do was walk her dog. ” Jewell’s father was Bobi’s first husband, a Chevrolet worker named Robert Earl White, according to Vanity Fair. The marriage resulted in divorce. Her second husband John Jewell adopted Richard. That marriage eventually broke up too, and Jewell felt abandoned. The Real Bomber Getty Eric Robert Rudolph, seen here in an undated photo, is the one-time carpenter who vanished in early 1998 and vaulted to the FBI’s Most Wanted list after a bombing at a Birmingham, Alabama abortion clinic. Richard Jewell didn’t do it. Eric Rudolph did, as the movie shows. An anti-government extremist, Rudolph was convicted of perpetrating the bombing at the Atlanta Olympics. Where is Eric Rudolph now? Today, he is serving a life prison term at Florence ADMAX USP. That’s a federal prison in Colorado. He is today 53 years old. Rudolph was responsible for a series of bombings. According to the FBI, “He pled guilty and is currently serving multiple life sentences without the possibility of parole. ” What were Rudolph’s motives for the bombings? Former FBI executive Chris Swecker explained on an FBI website devoted to Rudolph’s capture: “He had borrowed ideas from a lot of different places and formed his own personal ideology. He clearly was anti-government and anti-abortion, anti-gay, ‘anti’ a lot of things. The bombings really sprang from his own unique biases and prejudices. He had his own way of looking at the world and didn’t get along with a lot of people. ” Getty Federal Bureau of Investigations Ten Most Wanted Fugitive Webpage shows fugitive Eric Robert Rudolph. When he pleaded guilty, a “defiant Rudolph said he had no remorse or regrets, ” the FBI wrote. Rudolph ultimately confessed. You can read his full confession here. “Abortion is murder. And when the regime in Washington legalized, sanctioned and legitimized this practice, they forfeited their legitimacy and moral authority to govern, ” it says in part. According to the FBI, between 1996 to 1998, “bombs exploded four times in Atlanta and Birmingham, killing two and injuring hundreds and setting off what turned out to be a five-year manhunt for the suspected bomber Eric Robert Rudolph. ” The law caught up with Rudolph in 2003. On May 31, 2003, former FBI Top Ten Fugitive Eric Robert Rudolph “was arrested by police officer J. S. Postell while rummaging through a trash bin behind a rural grocery story in Murphy, North Carolina, ” the FBI explains. “A skilled outdoorsman, Rudolph had managed to elude law enforcement officials for five years while hiding out in the mountains after bombing four sites in Georgia and Alabama. Rudolph began his violent attacks on July 27, 1996, when he planted a backpack containing a bomb in crowded Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta, Georgia. ” According to the FBI, a woman who traveled with her daughter to watch the 1996 Summer Olympics “was killed and more than 100 others were injured in the blast. Shortly after, Rudolph bombed two more locations in Georgia and one in Birmingham, Alabama, resulting several more injuries and the death of a police officer. Rudolph ultimately told authorities where he’d stashed an additional 250 pounds of dynamite. ” READ NEXT: Richard Jewell’s Cause of Death: How Did He Die?

Richard jewell. Richard jewell behind the scenes. The media still hasnt learned. Our initial hesitation, based on early Hollywood media, were overcome by word of mouth kudos from others in our community.
This is a good movie folks! It's very tight, entertaining, and theater was full on Christmas night. It received an ovation at the end. While Star Wars patrons were offering mixed messages from the movie they just exited, Richard Jewell viewers offered high marks and enthusiasm. Kathy Bates was particularly outstanding in a breakout scene. Sam Rockwell was wonderful too.

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Richard jewell imdb. Richard jewell atlanta bombing. Richard jewell 60 minutes. Client Eastwood film - that's all I need to know. I'm in. Richard jewell olympic bombing case. More evidence of the FBI and its great work. I've seen it twice. It's that good. It's too bad that this experience didn't result in the media or the FBI cleaning up their acts. Richard jewell movie near me. Richard jewell reviews. Richard jewell making. Richard jewell trailer music. Considering all the actors had one take to get it right, I'd say everyone here did a pretty damn good job in the movie.

I was few miles away when this event happened. As an Atlanta resident I can say the shameless group-think of the media was embarrassing. During the movie I flashed back to the repeated government assaults on Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh. Clint Eastwood's portrayal was fair but with compassion added. Richard jewell online.

Thank you, wonderful interview. Richard jewell 2019. The Richard Jewell story is sad 😭 😢😢😢. This just in. dudes a innocent. STARmeter SEE RANK Up 1, 481 this week View rank on IMDbPro » On July 27, 1996, Richard Jewell was a security guard at the Summer Olympics in Atlanta, with aspirations of becoming a police officer. At around 1 a. m. in crowded Centennial Olympic Park, Jewell noticed an unattended green knapsack, alerted police and helped move people away from the site. The knapsack contained a crude pipe bomb, which exploded... See full bio » Born: November 17, 1962 in Danville, Virginia, USA Died: August 29, 2007 (age 44) in Woodbury, Georgia, USA.

Richard jewell stories. Richard jewell kino. The insanity of leftists. Richard jewellers. Richard jewell showtimes. Richard jewell trailer. Pre 911. weapon of mass destruction. Richard jewell mom speech. Richard Jewell Born Richard White [1] December 17, 1962 Danville, Virginia [1] Died August 29, 2007 (aged 44) Woodbury, Georgia Other names Richard Allensworth Jewell Occupation Security guard, Georgia law enforcement officer (Police Officer & Deputy Sheriff, at the time of his death). Known for July 1996: discovered pipe bomb at Centennial Olympic Park during the 1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia, helped evacuate people from the area before the bomb exploded three days later: falsely implicated by media and FBI of planting the bomb himself October 1996: exonerated by an FBI investigation Richard Allensworth Jewell (born Richard White; [1] December 17, 1962 – August 29, 2007) was an American security guard and police officer famous for his role in the events surrounding the Centennial Olympic Park bombing at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. While working as a security guard for AT&T, in connection with the Olympics, he discovered a backpack containing three pipe bombs on the park grounds. [1] Jewell alerted police and helped evacuate the area before the bomb exploded, saving many people from injury or death. Initially hailed by the media as a hero, Jewell was later considered a suspect, before ultimately being cleared. Despite never being charged, he underwent a " trial by media ", which took a toll on his personal and professional life. Jewell was eventually exonerated, and Eric Rudolph was later found to have been the bomber. [2] [3] In 2006, Governor Sonny Perdue publicly thanked Jewell on behalf of the State of Georgia for saving the lives of people at the Olympics. [4] Jewell died on August 29, 2007, at age 44 due to heart failure from complications of diabetes. Personal life [ edit] Jewell was born Richard White in Danville, Virginia, the son of Bobi, an insurance claims coordinator, and Robert Earl White, who worked for Chevrolet. [1] Richard's birth-parents divorced when he was four. When his mother remarried to John Jewell, an insurance executive, his stepfather adopted him. [1] Bombing [ edit] Centennial Olympic Park was designed as the "town square" of the Olympics, and thousands of spectators had gathered for a late concert and merrymaking. Sometime after midnight, July 27, 1996, Eric Robert Rudolph, a terrorist who would later bomb a lesbian nightclub and two abortion clinics, planted a green backpack containing a fragmentation-laden pipe bomb underneath a bench. Jewell was working as a security guard for the event. He discovered the bag and alerted Georgia Bureau of Investigation officers. This discovery was nine minutes before Rudolph called 9-1-1 to deliver a warning. During a Jack Mack and the Heart Attack performance, Jewell and other security guards began clearing the immediate area so that a bomb squad could investigate the suspicious package. The bomb exploded 13 minutes later, killing Alice Hawthorne and injuring over one hundred others. A cameraman also died of a heart attack while running to cover the incident. Investigation and the media [ edit] Early news reports lauded Jewell as a hero for helping to evacuate the area after he spotted the suspicious package. Three days later, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution revealed that the FBI was treating him as a possible suspect, based largely on a "lone bomber" criminal profile. For the next several weeks, the news media focused aggressively on him as the presumed culprit, labeling him with the ambiguous term " person of interest ", sifting through his life to match a leaked "lone bomber" profile that the FBI had used. The media, to varying degrees, portrayed Jewell as a failed law enforcement officer who may have planted the bomb so he could "find" it and be a hero. [5] A Justice Department investigation of the FBI's conduct found the FBI had tried to manipulate Jewell into waiving his constitutional rights by telling him he was taking part in a training film about bomb detection, although the report concluded "no intentional violation of Mr. Jewell's civil rights and no criminal misconduct" had taken place. [6] [7] [8] Jewell was never officially charged, but the FBI thoroughly and publicly searched his home twice, questioned his associates, investigated his background, and maintained 24-hour surveillance of him. The pressure began to ease only after Jewell's attorneys hired an ex-FBI agent to administer a polygraph, which Jewell passed. [5] On October 26, 1996, the investigating US Attorney, Kent Alexander, in an extremely unusual act, sent Jewell a letter formally clearing him, stating "based on the evidence developed to date... Richard Jewell is not considered a target of the federal criminal investigation into the bombing on July 27, 1996, at Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta". [9] Libel cases [ edit] After his exoneration, Jewell filed lawsuits against the media outlets which he said had libeled him, primarily NBC News and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and insisted on a formal apology from them. In 2006, Jewell said the lawsuits were not about money, and that the vast majority of the settlements went to lawyers or taxes. He said the lawsuits were about clearing his name. [5] Richard Jewell v. Piedmont College [ edit] Jewell filed suit against his former employer Piedmont College, Piedmont College President Raymond Cleere and college spokesman Scott Rawles. [10] Jewell's attorneys contended that Cleere called the FBI and spoke to the Atlanta newspapers, providing them with false information on Jewell and his employment there as a security guard. Jewell's lawsuit accused Cleere of describing Jewell as a "badge-wearing zealot" who "would write epic police reports for minor infractions". [11] Piedmont College settled for an undisclosed amount. [12] Richard Jewell v. NBC [ edit] Jewell sued NBC News for this statement, made by Tom Brokaw, "The speculation is that the FBI is close to making the case. They probably have enough to arrest him right now, probably enough to prosecute him, but you always want to have enough to convict him as well. There are still some holes in this case. " [13] Even though NBC stood by its story, the network agreed to pay Jewell $500, 000. [10] Richard Jewell v. New York Post [ edit] On July 23, 1997, Jewell sued the New York Post for $15 million in damages, contending that the paper portrayed him in articles, photographs and an editorial cartoon as an "aberrant" person with a "bizarre employment history" who was probably guilty of the bombing. [14] He eventually settled with the newspaper for an undisclosed amount. [15] Richard Jewell v. Cox Enterprises (d. b. a. Atlanta Journal-Constitution) [ edit] Jewell also sued the Atlanta Journal-Constitution newspaper because, according to Jewell, the paper's headlines read, "FBI suspects 'hero' guard may have planted bomb", "pretty much started the whirlwind". [16] In one article, the Atlanta Journal compared Richard Jewell's case to that of serial killer Wayne Williams. [13] [17] The newspaper was the only defendant that did not settle with Jewell. The lawsuit remained pending for several years, having been considered at one time by the Supreme Court of Georgia, and had become an important part of case law regarding whether journalists could be forced to reveal their sources. Jewell's estate continued to press the case even after his death in 2007, but in July 2011 the Georgia Court of Appeals ruled for the defendant. The Court concluded that "because the articles in their entirety were substantially true at the time they were published—even though the investigators' suspicions were ultimately deemed unfounded—they cannot form the basis of a defamation action. " [18] CNN [ edit] Although CNN settled with Jewell for an undisclosed monetary amount, CNN maintained that its coverage had been "fair and accurate". [19] Aftermath [ edit] In July 1997, U. S. Attorney General Janet Reno, prompted by a reporter's question at her weekly news conference, expressed regret over the FBI's leak to the news media that led to the widespread presumption of his guilt, and apologized outright, saying, "I'm very sorry it happened. I think we owe him an apology. I regret the leak. " [20] The same year, Jewell made public appearances. He appeared in Michael Moore 's 1997 film, The Big One. He had a cameo in the September 27, 1997 episode of Saturday Night Live, in which he jokingly fended off suggestions that he was responsible for the deaths of Mother Teresa and Princess Diana. [21] In 2001, Jewell was honored as the Grand Marshal of Carmel, Indiana's Independence Day Parade. Jewell was chosen in keeping with the parade's theme of "Unsung Heroes". [22] On April 13, 2005, Jewell was exonerated completely when Eric Rudolph, as part of a plea deal, pled guilty to carrying out the bombing attack at Centennial Olympic Park, as well as three other attacks across the southern U. Just over a year later, Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue honored Jewell for his rescue efforts during the attack. [23] [24] Jewell worked in various law enforcement jobs, including as a police officer in Pendergrass, Georgia. He worked as a deputy sheriff in Meriwether County, Georgia until his death. He also gave speeches at colleges. [5] On each anniversary of the bombing until his illness and eventual death, he would privately place a rose at the Centennial Olympic Park scene where spectator Alice Hawthorne died. [25] Death and legacy [ edit] Jewell died on August 29, 2007, at the age of 44. He was suffering from serious medical problems that were related to diabetes. [4] Richard Jewell, a biographical drama film, was released in the United States on December 13, 2019. [26] The film was directed and produced by Clint Eastwood. It was written by Billy Ray, based on the 1997 article "American Nightmare: The Ballad of Richard Jewell, " by Marie Brenner, and the book The Suspect: An Olympic Bombing, the FBI, the Media, and Richard Jewell, the Man Caught in the Middle (2019) by Kent Alexander and Kevin Salwen. [27] [28] [29] [30] [31] Jewell is played by Paul Walter Hauser. See also [ edit] Steven Hatfill and Bruce Edwards Ivins, two men who were sequentially subjected to similar media attacks and reputation destruction after FBI leaks identifying them as suspects in the 2001 anthrax attacks Yoshiyuki Kōno, a man who was subjected to a comparable " trial by media " in Japan as a suspect in the Matsumoto sarin attack Brandon Mayfield, an American Muslim man who was falsely accused of involvement in the 2004 Madrid train bombings Media circus Scapegoating References [ edit] ^ a b c d e f "American Nightmare: The Ballad of Rick Jewell". Vanity Fair. February 1, 1997. Retrieved July 22, 2016. ^ "Anthrax Investigation (online chat with Marilyn Thompson, Assistant Managing Editor, Investigative)". The Washington Post. July 3, 2003. ^ National Journal Global Security Newswire (August 13, 2002). "Anthrax: FBI Denies Smearing Former US Army Biologist". Archived from the original on April 19, 2005. Retrieved September 28, 2006. ^ a b Sack, Kevin (August 30, 2007). "Richard Jewell, 44, Hero of Atlanta Attack, Dies". New York Times. Richard A. Jewell, whose transformation from heroic security guard to Olympic bombing suspect and back again came to symbolize the excesses of law enforcement and the news media, died Wednesday at his home in Woodbury, Georgia. The cause of death was not released, pending the results of an autopsy that to be performed by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. But the coroner in Meriwether County said Jewell died of natural causes and that he had battled serious medical problems since learning that he had diabetes in February. ^ a b c d Weber, Harry R. (August 30, 2007). "Former Olympic Park Guard Jewell Dies". Associated Press in The Washington Post. Security guard Richard Jewell was initially hailed as a hero for spotting a suspicious backpack and moving people out of harm's way just before a bomb exploded, killing one and injuring 111 others. But within days, he was named as a suspect in the blast. ^ Sack, Kevin (April 9, 1997). "U. Says F. B. I. Erred in Using Deception in Olympic Bomb Inquiry". The New York Times. ^ "Jewell wants probe of FBI investigation". CNN. July 30, 1997. ^ "The Activities of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Part III)". House of Representatives, Subcommittee on Crime, Committee on the Judiciary,. July 30, 1997. CS1 maint: extra punctuation ( link) ^ "Jewell cleared of Olympic park bombing". October 26, 1996. ^ a b "Jewell sues newspapers, former employer for libel". January 28, 1997. ^ "Ex-Suspect in Bombing Sues Newspapers, College; Jewell's Libel Claim Seeks Unspecified Damages". Washington Post. January 29, 1997. Archived from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved July 16, 2008. ^ "Jewell settles with college". Lakeland Ledger. August 27, 1997. Retrieved May 5, 2010. ^ a b Ostrow, Ronald J. (June 13, 2000). "Richard Jewell Case Study". Columbia University. ^ Jones, Dow (July 24, 1997). "Richard Jewell Files Suit Against The Post". The New York Times. ^ Weber, Harry (August 30, 2007). "Former Olympic Park guard Jewell dies". USA Today. Retrieved April 18, 2013. ^ "60 Minutes II: Falsely Accused". 60 Minutes II. CBS Worldwide. June 26, 2002. Retrieved August 2, 2006. ^ Fennessy, Steve (August 1, 2001). "The wheels of justice - After five years, Richard Jewell v. AJC a long way from over". Creative Loafing. ^ Bryant v. Cox Enterprises, Inc., 311 Ga. App. 230 (Ga. Ct. 2011). ^ Fox, James Alan (September 17, 2009). "Commentary: Don't name 'person of interest' - CNN". CNN. ^ "Reno to Jewell: 'I regret the leak ' ". July 31, 1997. ^ "Saturday Night Live: Weekend Update Segment - Richard Jewell". NBC. ^ "Carmelfest filled with fun for everyone" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 17, 2005.   (423 KB) ^ "Jewell Finally Honored As A Hero | ". Gannett via WGRZ. August 2, 2006. Retrieved September 22, 2012. ^ Perdue, Sonny (August 1, 2006). "Governor Perdue Commends Richard Jewell". Office of the Governor of the State of Georgia. The bottom line is this – Richard Jewell's actions saved lives that day. He deserves to be remembered as a hero, " said Governor Sonny Perdue. "As we look back on the success of the Olympics games and all they did to transform Atlanta, I encourage Georgians to remember the lives that were spared as a result of Richard Jewell's actions. " ^ Weber, Harry R. (September 4, 2007). "Former security guard Richard Jewell memorialized a hero".. The Associated Press. ^ Ramos, Dino-Ray (October 8, 2019). "Clint Eastwood's 'Richard Jewell' To Make World Premiere At AFI Fest". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved October 9, 2019. ^ Climek, Chris. "Review: 'Richard Jewell' Clears One Name While Smearing Another". NPR. Retrieved December 13, 2019. ^ Brenner, Marie (February 1997). "American Nightmare: The Ballad of Richard Jewell". Retrieved December 6, 2019. ^ Kent Alexander and Kevin Salwen (2019). The Suspect: An Olympic Bombing, the FBI, the Media, and Richard Jewell, the Man Caught in the Middle, Abrams, ISBN   1683355245. ^ "Stop defending an irresponsible movie and start apologising | Benjamin Lee | Film". The Guardian. December 13, 2019. Retrieved December 14, 2019. ^ Marc Tracy. "Clint Eastwood's 'Richard Jewell' Is at the Center of a Media Storm". The New York Times. Retrieved December 14, 2019. Further reading [ edit] Kent Alexander; Kevin Salwen (2019). Suspect: An Olympic Bombing, the FBI, the Media, and Richard Jewell, the Man Caught in the Middle. Harry N. Abrams. ISBN   978-1419734625. External links [ edit] " Richard Jewell v. NBC, and other Richard Jewell cases". Libel and Slander. May 18, 2011 Farnsworth, Elizabeth (October 28, 1996). "Olympic Park: Another Victim". PBS NewsHour. " 'All I did was my job': Decade later, pain of being called bombing suspect fresh to Richard Jewell". NBC News / Associated Press. July 27, 2006. Richard Jewell at Find a Grave ESPN 30 for 30 clip.

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Release date - 2020. Canada. The Grudge is a movie starring Tara Westwood, Junko Bailey, and David Lawrence Brown. A house is cursed by a vengeful ghost that dooms those who enter it with a violent death. Audience Score - 5944 vote. Genre - Mystery, Horror. runtime - 94 m. No joke: I got a 10 second ad for The Turning right before the trailer played lol. Ha 27tina full. Hastinapur. Ha'tin tin. Hattimatim. Hatinator navy. Hatina nguva yekutamba nayo. Hatinati. Hatina terras. Ha tinh pubg. Ha tina. Ha'tna wwe. Hatinator tutorial. Tina ha obituary. Ha tinh pubg mobile. Hatenna serebii. Drug Policies For The New Millennium The Lindesmith Center - Drug Policy Foundation 2001 International Conference Thursday, May 31 - Saturday, June 2, 2001 Albuquerque, New Mexico by Erowid Crew Member, V INDEX Session summaries and contents Approximate transcripts of presentations by the speakers Comments on the conference by V Anger and Communication / Race and the Drug War / The Issue of Fear / On the Youth Movement Recommendations for the conference organizers More discussion time / Make salient the economic and social costs of the War on Drugs/ Short talks by many groups/ Things not said: On core issues of culture and society/ Proposing solutions/ Conclusion/ Congratulations to the organizers! Setting: The conference took place in the grand ballroom of the Hyatt Regency, Albuquerque. People sat around many tables distributed around the large room, a few dressed in business suits, but many adults and especially a large group of young people dressed very casually. Overall a diverse-looking group, by class and gender and age, except that there were not many people of color. I. Session summaries Ethan Nadelmann [ Full Report] spoke of the many kinds of people who are against the War on Drug - different groups, different views, different reasons, here in America and around the world. How we are ALL victims of the drug war, and must unite to support those of us who are more directly the victims. He spoke of how we have to be strategic, and how we have to express ourselves in a way that lends itself to communicating with people in the ways they are open to, rather than with our justifiable frustration. Reverend Edwin Sanders [ Full Report] gave an impassioned and motivating speech in the powerful style of the black preacher that he is. It was moving, it pointed to things that were lacking in the movement, and it asked that we use our passion and conviction to motivate others and to "wake up! He said we are all messengers, carrying a message of truth. Plenary Session I: "Taking Stock: Victories for Drug Policy" Bill Zimmerman [ Full Report] outlined successes gained through the use of voter initiatives, including those for medical marijuana in California, Alaska, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and Washington, D. C. in 1998; in Maine in 1999; and in Colorado in 2000; for asset forfeiture reform in Oregon and Utah, and for treatment instead of incarceration in California. Graham Boyd [ Full Report] gave an encouraging overview of litigation progress, including recent victories in the Supreme Court and lower courts, and good news not apparent but happening behind the scenes. Julie Stewart [ Full Report] discussed President Clinton's commutation of 28 drug prisoners before he left office and the prospects for major drug sentencing reform over the next two years. Several reform bills are pending in Congress to overhaul federal mandatory minimums. Glen Backes [ Full Report] discussed recent state legislative victories. Notes from a Press Conference [ Full Report] Plenary Session II: New Mexico Panel Honorable Joe Thompson [ Full Report] New Mexico House of Representatives had some words on strategy around drug policy reform, including: bipartisan thinking is not useful, keeping your cool, you're only as good as your sources, and you must protect your champions. Gary Johnson [ Full Report] New Mexico Governor gave a chronology of how he came to his politics on drug policy reform, and then said that the state of New York is what brought down Prohibition by refusing to police those laws - perhaps New Mexico can lay the same role here. Cisco McSorley [ Full Report] New Mexico State Senator spoke briefly on how we have to couple treatment to changes in drug policy. Also, must support and protect elected officials willing to address drug policy reform, or else it's seen as political suicide. Honorable Alex Valdez [ Full Report] Secretary, New Mexico Department of Health said brief words on supporting Narcan and treatment. Plenary Session III Ecstasy: Science, Medicine, Culture Rick Doblin [ Full Report] President, Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies outlined MAPS' strategy of making MDMA available for therapy and other medical uses. He discussed the FDA and gave a brief outline of the history of MDMA. Sue [ Full Report] described her personal therapeutic experience with MDMA. Before Sue's husband died of terminal cancer at a young age, they took it together and were able to resolve issues and re-establish a loving and positive relationship. A subsequent MDMA session allowed Sue to adjust to his death, through the cognitive and emotional therapeutic aspects of MDMA. Later use with a therapist enabled her to relieve deep depression and helped her re-engage with her life. Charlie Grob [ Full Report] MD, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center discussed MDMA from a medical perspective. He noted MDMA's therapeutic aspects, then outlined its scientifically demonstrated risks and a harm reduction approach to these risks. Lack of information about MDMA is a primary factor in the danger it does offer, which is far less than socially approved drugs like alcohol. Dustianne North [ Full Report] Ph. D. Candidate, UCLA discussed dance culture and the rave community, and the use of MDMA in these contexts. She outlined the unique, loving, and tribal communities that have arisen around rave music, and their need for support and harm reduction around the problems they experience with misuse of ecstasy. Theo Rosenfeld [ Full Report] Pala Community Development talked about problems in the dance community with MDMA, mainly due to unsafe venues and toxic substitutes that result from its illegal status. He applauded community support like that of DanceSafe, but urged a greater community response, the free flow of information and education, and a calming of useless hysteria. Establishing models of moderate and responsible use and opening up the dialog are essential. Plenary Session IV Race and the Drug War James Forman, Jr. [ Full Report] Fellow, New America Foundation brought up: that this (the anti-WOD) movement needs to go beyond talk only of legalizing marijuana, and only of drug possession, and address other drugs, and dealing drugs, because it is in those areas that the most persecution of people of color is occurring. He adressed up the issue of policing, and how the War on Drugs sets up a fundamental hypocrisy. In American culture students in school are told that if they study, excel, and play by the rules, they will succeed. Yet outside the doors of our schools they are singled out for harassment by police because of their color, and in the name of the War on Drugs. He urged everyone in the room to take the first step, to take the risk, of meeting with communities of people of color, and listening first, talking second. Antonio Gonzales [ Full Report] President, William Valasquez Institute spoke of how the Latino community once supported the WOD, but now, seeing its damaging effect and no reduction in drugs or crime, the Latino community is changing its attitudes. What we do to others in the world is a reflection of what we do to ourselves, he said, and the corruption of power we produce in other countries through our approach to currently illegal drugs is occurring here in the U. S. as well. As the U. supports policies destructive of civil liberties in other countries, we are destroying our own civil liberties here in the U. He spoke of how 'drug-baiting' has replaced red (communist) baiting, and with as little cause and for the same reasons, not least a drive for power. This McCarthy-like baiting is now destroying the career of politicians willing to look at crucial issues around the War on Drugs, while their opponents, having shamelessly manipulated the public, benefit. from their manipulative actions. Teddy Shaw [ Full Report] NAACP Legal Defense Fund spoke on the Kimba Smith case - how she had never sold or handled drugs yet was sentenced to 24 years in prison. The punishment is not equal to the crime, and a central pillar of our judicial system is thus violated. The War on Drugs is a war against people of color, obvious in the fact that while drug use among the privileged is ubiquitous, it is also unpunished relative to its frequency. The War on Drugs legitimizes oppression, and he announced that the Legal Defense Fund is now entering the battle against the War on Drugs. The Honorable Maxine Waters [ Full Report] Member, United States House of Representatives outlined how the drug war is clearly prosecuted with a racial bias. She discussed how mandatory minimums have shifted discretion to prosecutors away from judges, for who is charged and how they are charged in drug cases. Rep. Waters laid out many statistics on drug use and sentencing by race - although they are only a third of crack users, for instance, blacks are 85% of those in prison for crack charges. Distribution of resources for treatment and rehabilitation is biased against blacks, and constitutes a kind of apartheid. She's introducing a bill to rescind mandatory minimums, and pledges the rest of her time in office to addressing the War on Drugs, reform of the prison system, and getting the resources necessary to deal with HIV/AIDS. Rocky Anderson [ Full Report] Mayor of Salt Lake City stressed the dishonesty and failure of the War on Drugs, and the toll it takes on our taxpayers and our society. Focusing on harm reduction to individuals and society should be our major goal. The only way to reduce harm is to reduce demand. Punishing people is not a workable strategy; the War on Drugs has simply increased the supply and the money to be made on illegal drugs. He discussed how there is still insufficient research on how to best do harm reduction - we need that research, and then we need to implement those findings.


Ha tinh building in pubg.
Is it just me or does every trailer seem kind of lame. It feels like there was not a single good one.
Ha'tin tức.
Hatina musha panyika.
That start tho.

Can people read? No, they're retarded. There's a pretty good fan made Friday the 13th short movie though. Who watched this when they were little and came to hear what they said?🙋🏽‍♂️. I know that DMT and 5-MeO are completely different but wanted to post in here for anyone that's interested in Bufo! This is long AF but worth the read if you have some time! On December 20th 2019 I turned 32. The first thing on my agenda that morning was to smoke the psychedelic toad known as Bufo Alvarius or 5-MeO-DMT. I hardly slept the night before. Took a while to even get out of bed and get ready because I knew that meant I was one step closer to facing my fears. December 2018 was when I had my very first experience with psychedelics. I participated in a 2 night ayahuasca ceremony and it was very profound. I was shown visions of my childhood and also shown my parents and my ex husband's childhoods. I was taught a lot about who I am and got clarity on a lot of things. I posted a video of my experience on YouTube and through that I led a lot of people to my facilitator so that they could find their healing as well. I did not expect the response I have gotten from that video but I am so grateful that I could help so many people by sharing my experience. Here is that video if you'd like to watch: A few months later, DMT mysteriously found me and I had some amazing experiences with that but never fully broke through. Most of my DMT trips were open eye trips where I would observe myself and my surroundings. I would gasp and marvel at how everything came to life and transformed before my eyes but I was always scared to go deeper because I still struggled with my religious upbringing. Growing up as the daughter of a Kenyan pastor was no joke! I was taught that all of these things were demonic so when I would close my eyes on DMT, everything I was seeing and feeling was too overwhelming and I was filled with fear. I decided that I would just microdose and keep my eyes open, never fully allowing myself to break through. 9 months after my first aya ceremony, I sat in my 2nd ayahuasca ceremony and that one was physically harder on me than the first because I didn't stick to the dieta like I was supposed to. Even then, I still had a profound experience and learned even more about myself. Between my first and second ayahuasca ceremonies, I started hearing about Bufo Alvarius. A species of toad that lives underground 9 months out of the year and contains a chemical known as 5-MeO-DMT in its venom, which is secreted from its glands. They were calling it the strongest psychoactive known to man. I watched an interview of Mike Tyson talking about how he smoked it and how it changed him forever. I watched countless videos of other people's experiences and it all sounded so crazy to me. They talked about how the effects come on instantly and last about 15 minutes. They talked about ego death, your consciousness leaving your body and rebirth. I told myself I could never do such a thing. In the videos I saw, some people had really calm trips while others were screaming and yelling rolling around on the ground. It looked like an exorcism was going on and it looked terrifying. Completely leaving my body?! Ego death? No way! Not for me! Not ever. Yet a year later, I found myself sitting cross legged on a blanket out in nature on the morning of my birthday with a pipe in my mouth inhaling the venom of the Bufo Alvarius toad. That morning, I met up with the facilitator and a lovely lady by the name of Mo, that I had led to ayahuasca through my video. Her entire life had changed after she saw my video and drank ayahuasca. She went to Peru with the group I did my ceremony with and participated in more ceremonies and even did Bufo for her birthday! I was amazed at the strides she had made in her journey in the few months since she saw my video. We talked and laughed on the drive there and she helped calm my nerves. I kept asking her and the facilitator all these questions to try and figure out what to expect but there is just no way to prepare for Bufo. Everyone's experience is different. It was a bumpy ride to the location as we went to a very secluded place. We joked and laughed about how the ride reminded us of some roads in Africa. We are both of African descent so we joked about our upbringing and culture. When we got to the location, the facilitator noticed that his truck had a flat tire and we were in the middle of nowhere! He was working on it for a while and I kept feeling relieved because that was buying me more time before we could get the ceremony started. He decided to do the ceremony first then get back to the flat tire when we were done. I watched as he prepared all of his things for the ceremony. The whole time I was thinking oh my God I can't believe I'm really about to do this. Mo and I enjoyed the scenery as the facilitator was getting everything ready. Both the sun and the moon were visible in the clear blue sky. There was a stream nearby and birds were flying above us. Before we began, he saged me. A practice I have become familiar with from my ayahuasca ceremonies. I sat down and faced him as he brought out the glass pipes that I had seen in the numerous youtube videos I watched. I couldn't believe I was seeing these pipes in real life. He showed me the crystalized venom of the Bufo Alvarius toad in the pipe. It was brown and small. He had explained that he was going to microdose me up into the experience. The first one was a very small dose. He instructed me on how to first exhale all the air out of my lungs, and then inhale as much of the vapor as I possibly could. I exhaled then inhaled and inhaled and inhaled and when I felt like I couldn't inhale anymore, he asked me to keep inhaling. And so I did. You must have good strong lungs for this! He pulled the pipe away from my lips and watched me. Nothing happened. I closed my eyes and meditated. Waiting to see if I felt any different. But I felt nothing. Then I was ready for the next dose. He had told me that some people completely leave and have a full experience with the second dose and some people don't. After I inhaled as much as I could, I coughed a little and some smoke escaped my mouth but I held in as much as I could. Instantly, I started feeling things shifting. My body was shaking and I was letting out little screams and yelps as I laid down on my back. I was having resistance to the shift in energy. I still can't describe what it was like but it was out of control and my ego didn't like it. I was still aware that I was myself having this experience. I calmed down and returned to normal after a few minutes and sat up and looked at him. I knew that I hadn't crossed the threshold. I knew I had to take the next dose. He asked me if I was ready and I replied yes. This time there was a bigger piece of the toads crystalized venom in the pipe. This was it. The moment I had been terrified of was about to happen. Mo looked at the time and let me know that it was exactly 11:11am. Then she smiled at me and gave me 2 thumbs up and told me I was gonna do great! I exhaled all the air out of my lungs and put the pipe to my lips. He started lighting it and I slowly inhaled as much as I could and when all the vapor was gone, I covered my mouth and nose so that nothing would escape. Within seconds, I remember feeling a massive shift in energy. I was being pulled from this reality. I leaned to the side as I laid on the mat and everything turned black. I instantly felt like I was entering a sacred ancient realm. I was flying through hyperspace at a very fast speed. It was cold. Everything was black. There was nothing. Yet it was everything. And I was part of it. I was gone. I had melted. Dissolved into nothing. I had no awareness of time, or my body. My breathing became one with the Universe. It was as if I was the Universe breathing. I didn't think of my kids, my boyfriend, my family, my friends or my hopes and dreams. That world simply didn't exist anymore. It was gone in seconds. I was thrown in a dark, empty, bottomless, timeless, spaceless, void. I was floating and yet it felt like I was falling in all directions. I kept thinking "what's going on?! where am I?! " I kept looking around to find someone to help me but there was no one. Just darkness. I was trying to grab onto something to hold on to but there was nothing. I was floating. Gravity didn't exist here. It was just me in this empty black place that was eternal. I thrashed around the whole time trying to understand what was happening. As soon as I had a thought it would disappear. I was trying to hold on to my thoughts. I felt like I was on a roller coaster or that I had jumped out of a plane. It was so overwhelming and intense. This was by far the most terrifying thing I had ever experienced in my entire life. I was told that during my trip my body was shaking, I was rolling around, crawling, sitting up, spitting, yelling, screaming no no no get me out!! I had no idea that my body was doing this. I had read that you are supposed to surrender to that uncomfortable feeling of ego death but I was filled with so much terror that I couldn't even think to surrender to what I was going through. I was just trying to figure out what the hell was going on and the more I tried to understand what was going on the worse the trip got and my fear, panic and terror only magnified. Meanwhile back in the world I'm used to, the facilitator was busy working on my body to try and ground me. He put Florida Water on me. I only knew this because I could smell it on me when I came back. He was using feathers on me too but I have no recollection of that. I don't remember being calm at all. Just panic, panic, panic the whole time until I came back. I clearly remember coming back. The facilitator hit a gong next to me and I started snapping out of it. It scared me. I grabbed him in shock and looked at him with fear all over my face. I kept rolling around until I finally fully came back. I was laying on my side when I fully came back. He looked at me and said welcome back. I hugged him and I cried a lot. Told him that was the scariest thing I had ever experienced. Nevertheless, I was so happy to be back.. I was so grateful to be in my human form. I looked at the sky and the trees and the birds. Everything was crystal clear. There were honeycomb shapes in the sky as I was returning to this reality. I was looking at everything through new eyes. After I had calmed down a bit, he asked me if I wanted to go deeper by taking another dose because it was clear that I had not fully surrendered. I said hell no!! There was no way I could go through anything like that again! He chuckled and told me to get up and walk around and feel the earth beneath my feet. I did and it felt amazing. I was just so happy to be able to be in my body. So happy to be a human. I will never take this human experience for granted again. To be able to feel the sun on my skin, to smell, to taste food, to laugh, to cry. There were bees all around us and I'm usually terrified of bees but I didn't care. I was just so happy to be experiencing life with them. I let them get close to me and observed them. I honestly for the first time didn't care if a bee was going to sting me. The facilitator had a stack of cards with different animals on each card. He also had a book that had a description of what each animal meant. He told me to shuffle the cards, place them on my chest and pick whichever card called out to me. The card I ended up picking was none other than the frog! I was amazed! Here I had just done a toad ceremony and I picked the frog?! No coincidence in that at all! Also what the book described was exactly what I was going through in my life. After all of this he administered Rappé up both of my nostrils to ground me. Rappé is a dried and powdered snuff which is usually blown into the nose through a blow pipe. The benefits of rappé use range from physical and psychological to energetic and spiritual.  It clears and focuses the mind and thoughts, centers and grounds your energy, opens up your physical and spiritual senses and awareness, cleanses and purifies your body and energetic fields, connects you to your spirit allies and other medicines, and much more. Rappé is always hard for me. I always have it done during ayahuasca and I'm always shaking and have a very hard time with it. I've always wondered how some people can be perfectly calm and still when it's being administered. When he blew it into my second nostril, for the first time, I was perfectly calm. I laid down and closed my eyes thinking about everything I had just experienced. Even though my eyes were closed, I could somehow see a single cloud appear in the darkness. I laid there and cried. Just filled with gratitude and love for life. We never managed to get the flat tire fixed because he was missing some tools that he needed so we had to walk for a while to get help! We had to walk through a stream and got pretty wet in the process but I didn't mind at all! I was just happy to be a human experiencing this life! That was another journey in itself and a reminder that life is so unpredictable. When we were laughing on the drive there, we had no idea that we would be walking back up those hills! I immediately got on the phone with my best friend Luiggi and told him everything that had happened! Now looking back on my experience, I feel like I went through a rebirth. Much like a newborn leaving the womb and entering this world. It's probably not the most pleasant experience and I imagine it can be quite terrifying for a soul to be born but it is something we must all go through. I read in Dr. Michael Newton's Journey Of Souls that it is more traumatic to the soul to be born than to die. When we die we know we are going home. Being born is quite the opposite. Some things I have noticed are I am no longer afraid of death. I think about it often and I am at peace with my mortality. I am also no longer afraid of the dark. I have feared being in the dark my whole life. For a while I felt like I had failed because I didn't fully surrender and experience the blissful part of Bufo. I just wanted the happy part of the trip but I got the opposite! I now realize that my experience went exactly the way it was supposed to. It wasn't a bad trip. It was MY trip. It was exactly what I needed. I was so sure that I was going to surrender but boy was I wrong! My ego put up a lot of resistance and wouldn't let go, which is exactly what I struggle with in my day to day life. I have a problem letting go of situations so that is something I have been working on. I truly believe that plant medicine and other entheogens are here to help the human race. If we really just open our minds and our hearts there is so much healing that can happen. I value and cherish my life so much more now and I don't feel so alone in this. I know that I am fully supported and that I am here for a reason. "The highest form of worship is to enjoy yourself. " These are words spoken by my dear friend who introduced me to Ayahuasca Dave Marsh. During my first aya ceremony he came over to me and knelt infront of me and told me that the Madre had told him these words and he wanted to share with me. That is why we are here. To feel. To experience. To live. So live. Live life to its fullest and show gratitude even in the darkest of times. Because without those dark times, we truly wouldn't know or appreciate the good times. Storms will come and go in our lives. That is just part of the duality that keeps things in perfect balance. Remember that no situation is permanent and the only thing that's constant is change. Be at peace with yourself and others. Love hard, forgive easily and don't hold grudges. You are the author of your story. You create your reality and the possibilities are endless. Namaste Christine Wawira You can find me on instagram if you'd like to connect.

Hatina musha panyika sda. From producer Sam Raimi I'M IN. لا اله الا انت سبحانك اني كنت من الظالمين استغفر ألله العظيم رب العرش العظيم واتوب اليه. Ha'tina. 9 minutes in and finally the movie is starting. Hatinators silver. Blood like rain come down. Hatinator base. Ha'tintin. Ha 27tina 2. Ha 27tina lyrics. This movie is awful. It's already out here in Portugal and I watched it yesterday. It's totally derivative from the 2004 film, it even copies the messed up timeline from the original movie. It has no impact, there's not an ounce of creativity, it's not even entertaining. The characters suck, and what is John Cho doing in this? After Searching, The Exorcist and Twilight Zone, how can he star in such a bad movie? And I'm done with Lin Shaye. She gained popularity with her role in Insidious but every other movie that I've seen her in is absolutely terrible. The Grudge 2020 is a complete disaster, it's such a horrible mess. You'll find yourself gaping at the screen in horror for having spent your hard-earned money in this crap once the movie ends abruptly and the credits start rolling.

Masterpiece. Ha'tina arena. Ha tinh area pubg. I remember i watched this a a friends house when i was 11 didnt sleep for weeks. Ha 27tina movie. Ha tinh map in pubg. Harina pan.

 

Ha 27tina 2017. Ha'tiny kingdom. Ha'tirage. Ha 27tina de. Ha 27tina meaning. Hatina musha panyika oliver mtukudzi. Ha 27tina video. Ha 27tina mp3. Drug Policies For The New Millennium... [continued] Notes on the Lindesmith-DPF Conference, by Erowid Crew Member V Back to Index III. Comments on the conference from your correspondent This conference was enjoyable, informative, and an excellent place to meet motivated activists and concerned citizens. I highly recommend the one next year to everyone. Below are a few themes I believe are worth commenting on, and some suggestions for the conference organizers. Anger and Communication One of the major themes of the conference was communication, the power of words and expression, and the difference between activist expression and personal expression. Rev Sanders said, "Speech is the appropriation of infinite possibilities�born out of that place that allows it to be something more than words. " And it is crucial at this time, to voice our truth, to express our own understandings and experiences around the War on Drugs. We need to talk about the damage we have sustained, which harms so many so needlessly, and which prevents so much potential from reaching its fulfillment. Ethan Nadelmann's point, though, is also crucial �it's important not to allow anger at the the situation to harm the cause. Activist expression has to be for the express purpose of communicative - that is, guided by what those receiving the message can hear, rather than the emotional need to be heard. In other words, we run the risk of poisoning our own message by communicating from a purely emotional place, thus allowing proponents of the WOSD to paint us as illogical hotheads. However - there is a psychological tension here. If we communicate from our anger alone, we will be ignored and marginalized- but is there not a place for it? We have a claim to a righteous anger at the injustices around us, at the needless damage that has been done in the name of political power and financial gain Perhaps more importantly, we need to express this anger in order to heal it and direct it towards the most benefit. Similarly, we need to express our pain and sorrow and grief about the WOSD and the waste and damage it has done to so many lives. In a brief unscheduled address to the conference, Deborah Small of the Lindesmith Center pointed out that we are fearful and ashamed of telling the stories of damage and death from the drug war. Yet personal stories are essential to an understanding of the true impact of the War on Drugs - personal, familial, and professional; community, sociopolitical, and economic. The mass media do not report these stories, so let us make the damage that is invisible to so many, visible by communicating our stories and our experiences. Race and the drug war Race and the WOD was another theme at the conference. The media would have us believe that African-Americans and other people of color are the primary users of illegal drugs, but as the statistics Representative Maxine Waters presented (and in fact all other data on the subject shows it, there is no dispute over this), white people in America are the primary users - they simply do not pay the price in the same way other groups do. For the American public, truth is the first victim of the War on Drugs. A number of speakers brought up race even when they weren't speaking on it, pointing out to the audience that those who were most affected by the drug war were in the least attendance. While reasons for this were not made explicit, it may be that specific invitations to the African-American and Hispanic communities are needed to join this effort. Another reason, discussed by youth in an evening meeting in which race was a central topic, was the surprised realization that perhaps people of color are fearful of even more harassment, or even are so busy with day- to-day survival in the current climate of oppression that their energies are better spent elsewhere. In that case, more effort and support should certainly be devoted to enabling people of all ethnicities to attend future drug policy conferences, and especially the conference on Race and the Drug War announced by Ethan Nadelmann as the next conference they will hold. Perhaps the damage done by the War on Drugs can eventually serve a useful purpose by helping to catalyze the healing that is needed around the racism still so present in American society and culture. The issue of fear Ethan Nadelmann opened the conference by talking about how it is fear that keeps people in agreement with the War on Drugs. But I would have liked more on the subtle squashing of free speech due to the WOD, and how we could counter this. Fear stifles the speech of millions who are not in favor of the drug war, for fear they will be harassed, singled out, searched, imprisoned, and otherwise made to pay a negative price for their expression. Is this the Land of the Free?? Do we treasure and support our rights to free speech in American culture? How can it be so, if the price to be paid for speaking out is so high? The wealthy, the educated, scientists, teachers, administrators, government officials, and police, as well as just your average Joe or Jane - people in all of these groups have used drugs made illegal by our illogical drug policies. But they cannot speak out on the benefits they find and the reasons they use these chemicals despite their illegality, because the consequences to themselves could be so great. If they do, they are stigmatized, and run the risk of being targeted for reprisals by a government that should be protecting their civil rights. This unspoken inhibition of our free speech also prevents the propagation of useful information on safety, and of models of usage that are not abuse. Only by educating people can harm reduction be successful, but the current situation inhibits the free flow of information around crucial issues of set and setting, beneficial use, and safety. College kids are among the largest groups of users of illicit drugs, and they have been since the 1960s -- yet propaganda would have us believe that the uneducated, the poor, and the violent are the primary users. It is hypocrisy of the highest order that our educated and wealthy classes can use drugs with impunity, while those without advantages are punished on their behalf. That both of our last Presidential candidates had engaged in drug use without reprisal, while thousands were arrested and punished for the same offenses, shows that our traditions of fairness and justice in this country have been seriously compromised and must change. The restriction of information and the free flow of discussion are impingements of our right to free speech - but implemented in such a way that complaints about the restrictions themselves are inhibited. Recent revelations that the Reagan administration sought to destroy biomedical records of cannabis anti-tumor research illustrate the extremes governmental inhibition of information have take. Surely, if we live in a free country, the current structure and restriction of the debate in the media must change - those in a position to not fear reprisals must speak out for the benefit of all. Fear was also addressed in the teen caucus. Young people expressed their frustration at parents' and adults' fear of teenagers, their drugs and their behavior. This fear creates a knee-jerk reaction - the desire to clamp down, to control, to inhibit the expression, activity, and potential of young people. It was pointed out that this fear is only a subset of the fears driving the American people and American culture. Buried in consumerist drives and political propaganda, sleeping American culture is fearful of change, of expression of emotion, and of waking up to the new ways of being and culture that are being explored. The drug known as ecstasy is especially under fire and fear by parents, while the young people who use it at raves and communal gatherings have experienced it as a loving and connecting force. Again, though, there is no place for young people to express their truths and deep experience in these areas. And it is the backlash against those who would do and reveal these things that is in part driving the drug war itself. Being a young person at this time, and showing these new possibilities to America, means that youth can't help but call down the effects of this fear on themselves. We need new approaches and avenues of expression to explain the benefits that many in dance culture have experienced with ecstasy, and explore how other cultures have ceremonialized the use of drugs that have an important role in their societies. * On the youth movement The large number of young people who attended the conference, and the large number of youth activist groups who participated, were striking to this observer. I attended two sessions centered on youth: "The Emergent Student and Youth Movement"; and the evening "Youth Caucus: Connecting the Dots". There were representatives from more than a score of youth-based and youth-organized groups. The many young people I talked with individually and heard speak in groups - from Oklahoma, Vancouver, San Francisco, New York, and New Mexico - were impressive. They are articulate, intelligent, perceptive, and willing to act. They are also activists like we have not seen since the '60s - they understand that civil rights are being infringed, and that as a society we are in grave danger of demolishing the democratic structure we have left. Personally, I was amazed, and heartened. These young people have grown to adulthood in a fast-moving media climate that has commercialized them, propagandized them, disinformed them, and in general overwhelmed them with lies and half-lies. Rather than buying all of this, however, they have simply honed their bullshit detectors to a fine edge, and have learned to seek truth and turn away from those with hidden agendas. Even further, they have (to some extent due to the use of empathogens and entheogens) connected amongst themselves with love and truth and understanding, in ways larger American culture has not accepted. They are less concerned with security and consumerism than the media paint them, they are supportive of each other, and they are rejecting barriers based on race and gender, class and sexual orientation. As a group, they are the most loving and awake generation I have observed. They claim that they deserve a place at the table; I agree! They have an energy and a motivation that this movement needs, and they have a lot to teach their elders about community and connection. IV. Recommendations for the conference organizers I offer the following suggestions for improving the next conference. More discussion time Insufficient discussion time was the single major disappointment I had with the conference. For instance, discussion time should have been allocated for the plenary sessions; if the topics were important enough to be plenary sessions, they were important enough for 30 minutes to be given to the other 900 participants to comment on them. While clearly the breakout sessions were meant to be for discussion, often the panels took up much of the time simply in introduction. There was little time for discussion even in these. Why not have some time allotted simply for group discussion, brainstorming, and idea exchange? Many people came to the conference not only to learn, but to propose ideas and suggestions, to get the ear of those who need help making things happen and who would benefit from the ideas of the community. How about panels of experts, to listen and not just talk? And some time should definitely be scheduled for sessions to explore the ramifications and deeper aspects of all of these issues. The evening Youth Caucus was a great idea - now please extend it to some buffet dinner-and-discussion evenings on multiple topics, and some ways for people to self-organize to form discussion groups for their major areas of interest. Make salient the economic and social costs of the War on Drugs A session on the economic and social costs of the WOD would have been really useful, especially if there were handouts or other documentation. The assumption might be that everyone knows how much the WOD costs, but do we really know the combined expenses of the U. S. federal and state budgets for the WOD: the cost of imprisoning people, the costs of defense against illegal search and seizure, the cost to individuals of property forfeiture, the cost to families and taxpayers of parents going to prison and leaving their children, the costs of not being able to openly seek rehabilitation, the costs to communities of losing otherwise law-abiding taxpayers, the staggering costs of our foreign efforts? These don't even address more subtle social costs that have powerful ongoing impacts on the world: the erosion of democracy, the stunting of free speech, the climate of fear, the destruction of political and law- enforcement institutions through corruption. While many of these issues were touched on at times, the economic, social and political costs of the War on Drugs to us all, need to be put into a coherent package where the full scope of the damage to American society can be made completely clear. Especially since the press was there in full force, this conference could be a major source of information on exactly what the WOD costs us all, and how such massive amounts of funding could be used alternatively for the good of all. Short talks by many groups Plenary talks by major figures are great, but perhaps a few hours could have been spent in an afternoon of short presentations by people in the front line - community workers, police, non-profit organizations, etc. A series of 10 minute presentations with 5 minutes for questions from the audience could have alerted many groups to workable solutions that communities have found, problems that need more attention, education and harm reduction programs, and so on. It would also allow the audience to acknowledge and support the many organizers and activists doing such great work. Things not said: On core issues of culture and society Many core issues were not addressed at the conference, probably because they are considered outside of the focus of these organizations. I can understand that there needs to be such a focus for a conference, that there is an agreed-upon agenda, but even so we also need a place to discuss these central issues. Some of the 'core issues' below were mentioned in passing by various speakers, but these are crucial questions that deserve examination in their own right. Why do people take drugs? In many cases it is for reasons of escape, avoidance, boredom, lack of opportunity, hopelessness. It must be asked why Americans maintain a culture that induces such destructive and avoidant proclivities in so many. Prohibition and repression are not the answers; a straightforward scientific and social examination of core causes is. Deeper reasons may include the breakdown of American community structure, and/or it may indicate a desire to access paths of being that are not based on consumerism, obedience, and acceptance of the status quo. In other cases, as is seen throughout history, people use drugs to explore emotional, mental and spiritual aspects of themselves that are otherwise difficult to access, especially in a Puritanical culture. Many say that their experiences have been expansive, awakening, and joyous - why would compounds and plants with such obvious benefits be outlawed? Why is the United States so bent on punishment rather than rehabilitation or harm reduction? Why are illegal drugs feared so much when they are so much less harmful in most cases than alcohol, nicotine, and even many prescription drugs? How can the public be inoculated against the level of propaganda that is used to manipulate them even against their own wellbeing? Why is data that claims that many illegal drugs have positive uses in medical treatment and for therapy, rejected by agencies which have no medical or psychological expertise? Why do we deny that many people have positive, life- enhancing experiences with many of these compounds? Why do U. governmental agencies reject facts and studies that they themselves have commissioned? Why ignore evidence that the War on Drugs is a war on minorities and the poor, destroying all the ideals supposedly held dear in the U. S.? What emotional, cognitive, social, political issues need to be addressed, to create a climate where such issues can be tackled rationally and on the basis of the facts? These and so many other crucial questions are rarely asked in current forums. In other words, there are core issues of our society that there is little place and little space to address, anywhere in U. culture. They are issues of emotion, belief, attitude, education, judgment, fear, and bias. Maybe these should not be addressed at a conference exactly like this one, but perhaps we should give thought to what kind of conferences are needed, to open the dialog on these core foundational issues. The causes of the problems, and not just the symptoms, require attention. "Fighting the War on Drugs" The War on Drugs is a war against people, and it does seem natural to talk about how to fight back. But this brings up the question of whether 'fighting back' is the appropriate metaphor and tactic. First of all, reacting as though we are in a battle is their strategy, one that serves to demonize others, and polarize everyone. Do we want to adopt the strategies that have been used to marginalize so many? It also increases the likelihood of escalating the conflict. Further, adopting condemnatory and close-minded behavior patterns and strategies can only help prevent the healing around this issue which will undoubtedly be necessary when we have dismantled all these unfair practices and persecutions. Rather than fighting to win - which implies that the other party loses- perhaps we should seek to create win-win situations. If there is benefit in our solutions for everyone, and they can be made to see how that is the case, the likelihood of improving the situation for everyone massively increases. I'm certainly not saying that we shouldn't do all we can to get these damaging and useless laws repealed, to reduce harm to all by regulating rather than forbidding these compounds, and to create a vision for how currently illegal drugs can benefit our society. In fact that is clearly what we must do. And definitely we must stop the corruption and abuse inherent in a war where the government is against its own people, and against its own democratic traditions. But - by choosing their metaphor, we choose their mindset. By choosing their mindset, we become like them. And it is time we created, through our minds and our hearts, our strategies and techniques, a different way of being that will generate a wiser, more compassionate future. Proposing solutions Related to the above, it would be strategic and helpful to formulate a positive agenda which stressed what is to be done about drugs in modern society. Not how to forbid them, as we know that does not work, but how to acknowledge and regulate them so as to maximize benefit and minimize harm to all. Sessions around this could include: Addressing core societal problems. Start examining the central stresses and problems of modern life which send many people to either legal anti-stress medications or self-medication with illegal drugs. Education to a depth which would allow people to truly assess and understand the risks and implications of taking drugs. This includes re-evaluating what and how we educate our children. We live in an increasingly drug-oriented and pharmacological culture, yet education has not caught up with this fact. The woeful lack of understanding of our biochemistry and brains prevents truly rational decision-making by the populace. Acknowledge disinformation. The general public needs far greater understanding of the ways they have been disinformed and misinformed about the costs and benefits of illegal drugs, and the War on Drugs and its damages. Many still believe certain drugs are illegal because they are the most harmful, which is certainly not the case. We need to introduce straightforward, rational analyses of all drugs and their risks in our society so that we can formulate sensible harm reduction and rehabilitation policies. Benefit from currently illegal drugs Identifying what areas of society and the individual indeed benefit from drugs, and support research into safer analogs. {For instance, a safer replacement for alcohol would cut down on DUIs, liver damage, and alcohol-induced violence and crime). Current SSRIs and other anti-anxiety and anti-depression drugs are strongly related to some illicit drugs, for instance, and many Schedule I drugs have been shown to be efficacious for the treatment of alcoholism and other problems for which current treatments are insufficient. Cannabis has been shown in numerous studies to have medicinal uses noted by medical research, but non-medical groups such as the DEA have blocked research in these areas. Recognize sacred and creative uses of many currently illegal drugs. While not widely broadcast by the media, many drugs induce transcendental states of awareness that have been valued and sought after throughout human history. Let us appreciate these paths to realization, awareness, and creativity, and establish socially acceptable paths toward beneficial uses. Modeling responsible drug use. As was pointed out by more than one speaker, we do not have models of responsible drug use. Establishing these is crucial, so that people have some understanding of guidelines and early knowledge of when they may be headed for abuse problems. We should investigate models of use by indigenous cultures that have used similar compounds to our illegal drugs, in a safe and socially accepted way for centuries. They have learned to distinguish appropriate use and to surround it with ritual cues that enhance the experience for individuals and the entire community, while minimizing harm. This approach is especially important where potential for abuse is high, for instance in the rave community, and could include establishing set and setting, availability of accurate information, and harm reduction through community guidance. The above are only suggestions. Some of them may seem extreme. However, we know that the War on Drugs has failed, and does more damage than the problem it is treating. Hiding our heads in the sand and continuing on a destructive path can only lead to a negative future of persecution and unacceptable social control. We must therefore be willing to take innovative and soul-searching approaches to these issues before we completely criminalize our children and cripple our democracy. Conclusion Last of all, I found the conference heartening, and the conscientious, principled participants and speakers, inspiring. I highly recommend the next meeting to everyone. One of the purposes I can see for this conference was not only to hear the speakers - but to applaud them, to thank them, to note the sacrifices they have made, perhaps personally, perhaps professionally. It is something that we do not value highly enough in American culture - the impact and support and motivating aspect of appreciation. It was beautiful to see the crowd give their approval, and to realize that for some of the speakers, this was probably the first time they had been acknowledged publicly and fully for their work and their courage. In an America that is slowly dismantling its democratic traditions, that uses patriotism as propaganda, it was a heart-opening experience to be present to salute real defenders of our freedoms. Congratulations to the organizers! The suggestions above notwithstanding, I want to congratulate the organizers on an excellent and worthwhile conference. It was an important step towards the open discussion we need in this society on issues of such import to us all, and they are richly deserving of praise for all their good work.

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Countries - Spain runtime - 1h 59Min actors - George MacKay Sam Mendes release date - 2019 April 1917, the Western Front. Two British soldiers are sent to deliver an urgent message to an isolated regiment. If the message is not received in time the regiment will walk into a trap and be massacred. To get to the regiment they will need to cross through enemy territory. Time is of the essence and the journey will be fraught with danger. Leurs états de santé. The director, writer, and cast of 1917 take us behind the scenes to reveal the inspirations for the World War I epic and explain why it was important to film it as one shot. Watch the video Top Rated Movies #49 | Nominated for 10 Oscars. Another 85 wins & 150 nominations. See more awards  » Learn more More Like This Crime Drama Thriller 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 8. 6 / 10 X In Gotham City, mentally troubled comedian Arthur Fleck is disregarded and mistreated by society. He then embarks on a downward spiral of revolution and bloody crime. This path brings him face-to-face with his alter-ego: the Joker. Director: Todd Phillips Stars: Joaquin Phoenix, Robert De Niro, Zazie Beetz Comedy 8 / 10 A detective investigates the death of a patriarch of an eccentric, combative family. Rian Johnson Daniel Craig, Chris Evans, Ana de Armas 7. 7 / 10 A faded television actor and his stunt double strive to achieve fame and success in the film industry during the final years of Hollywood's Golden Age in 1969 Los Angeles. Quentin Tarantino Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie War A young boy in Hitler's army finds out his mother is hiding a Jewish girl in their home. Taika Waititi Roman Griffin Davis, Thomasin McKenzie, Scarlett Johansson Biography Martin Scorsese Al Pacino, Joe Pesci Action Adventure Fantasy 6. 9 / 10 The surviving members of the resistance face the First Order once again, and the legendary conflict between the Jedi and the Sith reaches its peak bringing the Skywalker saga to its end. J. J. Abrams Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver All unemployed, Ki-taek and his family take peculiar interest in the wealthy and glamorous Parks, as they ingratiate themselves into their lives and get entangled in an unexpected incident. Bong Joon Ho Kang-ho Song, Sun-kyun Lee, Yeo-jeong Jo Romance 8. 1 / 10 Jo March reflects back and forth on her life, telling the beloved story of the March sisters - four young women each determined to live life on their own terms. Greta Gerwig Saoirse Ronan, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh Noah Baumbach's incisive and compassionate look at a marriage breaking up and a family staying together. Noah Baumbach Adam Driver, Scarlett Johansson, Julia Greer 8. 2 / 10 American car designer Carroll Shelby and driver Ken Miles battle corporate interference, the laws of physics and their own personal demons to build a revolutionary race car for Ford and challenge Ferrari at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1966. James Mangold Matt Damon, Christian Bale, Jon Bernthal 6. 8 / 10 A group of women take on Fox News head Roger Ailes and the toxic atmosphere he presided over at the network. Jay Roach Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman, 8. 5 / 10 After the devastating events of Avengers: Infinity War (2018), the universe is in ruins. With the help of remaining allies, the Avengers assemble once more in order to reverse Thanos' actions and restore balance to the universe. Directors: Anthony Russo, Joe Russo Robert Downey Jr., Mark Ruffalo Edit Storyline April 1917, the Western Front. Two British soldiers are sent to deliver an urgent message to an isolated regiment. If the message is not received in time the regiment will walk into a trap and be massacred. To get to the regiment they will need to cross through enemy territory. Time is of the essence and the journey will be fraught with danger. Written by grantss Plot Summary Plot Synopsis Taglines: Time is the enemy. Details Release Date: 10 January 2020 (USA) See more  » Box Office Budget: $100, 000, 000 (estimated) Opening Weekend USA: $576, 216, 29 December 2019 Cumulative Worldwide Gross: $249, 046, 389 See more on IMDbPro  » Company Credits Technical Specs See full technical specs  » Did You Know? Trivia The movie was shot from April to June 2019 in Wiltshire, Hankley Common, and Govan, Scotland, as well as Shepperton Studios. Conservationists, concerned that filming on Salisbury Plain could disturb potentially undiscovered remains in the area, requested an archaeological survey be conducted before any set construction began. See more » Goofs In the final battle the Devons attack with absolutely no artillery support. That might have happened early in the war but certainly wouldn't have happened in 1917, when the allied armies were much better at coordinated attacks. See more » Quotes Colonel MacKenzie: I hoped today would be a good day. Hope is a dangerous thing. See more » Crazy Credits The opening logos are shortened and tinted blue. See more » Alternate Versions In India, the film received multiple verbal cuts in order to obtain a U/A classification. Also, two anti-smoking video disclaimers and a smoking kills caption were added. This version also features local partner credits at the beginning and an interval card after Schofield is hit. See more » Soundtracks I Am A Poor Wayfaring Stranger Arranged by Craig Leon Performed by Jos Slovick See more » Frequently Asked Questions See more ».

1917 download movie trailer. 2:00 essa cena dele correndo é bem louca. 1917 download movies. NOW PLAYING IN SELECT THEATERS. EVERYWHERE FRIDAY. Terms & Conditions Privacy Policy - New Do Not Sell My Personal Information Feedback MOVIE PLATFORM © 2020 POWSTER © 2020 Universal Pictures. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Watch the 1917 movie trailer on the official site. In select theaters December 25, 2019; everywhere January 10, 2020.

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1917 movie in hindi download. 7:06 HOLY MOLLY, IS THAT JOHN WICK FROM KEANU REEVES. 1917 download movie 2. 1917 full movie download. The recent run of World War I centennial anniversaries led to a spike in interest in the conflict, which ended in 1918, and Hollywood has been no exception. The few critically acclaimed Great War movies, such as All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) and Sergeant York (1941), were joined in 2018 by Peter Jackson’s documentary They Shall Not Grow Old. On Christmas Day, that list will get a new addition, in the form of Sam Mendes’ new film 1917. The main characters are not based on real individuals, but real people and events inspired the movie, which takes place on the day of April 6, 1917. Here’s how the filmmakers strove for accuracy in the filming and what to know about the real World War I history that surrounded the story. Get our History Newsletter. Put today's news in context and see highlights from the archives. Thank you! For your security, we've sent a confirmation email to the address you entered. Click the link to confirm your subscription and begin receiving our newsletters. If you don't get the confirmation within 10 minutes, please check your spam folder. The real man who inspired the film The 1917 script, written by Mendes and Krysty Wilson-Cairns, is inspired by “fragments” of stories from Mendes’ grandfather, who served as a “runner” — a messenger for the British on the Western Front. But the film is not about actual events that happened to Lance Corporal Alfred H. Mendes, a 5-ft. -4-inch 19-year-old who’d enlisted in the British Army earlier that year and later told his grandson stories of being gassed and wounded while sprinting across “No Man’s Land, ” the territory between the German and Allied trenches. In the film, General Erinmore (Colin Firth) orders two lance corporals, Blake (Dean-Charles Chapman) and Schofield (George MacKay), to make the dangerous trek across No Man’s Land to deliver a handwritten note to a commanding officer Colonel Mackenzie (Benedict Cumberbatch), ordering them to cancel a planned attack on Germans who have retreated to the Hindenburg Line in northern France. Life in the trenches The filmmakers shot the film in southwestern England, where they dug about 2, 500 feet of trenches — a defining characteristic of the war’s Western Front — for the set. Paul Biddiss, the British Army veteran who served as the film’s military technical advisor and happens to have three relatives who served in World War I, taught the actors about proper techniques for salutes and handling weapons. He also used military instruction manuals from the era to create boot camps meant to give soldiers the real feeling of what it was like to serve, and read about life in the trenches in books like Max Arthur’s Lest We Forget: Forgotten Voices from 1914-1945, Richard van Emden’s The Last Fighting Tommy: The Life of Harry Patch, Last Veteran of the Trenches, 1898-2009 (written with Patch) and The Soldier’s War: The Great War through Veterans’ Eyes. He put the extras to work, giving each one of about three dozen tasks that were part of soldiers’ daily routines. Some attended to health issues, such as foot inspections and using a candle to kill lice, while some did trench maintenance, such as filling sandbags. Leisure activities included playing checkers or chess, using buttons as game pieces. There was a lot of waiting around, and Biddiss wanted the extras to capture the looks of “complete boredom. ” The real messengers of WWI The film’s plot centers on the two messengers sprinting across No Man’s Land to deliver a message, and that’s where the creative license comes in. In reality, such an order would have been too dangerous to assign. When runners were deployed, the risk of death by German sniper fire was so high that they were sent out in pairs. If something happened to one of them, then the other could finish the job. “In some places, No Man’s Land was as close as 15 yards, in others it was a mile away, ” says Doran Cart, Senior Curator at the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City. The muddy terrain was littered with dead animals, dead humans, barbed wires and wreckage from exploding shells—scarcely any grass or trees in sight. “By 1917, you didn’t get out of your trench and go across No Man’s Land. Fire from artillery, machine guns and poison gas was too heavy; no one individual was going to get up and run across No Man’s Land and try to take the enemy. ” Human messengers like Blake and Schofield were only deployed in desperate situations, according to Cart. Messenger pigeons, signal lamps and flags, made up most of the battlefield communications. There was also a trench telephone for communications. “Most people understand that World War I is about trench warfare, but they don’t know that there was more than one trench, ” says Cart. “There was the front-line trench, where front-line troops would attack from or defend from; then behind that, kind of a holding line where they brought supplies up, troops waiting to go to to the front-line trench. ” The “bathroom” was in the latrine trench. There were about 35, 000 miles of trenches on the Western Front, all zigzagging, and the Western Front itself was 430 miles long, extending from the English Channel in the North to the Swiss Alps in the South. April 6, 1917 The story of 1917 takes place on April 6, and it’s partly inspired by events that had just ended on April 5. From Feb. 23 to April 5 of that year, the Germans were moving their troops to the Hindenburg Line and roughly along the Aisne River, around a 27-mile area from Arras to Bapaume, France. The significance of that move depends on whether you’re reading German or Allied accounts. The Germans saw it as an “adjustment” and “simply moving needed resources to the best location, ” while the Allies call the Germans’ actions a “retreat” or “withdrawal, ” according to Cart. In either case, a whole new phase of the war was about to begin, for a different reason: the Americans entered the war on April 6, 1917. A few days later, the Canadians captured Vimy Ridge, in a battle seen to mark “the birth of a nation” for Canada, as one of their generals put it. Further East, the Russian Revolution was also ramping up. As Matthew Naylor, President and CEO of the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Mo., says of the state of affairs on the Western Front in April 1917, “Casualties on both sides are massive and there is no end in sight. ” Correction, Dec. 24 The original version of this article misstated how WWI soldiers de-loused themselves. The troops used a candle to burn and pop lice, they did not pour hot wax on themselves. Write to Olivia B. Waxman at.

1917 movie free download. 1917 download movie hd. Battlefield 1 got me deep into ww1, so Im thrilled to finally see this war getting main stream attention. 1917 Download movie reviews. Unlike Charlies angels, a movie for grown ups. That's why he's doing so well in theaters. When I watched this trailer, I was baffled by how this could possibly be a one-take style film. I watched it and I gotta say this is one of the most impressively shot films I've ever seen, and it pulls off the one-take style magnificently.


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Sam Mendes directs this visually extravagant drama about young British soldiers on a perilous mission in World War I. Credit... Francois Duhamel/Universal Pictures Published Dec. 24, 2019 Updated Dec. 27, 2019 On June 28, 1914, a young Serbian nationalist assassinated the presumptive heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, thus starting World War I. That, at any rate, is the familiar way that the origins for this war have been shaped into a story, even if historians agree the genesis of the conflict is far more complicated. None of those complications and next to no history, though, have made it into “1917, ” a carefully organized and sanitized war picture from Sam Mendes that turns one of the most catastrophic episodes in modern times into an exercise in preening showmanship. The story is simple. It opens on April 6, 1917, with Lance Corporal Blake (Dean-Charles Chapman) and Lance Corporal Schofield (George MacKay), British soldiers stationed in France, receiving new orders. They are to deliver a message to troops at the front line who are readying an assault on the Germans, who have retreated. (Coincidentally or not, April 6 is the date that the United States formally entered the war. ) The British command, however, believes that the German withdrawal is a trap, an operational Trojan horse. The two messengers need to carry the dispatch ordering the waiting British troops to stand down, thereby saving countless lives. It’s the usual action-movie setup — a mission, extraordinary odds, ready-made heroes — but with trenches, barbed wire and a largely faceless threat. Blake jumps on the assignment because his brother is among the troops preparing the assault. Schofield takes orders more reluctantly, having already survived the Battle of the Somme, with its million-plus casualties. The modest difference in attitude between the messengers will vanish, presumably because any real criticism — including any skepticism about this or any war — might impede the movie’s embrace of heroic individualism for the greater good, which here largely translates as vague national struggle and sacrifice. What complicates the movie is that it has been created to look like it was made with a single continuous shot. In service of this illusion, the editing has been obscured, though there are instances — an abrupt transition to black, an eruption of thick dust — where the seams almost show. Throughout, the camera remains fluid, its point of view unfixed. At times, it shows you what Blake and Schofield see, though it sometimes moves like another character. Like a silent yet aggressively restless unit member, it rushes before or alongside or behind the messengers as they snake through the mazy trenches and cross into No Man’s Land, the nightmarish expanse between the fronts. The idea behind the camerawork seems to be to bring viewers close to the action, so you can share what Blake and Schofield endure each step of the way. Mostly, though, the illusion of seamlessness draws attention away from the messengers, who are only lightly sketched in, and toward Roger Deakins’s cinematography and, by extension, Mendes’s filmmaking. Whether the camera is figuratively breathing down Blake’s and Schofield’s necks or pulling back to show them creeping inside a water-filled crater as big as a swimming pool, you are always keenly aware of the technical hurdles involved in getting the characters from here to there, from this trench to that crater. In another movie, such demonstrative self-reflexivity might have been deployed to productive effect; here, it registers as grandstanding. It’s too bad and it’s frustrating, because the two leads make appealing company: The round-faced Chapman brings loose, affable charm to his role, while MacKay, a talented actor who’s all sharp angles, primarily delivers reactive intensity. This lack of nuance can be blamed on Mendes, who throughout seems far more interested in the movie’s machinery than in the human costs of war or the attendant subjects — sacrifice, patriotism and so on — that puff into view like little wisps of engine steam. The absence of history ensures that “1917” remains a palatable war simulation, the kind in which every button on every uniform has been diligently recreated, and no wound, no blown-off limb, is ghastly enough to truly horrify the audience. Here, everything looks authentic but manicured, ordered, sane, sterile. Save for a quick appearance by Andrew Scott, as an officer whose overly bright eyes and jaundiced affect suggest he’s been too long in the trenches, nothing gestures at madness. Worse, the longer this amazing race continues, the more it resembles an obstacle course by way of an Indiana Jones-style adventure, complete with a showstopping plane crash and battlefield sprint. Mendes, who wrote the script with Krysty Wilson-Cairns, has included a note of dedication to his grandfather, Alfred H. Mendes, who served in World War I. It’s the most personal moment in a movie that, beyond its technical virtues, is intriguing only because of Britain’s current moment. Certainly, the country’s acrimonious withdrawal from the European Union makes a notable contrast with the onscreen camaraderie. And while the budget probably explains why most of the superior officers who pop in briefly are played by name actors — Colin Firth, Mark Strong, Benedict Cumberbatch — their casting also adds distinctly royal filigree to the ostensibly democratic mix. 1917 Rated R for war violence. Running time: 1 hour 58 minutes.
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1917 download movie full. 1917 downloaded movie. The moment that Schofield hops over the wall to run across the battlefield was so incredible. the pause he takes to look at the commanding officer below before making the jump over makes the entire scene. The movie 1917 download. This is hands down one of the greatest war movies to ever hit the silver screen along with being very unique. The hell of the WWI battlefield is a subject that hasn't been covered in a long time and Mr. Mendes executes this perfectly. A movie like this couldn't have been made 50 years ago but with today's advances in film making along with a large studio budget Mr. Mendes takes us through an adventure every bit as harrowing as Saving Private Ryan and Thin Red Line.
The use of the single shot was brilliant as it brings the viewer along in the trenches and further adds to the realism to the film. I was surprised to hear that this was gimmicky effect from some critics, I feel Mr. Mendes nailed it brilliantly with the help of some fantastic cinematography. The set pieces were so realistic and detailed, a lesser director would've focused more on them but for this ride the camera never stops moving and it's a benefit to the film.
There was no slow part in the movie and the audience is enthralled with the journey from the first minute of the film. The dialogue was great and certainly was a key component of making the single shot method work here. There is no pointless exposition in the movie.
This isn't a piece to glorify war but rather demonstrate how one can be brave all the while showing their vulnerabilities and fear that any normal person would feel in that type of situation. There are no gratuitous bits in the film to exemplify heroism, just a simple story that allows the characters to shine and define bravery on their own terms.
From the acting, to the score, to the cinematography, editing and overall direction of the film Mr. Mendes absolutely knocked it out of the park. This isn't just one of the best war movies of all time, I believe it's truly one of the best pieces of film to ever grace the big screen. 1917 will leave you breathless and for many like myself, in tears when the journey comes to and end.
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Roger Deakins masterclass. 1917 Download movie database. 1917 movie download 480p. 1917 download movies download. 1917 Theatrical release poster Directed by Sam Mendes Produced by Sam Mendes Pippa Harris Jayne-Ann Tenggren Callum McDougall Brian Oliver Written by Krysty Wilson-Cairns Starring George MacKay Dean-Charles Chapman Mark Strong Andrew Scott Richard Madden Claire Duburcq Colin Firth Benedict Cumberbatch Music by Thomas Newman Cinematography Roger Deakins Edited by Lee Smith Production company DreamWorks Pictures Reliance Entertainment New Republic Pictures Mogambo Neal Street Productions Amblin Partners Distributed by Universal Pictures (United States) eOne (United Kingdom) Release date 4 December 2019 ( London) 25 December 2019 (United States) 10 January 2020 (United Kingdom) Running time 119 minutes [1] Country United Kingdom United States Language English Budget $90–100 million [2] [3] Box office $249 million [4] [5] 1917 is a 2019 epic war film directed, co-written, and produced by Sam Mendes. The film stars George MacKay and Dean-Charles Chapman, with Mark Strong, Andrew Scott, Richard Madden, Claire Duburcq, Colin Firth, and Benedict Cumberbatch in supporting roles. It is based in part on an account told to Mendes by his paternal grandfather, Alfred Mendes, [6] and chronicles the story of two young British soldiers during World War I who are tasked with delivering a message calling off an attack doomed to fail soon after the German retreat to the Hindenburg Line during Operation Alberich in 1917. This message is especially important to one of the young soldiers as his brother is taking part in the pending attack. The project was officially announced in June 2018, with MacKay and Chapman signing on in October and the rest of the cast the following March. Filming took place from April to June 2019 in England and Scotland, with cinematographer Roger Deakins and editor Lee Smith using long takes to have the entire film appear as one continuous shot. 1917 premiered in the UK on 4 December 2019 and was theatrically released in the United States on 25 December 2019 by Universal Pictures, and in the United Kingdom on 10 January 2020 by eOne. The film received praise for Mendes's direction, the performances, cinematography, musical score, editing, sound effects, and realism. Among its various accolades, the film received ten nominations at the 92nd Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Original Screenplay. The film won Best Motion Picture – Drama and Best Director at the 77th Golden Globe Awards, and it has received nine nominations at the 73rd British Academy Film Awards. It also won the Producers Guild of America Award for Best Theatrical Motion Picture. Plot [ edit] On 6 April 1917, aerial reconnaissance has observed that the German army, which has pulled back from a sector of the Western Front in northern France, is not in retreat but has made a tactical withdrawal to the new Hindenburg Line, where they are waiting to overwhelm the British with artillery. In the British trenches, with field telephone lines cut, two young British soldiers, Lance Corporals Will Schofield and Tom Blake, are ordered by General Erinmore to carry a message to Colonel Mackenzie of the Second Battalion of the Devonshire Regiment, calling off a scheduled attack that would jeopardise the lives of 1, 600 men, including Blake's brother Lieutenant Joseph Blake. Schofield and Blake cross no man's land to reach the abandoned German trenches. In an underground barracks, they discover a booby-trap tripwire. This is triggered by a rat, and the explosion almost kills Schofield, but Blake saves him, and the two escape. They arrive at an abandoned farmhouse, where they witness a German plane being shot down in flames. Schofield and Blake drag the injured pilot from the plane. Schofield proposes a mercy kill, but Blake insists they help him. The pilot stabs Blake and is shot dead by Schofield. Schofield comforts Blake as he dies, promising to complete the mission and to write to Blake's mother. Schofield is then picked up by a passing British unit. A destroyed canal bridge near the bombed village of Écoust-Saint-Mein prevents the British lorries from crossing. Schofield chooses to cross alone, and comes under fire from a German sniper. He tracks down and kills the sniper, only to be knocked out by a ricocheting bullet. He regains consciousness and proceeds. Under fire, Schofield stumbles into the hiding place of a French woman with an infant. She treats his wounds and he sings the infant a song, giving the woman his canned food and milk from the farm. Continuing, Schofield is shot at as flares light up the night sky. He meets more German soldiers, strangling one and pushing past another who is inebriated. Other soldiers give chase, but he escapes by jumping into a river. He is swept over a waterfall before reaching the riverbank in the morning. In the forest, he finds D Company of the 2nd Devons, which is in the last wave of the attack. As the company starts to move through the trenches to the front, Schofield tries to reach Colonel Mackenzie. Realising that the trenches are too crowded for him to make it to Mackenzie in time, Schofield sprints across the battlefield, just as the infantry begin their charge into the German bombardment. He forces his way into meeting Mackenzie, who reads the letter and reluctantly calls off the attack. Schofield is told that Joseph was among the first wave, and searches for him among the wounded, finding him unscathed. Joseph is upset to hear of his brother's death, but thanks Schofield for his efforts. Schofield gives Joseph his brother's rings and dog tag, and asks to write to their mother about Blake's heroics, to which Joseph agrees. Schofield then sits under a nearby tree, looking at photographs of his two young daughters and his wife. Cast [ edit] Production [ edit] Development and casting [ edit] Amblin Partners and New Republic Pictures were announced to have acquired the project in June 2018, with Sam Mendes directing, and co-writing the screenplay alongside Krysty Wilson-Cairns. [7] Tom Holland was reported to be in talks for the film in September 2018, though ultimately was not involved, [8] and in October, Roger Deakins was set to reunite with Mendes as cinematographer. [9] George MacKay and Dean-Charles Chapman entered negotiations to star the same month. [10] Thomas Newman was hired to compose the score in March 2019. [11] The same month, Benedict Cumberbatch, Colin Firth, Mark Strong, Richard Madden, Andrew Scott, Daniel Mays, Adrian Scarborough, Jamie Parker, Nabhaan Rizwan, and Claire Duburcq joined the cast in supporting roles. [12] Writing [ edit] In August 2019, Mendes stated, "It's the story of a messenger who has a message to carry. And that's all I can say. It lodged with me as a child, this story or this fragment and obviously I've enlarged it significantly. But it has that at its core. " [13] In Time in 2020, Mendes stated that the writing involved some risk-taking: "I took a calculated gamble, and I'm pleased I did because of the energy you get just from driving forward (in the narrative), in a war that was fundamentally about paralysis and stasis. " The ideas for a script, which Mendes wrote with Krysty Wilson-Cairns, came from the story that Mendes's grandfather, Alfred Mendes, a native of Trinidad who was a messenger for the British on the Western Front, had told him. [14] Filming [ edit] Roger Deakins was cinematographer for the film, reuniting with Mendes for their fourth collaboration, having first worked together on Jarhead in 2005. [14] Filming was accomplished with long takes and elaborately choreographed moving camera shots to give the effect of one continuous take. [15] [16] Time reported, "The camera stays with the two lance corporals from the film's first frame to its last, as if unfolding in one long take, much like the technique used by Alejandro González Iñárritu in his 2015 Best Picture winner Birdman. The aim is to immerse the viewer in a propulsive, at times headlong journey that travels like a lit fuse. " [17] Filming began on 1 April 2019 and continued through June 2019 in Wiltshire, Hankley Common in Surrey and Govan, Scotland, as well as at Shepperton Studios. [18] [19] [20] [21] Concern was raised over the planned filming on Salisbury Plain by conservationists who felt the production could disturb potentially undiscovered remains, requesting a survey before any set construction began. [22] [23] Some shots required the use of as many as 500 background extras. [2] Sections of the film were also shot near Low Force, on the River Tees, Teesdale in June 2019. The production staff had to install signs warning walkers in the area not to be alarmed at the prosthetic bodies strewn around the site. [24] Release [ edit] The film premiered on 4 December 2019 at the 2019 Royal Film Performance. [25] The film began a limited release in the United States and Canada on 25 December 2019 in eleven venues. This made it eligible for 2020 awards, including the 77th Golden Globes, held on 5 January 2020, where the film won both the Golden Globe for Best Dramatic Motion Picture and Best Director for Mendes. Reception [ edit] Box office [ edit] As of 2 February 2020, 1917 has grossed $119. 2 million in the United States and Canada and $129. 8 million in other countries, for a worldwide total of $249 million. [4] [5] In the US, the film made $251, 000 from 11 venues on its first day of limited release. [26] It went on to have a limited opening weekend of $570, 000, and a five-day gross of $1 million, for an average of $91, 636 per-venue. [27] The film would go on to make a total of $2. 7 million over its 15 days of limited release. It then expanded wide on 10 January, making $14 million on its first day, including $3. 25 million from Thursday night previews. It went on to gross $36. 5 million for the weekend (beating the original projections of $25 million), becoming the first film to dethrone Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker at the box office. [28] In its second weekend of wide release the film made $22 million (and $26. 8 million over the four-day Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday), finishing second behind newcomer Bad Boys for Life. [29] It then made $15. 8 million the following weekend, remaining in second. [30] Critical response [ edit] On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 89% based on 388 reviews, with an average rating of 8. 4/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "Hard-hitting, immersive, and an impressive technical achievement, 1917 captures the trench warfare of World War I with raw, startling immediacy. " [31] Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 78 out of 100 based on 57 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [32] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale, and PostTrak reported it received an average 4. 5 out of 5 from viewers, with 69% of people saying they would definitely recommend it. [28] Several critics named the film among the best of 2019, including Kate Erbland of IndieWire [33] and Sheri Linden of The Hollywood Reporter. [34] Karl Vick, writing for Time magazine, found the film to stand up favourably when compared to Stanley Kubrick 's WWI film Paths of Glory, stating, "motion pictures do require a certain amount of motion, and the major accomplishment of 1917, the latest film to join the canon, maybe that its makers figured out what the generals could not: a way to advance. " [35] Rubin Safaya of described the movie as "A visceral experience and visual masterclass. " [36] Writing for the Hindustan Times, Rohan Naahar stated, "I can only imagine the effect 1917 will have on audiences that aren't familiar with the techniques Sam Mendes and Roger Deakins are about to unleash upon them. " [37] In his review for NPR, Justin Chang was less positive. He agreed the film was a "mind-boggling technical achievement" but did not think it was that spectacular overall, as Mendes’s style with its impression of a continuous take “can be as distracting as it is immersive. ” [38] Of the long takes, Manohla Dargis of The New York Times opined that "such demonstrative self-reflexivity might have been deployed to productive effect; here, it registers as grandstanding". [39] Richard Brody of The New Yorker stated that, "far from intensifying the experience of war, [they] trivialize it; the effect isn’t one of artistic imagination expanded by technique but of convention showily tweaked". [40] Top ten lists [ edit] 1917 appeared on many critics' year-end top-ten lists: [41] 1st – Sam Allard, Cleveland Scene [42] 1st – Johnny Oleksinski, New York Post [43] 1st – Tim Miller, Cape Cod Times [44] 1st – Lawrence Toppman, The Charlotte Observer [45] 1st – Mal Vincent, The Virginian-Pilot [46] 1st – Sandy Kenyon, WABC-TV [47] 2nd – Randy Myers, The Mercury News [48] 3rd – Matt Goldberg, Collider [49] 3rd – Jason Rantz, KTTH [50] 3rd – Mara Reinstein, Us Weekly [51] 3rd – Chuck Yarborough, Cleveland Plain Dealer [52] 4th – Lindsey Bahr, Associated Press [53] 4th – Benjamin Lee, The Guardian [54] 4th – Brian Truitt, USA Today [55] 5th – Staff consensus, Consequence of Sound [56] 5th – Bruce Miller, Sioux City Journal [57] 6th – Cary Darling, Houston Chronicle [58] 6th – Peter Travers, Rolling Stone [59] 6th – Ethan Alter, Marcus Errico and Kevin Polowy, Yahoo! Entertainment [60] 6th – Chris Bumbray, JoBlo [61] 6th – Peter Howell, Toronto Star [62] 7th – David Crow, Den of Geek [63] 7th – Tom Gliatto, People [64] 8th – Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter [65] 8th – Jeffrey M. Anderson, San Francisco Examiner [66] 8th – Anita Katz, San Francisco Examiner [66] 8th – Col Needham, IMDb [67] 9th – Richard Whittaker, The Austin Chronicle [68] 9th – Dann Gire, Chicago Daily Herald [69] 9th – Mike Scott, New Orleans Times-Picayune [70] 10th – Max Weiss, Baltimore Magazine [71] Accolades [ edit] 1917 received ten nominations at the 92nd Academy Awards. [72] It received three nominations at the 77th Golden Globe Awards and won two: for Best Motion Picture – Drama and Best Director. [73] It also received eight nominations at the 25th Critics' Choice Awards and nine nominations at the 73rd British Academy Film Awards. [74] [75] It was chosen by the National Board of Review and the American Film Institute as one of the top ten films of the year. [76] [77] See also [ edit] Dunkirk Real time References [ edit] ^ "1917". British Board of Film Classification. Archived from the original on 19 December 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2019. ^ a b Tatiana Siegel (26 December 2019). "Making of '1917': How Sam Mendes Filmed a "Ticking Clock Thriller " ". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 26 December 2019. Retrieved 26 December 2019. ^ Lang, Brent (10 January 2020). "Box Office: 1917 Picks Up Impressive $3. 2 Million in Previews, Kristen Stewart's Underwater Bombing". Variety. Archived from the original on 12 January 2020. Retrieved 12 January 2020. ^ a b "1917 (2019)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Archived from the original on 28 December 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2020. ^ a b "1917 (2019)". The Numbers. Retrieved 2 February 2020. ^ Simon, Scott (21 December 2019). " " It Was Part Of Me": Director Sam Mendes On The Family History In '1917 ' ".. Archived from the original on 25 December 2019. Retrieved 25 December 2019. ^ Jr, Mike Fleming (18 June 2018). "Amblin, Sam Mendes Set WWI Drama '1917' As His First Directing Effort Since James Bond Pics 'Spectre' & 'Skyfall ' ". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on 31 March 2019. Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ Zinski, Dan (5 September 2018). "Tom Holland In Talks To Star In Sam Mendes' WWI Drama 1917". ScreenRant. Archived from the original on 4 April 2019. Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ Marc, Christopher (24 October 2018). "Oscar-Winning 'Blade Runner 2049' Cinematographer Roger Deakins Might Reunite With Sam Mendes For WWI Movie '1917 ' ". Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ Jr, Mike Fleming (26 October 2018). "George MacKay, 'GOT's Dean-Charles Chapman In Talks For Leads In Sam Mendes WWI Pic '1917 ' ". Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ "Thomas Newman to Score Sam Mendes' '1917 ' ". Film Music Reporter. Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ Galuppo, Mia (28 March 2019). "Colin Firth, Benedict Cumberbatch Join Sam Mendes' WWI Movie '1917 ' ". Archived from the original on 28 March 2019. Retrieved 28 March 2019. ^ Moore, Matthew (7 August 2019). "Mendes epic is a personal battle". The Times (72, 919). p. 3. ISSN   0140-0460. ^ a b Karl Vick. Time magazine. "Escaping the Trench". January 20, 2020. Page 38-41. ^ Giardina, Carolyn (30 September 2019). "New Video Shows How Sam Mendes, Roger Deakins Shot '1917' to Appear as One Continuous Take". Archived from the original on 30 September 2019. Retrieved 30 September 2019. ^ Evangelista, Chris (30 September 2019). " ' 1917' Featurette Teases a War Epic Told in One Continuous Shot". Slash Film. Retrieved 30 September 2019. ^ Karl Vick. Page 38-41. ^ "Chance to star in Hollywood movie filming in Wiltshire". Spire FM. 4 January 2019. Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ "World War One film to begin production on Hankley Common". Eagle Radio. 18 February 2019. Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ Diamond, Claire (19 February 2019). "Spielberg movie wants to film in Glasgow". BBC News. Retrieved 7 April 2019 – via. ^ Marc, Christopher (11 December 2018). "EXCLUSIVE: Sam Mendes' '1917' Adds 'Skyfall/Blade Runner 2049' Production Designer and 'Atonement' Art Director – Confirmed To Shoot At Shepperton Studios". Archived from the original on 2 April 2019. Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ Pulver, Andrew (6 February 2019). "Spielberg and Mendes Stonehenge war film plans hit by locals' objections". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 April 2019. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (28 March 2019). "Sam Mendes' '1917' Nears Production: Mark Strong, Colin Firth, Benedict Cumberbatch & More Join Cast". Retrieved 28 March 2019. ^ Chapman, Hannah, ed. (26 June 2019). "Spielberg's new drama filmed in Teesdale warns of prosthetic bodies". The Northern Echo. p. 6. ISSN   2043-0442. Archived from the original on 15 January 2020. ^ Grater, Tom; Grater, Tom (29 October 2019). "Sam Mendes War Movie '1917' To World Premiere As UK Royal Charity Event". Archived from the original on 5 November 2019. Retrieved 21 November 2019. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (26 December 2019). " ' Rise Of Skywalker' Rings Up Second Best Christmas Ever With $32M+; 'Little Women' $6M+; 'Spies In Disguise' Near $5M". Retrieved 26 December 2019. ^ Ramos, Dino-Ray (29 December 2019). " ' 1917', 'Just Mercy' And 'Clemency' Open Strong In Limited Debuts Over Busy Holiday Weekend – Specialty Box Office". Archived from the original on 29 December 2019. Retrieved 29 December 2019. ^ a b D'Alessandro, Anthony (12 January 2020). " ' 1917' Strong With $36M+, But 'Like A Boss' & 'Just Mercy' Fighting Over 4th With $10M; Why Kristen Stewart's 'Underwater' Went Kerplunk With $6M+". Retrieved 12 January 2020. ^ Anthony D'Alessandro (19 January 2020). " ' Bad Boys For Life' So Great With $100M+ Worldwide; 'Dolittle' Still A Dud With $57M+ Global – Box Office Update". Archived from the original on 20 January 2020. Retrieved 20 January 2020. ^ Anthony D'Alessandro (24 January 2020). " ' Bad Boys For Life' & '1917' Shooting Past $100M; 'The Turning' Slammed With Second 'F' Of 2020 e". Archived from the original on 24 January 2020. Retrieved 26 January 2020. ^ "1917 (2020)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Archived from the original on 18 December 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2020. ^ "1917 Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 9 December 2019. Retrieved 22 January 2020. ^ Kohn, Eric; Thompson, Anne; Erbland, Kate; Ehrlich, David; Obenson, Tambay A. ; Blauvelt, Christian (11 December 2019). "The 15 Best Film Performances By Actors in 2019". Retrieved 10 January 2020. ^ "Awkwafina – Hollywood Reporter Film Critics Pick the 25 Best Performances of the Year". Archived from the original on 10 January 2020. Retrieved 10 January 2020. ^ "Review: '1917 ' ". AwardsWatch. 26 November 2019. Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2020. ^ "1917 movie review: Sam Mendes directs one of the best war movies of all time, will leave you stunned in your seat". hindustantimes. 17 January 2020. Archived from the original on 19 January 2020. Retrieved 20 January 2020. ^ Chang, Justin. " ' 1917' Is A Mind-Boggling Technological Achievement — But Not A Great Film". Fresh Air. NPR. Archived from the original on 18 January 2020. Retrieved 18 January 2020. ^ Dargis, Manohla (24 December 2019). " ' 1917' Review: Paths of Technical Glory". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 29 January 2020. Retrieved 30 January 2020. ^ Brody, Richard (7 January 2020). "The Beauty of Sam Mendes's "1917" Comes at a Cost". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 13 January 2020. Retrieved 30 January 2020. ^ "Best of 2019: Film Critic Top Ten Lists". Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ Allard, Sam. "The 10 Best Movies of 2019, According to Scene". Cleveland Scene. Archived from the original on 1 January 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ Oleksinski, Johnny; Stewart, Sara (27 December 2019). "The best movies of 2019 and the decade". Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ Miller, Tim. "Cinematic standouts: Tim Miller's top 10 for 2019".. Retrieved 10 January 2020. ^ Toppman, Lawrence (23 December 2019). "These are our picks for the top 10 movies from 2019 that are worth your time". The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ Vincent, Mal. "Mal Vincent's Top 10 movies of 2019".. Archived from the original on 3 January 2020. Retrieved 10 January 2020. ^ "Sandy Kenyon's 10 best movies of 2019". ABC7 New York. 27 December 2019. Archived from the original on 27 December 2019. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ Myers, Randy (18 December 2019). "The best 10 movies of 2019? Start with Terrence Malick". The Mercury News. Retrieved 22 December 2019. ^ Goldberg, Matt (9 December 2019). "Matt's Top 10 Films of 2019". Collider. Archived from the original on 10 December 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ Rantz, Jason (18 December 2019). "Rantz: The 10 best films of 2019". Retrieved 22 December 2019. ^ Reinstein, Mara (6 December 2019). "Top Movies of 2019: 'Hustlers, ' 'Avengers: Endgame' and More". US Weekly. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ Yarborough, Chuck (23 December 2019). " ' Rocketman, ' 'Tolkien, ' '1917' among year's best: Chuck Yarborough PD critics' picks 2019". Cleveland Plain Dealer. Archived from the original on 24 December 2019. Retrieved 24 December 2019. ^ " ' Once Upon a Time, ' 'Portrait' top AP's 2019 best films list". AP NEWS. 5 December 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ Lee, Benjamin. "The 50 best films of 2019 in the US: No 4 – 1917". Retrieved 22 December 2019. ^ Truitt, Brian. "The 10 best movies of 2019 definitively ranked, from 'Avengers: Endgame' to 'Jojo Rabbit ' ". USA TODAY. Archived from the original on 16 December 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ "Top 25 Films of 2019". 9 December 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ Miller, Bruce. "The Best Films of 2019: 'Hollywood, ' 'Marriage Story' and 'Parasite' top list". Sioux City Journal. Archived from the original on 23 December 2019. Retrieved 23 December 2019. ^ "Here are our 13 Best Movies of 2019". 23 December 2019. Retrieved 24 December 2019. ^ Travers, Peter (5 December 2019). "10 Best Movies of 2019". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 17 December 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ Alter, Ethan; Errico, Marcus; Polowy, Kevin. "The 25 best movies of 2019". Yahoo! Entertainment. Retrieved 22 December 2019. ^ "Top 10 Films of 2019 (Bumbray) | ".. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ "Peter Howell's Top 10 films of 2019: A year of unforgettable characters, despite abundant human frailty | The Star".. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ "10 Best Movies of 2019". Retrieved 24 December 2019. ^ "The 10 Best Movies of the Year, According to PEOPLE's Critic".. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ McCarthy, Todd. "Hollywood Reporter Critics Pick the Best Films of 2019". Archived from the original on 14 December 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ a b "2019: The best in film". The San Francisco Examiner. 31 December 2019. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ Needham, Col. "Col Needham's Best Movies of 2019". Retrieved 22 December 2019. ^ Whittaker, Richard (20 December 2019). "Richard Whittaker's Top 10 Films of 2019". Austin Chronicle. Archived from the original on 20 December 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2019. ^ Gire, Dann (28 December 2019). " ' Parasite, ' 'Little Women' and 'Marriage Story' lead list of 2019's best films". Daily Herald. Retrieved 3 January 2020. ^ writer, MIKE SCOTT | Contributing. "The best movies of 2019: Movie critic Mike Scott unveils his favorite films of the year".. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ magazine, Baltimore (13 December 2019). "My Favorite Films of 2019". Baltimore magazine. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ Rottenberg, Josh (13 January 2020). " ' Joker' tops this year's Oscar nominations, with '1917, ' 'Irishman, ' 'Once Upon a Time' close behind". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 13 January 2020. ^ Bisset, Jennifer (5 January 2020). "Golden Globes 2020: The full winners list". CNET. Archived from the original on 6 January 2020. Retrieved 9 January 2020. ^ Malkin, Marc (8 December 2019). "Critics' Choice: 'The Irishman, ' 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' Lead Movie Nominations". Retrieved 8 December 2019. ^ Ritman, Alex (6 January 2020). "BAFTA Nominations: 'Joker' Leads the Pack". Archived from the original on 7 January 2020. Retrieved 7 January 2020. ^ Lewis, Hilary (3 December 2019). " ' The Irishman' Named Best Film by National Board of Review". Archived from the original on 5 December 2019. Retrieved 4 December 2019. ^ "AFI AWARDS 2019 Honorees Announced". American Film Institute. Retrieved 4 December 2019. External links [ edit].

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∫No Sign Up Full Movie Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story

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Country - USA

2019

writer - Thaddeus D. Matula, Jacob Hamilton

Director - Jacob Hamilton

THEY SHOULD MAKE A MOVIE ABOUT THIS. CALLED JUMP SHOT. There is no God. Nothing to discuss there. Another sport, football the shape of the ball and the rules were adopted by the Americans it is all in the history books but the Americans tend to avoid the truth and claim that they invented when it comes to hockey the game and the rules were invented in Canada.

 

Full movie jump shot the kenny sailors story. Full Movie Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors storyid. Full Movie Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors story 3. It was invented in Canada. It was intended in Canada. Full Movie Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors story 7. This guy got the history wrong because first of all it was made in canada and second of all coloured people coudnt play basketball at that time.

I love this video for how short it was. This video pissed me off so I wrote an essay. naismith became an American citizen in 1925, 34 years after he invented the game. At least 10 of the students in the game were university students from Quebec. the idea that baseball was invented in the US is also a myth based off a 1838 baseball game in beachville, Ontario. This is agreed upon by John Thorne, the official historian for MLB. Finally, American football originated from two games between harvard university and Canadian McGill university in 1874. the first game was played using harvard's rules, which involved a round ball and was more like soccer. the second game was played using McGill's rules which used an oval ball. the Canadian rules introduced ' downs' and tackling to the game as well. Americans tend to cite a game that occurred a year later between harvard and yale as the start of American football, though the game was played using the Canadian rules. so there, Canada invented all your sports.

No way this guy is 91. Full movie jump shot 3a the kenny sailors story tv. Wow, what a great story. Better than watching cat video by far. Full Movie Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors story. Isint basketball invited in Canada. Naismith was canadian and born in started his peach basket idea at mcgill university in montreal canada. Everyone stop saying it was made in canada it was made in america but a canadian made it so its a american sport 🇱🇷🇱🇷🇱🇷🇱🇷. Inspiring video. Full movie jumpshot 3a the kenny sailors story explained.

Lol. This video was made to be purposely provocative in an effort to strip Canada of any credit for the development of the game. No wonder you only have 5k subscribes. You have zero credibility. Nice try. Tucker Carlson called. He wants the page you ripped out of his book back. Full Movie Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors story 4. Not informitive. I wonder if he ever thought about the fact that some people could actually jump as high as 10 feet with a basketball and slam the ball into the basket. I'm sure that wasn't his first intentions when he first made the sport. One of my all-time favorite people. A Wyoming hero and great ambassador to our state and our University.

It was not an American it was a Canadian just like superman it was a Canadian who created him. Full Movie Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors story 8. Was invented in CANADA NOT AMERICA. Full Movie Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors story 2. Do your research bro.


Reporter: Tommy Nichols
Resume: Creative Visionary & Media Consultant Founder Charlotte Black Film Festival, Executive Director PowerUp USA. Digital Apostle

 

 

 

4.2/ 5stars

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About The Author: Mister Ed

Info Go right to the source and ask the horse, he'll give you the answer that you'll endorse. He's always on a steady course. Talk to Mister Ed. #KAG #MAGA

 

writed by: H.G. Wells

Genre: Horror

year: 2020

The Invisible Man is a movie starring Elisabeth Moss, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, and Aldis Hodge. When Cecilia's abusive ex takes his own life and leaves her his fortune, she suspects his death was a hoax. As a series of coincidences

The invisible man movie 2014. The invisible man movie 2020 rating. The invisible man movie wiki. მე მქვია nähtamatu mees, მე ვარ 26 წელი წლის. ჩემი ზოდიაქოს ნიშანია - ქალწული. მე ვცხოვრობ Põltsamaa, ესტონეთი-ში. გაცნობის საიტზე მე დავრეგისტრირდი 28. 07. 2013 წელს. თუ ჩვენი შეხედულებები ემთხვევა, მაშინ თქვენ შეგიძლიათ მომწეროთ მე, გამიკეთოთ საჩუქარი ან დამპატიჟოთ პაემანზე. მე ვიცი ესტონური ენა. ჩემი მშობლიური ენა ესტონური.

 

The invisible man movie trailer 2020. Avaleht Ilukirjandus Nähtamatu Tõlkija: Ülo Poots Toimetaja: Ingrid Eylandt-Kuure Formaat: Pehme kaas Lehekülgi: 248 Kirjastus: Pegasus ISBN: 9789949681082 Ilmumisaeg: 2019-04 Mõõdud: 140mm x 210mm “Mind haaras võimas nägemus sellest, mida võiks tähendada nähtamatuks muutumine inimesele. Seda nägemust ei varjutanud ükski kahtlus. See tähendas salapärast jõudu, vabadust. Varjukülgi ma ei näinud. Kujutlege vaid! Ja mina, see armetu, puruvaene ning käsist-jalust seotud assistent, kes pidi provintsikolledžis tobusid õpetama, võisin äkki muutuda selleks. ” Kui müstiline mees, nimega Griffin, saabub ootamatult Inglismaa külakesse, ei aima keegi, et tegemist võiks olla teadlasega, kel õnnestus end nähtamatuks muuta. Tema uus olek pakub talle ohtralt võimu ja vabadust, millele teistel puudub juurdepääs. Ta jätkab palavikuliselt katsetustega, sihiks nähtamatuse varjus valitseda maailma ning hoida ümbritsevaid terrori abil hirmu all. Inglise kirjanik Herbert George Wells (1866–1946) oli üks neist, kelle teosed panid aluse ulmekirjandusele. Ülikoolis bioloogiat õppinud Wellsi romaane saatis ilmudes suur menu, neist tuntuimaks said “Ajamasin”, “Doktor Moreau saar”, “Nähtamatu”, “Maailmade sõda”, “Esimesed inimesed kuu peal” ja “Inimjumalad” on neljal korral esitatud Nobeli kirjandusauhinna nominendiks ning tema „Nähtamatu“ põhjal tehtud flmi saatis kogu maailmas tohutu edu. Samast kategooriast.

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The invisible man movie tamil. Nähtamatu mees Esmalt ilmus see järjejutuna perioodikaväljaandes "Pearson's Weekly" ning samal aastal ka raamatuna. Wellsi kaks eelmist teadusulmeromaani olid kirjutatud esimese isiku vaatepunktist (mina-vormis), kuid " Nähtamatu mees" on kirjutatud kolmandas isikus. Selle järgi on tehtud film " Nähtamatu mees" (1933). " Nähtamatu mees" on Herbert George Wellsi romaan 1897. aastast. Pealkiri viitab peategelasele Griffinile, kes on optikat uuriv teadlane ning püüab muuta inimkeha murdumisnäitajat õhu omaga sarnaseks, et keha ei neelaks ega peegeldaks valgust ja muutuks seetõttu nähtamatuks. Tal õnnestub selline muutus enda peal korda saata, kuid katsed uuesti nähtavaks saada ebaõnnestuvad. Nähtamatu mees (film) " Nähtamatu mees" (originaalpealkirjaga "The Invisible Man") on 1933. aasta USA õudusfilm. Nähtamatu gorilla test Selle teema uurimist on jätkanud näiteks J. Seegmiller koos kolleegidega ja leidnud, et need, kes ei märka videos gorillat, jäävad hätta ka ülesannetega, kus tuleb tähelepanu mitme asja vahel jagada. Inimene, kes ei märka midagi otse enda nina all, sest on parajasti keskendunud mingile muule tegevusele, on väiksema töömälu mahuga. See põhineb Herbert George Wellsi romaanil " Nähtamatu mees". Nähtamatu gorilla test on 1999. aastal psühholoogide Daniel Simonsi ja Christopher Chabris' kuulsaks saanud eksperiment, mille käigus lindistati video, kus inimesed loobivad palli. Videoklipi vaatajatel paluti valgetes särkides mängijate pallivisked üle lugeda. Ühel hetkel ilmub mängijate keskele gorillakostüümis inimene, kes taob paar korda vastu rinda ja seejärel lahkub kaadrist. Umbes pooled, kes eksperimentides seda videot on vaadanud, ei pane gorillat tähele. Daniel Simons ja Christopher Chabris said selle töö eest 2004. aastal ka Ig Nobeli auhinna. " Nähtamatu laps" ja teisi jutte "" Nähtamatu laps" ja teisi jutte" (rootsi keeles "Det osynliga barnet") on Tove Janssoni muumilugude seitsmes raamat, kirjutatud aastal 1962.

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The invisible man movie 2018 in hindi. Arabic Bulgarian Chinese Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Malagasy Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Thai Turkish Vietnamese sens a gent 's content definitions synonyms antonyms encyclopedia määratlus sünonüüm Webmaster Solution Alexandria A windows (pop-into) of information (full-content of Sensagent) triggered by double-clicking any word on your webpage. Give contextual explanation and translation from your sites! Try here   or   get the code SensagentBox With a SensagentBox, visitors to your site can access reliable information on over 5 million pages provided by Choose the design that fits your site. Business solution Improve your site content Add new content to your site from Sensagent by XML. Crawl products or adds Get XML access to reach the best products. Index images and define metadata Get XML access to fix the meaning of your metadata. Please, email us to describe your idea. Lettris Lettris is a curious tetris-clone game where all the bricks have the same square shape but different content. Each square carries a letter. To make squares disappear and save space for other squares you have to assemble English words (left, right, up, down) from the falling squares. boggle Boggle gives you 3 minutes to find as many words (3 letters or more) as you can in a grid of 16 letters. You can also try the grid of 16 letters. Letters must be adjacent and longer words score better. See if you can get into the grid Hall of Fame! English dictionary Main references Most English definitions are provided by WordNet. English thesaurus is mainly derived from The Integral Dictionary (TID). English Encyclopedia is licensed by Wikipedia (GNU). Translation Change the target language to find translations. Tips: browse the semantic fields (see From ideas to words) in two languages to learn more. 8919 online visitors computed in 0. 047s I would like to report: section: a spelling or a grammatical mistake an offensive content(racist, pornographic, injurious, etc. ) a copyright violation an error a missing statement other please precise: Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies. Find out more.

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The Invisible Man - by Qiy, February 27, 2020
7.6/ 10stars

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  1. Correspondent: Michael Burgett
  2. Bio: Follower of Jesus Christ trying to love God & others more, Sports nerd, Film & TV fan, Video game enthusiast, @screennerdspod, GIF aficionado, Romans 8:28

 

2019

story - Several years after his childhood friend, a violin prodigy, disappears on the eve of his first solo concert, an Englishman travels throughout Europe to find him

Genre - Drama

Clive Owen

countries - Canada, Hungary

duration - 1 h 53 Min

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The song of names synopsis. The song of names ost. Yes, this is a wonderful and memorable film. The director, Francois Girard, and, I suspect, the same Canadian production company were involved in the 1998 RED VIOLIN. Like that film it takes place over multiple time periods, in this film clearly stated to be 1951, 1986, and the earliest, unidentified time which can be inferred to be sometime between March and September 1939. The scene shifts back and forth a good deal and some critics found this confusing and destructive of continuity but I found no difficulty in following the story line. Memory is not linear and orderly but rather fragmented and out of sequence, particularly when dealing with highly charged emotionally traumatic experiences. This is an exceptionally intelligent screenplay where not everything has to be spelled out. It's true that a key plot point mystery is fairly predictable. Yet the story builds to a wrenching climax in a way you don't see every day in the movies.
Tim Roth plays well against type as a quiet, introspective Brit. The score composer, Howard Shore, was involved in composing the impressive music in the Lord of the Rings and does an award-deserving job here. I rate the film at 3.5/4 stars. Strongly recommended for everybody, especially any serious music student as well as anyone of Jewish background, particularly of GenX through to Millennials.

 

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The song of names full movie. This is the most weight Johnny depp has ever had and he looks so good. The song of names cast. The song of names howard shore. ‘Our Time hook up gone bad. Kramer - My name's Cosmo. I wanted the movie to start with Maverick flying a cargo plane full of rubber dog shit out of Hong Kong. The song of names ending. The song of names film. The Song of names new. Can Daniel keep his look like this ARGHH HES CUTE. The song of names trailer. The song of names plot. The song of names book. The song of names violin. Mr. rogers isnt dead, hes just in a new neighborhood.

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The song of names where to watch. The song of names movie trailer. Another masterpiece eagerly waiting for this ❤️from England. Mr. Rogers. One of the last, kind and gentle souls who taught children that boys don't have to grow up to be vile, brute beasts to be real men. God bless you sir. They finally made Battle Tendency live action. Hey remember Encino Man from 30 years ago? Lets do that but sad. Who is here in October? 2019 I think is only me... The song of names 2019. Good movie. Looks like another classy and emotional rollercoaster. Definitely will see this 😊👍. If I told you this was only gonna hurt If I warned you that the fire's gonna burn Would you walk in? Would you let me do it first? Do it all in the name of love Would you let me lead you even when you're blind? In the darkness, in the middle of the night In the silence, when there's no one by your side Would you call in the name of love? In the name of love, name of love In the name of love, name of love In the name of, in the name, name In the name, name If I told you we could bathe in all the lights Would you rise up, come and meet me in the sky? Would you trust me when you're jumping from the heights? Would you fall in the name of love? When there's madness, when there's poison in your head When the sadness leaves you broken in your bed I will hold you in the depths of your despair And it's all in the name of love In the name of love, name of love In the name of love, name of love In the name of, in the name, name In the name, name I wanna testify Scream in the holy light You bring me back to life And it's all in the name of love I wanna testify Scream in the holy light You bring me back to life And it's all in the name of love In the name of love, name of love In the name of love, name of love In the name of, in the name, name In the name, name, in the name of In the name, name, in the name of.

Crying just watching. Makes me hate DCF even more watching this. The world doesn't need you! YES! I must see this. William Fichtner directed this, and it looks great. Im dying to see this, I remember the streets being full of men and women coming and going to the mills. Everyone should cut this movie some slack! It was made by just 3 people with no backup or budget. Been following its making for 5 years and it's amazing to see it doing well. I get it might not be for you but don't hate on folks just trying to follow their dream. I for one am looking forward to a stripped-back movie that actually tries to tell an actual story than just distracting with vfx and explosions. The song of names tiff. This Black Widow prequel looks intense. The song of names movie review. The song of names showtimes near me.

The Song of namespaces in xml. The song of names spoiler. She gave me waaataahhh. The Song of names and numbers. „You‘ll need to marry well“ „But you arent married aunt- „Well, that‘s because I‘m rich“ Haha I love it already🥰. The song of names novel. The song of names ray chen. The song of names - imdb movie. The song of names for violin and cantor. The song of names movie. The song of names soundtrack. Can we appreciate the fact theyre using actual fighter jets and not some CGI crap.

He's so adorable. F.F.F-b eazy In The Name Of Love-barrix Hhhmmmm who is next one like one new ship l v. The song of names 2013. The song of names song. Adam better win all of the awards for this. The Song of namespace. Quem e do Brasil. e ta escutando em 2020... The song of names clip.

 

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The Song of Names