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Last Thursday I performed some of my original haikus. I hope they make you laugh! Please let me know what you think.

VIEW 3 of 3 COMMENTS
jacinto2:
I'll let you know about my tragedy debut.
deadguitarist:
Awesome sauce!
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@crismaire tagged me and he was tagged by @ainoa I could write an entire blog on how much I love each of these movies. Each one has an incredible cast, soundtrack, script, director, and so much more. They are all funny, intense, full of sex, have lots of action, and very weird. Everything I look for in a movie. Thanks for tagging me @crismaire!

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VIEW 12 of 12 COMMENTS
avrora:
as a big Tarantino fan, I love the choice!
dashwood_one:
Hello, beautiful lady - I'm always tempted when someone asks about movies. I have watched far too many in my lifetime, and a lot of them over, and over again. Cutting it down to three is difficult, but here goes: 1] 'Jaws'. This is a movie, that I have watched literally hundreds of times. If it is on TV, I have an odd compulsion to sit down and watch it to the end. I don't know why, but I do - and I still get the same pleasure from it as I did when I first saw it, in a traditional 'fleapit' cinema, in 1976 [I was 13, and only got in because I knew the bloke on the door]. [2] 'Quatermass And The Pit' [US: 'Five Million Years To Earth']. First watched on TV, it really got me thinking, big ideas that a horror movie shouldn't set off - and, over the years, repeated viewings still thrill, and disturb; it's very tame compared to today's fast edited hack 'n' slash offerings [it was made in 1967, from a 1959 BBC TV serial], but the ideas behind it are big and disturbing, and it is seriously creepy for most of it's length. I saw a new print of it in my local cinema, a few years back, and it was simply astonishing - a DVD on a large HD TV doesn't even come close. [3] 'Theatre Of Blood'. As I couldn't really have a list that didn't feature my all-time favourite filmstar, Vincent Price, I went for this, one of the blackest of all black comedies, from 1973. His 'Doctor Phibes' movies are great - but this is better. Price plays the embittered [and presumed dead] barnstorming actor Edward Lionheart, who hacks his way through the theatre critics who [rightfully, as Lionheart is a dreadful ham], ignored his performances, and gave him terrible reviews. All the deaths are ones featured in the plays of Shakespeare, altered for the modern age. Some killings are amusing: some are properly nasty. I love Price's performance here - there is a sense of glee in everything he does in this movie. Again, I have watched this far too many times, but it still makes me happy.
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VIEW 3 of 3 COMMENTS
agent_easy:
Awesome indeed
cripplethreat:
@lewdreck @agent_easy It's fucking incredible!