![thedailywhat:
Cannot Be Unseen of the Day: Screw Hitler — if I ever get hold of a time machine I’m going back to 1986 and making damn sure this movie gets produced.
[via.]](http://18.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_ktbgn23uSa1qzpwi0o1_400.gif)
Cannot Be Unseen of the Day: Screw Hitler — if I ever get hold of a time machine I’m going back to 1986 and making damn sure this movie gets produced.
[via.]
Reblogged from The Daily What.
November 24, 2009, 12:12am
![thedailywhat:
Cannot Be Unseen of the Day: Screw Hitler — if I ever get hold of a time machine I’m going back to 1986 and making damn sure this movie gets produced.
[via.]](http://18.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_ktbgn23uSa1qzpwi0o1_400.gif)
Cannot Be Unseen of the Day: Screw Hitler — if I ever get hold of a time machine I’m going back to 1986 and making damn sure this movie gets produced.
[via.]
November 24, 2009, 12:12am
A fart
Intestinal gas (red, lower left) being expelled from the body. The gas shows up as red because it has recently been at body temperature, which is warmer than the surroundings. Picture: THIERRY BERROD, MONA LISA PRODUCTION/ SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY. via telegraph uk
November 23, 2009, 11:54pm
“This is an experimental film made up of over 35,000 photographs. It combines an innovative mix of stop motion and live projection mapping techniques.”
November 10, 2009, 4:19pm
Hecq Vs Exillion - Spheres Of Fury
Great mood…
Tim Brown (Colonel Blimp) & Christopher Hewitt (Knucklehead) team up for the the new release from Hecq Vs Exillion. Titled “Spheres Of Fury”
October 30, 2009, 5:31pm
Vladislav Delay - Toive (taken from Tummaa, 2009)
vladislavdelay.com
myspace.com/vladislavdelaymusic
theleaflabel.com/vladislavdelay
October 30, 2009, 4:27pm
via boingboing
Bradley Novicoff of Dangerous Minds writes about Collapse, a new documentary by Chris Smith (American Movie, The Yes Men) about impending global doom, which Variety called “an intellectual horror movie” that’s “unnervingly persuasive much of the time, and merely riveting when it’s not.”
From Apple’s Trailer site:
Americans generally like to hear good news. They like to believe that a new President will right old wrongs, that clean energy will replace dirty oil, and that fresh thinking will set the economy straight. American pundits tend to restrain their pessimism and to hope for the best. But is anyone prepared for the worst? Michael Ruppert is a different kind of American. He predicted the current financial crisis in his self-published newsletter “From the Wilderness” at a time when most Wall Street and Washington analysts were still in denial.Sitting in a room that looks like a bunker, Ruppert recounts his career as a radical thinker and spells out the crises he sees ahead. He draws upon the same news reports and data available to any Internet user, but he applies a unique interpretation. He is especially passionate over the issue of “peak oil,” the concern raised by scientists since the 1970s that the world will eventually run out of fossil fuel. While other experts debate this issue in measured tones, Ruppert doesn’t hold back at sounding an alarm. He portrays a future that resembles apocalyptic science fiction. Listening to his rapid flow of opinions, the viewer is likely to question some of the rhetoric as paranoid or deluded; and to sway back and forth on what to make of the extremism. Smith lets viewers form their own judgments.
October 29, 2009, 3:44am