Sharing one of my favorite Jonghyun clips, since it's been a long time since I've seen it subtitled and in good quality. This is from when he was a contestant on Immortal Songs 2 in 2011. For his last performance on the show, he decided to cover "Left-Handed" by Panic in his own unique style. The results are—well, you'll see. Nothing about it is boring.
I feel like I talk about this clip a lot, both because it was one of the first performances I saw from Jonghyun, and because it represents so many of the things that he was (and still is) to me: dorky, brave, and stubbornly committed to being himself—a genuine iconoclast in an industry that does everything it can to hammer out non-conformity.
One must wonder how Yuding Zhenren feels during the events of Lotus Lantern...
[ID: A monochrome purple comic. In the first panel is Yuding Zhenren from the shoulders up, resting his head on his hand while reclining and looking up with a cold, angry expression, saying "Yang Jian." In the second panel is Erlang Shen from the shoulders up, looking down at Yuding Zhenren with a detached expression, responding "Shifu." The third panel zooms out to show Yuding Zhenren reclining on a mat while looking up at Erlang Shen, who is standing a few feet away. Yuding Zhenren says, "My... How you've grown." Yuding Zhenren and Erlang Shen both cast reflections on the pond beside them. While Yuding Zhenren's reflection looks largely unchanged, where Erlang's reflection should be, are the image of him and his sister as kids, crying and kneeling in front of Yuding Zhenren. End ID]
Roman Triumvir Mark Antony’s physical appearance is described like that of Hercules by the ancient sources. I firmly believe that Henry Cavill is the best actor for portraying Antony in a film or TV series based on his life ❤️
Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing shares a ~joke~ with David Coulthard as they take part in a public questions and answers session while visiting the Nissan Global Headquarters
October 10, 2011 - Yokohama, Japan
Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images
I just watched Immortals (2011) and I have to say it made me feel kinda relieved that Troy let out the gods given the path it took.
Henry's Theseus is the same sort of anacronical agnostic hero that we see in Brad's portrayal of Achilles, but with the film incluiding the gods that position feels even more out of place.
Unlike Troy, Immortals is a fantasy film, so why going that path?
Hearing Zeus speaking of free will and some oath of not getting in the paths of mortals sounds way worse than not seeing gods at all.