When I was a kid, somewhere around 15, my first horror movie, like actual movie that made me scared, was The Messengers.
My second one was Mirrors.
I didn’t sleep much that weekend. The bathtub scene in Mirrors had me scared shitless.
I think for me personally the worst part in that scene isn’t watching what happens, or seeing the gory aftermath. It’s the fear in the woman’s eyes because she realizes what’s happening and she is completely powerless to stop it. She feels it all and she can’t do a damn thing to make it stop; all she can do is sit there and scream as it happens. And then she’s dead. I think that kind of fear, of watching the inevitable approach and not being able to stop it even though you know it means your doom, is one of the most intense kinds. At least, for me it is.
So, yeah. After watching that movie, my friends and I couldn’t go to the bathroom without a bathroom buddy and a towel over the mirror. Ah, memories🥰💜
10 notes
·
View notes
there are no mirrors in barbie land, not in the beginning or in scenes when we see the car mirrors, which means the barbies don’t really know what they look like. barbie responds to a compliment with “thank you, i feel beautiful” and whenever else she’s talking about her appearance, it’s just about how she feels.
we can see her change in appearance, but her view of how she looks is through the way she feels she looks
13K notes
·
View notes
some william pictures (costest + fnaf movie day)
every bowl of popcorn is personalized
2K notes
·
View notes
I find it incredibly funny seeing some fans complain that the movie wasn't "lore accurate" as if FNAF has ever been consistent with its lore, like
Wow, the movie changes a lot of stuff and is not accurate to what we thought we knew? *looks at The Silver Eyes trilogy* I can't believe that, how horrible *looks at The Silver Eyes trilogy* Who would've thought they'd change stuff that makes us doubt what we know about the series *looks at the fourth fucking closet*
1K notes
·
View notes
Fred Astaire in his studio, photographed by John Engstead, 1955
153 notes
·
View notes
glass onion demonstrates how great satire often seems prophetic since it draws on what’s plain to see in the present. fake-elon Miles Bron waters a crowd of sycophants to do his bidding, throws money around until smarter people turn his idiotic ideas into something workable; worse-elon bought twitter in what looked like a childish fit of pique, grand proclamations to finally rid the platform of bots and meanies*. but that can’t be what’s going on right? theres gotta be something we’re not seeing, no one would make such nonsensical, expensive, dangerous decisions just for notoriety. there’s gotta be some master plan. but no, glass onion says (way back in 2021!), the center is clear. to see it, you just need to accept that he really is that fucking stupid.
2K notes
·
View notes
Absolutely in love with the idea of movie shadow , and movie sonic mirroring each other in almost every way, instead of contrasting the other. Shadow being the most extreme version of Sonic, someone who once had the same dreams and beliefs, but lost everything, and lost the ability to keep his hopes and dreams alive. Sonic being the most light version of shadow, someone who kept his dreams and hopes alive , despite the loses, he still has everything. I hope in Sonic 3, Sonic and shadow have to fight the crushing weight knowing the they could’ve been each other.
223 notes
·
View notes