zenawhite

May 30
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
May 28

yep yep yep

May 22

I HEART PETER SERAFINOWICZ

Padwan learners and Reggie Watts driving a spaceship. absolute genius. I swear the director cameos as one of the hooded dancer knight people… remember Duane from Spaced?

May 22

Here We Go Magic. yep yep. 

May 22

I promise…

not to neglect my tumblr. 

Mar 11

Visitors Tunnel @ JVA Prison in Dusseldorf →

reblogged from This Is Collossal

Mar 11

Visitors Tunnel @ JVA Prison in Dusseldorf →

Visitors Tunnel at the JVA/Prison in Düsseldorf by Markus Linnenbrink prisons painting murals interior design art

reblogged from This Is Collossal

Feb 13
Feb 13
waxandmilk:

“In 1971 I wrote and shot a scene for Annie Hall involving the Knicks and Earl The Pearl. I was extolling the concept of the physical over the cerebral, so I wrote a fantasy basketball game in which all the great thinkers of history – Kant and Nietzsche and Kirkegaard – played against the Knicks. I cast actors who looked like those philosophers to play those roles and they played against the real Knicks. We used the players on the team at that time including Earl, Bill Bradley and Walt Frazier, and we shot it inside Madison Square Garden after the last game of the season. Of course the Knicks were smooth and beat the philosophers easily; all their cerebration was impotent against the Knicks. But I cut the scene from the picture, not because it didn’t come out but because I had to keep the picture moving and it was too much of a digression. It didn’t break my heart not to use it in the film. I always feel that anything I cut out of a film is always a mercy killing.”
— Woody Allen, The Observer Sport Monthly
via the always regaling breadcity

waxandmilk:

“In 1971 I wrote and shot a scene for Annie Hall involving the Knicks and Earl The Pearl. I was extolling the concept of the physical over the cerebral, so I wrote a fantasy basketball game in which all the great thinkers of history – Kant and Nietzsche and Kirkegaard – played against the Knicks. I cast actors who looked like those philosophers to play those roles and they played against the real Knicks. We used the players on the team at that time including Earl, Bill Bradley and Walt Frazier, and we shot it inside Madison Square Garden after the last game of the season. Of course the Knicks were smooth and beat the philosophers easily; all their cerebration was impotent against the Knicks. But I cut the scene from the picture, not because it didn’t come out but because I had to keep the picture moving and it was too much of a digression. It didn’t break my heart not to use it in the film. I always feel that anything I cut out of a film is always a mercy killing.”

— Woody Allen, The Observer Sport Monthly

via the always regaling breadcity

Feb 12