Of course not. That’s how people get hurt.
Although sometimes that happened when you listen to the voices too.
Of course not. That’s how people get hurt.
Although sometimes that happened when you listen to the voices too.
I love how Hauer puts on his war paint.
Never be afraid to ask. No one loses geek cred 'round here.
Rutger was made for his role in Lady Hawke. d:
Harrison Ford plays beat-up really well.
Lol. Now, I wanna see that again.
Stigmata time.
Wait til you see The Fugitive. d:
(He was really hurt and limping.)
Not seen it. Need to.
True. They gain geek demerits instead.
We’re amazingly still well synced for watching different versions.
“That’s the spirit.”
Said that in a fight, once. Actually a few times. Really freaks the other person out.
I wasn’t quoting this movie, though.
That is frakkin weird.
Love Hauer in the rain as Harrison climbs to the rooftop. What a wonderful performance!
The vampire Lestat in Interview with the Vampire was actually written with him in mind, but it took so long for the movie to get made that he was too old for the part.
Check this out:
Philip K. Dick first came up with the idea for his novel ‘Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?’ in 1962, when researching ‘The Man in the High Castle’ which deals with the Nazis conquering the planet in the 1940s. Dick had been granted access to archived World War II Gestapo documents in the University of California at Berkley, and had come across diaries written by S.S. men stationed in Poland, which he found almost unreadable in their casual cruelty and lack of human empathy. One sentence in particular troubled him: “We are kept awake at night by the cries of starving children.” Dick was so horrified by this sentence that he reasoned there was obviously something wrong with the man who wrote it. This led him to hypothesize that Nazism in general was a defective group mind, a mind so emotionally flawed that the word human could not be applied to them; their lack of empathy was so pronounced that Dick reasoned they couldn’t be referred to as human beings, even though their outward appearance seemed to indicate that they were human. The novel sprang from this.
He would have been perfect.
The dove gets me. So touching.
Oh, he’s actually hurting him with the nail as he saved him. Missed that.
If I remember correctly the reason it is always dark and rainy is because of the heavy amount of pollution in the air. And only the rich who live in the upper levels of the giant pyramid builds get to escape it, while the poor citizens have to suffer the constant downpour down lower where the weather is actually different.
Oh, Taunhausser gate was in Homeworld (PC game)…