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shehaditcoming

Where I collect everything I love about film.

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843

843 notes | 3 weeks ago

(via robynmarian)

10 notes | 3 weeks ago

criterioncast:

Check out Sam Smith’s latest design work for some Wes Anderson prints for the Castro Theater and Spoke Art.

10 notes | 3 weeks ago

109

strangewood:

“Some years ago I was asked, ‘When you were a kid what did you want to be when you grew up?’ Back then I thought the answer I gave was funny. I said, “Saul Bass.” It was no joke.”
Saul Bass (May 8, 1920 – April 25, 1996)
109 notes | 3 weeks ago

525

life:

Happy 100th, Paramount Pictures.
On the 100th anniversary of the founding of Paramount Pictures, we present a series of photos capturing both the faded magic and the undeniable appeal of a uniquely self-absorbed industry: the movies.
Original caption from LIFE: The scene of countless cowboy shoot-outs, a phony Western town drowses beneath a painted sky on the Paramount back lot. (Henry Groskinsky—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)
See more here.
525 notes | 3 weeks ago

strangewood:

Saul Bass: The Origins of the Vertiginous Forms in Vertigo

I was browsing through the remainder bin in a Third Avenue bookshop. I leafed through a book and was stunned by some beautiful images. They were by Lissajous, a French mathematician of the late 1800s.

From a Swiss scientist’s later description of these images and how they were made, I was able to reconstruct a device used by Lissajous to create them. It consisted of a recording pendulum with an attached and smaller free-swinging eccentric pendulum which introduced variables into the motion of the recording pendulum. The recording device was a tiny brush with an ink reservoir and a stop cock regulator. Very tricky to operate. But when it worked the images were extraordinary. Watching them grow as the pendulum swung, not knowing what their final form would be, was a magical experience. I made a batch. Sat on them for years. And then Hitchcock asked me to work on “Vertigo.” Click!

I did not invent them, they had already existed, but were not fully recognized for their aesthetic potential since they were mainly seen as scientific expressions. You could say I was obsessed with them for a while — that I had fallen in love with them — so I knew what Hitch was driving at. [x]

256 notes | 3 weeks ago

1055

verdantmug:

‎”Oh please don’t go. We love you so. We’ll eat you up.”
1,055 notes | 3 weeks ago

219

danielpwnz:

The Tree of Life (2011) - Fake Criterion
219 notes | 3 weeks ago

3550

fuckyeahdirectors:

Peter Jackson on the set of Braindead (1992)
3,550 notes | 3 weeks ago

922

922 notes | 4 weeks ago

252

Only one is a wanderer; two together are always going somewhere.

—Vertigo (1958, dir. Alfred Hitchcock)
252 notes | 4 weeks ago

(Source: midmarauder, via fakecriterions)

58 notes | 1 month ago

92

strangewood:

French poster for Play It Again, Sam.
92 notes | 1 month ago

7

celluloidshadows:

Movie poster for the 1988 film “Action Jackson” starring Carl Weathers, Craig T. Nelson and Vanity. Click the pic to watch a scene from the movie.
7 notes | 1 month ago

111

celluloidshadows:

Director Alan J. Pakula with actor Robert Redford on the set of the 1976 film “All The President’s Men”. Click the pic to watch a featurette on the making of the movie.
111 notes | 1 month ago