day 136/548 of hobi's military service
this selca was posted on 140517, the day of a fansign in hoseok's hometown Gwangju, with the caption:
This is a bonus >~<
(trans cr: Denise @ bts-trans)


#iwtv#interview with the vampire#the vampire armand#assad zaman


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day 136/548 of hobi's military service
this selca was posted on 140517, the day of a fansign in hoseok's hometown Gwangju, with the caption:
This is a bonus >~<
(trans cr: Denise @ bts-trans)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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ā May 16th, 2014
(7 years ago today)
ģė ķģøģ¬ ģź°ė°ģ¬ 민ķ¼ėė ģ“ģ¬ķ ė ¹ģė°ėģ¤ģ“ģ!! ė¬“ģØ ź³”ģ¼ź¹...?? źø°ėėģ£ ?? ė£ź³ ģØģģ§ė(ā„āā¤)/
Hello itās Suga. MinPDās currently really hard at work-syub!! What song could it beā¦?? Youāre looking forward to it right?? Who vhwannts to lisshyun(ā„āā¤)/
Gary M. Kramermay,Ā 14th May 2016Ā
āHigh-Riseā is director Ben Wheatleyās dizzying, savage adaptation of J.G. Ballardās dazzling, savage novel. Amy Jump, who is Wheatleyās wife, penned the screenplay. The story concerns a physiologist, Dr. Robert Laing (Tom Hiddleston), who moves into a modern apartment complexācomplete with swimming pools, supermarkets and other amenitiesāand watches society break down completely. The high-rise is, of course, a metaphor for class inequality, with Richard Wilder (Luke Evans), a documentary filmmaker and shit-stirrer living on one of the low floors, challenging the status quo of Anthony Royal (Jeremy Irons), the buildingās designer, who lives in the penthouse. Laing, who lives on a middle floor, watches the devolution and subsequent revolution with a cool detachment--that is, until his hand is forced and he must act to survive. (Read Andrew O'Hehir's Salon review.)
Wheatley delivers the goods in āHigh-Riseā with real panache, vividly depicting the violence, orgies and other bad behavior. Hiddleston, currently starring in the impressive TV miniseries āThe Night Manager,ā and Wheatley had tea with Salon in a New York hotel room to discuss their film, shooting orgies, and how they would fare with the end of the world.
Tom, on screen, youāve lived in a converted barn in Tuscany in āUnrelated,ā a stately mansion in āCrimson Peak,ā and now in a modern apartment complex in āHigh-Rise.ā If a manās home is his castle, where are you most comfortable?
Hiddleston: I like my house in London, to be honest. I donāt want to reveal too much, but itās an old artistās studio from the mid-19th century. There have been extensions, but it is, essentially, a bungalow. My feet are on the ground. Iāve got a little outside space, and it suits me just fine.
What about you, Ben?
Wheatley: I live in a house.
Hiddleston: A lovely house.
Wheatley: We had a little house, and now we have a bigger house. If I swing a cat around, it doesnāt hit the walls or the floor or the windows.
Tom, youāve appeared in several class-based stories, from Joanna Hoggās films āUnrelatedā and āArchipelagoā to āHigh-Rise.ā What appeals to you about these kinds of characters?
Hiddleston: I hope I havenāt been typecast. The Hogg films are depictions of human life that she recognizesā¦
Wheatley: The Joanna Hogg roles are very different from each other and the Laing role.
Hiddleston: The one thing that I think unites these three characters isā¦
Wheatley [interrupting]: Height! [Hiddleston and Wheatley burst out laughing].
Hiddleston: They all look like meā¦
Wheatley: Itās uncanny! [Laughter continues]
Hiddleston [getting serious again]: They seem like one thing on the surface, and there is something else going on beneath it.
Wheatley: Thatās definitely what attracted Amy and me to work with Tom. He has a sense of control and then he has a sense of something else bubbling below the surface, trying to capture those emotions. Heās like that as Loki.
Hiddleston: Thatās probably who I am. I donāt know anyone who isnāt like that. Thatās my, perhapsāand itās not a clean readingāmy experience. We are all so complex and contradictory. We try to put our best foot forward and, quite often, behind closed doors is something much more chaotic and turbulent and vulnerable. Thereās that phrase that everyone you meet is fighting a battle you donāt know about.
Wheatley: Thatās a good one. Whereās that from?
Hiddleston: I canāt remember. I donāt know. From somewhere. But itās true! Iām not sure whether itās about the size of our society now. My sister [studied] social anthropology at college and she did a paper about this. We still havenāt evolved beyond really being able to associate with more than about 100 people. As evolutionary beings, weāre still made to know about 100 people. As the numbers get bigger, the more dissociated and detached we become from everybody else. In order to make sense of the world, psychologically, itās easier to objectify people and say, āYou are that.ā People are defined by their job, or their physical appearance, or their zip code. And it is easier on the braināand I suppose what Iām saying is that if you acknowledge each of those individual faces in a crowd is unique, then each character is going to have its unique complexity and turbulence, and thatās what I find interesting about being an actor. [Hiddleston flips his hand in the air in a triumphant gesture. Wheatley appreciates it with a raucous cheer.]
Ben, how do you approach a tricky text like the Ballard novel and capture the spirit of it on screen?
Wheatley: Well, Iāll tell you how itās done. You get a really, really brilliant person to write the script. Amy Jump did it. To be clear, I had no hand in the writing of the script. The clichĆ© of how a director interacts with a screenwriter, stalking around the room in a smoking jacket, ripping pages from the novel, and indicating āPut this in!āāitās not like that. Our relationship is completely separate. She took the book away and came back with a fully formed script. That was it. That was the script that we made.
What can you say about your vision for the film? How did you imagine it from the book?
Wheatley: My job was adapting the screenplay. The script is a very clever adaptation of the book, but there are other things going on in it. Itās talking about Amyās and my 1970s childhood, and our relationship with that generation. It comes [together] in baby steps. There are elements that are practical, like the whole idea that the characters are talking from balcony to balcony. That dictates the shape of the building. It took me a while to work it out. I stayed in an apartment with balconies. When there was a description in the book that the tower is like a hand and the palm is the lake, I thought: thatās what it is. When you see the bend on the fingers, thatās where we are going to put these tiered balconies. I had a lot of conversations with Mark Tildesley, the production designer, who came up with a way to unify the whole space. We were worried that the swimming pool and the supermarket and other disparate places would feel like they were in different locations from the tower, and that would throw the audience. Mark came up with the idea of this motif to bring everything together with a triangular pillar, and built that into every set. I liked that it impinged on the humans. Itās not a nice shape. You get the feeling of weightāthe whole building is weighed down on everybody. That helps.
Letās talk about the end of the worldā¦
Hiddleston: A great subject!
Laing is organized, proficient, disciplined. Yet at the start of āHigh-Riseā he is seen being barbaric. He adapts, as necessary, to the bizarre. What are your survival skills, and how would you fare with the breakdown of society? Are you more likely to be assertive (as Wilder is) or be invisible (as Laing tries to be)?
Wheatley: Itās happening, isnāt it? Weāre already in it. I always love that in my relationship with Amy, sheās the one whoās ready to be called straight to arms. Whereas I get stunned easily in stressful situations, so I would be quite useless.
Yes, my spouse says if a dirty bomb were to go off, heād go outside and inhale deeply. I, however, would try to stay alive, even if it kills me!
Wheatley: Iāve had a similar thing. I always think in the moment, Iād become the man. And come the moment, the man doesnāt turn up. My inner coward would manifest itself.
Tom, how do you think you would you react?
Hiddleston: I think Iāve spent my whole acting career answering that question. The truth is, I donāt know. How could I know?
Wheatley: Youāre very good at running, though⦠you could probably remove yourself from any situation and be five miles away before it kicked off.
Hiddleston: Thanks, Iāll take that.
Suddenly, Ben notices something unusual going on outside. The interview stops for a moment. We all look out the window where jet planes are skywriting. [āFACT CHECK ARMENIA,ā the text reads when completed]
Hiddleston [astonished]: Iāve never seen anything like that in my life! Does that routinely happen in New York?
Wheatley: My brainās on fireā¦What is that?!⦠Itās like a bubble jet printer for the sky!
Hiddleston [incredulous]: Gary, Is this the end of the world? [Laughter, and then the interview resumes again in earnest]
Hiddleston: Drama is what happens to human beings in extreme situations. That is why weāre fascinated by it. Thatās why everybody flocks to films about the apocalypse, thatās why people love zombie movies. Thatās why people are moved by superhero movies. Thatās why everyone sees āThe Revenant.ā They are asking: What would I do in that situation? And the truth is that none of us know. We would like to believe that we would make noble, courageous decisions, but you donāt know until it happens, I suppose, the choices you would make. Would I be someone who is crippled by fear? Would I be too brave, too soon, and therefore disadvantage myself? I remember watching āAliveā and being so interested by this true story where certain people emerged from the group and were tougher than others.
Wheatley: I think the story of being brave is a fabrication. On a moment-by-moment basis, you get tested again and again. When you read about the Second World War, these guys are confronting stuff again and again and again, itās not just surviving one thing. But within that behavior, you can have days where youāre terribly afraid, and days when youāre not. I think that is probably closer to it. You donāt always behave extremely well, but sometimes you do.
Hiddleston: One of the first parts I ever played was in a play called āJourneyās End,ā about a company of officers in a trench in 1918, and they all deal with the horror of the First World War in a completely different way. A schoolmaster retells the story of āAlice in Wonderland,ā because it makes him feel comfortable. Somebody else complains about the food; the next tries to skive off sick with neuralgia; and the soldier I play, who is intensely brave in battle but is deeply, deeply damaged, and gets himself to sleep with a bottle of whisky every night. And I remember I was 18 years old when I played this part, and I had no frame of reference to draw on. I was the right age, and had I been there 100 years ago, I wonder which guy I would be?
Laing seems somewhat afraid of having an emotional connection. Can you discuss that aspect of his character?
Hiddleston: Thatās the interesting challenge to me, presented by the book. Ballard deliberately chose Laingās profession as a physiologist. Heās someone who is obliged to be detached to deconstruct the biomechanics of human engineering, which keeps him at armās length from behavior dysfunction. Heās able to diagnose human behavior according to chemicals and hormones, and organ dysfunction, but the fact is, heās a man faced with a crisis, and at what point does he commit one way or another? How does he feel about it? I think that detachment is what makes it interesting. I think he comes face to face with some truth about himself that he never acknowledged, and had never been aware of, in the devolution of the high-rise. Laing has moved into the high-rise to get away from the entanglements of real life. He wants the anonymity of a clean, grey, clinical space.
Laing attends various parties in the high-rise: costume parties, childrenās parties, social get-togethers and even orgies. How did you film the orgies, Ben?
Wheatley: Itās really tough filming orgies, Iāve found. Amy was laughing, because in the script, that party wasnāt going to be as raucous as it was. I brought that upon myself. I sent the production team out to go get me a load of naked people, and itās very hard to get them in Northern Ireland because āGame of Thronesā has pumped the per-person cost of nudity through the roof. So now, no one will be naked in Northern Ireland for under Ā£1,000. Itās very expensive. So we had to figure out how to do it. When I did āKill Listā in England, itās only Ā£30 more to be naked for an extra. But in Ireland, it was Ā£1,000 straight up. So I had this clever idea to contact local swingers groups, because I knew they would be just the kind of peopleā¦
Hiddleston: I wasnāt present that day.
Wheatley: So these guys and gals turned up and they loved it. They loved being naked. And youād see them out of the corner of your eye, and the trickiest one was this guy who had the most enormous penis Iāve ever seen. It was down to his knee. I think, as a man, itās a fight-or-flight thing from the Serengeti when you see a penis that big. You can always see it. Even when you have to think about something and are focusing on some middle distance, you realize, āIām staring right at this guyās cock!ā [Tom starts clapping in hilarity] It was just huge. And he was so proud of it. Itās the best thing that happened to him. I met him earlier in the day, and he was a very confident man, but little did I know why. But I did find out.Ā
So thatās how you film orgies.
Kim Taehyung
"ė ź°ķė¤!!!ģ°ģģ“ģ¤ģ¤!!"
May 16th, 2014

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āSeason 2ā² Official Video Compilation
140514 - 'Last Romeo' MV Teaser
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140516 - 'Season 2' Album Preview
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140518 - Ready to Comeback "Last Romeo"
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140521 - Last Romeo Music Video
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140904 - Last Romeo Dance Practice
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ā” happy 3rd anniversary, Season 2 ā”
Park Jimin
"ģ°ė¦¬ ź³§ ė§ėź² źµ°ģ?
ģ”°źøė§ źø°ė¤ė ¤ģ! ģ ģ“ķģ¤ķź³ ė¹ģ ģėė” ź°ź³ ģģ“ģć ć ć "
May 16th, 2014