Mmm Errorink but you add Classic to the mix to make it more freaky and toxic
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Mmm Errorink but you add Classic to the mix to make it more freaky and toxic

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Twas foggy today, classic film
Classic Hollywood or modern blockbusters? Either way, USA movies stay undefeated 🏆
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Hi bee!! You know exactly I want you to draw my niche poly Classicflims (classic x error x ink) >:))))
Hey someee!! :3
ClassInkError is a cool name for them too… they’re so silly and stupid im gonna crush them :3 Ink has a pillow between them and error to prevent the haphephobia thinggg.
The Red Shoes, 1948

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Looking for romance with depth? These French films about love explore passion, heartbreak, and timeless relationships worth watching.
Why I Love Westerns but Didn’t Know My Top Ones
I love westerns. That part has never been in doubt. What surprised me is realizing how few movie westerns I’ve actually watched, at least compared to how deeply the genre lives in me. When I really think about it, I know why. I was raised on TV westerns, not films. Bonanza. Gunsmoke. Have Gun – Will Travel. The High Chaparral. And my favorite, The Wild Wild West, where the frontier met brains,…
Frost/Nixon
Frost/Nixon - Ron Howard
When drafting this piece, I found it very hard to get started. There is nothing that really jumps out about this film.
It's not great. It's not bad. I thought the most interesting feature of this film was some of the period-specific things.
The first of these is the aeroplane that Frost takes to the US. There is a walk-up bar up a spiral staircase.
There is a canapé bar in the middle of the rows. Clearly first class, but this is next level.
The other is all of the sets. The décor and buildings are all so fantastic that I was left looking at all of this rather than what was going on in the film.
Overall, the narrative is good, but it is just a bit same-same.
The opening sets up Nixon's resignation after Watergate, so we have some idea about where this interview takes place chronologically.
The setup of all the actors as talking heads, like a documentary, is a neat touch.
The whole backstory of how Frost got the interview is really what the film is about. He is a bit of a nobody. His last show in the UK was cancelled, and he moved to Australia.
Nixon's staff think that Frost is their best option as he is a nobody and is offering more money. We also get to see that Nixon is keen to tell his story, set the record straight.
The money to pay for the whole thing is where the story of the film comes from. The crisis is when none of the US networks will carry it, mainly due to do with the fact that Frost is paying for the interview.
This leaves Frost running around trying to fund the film through advertising rather than focusing on preparation.
The rest of his research team doesn't realise that Frost funds the entire project, and so these actions make them concerned about how badly this is going to go, as their careers are on the line.
Then the filming begins, and it is a disaster. Nixon runs roughshod over Frost. The research team are furious with how it is handled.
Then the phone call happens. Nixon drunkenly dials Frost one night before the final day of shooting. He comes across as very vulnerable and bitter.
Frost realises that he has to nail him on Watergate, so he spends the rest of the time preparing step-by-step to take him apart.
He does it. He gets Nixon to admit and apologise for his actions. More than that, he uses TV perfectly to capture the emotion as it happens.