I LOVE YOU CONNIE

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I LOVE YOU CONNIE

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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Which August Diehl character?
Marc Schrader \\\ Tattoo (2002)
Günther Scheller \\\ Love in Thoughts (2004)
Dieter Hellstrom \\\ Inglourious Basterds (2009)
Stiglitz and his resting bitch face ♥︎ took me three days but I am verrry proud
Goldfinger (1964) - Gert Fröbe
I really got to find more stuff Gert in it.
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“Over the course of the vast sweep of his unpredictable career, Kier has earned a reputation as a “decadent icon in … arty sex and / or horror features”, although many of these films are as hard to classify or pigeon-hole as Kier’s own performances. He’s the consummate maverick, and many of the directors with whom he’s worked can similarly be labelled thus.”
/ From the essay “The Other Face of Love: Udo Kier’s Career in the Erotic Genre” by Tons May in the book Fleshpot: Cinema’s Sexual Myth Makers and Taboo Breakers (2000) edited by Jack Stevenson /
Auf Wiedersehen to flamboyant German actor, filth elder and flaming creature Udo Kier (Udo Kierspe, 14 October 1944 – 23 November 2025), who has died aged 81 in his adopted home of Palm Springs. The man was a kinky, anarchic and perverse titan in the realms of cult, European art and exploitation cinema. Kier was good value in absolutely everything (and he apparently featured in about 280 films!), but off the top of my head, I’ve particularly loved his performances in the Andy Warhol-produced, Paul Morrissey-directed horror flicks Flesh for Frankenstein (1973) and Blood for Dracula (1974), his collaborations with Rainer Werner Fassbinder (like The Stationmaster’s Wife (1977) and Lili Marleen (1981)), 1976 British exploitation “video nasty” Exposé (aka House on Straw Hill aka Trauma), Dario Argento’s classic giallo Suspiria (1977), Gus Van Sant’s My Own Private Idaho (1991) and Lars von Trier’s Nymphomaniac (2013). Oh, and his memorable guest star appearances in Madonna’s SEX book (1992) and her “Erotica” and “Deeper and Deeper” videos! Pictured: portrait of Kier by Ronald Siemoneit, 1996.

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Udo Kier as Dracula
Photographer: János Vető
Museum of Fine Arts – Hungarian National Gallery
‘Spotlight Saturday’ - Conrad Veidt
(Conrad Veidt, the formidable German thespian, graced more than a hundred motion pictures, carving out a reputation as one of the most arresting presences of the silent & early sound eras. One of his earliest triumphs came in Robert Wiene’s ‘The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari’ (1920), that utterly cracking cornerstone of German Expressionism, wherein Veidt embodied the murderous somnambulist Cesare with a spectral intensity that fairly knocked audiences for six. Sharing the screen with Werner Krauss & Lil Dagover, he became synonymous with the eerie, stylised chiaroscuro of Weimar cinema.
Veidt delivered another astonishing turn in ‘The Man Who Laughs’ (1928), portraying the disfigured, misunderstood, young outcast known as Gwynplaine whose mouth had been carved into a perpetual grin. This haunting visage would later give rise to the visual conception of the Joker in the ‘Batman’ mythos, though Veidt himself never lived to see the caped crusader’s cultural ascendancy. He likewise headlined a string of silent Gothic treasures, ‘The Hands of Orlac’ (1924), again under Wiene’s direction; ‘The Student of Prague’ (1926); & ‘Waxworks’ (1924), in which he took on the role of Ivan the Terrible with characteristic ferocity.
Notably, Veidt appeared in Magnus Hirschfeld’s pioneering ‘Anders als die Andern’ (‘Different from the Others’, 1919), one of the earliest sympathetic cinematic treatments of homosexuality—brave stuff for its time, though the characters themselves meet no cheery resolution.
Veidt, a staunch opponent of the burgeoning Nazi movement, later contributed funds to aid Britons during the Blitz, long before it became fashionable on the Continent to stand in solidarity with the United Kingdom.
By March of 1933, with the Nazi Party tightening its grip, Joseph Goebbels had begun purging German film of Jewish artists & political dissenters. Recognising which way the wind was blowing, Veidt, having just married Ilona “Lilli” Prager, a Jewish woman—legged it from Germany in April of that year, the pair slipping away to Britain before the authorities could make an example of them. By 1941, they had decamped to Hollywood, determined to bolster the British war effort by shaping American cinema in ways that might coax the still-neutral United States into standing against the Reich, which by then held the whole of Europe in a stranglehold & continued to batter the United Kingdom from the skies.
Before leaving Britain, the Veidts relinquished a substantial portion of their savings to aid the war effort, & later offered their American home as refuge for an English child throughout the conflict, a rather smashing act of generosity. Veidt, ever practical, anticipated that Hollywood would typecast him as a Nazi officer, & so had the presence of mind to stipulate in his contract that, if he must play such rôles, they should invariably be villains. His most celebrated American performance came as the sinister Major Heinrich Strasser in ‘Casablanca’ (1942), a picture that entered pre-production before America had formally entered the war. Veidt himself remarked, with a sort of wry, almost weary amusement, that it was a queer twist of fate to be applauded for portraying precisely the type of black-hearted fellow who had driven him from his homeland.
An intriguing rivulet of near forgotten film lore holds that Veidt had originally been considered for ‘Dracula’ (1931) at Universal. Had his schedule not clashed, compounded by his need to return to Germany, the rôle might never have passed to Bela Lugosi. Given Veidt’s formidable presence in silent horror & his flair for uncanny, villainous personae, he would have been an absolutely first-rate fit for Stoker’s vampiric aristocrat. Fate, however, had other ideas, & the mantle of Dracula slipped to Lugosi, who immortalised it henceforth)