Sakura Tsuushin (1997) Episode 7

seen from Malaysia
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Sakura Tsuushin (1997) Episode 7

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.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Sakura Tsuushin (1997) Episode 7
Sakura Tsuushin (1997) Episode 7
Sakura Tsuushin (1997) Episode 5
Sakura Tsuushin (1997) Episode 4

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.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Sakura Tsuushin (1997) Episode 2
Sakura Tsuushin (1997) Episode 1
This Month In Black Cinema History
Here are some of the films from Black filmmakers with landmark anniversaries I am saluting this month:
July 2, 1971: Shaft opens
One of the breakout films of the blaxploitation genre was released in July 1971. Shaft was more than just a fun 70s action movie with a terrific score. It was the start of something new. Based on a book about a white private eye, Black filmmaker Gordon Parks adapted it to be a Black PI played by Richard Roundtree. Made on a budget of $500,000, it grossed $13 mil. at the box office. It is also one of the great movie soundtracks of all time! Isaac Hayes’ funky score truly made this movie. Who can forget the opening sequence of Shaft walking down the street to the “Theme from Shaft”. Whenever you see a list of the best music moments in a movie or the best soundtracks of all time, Shaft is always on the list. Hayes’ theme song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song. Whatever your take was on the Blaxploitation films of the 70s, actors like Richard Roundtree and Pam Grier have said that they felt the parts they were playing were more about empowerment and playing strong characters in control as opposed to exploitation. Today, the movie Shaft is preserved by the National Film Registry. There have been sequels, a TV series, a 2000 re-boot where Samuel L. Jackson played John Shaft’s nephew and a 2019 sequel. But the first movie stands as the best. Happy 55th Shaft!
July 12, 1991: Boyz N the Hood opens
One of the great hood movies of the 1990s was released in July 1991. In an extremely ambitious debut, director John Singleton swung for the fences with Boyz n the Hood. Just as N.W.A. were bringing their South Central Los Angeles experience to the masses, here was a movie about growing up as a teen in South Central amidst gang violence. It even marked the acting debut of N.W.A.’s Ice Cube. The protagonist Tre (played by Cuba Gooding Jr) is torn between the gang life around him and his father (Lawrence Fishburne) trying to turn him against that world, while coming face to face with police harassment. Opening in theaters just a few months after the Rodney King video was released, this movie was a wake-up call for a lot of audiences. But at the heart of the film, it was a coming-of-age movie about a young man trying to find his place in the world and what path to go down. John Singleton became the youngest Best Director nominee in Oscar history as well as the first Black director nominated. After Singleton died in 2019, this was hailed by many (including me) as his best work. Happy 35th Boyz n the Hood!