Thoroughbread Wonder's First Race by Joanna Campbell
1990s
My picture of my stuff from childhood
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from Belgium
seen from Belgium

seen from United States

seen from Sweden
seen from Belgium
seen from Netherlands
seen from China
seen from Yemen

seen from Ukraine

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Singapore
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
Thoroughbread Wonder's First Race by Joanna Campbell
1990s
My picture of my stuff from childhood

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
Gelding for Sale in Mississippi
Cowboy is a six-year-old 16hh Thoroughbred gelding. He is sweet, caring, and loves to work. He has excelled greatly in eventing. Needs a strong intermediate to advanced rider to carry out his playful self.
 âĄď¸ Source: Gelding for Sale in Mississippi
 âĄď¸ More: Thoroughbred HorsesÂ
My (1) 2019 #Thoroughbread #quilttop #fr And my (2) 2020 #nashvegas #satin #floydrose Simply put the best bang for the buck on the market. @seymourduncanpickups @floydroseofficial @deanguitars If you would have told me I would be playing an import guitar as my two main guitars I would have told you are out of your mind. Hats off to @evanrubinson @deanguitars @airborne5150 @___vdb___ and the entire Dean crew! https://www.instagram.com/p/B-tW9KinVmD/?igshid=1iekyjj2afwtt
Not a bad lilâ rig! @eventideaudio #rose @bossfx_us #tubeampexpander #tae #ev30 @deanguitars #thoroughbread #select @gruvgear #fretwrap #fretwedge #fabrkstrap @ghsstrings #ghsartist @stonetoneproducts #rockblock @floydroseofficial @swiss_picks #sharpchedder @mesaengineering #mkv #recto @creationmusiccompany #pedalboard #ilovemygig https://www.instagram.com/p/B2NbMsFppK5/?igshid=17suhi9cyu4h2

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
Great Family Horse
Great Family Horse! I have for sale a registered TB gelding. His barn name is "beau" and his papered name is Beaver Lakes Best. He is a wonderful horse that we've enjoyed having on the farm for the last eight years. He's become the kind of horse that you can put anybody on. We spend a lot of time camping during the summers with family and he is one of the horses that we use for the intermediate riders. He is very enjoyable on the trails and he has no issues with separating, leading the pack, or falling behind. He does not kick or bite, very easy going...
âĄď¸ Great Family Horse âĄď¸ Horses for Sale in Minnesota âĄď¸ Thoroughbred Horses for Sale
Latest story from https://movietvtechgeeks.com/sundance-day-8-wounds-queer-perspective-plus-throughbred-sidney-hall/
Sundance Day 8 'Wound's' queer perspective plus 'Throughbred,' 'Sidney Hall'
The 2017 Sundance Film Festival is nearly over, and as weâre basking in the glow of fresh air and theater lighting, itâs exciting knowing that some amazing treasures found here will be resonating with todayâs world. Some of our favorites picks of today are John Trengroveâs fascinating The Wound which really gives an eye-opening look at a South African secretive rite of passage for boys entering into manhood.
Thoroughbred is another very interesting one that many people can relate to about two friends trying to rekindle their connection. It reminded me of when you home five years or more after high school and run into some of those same people who never left your town. You realize how much youâve changed in that time and trying to connect again is nearly impossible, especially for those that havenât changed at all in that same timeframe.
âTHE WOUNDâ PRESENTS A QUEER PERSPECTIVE ON A SOUTH AFRICAN RITUAL OF MANHOOD
For his enthralling debut feature, South African filmmaker John Trengove lifts the veil on the secretive rite of passage from boyhood to manhood in a remote area of South Africa. The Wound follows Xolani (Nakhane TourĂŠ), a forlorn factory worker, as he travels to an obscure mountain camp where teen boys go through the traditional Xhola initiation. Xolani has been assigned to mentor a friendâs son, Kwanda (Niza Jay Ncoyini), who notices the attraction between Xolani and another caregiver, Vija (Bongile Mantsai), who is not only secretive about his sexuality but also prone to bursts of explosive behavior.
Following the screening, Trengove, who is white and self-identifies as queer, said he made the movie because thereâs a complete lack of queer imagery in the African film canon. âIt came out of a sense of urgency,â he told the audience. âFor myself as an outsider, itâs something I could speak about more freely than someone who is inside the culture. Iâm speaking about same-sex desire. As a queer filmmaker I was able to introduce the subject into this very intricate world and practice.â
Describing the project as the result of profound collaborations, Trengove revealed that to achieve authenticity he spoke with a South African novelist who had been through the initiation himself, and the two men began to create the story together. The three principal actors in the film each in his own way made a formidable contribution to the film, not just in terms of what an actor does but in making the characters their own and contributing something quintessential and unique to their own experiences.
Trengove noted that the filmâs subject matter is very controversial in South Africa, despite being the subject of various documentaries and news articles and even being mentioned by Nelson Mandela in his autobiography. âI think our film comes at a moment when thereâs a growing conversation about a sensitive subject,â he stated. âThe ritual has come under fire for reasons of relevance and safety. I think equally itâs still regarded as a meaningful process that boys go through that shows them their place in the world of men.â
The director praised the courage of his three lead actors for taking on the roles. âI was very fortunate to have the bravery of these three actors to collaborate on what you saw tonight,â he said. âThey did it for their own very personal reasons, primarily out of a conviction that these are stories we need to begin to speak out.â
THOROUGHBRED: OLIVIA COOKE AND ANYA TAYLOR-JOY CONSPIRE TO MURDER
With his debut film, Thoroughbred, Cory Finley finessed his way through two major challenges that could confound another first-time filmmaker. The first, as he told the audience during a post-screening discussion on Thursday at the Yarrow Theatre, was a transition from theater to moviemaking. And the second was pulling off a nuanced tone that at once straddles comedy, drama, and thriller.
The film stars Sundance Film Festival veterans Olivia Cooke (Me and Earl and the Dying Girl) and Anya Taylor-Joy (The Witch) as Amanda and Lily, two old school friends who uneasily try to rekindle some kind of connection. Though Amanda is emotionally blocked, incapable of showing or perhaps even having feelings, chilly Lily slowly reveals herself to be in greater crisis, as she bristles against a stepfather whose strictness is driving her to entertain wicked thoughts.
Finley talked about how Thoroughbred started out as a play but became a film. âWhen it was a play it really was a kind of philosophical, moral discussion between these two characters on one couch. It started with asking questions about myself, and attacking some of my own fears and anxieties about my own mind and moral compass, through writing,â he said. âAs I started getting towards the later drafts of the play, I realized that there was something about it that was very film noir. And even though it was contained in one household, I started becoming aware of all the things I could do cinematically.â
Producer Alex Saks talked about her first conversation with Finley, after coming across what was still a play. âWithin five minutes I knew that even if he didnât know it yet, he was going to direct the movie â and that he was a filmmaker,â she said. Finley described trying to make up for his inexperience by reading books, watching movies, and visiting film sets in the months before his first shoot. âI tried to cram in as much preparation as possible so that I could communicate effectively with the whole crew,â he said. âBut I was certainly learning a lot on the job.â
And as for that fine-tuned tone, Finley said it was something they consciously refined from rehearsals through the shoot and then in editing. âWe talked about [the tone] as being a narrow tightrope,â he said. âI was lucky to get a couple of days of rehearsal before we started, with the two leads, and we came to a clear understanding of the tone that we were all aiming for. And then in the editing process we had another chance to really look carefully at these scenes and play very specifically with timing and pauses and different takes. Thereâs a fun balance to be had in trying to provoke an audience to laugh and also to be slightly afraid. The two emotions, if you can balance them, go well together.â
Though he said he still plans on producing more theater, Finleyâs first foray into filmmaking has him hooked. âIâve fallen in love with the tools to which a director has access,â he said. âSo Iâm definitely looking forward to playing around in this world more.â
WINNIE: A DOC ABOUT WOMEN, POLITICS, AND MISOGYNY
With WINNIE, the new documentary about Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Pascale Lamche offers an illuminating portrait of the complex story of the woman, who is often cast in the shadow of legendary human rights activist Nelson Mandela, her husband of 38 years, even though she fought on the frontlines to end apartheid during the 27 years he was imprisoned.
While Winnieâs story has been capably told by other filmmakers and documentarians and through countless books and articles, Lamche manages to create a fresh, thorough, and likely definitive study by using revealing new interviews, as well as a veritable treasure trove of newly uncovered archival materials.
âI interviewed Nelson twice for previous films, and each time it was a great honor to meet him and speak to him and spend time with him, but I was always very intrigued by Winnie,â Lamche told the audience at the post-screening Q&A. The director noted that, while Winnie is mostly venerated in her home of Soweto, South Africa, Lamche learned that her subject was also widely demonized in many European capitals for her crusade against racism, and a smear campaign was launched against her. âThat seemed like a space to explore,â the director offered.
Through a meeting and conversation with Mandelaâs daughter Zindzi, who also speaks on camera in the doc, Lamche was eventually introduced to Winnie. She ended up interviewing her subject four times over a period of two years, including once just after the death of her former husband, when she was still dressed in her black mourning clothes.
âOn each occasion, I tried to pull back another layer of the story,â Lamche shared. âEach time I met her I uncovered more in the story because Iâd been digging away and making progress with the people whoâd been her enemies. I never went to her with specifics and said I interviewed this guy who waged this warfare campaign against you. As our relationship progressed over time, it deepened. I hope thatâs apparent in the film.â As her film skillfully explores the intersection of women, politics, and misogyny, itâs not a challenge for audiences to draw a strong parallel between Mandelaâs story and the current political climate in the U.S.
PERSON TO PERSON: A SUBTLE, OPTIMISTIC COLLAGE OF EVERYDAY NEW YORKERS
âI made [this movie] with a lot of friends. And itâs about tenderness, itâs about friendship, itâs about wanting to have a friend, and what itâs like to be a friend, and what itâs like to lose a friend,â explained director Dustin Guy Defa as he introduced his latest project, Person to Person. Defa makes his return to the Festival after his 2014 short film of the same name.
The feature, shot in retro 16mm, follows various characters throughout one day in New York City, including a moody teenager putting up with her best friendâs antics, an endearingly simple man trying to buy a rare vinyl record (Bene Coopersmith, who also starred in the short film version of the story), a depressed guy attempting to reconcile with his girlfriend after hurting her, and an anxiety-ridden rookie reporter who feels completely out of place her first day on the job. But unlike other films that depict a large ensemble of characters with different story lines, this one doesnât aim to connect them in any obvious way other than the fact that theyâre in the same city.
Defa said that when he first thought of the idea for this project, âI got very excited ⌠to make such a variety of people and to not necessarily connect them. So I got very excited [about how to] pull it off. I developed all the characters separately. ⌠But once I started actually working on the outline and the writing, I was interconnecting it in other ways that arenât visible. ⌠Even though they all had such different things and different tones and things like that, I was still connecting them thematically in many ways. And so I needed the flow to really work even though all these people had such different things going on.â
When asked which characters he relates to the most, Defa revealed, âTheyâre all me in many ways. Iâve done stupid things in my life, Iâve treated people weirdly, and then friendship is very important to me [like it is with Bene]. And Wendy the teenager is definitely me as a teenager in many ways. ⌠But I donât have a favorite.â
The characters donât necessarily go through anything captivatingly dramatic, but Defaâs purpose wasnât to have audiences on the edge of their seats. He explained that, amid many abrasive, visceral depictions that often appear on the screen, he simply wanted to create âa nice place to go for an hour and a halfâ â to which the audience applauded in agreement.
 SIDNEY HALL: A PRECOCIOUS WRITING TALENT DRIFTS INTO OBSCURITY
Sidney Hall, which premiered on Wednesday night at the Eccles Theatre, spans 12 years in the life of the eponymous character, from the moment that the precocious high school kid becomes a celebrated author to his apex of fame and emotional nadir, and to his time disowning all that heâd become and drifting into obscurity. Remarkably, those 12 years mirror the 12 years it took writer-director Shawn Christensen and writer Jason Dolan to see the project to completion.
âShawn was in a great band called stellastarr*, and when he was on tour I sent him the first couple of pages of the script, and we went from there. It was the summer of 2004,â Dolan said during the post-screening Q&A. âWe wanted to tell a story about perspective â what itâs like to think about how you were at 18, 24, and 30. We chose those ages because those were the ages we were at when we were writing the script.â
The breadth of time covered presented challenges for both the crew and the performers, including Logan Lerman as Sidney and Elle Fanning as his neighbor and later wife, Melody. âThe transitions between ages â sometimes we had only hours in which to do it,â Lerman recalled.
âWe shot 10 days of [age] 18 first, then we shot the [age] 24 segment, and then we shot the 30, with the intention of having a weekend in between each era,â Christensen said. âBut actually for Elle and for Logan I had to break the news to them that we were going to have to switch from 18 to 24 over the lunch break.â
Though it seems like such a quick shift in age would be challenging, Fanning explained, âYou canât really think about playing older or playing a certain age, because what does that really mean?â She continued, âI was more interested in where Melody was in her life.â
The script doesnât take a straightforward chronological approach to those eras, and instead interweaves them throughout, such that itâs only at the end that you know how the characters resolved each of those dramatic moments. Dolan explained that he hoped audiences would connect to that structure because âyour life is sometimes a mess in your own mind.â He said, âWhat we wanted was to give people a puzzle to put together, to reflect on this character and also themselves.â
Movie TV Tech Geeks News
Thoroughbread - Pound Cake Freestyle Video
R.I.P