Well, somehow I feel like that wouldn't be nice to my sister, so maybe the camera will stay around for a while, at least while I look for another DSLR or get fresh batteries for my ol' Sony. Regarding the ratio, you can configure the ratio but at a huge loss of quality, in all honesty, I've always liked 4:3, but that's me.
I need to make some mysterious page of my own at some point. Love the vibe all your sites give out when i go on them. Mine just sorta goes "ye ur here on this basic site"
I think nostalgia can only be milked so far. It was fun seeing all of the web 1.0 inspired designs, but at a certain point there was a reason we moved beyond that.
I been thinking more of an 2000's grunge/edgy style looks to it. Kinda like the old days of Newgrounds.
After setting so many iframes, I think I respect way more my university online portal
You've a keen eye for composition. I especially like your photos of the chihuahua, as well as those of Morelia's promenades, arcades and that massive waterside trunk...
Also, your formatting and the transparency of your gear's images all look terrific.
Thanks, I spent way too much time designing these pages. As for the photos, thanks, I still have a lot to learn about these cameras, also, I still have two cans of film of Morelia that I need to scan, eventually I will upload them.
Wrote about Vámonos con Pancho Villaz a 1935 film that is considered one of the bests of Mexican cinema
Like Americans, Mexicans loathed moral ambiguity in lieu of triumphalism in their movies through the postwar era. Both our nations outgrew that idealism during New Hollywood, but mainstream Mexican cinema didn't regress as the American industry did during the '90s, when our Boomers' palates turned utterly saccharine.
Both can be contrasted to jidaigeki, which has always been brutally sincere in its depiction of Japan's past -- even when it served as propaganda during WWII. Anyhow, I'd love to see a good enactment of the Zapatista Uprising, but haven't yet.
In the first sentence of your review's penultimate paragraph, you may care to replace "homologous" with "homonymous."
Actually, I'm not familiar with japanese era films, so I'll do some homework!!
UPDATE: NO, PARASITE IS THE BEST THING I'VE SEEN IN THE ENTIRE YEAR
YES YES I WATCHED THAT ON MY BIRTHDAY, FIRST R FILM WO MY PARENTS AND EVERYTHING WAS AMAZING !!!
I really enjoyed it a lot!! It made me feel a lot of stuff
It doesn't quite match "Hereditary", but "Midsommar" really was superb, a breath of fresh air in an incredibly stale market. After Lynch and the Coens (who've been winding down for a decade), Aster is the only active American filmmaker who demonstrates ingenuity and enjoys access to nationwide distribution.
"Cold War" is likely to justify its hype; Pawlikowski has a keen eye and an able cast at his disposal. I've procrastinated its screening because its themes are so shopworn, and I'm just exhausted with WWII and the postwar era.