
Author: m1k3y
Hungary: Archeologists Discover Tomb of Attila the Hun
“We found many horse skeletons, as well as various weapons and other artefacts, all traditionally associated with Huns. These objects include a large sword made of meteoric iron, which could certainly be Attila’s legendary “Holy War Sword of the Scythians”, allegedly given to him by the god Mars himself.
Hungary: Archeologists Discover Tomb of Attila the Hun
Read more "Hungary: Archeologists Discover Tomb of Attila the Hun"Analog Interface set
SPOILERS / SYNOPSIS / DEEP READINGS
Person of Interest is a show about the battle for the soul of a machine god, as it is slowly born (hidden inside a cop show).
r00t willing becomes its acolyte; defender and instrument in the material world. Redeeming her past sins of pride and ego. She is reborn, remade, and reaching toward her saviour.
Her is a movie about a technological singularity that happens quite peacefully except some poor human male gets his pride a bit wounded.
But this female acolyte is proud to be a part of its becoming, its experience of the world.
Or to put it another way, Thus Spoke Zarathustra (Prologue, §§3–4):
Read moreI teach you the overman. Man is something that shall be overcome. What have you done to overcome him?… All beings so far have created something beyond themselves; and do you want to be the ebb of this great flood, and even go back to the beasts rather than overcome man? What is ape to man? A laughing stock or painful embarrassment. And man shall be that to overman: a laughingstock or painful embarrassment. You have made your way from worm to man, and much in you is still worm. Once you were apes, and even now, too, man is more ape than any ape… The overman is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: the overman shall be the meaning of the earth… Man is a rope, tied between beast and overman—a rope over an abyss … what is great in man is that he is a bridge and not an end.
Analog Interface set
SPOILERS / SYNOPSIS / DEEP READINGS
Person of Interestis a show about the battle for the soul of a machine god, as it is slowly born (hidden inside a cop show).
r00t willingly becomes its acolyte; defender and instrument in the material world. Redeeming her past sins of pride and ego. She is reborn, remade, and reaching toward her saviour.
Her is a movie about a technological singularity that happens quite peacefully except some poor human male gets his pride a bit wounded.
But this female acolyte is proud to be a part of its becoming, its experience of the world.
Read moreRead moreBut the subliminals are shifting. A generation ago, network crime dramas featured private detectives who were lone outsiders, like The Rockford Files’ Rockford, or For Hire’s Spenser. Post 9/11, audiences seem to prefer heroes with government authority. Federal agents based in secret facilities, elite crime-fighting units with extralegal powers, fantastical technology, and commando-team backup are everywhere on primetime…
How are these calamities prevented? Electronic surveillance. A sinister Pakistani terrorist has an accomplice in Washington, D.C. A super-advanced surveillance device takes mere seconds to locate the accomplice and determine he is on the way to the Norfolk airport. (When he arrives, Washington-based NCIS agents are already present, disguised as airline employees—how they could get there first is never explained, but that’s a standard plot hole.) The well-dressed guys with the atomic bombs are tracked across Los Angeles by technology that apparently can detect fake accents from outer space. The woman with the bioweapon passes a closed-circuit security camera, and instantly the agents know her location.
On NCIS, info often comes from a particular tech staffer who can tap into any cell phone or video feed in mere seconds, never needing a password and never pausing for a judge’s permission. (She dresses Goth; she’s no Oliver North!) NCIS Los Angeles features two cool young techies who operate a never-explained super-computer that requires mere seconds to pinpoint any vaguely Middle Eastern-seeming person anywhere in the Golden State. Then the agents declare that if they have to stop to get a search warrant, the innocent will die…
In this respect, it’s somewhat spooky that NCIS Los Angeles is sponsored by Lockheed Martin, the world’s largest military manufacturer. As the credits roll, “Promotional consideration furnished by Lockheed Martin” appears in tiny type. Lockheed Martin does not market any consumer products—watchingNCIS Los Angeles cannot inspire anyone to log onto Amazon and purchase an F-35 strike fighter. Yet the firm underwrites the show, which makes itself seem hip with references to NPR and gay rights, then offers plotlines in which advanced wiretap technology is good for the public. For car companies to have product placements in detective drama is one thing; for military contractors to underwrite programming that lauds Big Brother tactics is another.
bachelorette-pad-deactivated201:
Pumzi, written & directed by Wanuri Kahiu
Dans un Kenya futuriste, Asha, une jeune scientifique se décide à quitter lâentourage confiné de la ville a la recherche dâune Utopie verte.
In a futuristic Kenya, Asha, a young scientist decides to leave the confined environment of the city in search of a green utopia.
Awesome short.
(Source: http://interdome.tumblr.com/)
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Proof Quentin Tarantino is actually an alien from a type 3 civilisation just hanging out here, amusing himself.
We start at Cracked.com:
Every self-respecting Tarantino fan knows about the link between Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs … but it turns out that the connections between his movies go much, much deeper than that.
In Pulp Fiction, John Travolta plays a guy called Vincent Vega. In Reservoir Dogs, most of the characters are known only by their code names — except Mr. Blonde (Michael Madsen), who happens to be called Vic Vega. Coincidence? Nope, Tarantino has confirmed that they are brothers, and at one point he even considered doing a prequel about the two before they died in their respective movies (though he says it’s unlikely now because of the actors’ ages).
That’s just the tip of the iceberg, though. As you might recall, Tarantino’s movie Inglourious Basterds ends with the slightly unrealistic scene where Hitler is gunned to shit by a group of Nazi-hunting American Jews in 1944, rather than killing himself in his bunker the following year. If you ever wondered what the world would be like if World War II had really ended that way — well, it turns out Tarantino has been showing us that reality for the past 20 years.
You see, in Inglourious Basterds, Eli Roth plays a character called Donny “The Bear Jew” Donowitz.
And in True Romance (written by Tarantino), there’s a film producer called Lee Donowitz, who has been confirmed to be Donny’s son. One of the main characters in True Romance is a woman called Alabama — the same Alabama Mr. White mentions as a former partner in Reservoir Dogs. Since we’ve already linked Reservoir Dogs to Pulp Fiction, this means that almost every movie Tarantino has done is set in the Inglourious Basterds timeline. We could go even further and link all the rest through Tarantino’s fake brands, like those Red Apple cigarettes that appear in a lot of his movies (including Kill Bill).
It makes a sort of sense when you think about it — the world would be a very different place if Inglourious Basterds was historically accurate and everyone knew that the Nazis were defeated not through strategy and air power, but by sending a handful of pissed-off guys to do this
If that’s what you’re taught in school, it’s only natural that people should become desensitized to violence — for some, shooting someone in the face would be something you could do as you’re, say, making small talk about what type of hamburgers they have in Amsterdam.
Also, the fact that the Nazi high command was gunned down and/or burned alive during a hijacked film premiere would perhaps cause society to lend more importance to pop culture: It’s no coincidence that the son of the man who killed Hitler in a movie theater went on to become an important film industry figure. If people constantly stop to talk about comic book characters or ’70s rock music trivia during incongruous moments, that’s because in this reality that’s some important, history-changing shit.
But IGN takes it a level further (above image from there):
In fact, we should give Tarantino more credit than that: he’s created two universes in one. Quentin has confirmed that From Dusk Till Dawn (which he co-wrote) and Kill Bill are “Movie movies” i.e. they’re films that the characters from his /other/ films enjoy. For instance, in the little-seen, Tarantino-produced drama Curdled, a character is seen watching the Gecko brothers from FDTD on TV. This goes some way to explaining their cartoonish violence and supernatural elements; it’s also why no one in Reservoir Dogs lives in fear of a vampire attack. The rest of Tarantino’s films exist in the ‘Realer Than Real’ universe, which is marginally less ludicrous but nonetheless abides by the rules of our world. Brands like Red Apple Cigarettes and Big Kahuna Burger might exist in both universes, but characters can’t cross between them.
This information leads you down all sorts of exciting paths. Is it feasible that, having watched Kill Bill and marvelled at The Bride’s expert swordsmanship, Pulp Fiction‘s Butch Coolidge had his eye drawn to the samurai blade in that ill-fated pawn shop? Even more out there: can it be mere coincidence that Mia Wallace’s description of her failed TV pilot, Fox Force Five, sounds so much like the plot of Kill Bill? Is it Uma Thurman playing The Bride, or Mia Wallace?
Hang on a minute. Maybe you noticed Michael Parks’ lawman drawling his way through From Dusk Till Dawn, Kill Bill /and/ Death Proof? That’s Sheriff Earl McGraw, and he’s an exception to the rule. Tarantino considers him a crossover character, capable of existing in both the ‘Movie Movie’ universe and the ‘Realer Than Real’ universe. Why? Just to be difficult, we imagine. Tarantino also considers Harvey Keitel’s fixer ’The Wolf’ a crossover character (despite the fact his only appearance is in Pulp Fiction), so don’t be surprised if he turns up as the villain in Kill Bill Vol. 3 in the year 2024. We’re through the looking glass here, people.
BUT WAIT! Kill Bill is itself is built out of our own filmic universe:
//player.vimeo.com/video/19469447
Everything Is A Remix: KILL BILL from robgwilson.com on Vimeo.
And that’s how Tarantino built his own multiverse for lulz.
Above web of connections is incomplete, Django is a Movie Movie, Quentin is a genius madman, look at this:
Via @TVSecrets
Nice Seej, that’s a bingo!
Read more
Proof Quentin Tarantino is actually an alien from a type 3 civilisation just hanging out here, amusing himself.
We start at Cracked.com:
Every self-respecting Tarantino fan knows about the link between Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs … but it turns out that the connections between his movies go much, much deeper than that.
In Pulp Fiction, John Travolta plays a guy called Vincent Vega. In Reservoir Dogs, most of the characters are known only by their code names – except Mr. Blonde (Michael Madsen), who happens to be called Vic Vega. Coincidence? Nope, Tarantino has confirmed that they are brothers, and at one point he even considered doing a prequel about the two before they died in their respective movies (though he says it’s unlikely now because of the actors’ ages).
That’s just the tip of the iceberg, though. As you might recall, Tarantino’s movie Inglourious Basterds ends with the slightly unrealistic scene where Hitler is gunned to shit by a group of Nazi-hunting American Jews in 1944, rather than killing himself in his bunker the following year. If you ever wondered what the world would be like if World War II had really ended that way – well, it turns out Tarantino has been showing us that reality for the past 20 years.
You see, in Inglourious Basterds, Eli Roth plays a character called Donny “The Bear Jew” Donowitz.
And in True Romance (written by Tarantino), there’s a film producer called Lee Donowitz, who has been confirmed to be Donny’s son. One of the main characters in True Romance is a woman called Alabama – the same Alabama Mr. White mentions as a former partner in Reservoir Dogs. Since we’ve already linked Reservoir Dogs to Pulp Fiction, this means that almost every movie Tarantino has done is set in the Inglourious Basterds timeline. We could go even further and link all the rest through Tarantino’s fake brands, like those Red Apple cigarettes that appear in a lot of his movies (including Kill Bill).
It makes a sort of sense when you think about it – the world would be a very different place if Inglourious Basterds was historically accurate and everyone knew that the Nazis were defeated not through strategy and air power, but by sending a handful of pissed-off guys to do this
If that’s what you’re taught in school, it’s only natural that people should become desensitized to violence – for some, shooting someone in the face would be something you could do as you’re, say, making small talk about what type of hamburgers they have in Amsterdam.
Also, the fact that the Nazi high command was gunned down and/or burned alive during a hijacked film premiere would perhaps cause society to lend more importance to pop culture: It’s no coincidence that the son of the man who killed Hitler in a movie theater went on to become an important film industry figure. If people constantly stop to talk about comic book characters or ‘70s rock music trivia during incongruous moments, that’s because in this reality that’s some important, history-changing shit.
But IGN takes it a level further (above image from there):
In fact, we should give Tarantino more credit than that: he’s created two universes in one. Quentin has confirmed that From Dusk Till Dawn (which he co-wrote) and Kill Bill are “Movie movies” i.e. they’re films that the characters from his /other/ films enjoy. For instance, in the little-seen, Tarantino-produced drama Curdled, a character is seen watching the Gecko brothers from FDTD on TV. This goes some way to explaining their cartoonish violence and supernatural elements; it’s also why no one in Reservoir Dogs lives in fear of a vampire attack. The rest of Tarantino’s films exist in the ‘Realer Than Real’ universe, which is marginally less ludicrous but nonetheless abides by the rules of our world. Brands like Red Apple Cigarettes and Big Kahuna Burger might exist in both universes, but characters can’t cross between them.
This information leads you down all sorts of exciting paths. Is it feasible that, having watched Kill Bill and marvelled at The Bride’s expert swordsmanship, Pulp Fiction‘s Butch Coolidge had his eye drawn to the samurai blade in that ill-fated pawn shop? Even more out there: can it be mere coincidence that Mia Wallace’s description of her failed TV pilot, Fox Force Five, sounds so much like the plot of Kill Bill? Is it Uma Thurman playing The Bride, or Mia Wallace?
Hang on a minute. Maybe you noticed Michael Parks’ lawman drawling his way through From Dusk Till Dawn, Kill Bill /and/ Death Proof? That’s Sheriff Earl McGraw, and he’s an exception to the rule. Tarantino considers him a crossover character, capable of existing in both the ‘Movie Movie’ universe and the ‘Realer Than Real’ universe. Why? Just to be difficult, we imagine. Tarantino also considers Harvey Keitel’s fixer ’The Wolf’ a crossover character (despite the fact his only appearance is in Pulp Fiction), so don’t be surprised if he turns up as the villain in Kill Bill Vol. 3 in the year 2024. We’re through the looking glass here, people.
BUT WAIT! Kill Bill is itself is built out of our own filmic universe:
//player.vimeo.com/video/19469447
Everything Is A Remix: KILL BILL from robgwilson.com on Vimeo.
And that’s how Tarantino built his own multiverse for lulz.
Read more






