Like Regular Chickens

This is my own page, mostly highlighting my taste in film, music, art and some quotes.

My name is Anton Murrell and I live in Sydney.

http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000724240052
Sat Mar 19

askthe69pineapples asked: 2 roaches?
fucking?
eww.....

I know.

Sun Mar 13

Naked Lunch - The Man Who Taught His Asshole to Talk.

Sat Mar 12

(Source: littlehellflames, via kcobain)

kittenskittenskittens:

A kittengram for you, sir!

kittenskittenskittens:

A kittengram for you, sir!

oldhollywood:

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968, dir. Stanley Kubrick)
“Film operates on a level much closer to music and to painting than to the printed word, and, of course, movies present the opportunity to  convey complex concepts and abstractions without the traditional reliance  on words. I think that 2001, like music, succeeds in  short-circuiting the rigid surface cultural blocks that shackle our  consciousness to narrowly limited areas of experience and is able to cut  directly through to areas of emotional comprehension. In two hours and  twenty minutes of film there are only forty minutes of dialogue.
I think one of the areas where 2001 succeeds is in stimulating thoughts about man’s destiny and role in the universe in the minds of  people who in the normal course of their lives would never have considered  such matters. Here again, you’ve got the resemblance to music; an Alabama  truck driver, whose views in every other respect would be extremely narrow,  is able to listen to a Beatles record on the same level of appreciation and  perception as a young Cambridge intellectual, because their emotions and  subconscious are far more similar than their intellects. The common bond  is their subconscious emotional reaction; and I think that a film which can  communicate on this level can have a more profound spectrum of impact than  any form of traditional verbal communication.
The problem with movies is that since the talkies the film industry has historically been conservative and word-oriented. The three-act play has  been the model. It’s time to abandon the conventional view of the movie as  an extension of the three-act play.”
-Kubrick, quoted in Stanley Kubrick: Interviews (1970)

oldhollywood:

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968, dir. Stanley Kubrick)

“Film operates on a level much closer to music and to painting than to the printed word, and, of course, movies present the opportunity to convey complex concepts and abstractions without the traditional reliance on words. I think that 2001, like music, succeeds in short-circuiting the rigid surface cultural blocks that shackle our consciousness to narrowly limited areas of experience and is able to cut directly through to areas of emotional comprehension. In two hours and twenty minutes of film there are only forty minutes of dialogue.

I think one of the areas where 2001 succeeds is in stimulating thoughts about man’s destiny and role in the universe in the minds of people who in the normal course of their lives would never have considered such matters. Here again, you’ve got the resemblance to music; an Alabama truck driver, whose views in every other respect would be extremely narrow, is able to listen to a Beatles record on the same level of appreciation and perception as a young Cambridge intellectual, because their emotions and subconscious are far more similar than their intellects. The common bond is their subconscious emotional reaction; and I think that a film which can communicate on this level can have a more profound spectrum of impact than any form of traditional verbal communication.

The problem with movies is that since the talkies the film industry has historically been conservative and word-oriented. The three-act play has been the model. It’s time to abandon the conventional view of the movie as an extension of the three-act play.”

-Kubrick, quoted in Stanley Kubrick: Interviews (1970)

(via hey-paul)

Sun Mar 6

1000-stars replied to your post: Bye Tumblr.

but i like your blog

Yeah, but I don’t.

Bye Tumblr.

Tue Mar 1

(via )

Sun Feb 27

(via )

iwdrm:

“Well, it’s an interesting combination of elements, making him a tough little son-of-a-bitch.”
Alien (1979)

iwdrm:

“Well, it’s an interesting combination of elements, making him a tough little son-of-a-bitch.”

Alien (1979)

gifake:

Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

gifake:

Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

(Source: gifake)

(via )

Sat Feb 26