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One of the greatest scenes in film history. <3

This is such a gorgeous and exquisitely made film. More folks need to see it and discuss it.




Next of Kin (Tony Williams, 1982)
File under films I need to see.












MUSCLE (1989)
Director: Hisayasu Satō Cinematography: Kôichi Saitô
Always always always support physical media and film preservation.
They actually make physical media for a much larger percentage of movies than they ever did in the past. Often with a lot more care than any small release was treated in the early dvd days. Its just if you only watch streaming stuff or the big new recent box office hits you won't see that. It is so ridiculously easy to get physical media for movies that even 5 years ago you couldn't even find. Like yes Netflix is a stingy bastard but so many things are available on disc WITH special features than ever before
To Live & Die in LA was the film that made me fall in love with William Friedkin as a director....and it still does not get enough proper respect and affection.




















To Live and Die in L.A. (1985) dir. William Friedkin
One of the greatest films EVER and praise be Lance Henriksen. Perfection






LANCE HENRIKSEN in Near Dark (1987) Happy birthday @thegoodgowest!
These BTS shots from Norrington's Death Machine are fantastic.






Death Machine (1994) Behind the Scenes
Viva la Death Machine! This is such a great and vastly underrated film. Great writing, cool sfx, and an absolute banger of a cast...especially Brad Dourif!



This is adorable.


Jean and Olivier Rollin, behind the scenes of Le viol du vampire (1968)
Adding this to the watchlist asap.

The film "Looking for Langston" (1989) by Isaac Julien (re)imagines Langston Hughes' gay exploits. The poet's ghost haunts a 1920s speakeasy/gay bar alongside the spectre of James Baldwin, the voices of Toni Morrison and Stuart Hall, recreations of photos by George Platt Lynes, and queer icons of the Harlem Renaissance, while twink angels-and the shadow of the AIDS crisis-watch over it all.
There were few humans as innately radiant and cool as Divine. <3




Harris Milstead a.k.a. Divine photographed by David Meyer
Masterpiece.










Fruits of Passion (1981) | dir. Shūji Terayama
A brilliant film from a often unsung auteur. <3







Corruption (1983) // dir. Roger Watkins