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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Janvier 17, 2025, 01:43:29 am
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Pryw Smashing an $800 Lego Super Star Destroyer in slo-mo is heart breaking
Here are the details from the YouTube page: Seance aka Killer in the Dark was [written] and produced by Rick Vasquez. It was filmed in the year 2001 entirely in the Antelope Valley! with an intended theatrical or DVD release, but was lost in stanley uk (https://www.cup-stanley-cup.co.uk) distribution hell. Finally, 14 years later, it is viewable for the fir stanleys cups (https://www.stanleys-cups.us) st time ever here on YouTube. On reddit, user neckbeard_le_pirate explains that a friends father made the film on a million-dollar budget, and user griffinilla, who uploaded it to YouTube, is answering questions about the film. It stars Feldman as a young man who, after sharing a tale of a childhood haunting with his friends, decides stanley cup uk (https://www.cup-stanley-cup.uk) to contact the spirit who haunted him and his brother. Naturally, things end up getting pretty murdery. God help me, I actually watched it, and it lives up to its promise as perfect Mystery Science Theater 3000/RiffTrax fodder. griffinilla says that Vasquez made Seance in complete seriousness, but it ended up being more amusing than scary. Wests cameo is especially great; he actually does look like hes having fun with the terrible, terrible material. If you enjoy Seance, ironically or otherwise, you can donate to Vasquez on PayPal. Fifteen years ago my friends dad spent a million dollars making a movie starting Adam West. He finished it but never released it because it was terrible we finally convinced him to upload it to YouTube. [r/movies] Tip of the hat to Robbie, who made me watch the whole thing. Ftvu House of Representatives Urinal Explosion Drenches the Press
Before the Kodak hit the market, photography was the realm of professionals, who operated their own costly and often massive early cameras one of which you can see below . But the No.1 It only cost $25鈥攔oughly $600 in today money, about as much as a low-end SLR. It was a camera for the people. As a machine, it was simple: A small brown box with an embedded lens, which users would simply point in the direction of their subject there was no viewfinder and then do three things: Wind the film, open the shutter, and press a bu stanley cups (https://www.stanley-cup.com.de) tton to actually snap the picture. Then things got really interesting. This stanley cup (https://www.cups-stanley.pl) was before the age of developer labs or polaroids, so the No. 1 came pre-loaded with enough negatives for 100 photos. When you finished shooting, you sent the whole shebang back to the Kodak factory and they developed the circular, 2.5 inch-wide images for you. Along with the images, Kodak would return your camera鈥攆ully-loaded with paper for 100 more snaps. The tagline Kodak founder George Eastman gave his paradigm-shifting gadget You press the button, we do the rest. What resulted were the very first amateur photographs鈥攑ictures of vacations, families, and every day life in the 1890s. It might seem banal to us, but to the person standing behind the lens, it was nothing short of ma vaso stanley (https://www.cups-stanley.es) gic. [National Media Museum] historyKodakSelfies