patbaer:

Bill Murray was shooting something. A couple fans asked for an autograph. Instead, Bill Murray suggested they make this.

Just another reason why I love Bill Murray

Before I Die is a public art project that invites people to reflect on their lives and share their personal aspirations in public space. Painted with chalkboard paint and stenciled with the sentence “Before I die I want to _______”, the wall aims to create public spaces that better reflect what is important to us as a community and as individuals.
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(Source: myheadisweak)

badvzn:

When I watched this scene I kept wondering why they didn’t just go google the information they needed. It took me a few seconds to realize that the characters were all in the past. The internet has ruined me.

badvzn:

When I watched this scene I kept wondering why they didn’t just go google the information they needed. It took me a few seconds to realize that the characters were all in the past. The internet has ruined me.

(Source: fassyy)

fuckyeahtattoos:

Radiohead kept me up when life was getting me down.  I got this to pay my respect for such amazing music :)

fuckyeahtattoos:

Radiohead kept me up when life was getting me down.  I got this to pay my respect for such amazing music :)

the-overlook-hotel:

Late in the production of The Shining, as the crew filmed on the Lobby set, a small fire broke out on an adjacent sound stage. The fire quickly grew out of control, and by morning, the sound stages containing some of The Shining’s most massive sets: The Colorado Lounge, the Lobby, and the hallways containing the door to Room 237, were completely destroyed.
The next morning Stanley Kubrick surveyed the damage, and still photographer Murray Close captured this image of Kubrick laughing in the face of disaster – surrounded by twisted girders and the smoldering wreckage of his sets.

the-overlook-hotel:

Late in the production of The Shining, as the crew filmed on the Lobby set, a small fire broke out on an adjacent sound stage. The fire quickly grew out of control, and by morning, the sound stages containing some of The Shining’s most massive sets: The Colorado Lounge, the Lobby, and the hallways containing the door to Room 237, were completely destroyed.

The next morning Stanley Kubrick surveyed the damage, and still photographer Murray Close captured this image of Kubrick laughing in the face of disaster – surrounded by twisted girders and the smoldering wreckage of his sets.

doxysplendor:

torncurtain:

As Wendy guides the pediatrician into her living room at the beginning of The Shining, they pass a painting of a horse galloping along train tracks towards an oncoming train. The painting is titled “Horse and Train” (1954) by Canadian artist Alex Colville.

A common interpretation of the painting is that it is intended to invoke feelings of helplessness and tension, and that the anxiety is heightened because we are not shown the outcome. It can only be assumed that the results will be disastrous if the subjects continue on their current course.

The choice of this image is certainly in alignment with the anxiety and tension Kubrick has already begun to invoke as the Torrance family prepares to move up to the Overlook Hotel for the winter.

via imathers

@rubysoho21

(Source: the-overlook-hotel)

spinningwhilefallingdown:

HAPPY REX MANNING DAY!

damn the man, save the empire.