In this very moment, Mexico citizens are marching on the Capital City urging and asking for Mexico’s President Enrique Peña Nieto to step down and quit.
THIS IS SOMETHING NO MEDIA WILL BROADCAST BUT IT’S THE REALITY OF THIS COUNTRY !!
Thank you so much to all of you who had reblogged this !! Update on this video: it was a peaceful march, in response to the ‘news’ of the 43 missing students (body pieces were found burned and torn apart and while the government had said they are not sure the body parts are the students, in cont. the president had told the devastated parents he would find the missing students a month after the event and now everyone wants those persons alive and returned to their families). During the march, the security responsible for the National Palace retreated, moment some anarchists used to attack and lit fire to the Palace Door, when citizens made a move to stop them because that was not the intention of the march, police and security elements returned and protected those responsible for the burned door. It has been pointed that those anarchists where working for the government to cause troubles and distraction for the media and make it seems like the citizens attacked and discredit the original purpose of the march.
Patrick Maître-Bailly-Grand :: The Drops of Niépce, 2006
Ida Lupino (4 February 1918 – 3 August 1995) was an English-American film actress and director, and a pioneer among women filmmakers. In her forty-eight-year career, she appeared in fifty-nine films and directed seven others. She co-wrote and co-produced some of her own films as well. She appeared in serial television programmes fifty-eight times and directed fifty other episodes. Additionally, she contributed as a writer to five films and four TV episodes. She and her husband Collier Young formed an independent company, The Filmakers, and Lupino became a producer, director and screenwriter of low-budget, issue-oriented films.
In an article for the Village Voice, Carrie Rickey wrote that Lupino was a model of modern feminist filmmaking: “Not only did Lupino take control of production, direction and screenplay, but each of her movies addresses the brutal repercussions of sexuality, independence and dependence.”
After four “woman’s” films about social issues – including Outrage (1950), a film about rape – Lupino directed her first hard-paced, fast-moving film, The Hitch-Hiker (1953), making her the first woman to direct a film noir. Writer Richard Koszarski noted: “Her films display the obsessions and consistencies of a true auteur…. In her films The Bigamist and The Hitch-Hiker Lupino was able to reduce the male to the same sort of dangerous, irrational force that women represented in most male-directed examples of Hollywood film noir.” x
Koen Lybaert (Belgian, b. 1965, Wilrijk, Belgium) - County Kerry (Abstract N° 2556), Paintings: Oil on Canvas
Dennis Hopper in Apocalypse now directed by Francis Ford Coppola, 1979
Soho, London, 1965
by David Hurn
Ink Maze illustrations for Saatchi & Saatchi by Maria Tiurina
My summer reading list used to be lit 😈
I’m my own bitch now!
Atomic Blonde (2017) dir. David Leitch