Source: idjitsintardisAll the feels
when someone tries to argue with you on a topic you know more about
This is the NFL for me
(via regretwhatyouletslip)
Source: theselener
Pulp Fiction trivia: Speculation abounds as to the nature of the mysterious glowing contents of the case:
- Could it be Elvis’s gold suit, seen worn by Val Kilmer (as Elvis) in True Romance?
- The most persistent theory (most usually attributed to a friend of a friend who saw it posted on a message board by someone whose brother had read a report of a radio interview with Tarantino himself) is that it is Marcellus Wallace’s soul. The story goes that when the Devil takes a person’s soul, it is removed through the back of the head (this isn’t part of any known religion, but this is what the message board posters say). When we see the back of Marcellus’s head he has a Band-Aid covering the precise spot indicated by tradition for soul removal. Perhaps Marcellus sold his soul to the devil which would also explain why the combination to open the briefcase is 666.
- Quentin Tarantino has said that the band-aid on the back of Marsellus Wallace’s neck had nothing to do with an allusion to the Devil stealing Marsellus’s soul… but that the actor Ving Rhames had a scar on the back of his neck he wanted to cover up.
- Or could it be simply a 20-watt light bulb?
- According to Roger Avary, who co-wrote the script with Quentin Tarantino, the original plan was to have the briefcase contain diamonds. This seemed neither exciting nor original, so Avary and Tarantino decided to have the briefcase’s contents never appear on screen; this way each filmgoer could mentally “fill in the blank” with whatever struck his or her imagination as best fitting the description “so beautiful”. The orange light bulb (projecting shimmering light onto the actors’ faces) was a last-minute decision and added a completely unintended fantastic element.
- In a radio interview with ‘Howard Stern’ in late 2003, Quentin Tarantino was asked by a caller the contents of the briefcase, and he answered, “It’s whatever the viewer wants it to be.”
(via funnycreativeusername)
Source: ddowney
etsy:
Source: thisiscolossal.comOh, we’d take one of these. A Library Slide by Moon Hoon | Colossal.
Source: arkitekcherChipicas Town Houses | Alejandro Sánchez García
Location: Valle de Bravo, México
Source: dezeen.comJoyce & Jeroen House renovation by Personal Architecture
Photography is by René de Wit
Source: lombardiabeniculturali.itFontana per Piazzale Corsica by Cesare Cattaneo
Built temporarily in Milan for the Sixth Triennial 1936, and in 1962 was finally rebuilt permanently in Camerlata through the efforts of the Cattaneo family.
Calls me ugly:
Calls me sexy:
Calls me cute:
Calls me fat:
Tells me I’m wrong:
Tells me a boring story:
Tells me they love me:
Tells my parents about what I did over the weekend:
favorite one is the fat one
(via rickyproctor)
Source: bennieeee
Flight of the Conchords - I’m not crying (by alecwh)
I love this song. It’s hilarious to me.
Source: youtube.com
Fun things you never knew when you were growing up-
NES systems had built in televisions. “We felt it was one of the most important aspects of the console,” said system creator and company founder David Rosen, “But nobody ever tried opening them and despite numerous diagrams in Nintendo Power, word just never got out”.
This post has been featured on a 1000notes.com blog.
I’m testing this as soon as I go back to Boone. I call major bullshit.
(via lbrigman94)
Source: dorkly