|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Apr 14, 2021 16:49:03 GMT
2016. Big event in Italy. 6 frontmen of 6 popular Italian bands, together!
70's Gold:
Pietro Paolo Barbella (Santo California); Gianfranco Caliendo (former lead singer of Il Giardino dei Semplici from 1974 to 2012); Claudio Lumetta (Homo Sapiens); Gianni Minuti Muffolini (Daniel Sentacruz Ensemble); Daniele Montenero (Romans); Franco Morgia (former lead singer of Beans from 1972 to 1979).
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Apr 11, 2021 17:38:12 GMT
The first song is the "remake" of his first hit with Il Giardino dei Semplici, back in April 1975.
The second song is taken from his first solo album, Memorie di un pazzo (2012).
This is a third single, issued in January 2015, featuring the rapper Ciccio Merolla. It's a song criticizing TV talent shows and their illusions.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Apr 9, 2021 0:15:45 GMT
Hopefully he's... ASH!
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Apr 9, 2021 0:12:33 GMT
My father.
Italian singer/guitarist/songwriter Gianfranco Caliendo, frontman of the popular band Il Giardino dei Semplici (4 million records sold) from 1974 to 2012. Also, composer of the song "Turuturu", worldwide hit (1,2 million records sold) performed by Sandy & Junior and many other artists.
14 albums released, 2000 gigs all over Italy as well as States and Romania.
My father is a solo artist since 2012. I will post his official & live videoclips on this same thread. Watch this space. He already released two solo records: Memorie di un pazzo and Amanapoli. He is about to launch his autobiography book and a new album recorded with his Miele Band.
Give me feedback, I would love that. Thanks.
2012:
2013:
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Feb 12, 2021 14:29:44 GMT
Hey guys, I got a very important question (in order to understand the time travel in Season 2):
What is the very last time when we see the Kandarian Dagger in Episode 7/8, Season 2? I'm sure that Ash, Kelly and Ruby did not bring the Dagger with them, when they traveled back in time (beginning of Episode 9).
Thank you so much.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Feb 5, 2021 19:11:27 GMT
Waiting for some feedback. Oh, sure. I do absolutely find this interesting but my take is that Mad Max never struck me as a series with a consistent, linear timeline. Aside from the first, Max always came off as a ronin or a gunslinger who would come in from out of town and get embroiled somehow in a conflict within the setting. You can tell any number of Mad Max stories and it doesn't need to make sense in a temporal way. It's just "this was one of his adventures" sort of things where it doesn't matter because the setting is interesting and that's the draw. I wouldn't complain about 100 Mad Max movies (assuming they were decent) even if it borked the timeline because I like the concept and I'd suspend disbelief and not really sweat how he probably couldn't do that in one lifetime.
Thank you so much for your words.
I understand your particular perspective, of course, but I can also assure that there's a consistent continuity in Max's personality, costume and overall story-arc throughout the three classic movies. Also, there's a kind of "evolution"/progression in his world, from the first movie to the third one.
Hope you enjoyed my site.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Feb 1, 2021 1:01:06 GMT
If you want Mad Max to cross over to Marvel then the Savage Avengers might be a good fit:
Great suggestion.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Feb 1, 2021 0:59:37 GMT
Whoever engraved the names on the memorial wall was so stupid that the names aren't even in alphabetical order. So how the fuck does Scott Lang even know which section of the wall to look for Cassie's name? Makes no sense at all.
The entire sequence and the concept of billions and billions of people disappearing and then reappearing 5 years later make no friggin' sense, but nevermind, it's just for fun. Nitpicking is useless at this point.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Feb 1, 2021 0:56:41 GMT
Waiting for some feedback.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Dec 14, 2020 20:43:07 GMT
Do you accept the comic book story about how Max rebuilt his car to be canon ?
No, horrid.
Things like that happen only in comic books.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Dec 14, 2020 20:41:07 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Dec 14, 2020 20:00:53 GMT
You're absolutely right, Bane was on course to rival Joker in Dark Knight Rises, but Nolan decided to railroad his character in the third act as a sacrifice to Marion Cottilards truly terrible performance as Talia Ghul. This also gave us the most cringe scene of the trilogy when she stabs Batman in the side and he sits there with a truly horrified look on his face as she explains the entire movie to him.
Terrific sequence. Marion did a brilliant job with Talia. Maybe you just watched a different movie, or going hyperbole just for the sake of it.
Tom Hardy's performance was 100% amazing and memorable. Bane's death is anticlimatic as a metaphor of life... death is always anticlimatic for most people, no matter who you are or what you accomplished.
TDKR is just a masterpiece. Not better than TDK, but surely better than most superhero movies out there...
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Dec 14, 2020 1:32:30 GMT
Any feedback?
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Dec 6, 2020 14:12:54 GMT
Have you read it?
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Nov 27, 2020 19:22:02 GMT
Human prodigy. Superhuman. Greatest martial artist in history. One of the most iconic and charismatic actors of all time.
What's your fave Bruce Lee movie?
Happy birthday, DRAGON.
Lee Jun-fan (Chinese: 李振藩; November 27, 1940 – July 20, 1973), commonly known as Bruce Lee (Chinese: 李小龍), was a Hong Kong American actor, director, martial artist, martial arts instructor and philosopher. He was the founder of Jeet Kune Do, a hybrid martial arts philosophy drawing from different combat disciplines that is often credited with paving the way for modern mixed martial arts (MMA). Lee is considered by commentators, critics, media, and other martial artists to be the most influential martial artist of all time and a pop culture icon of the 20th century, who bridged the gap between East and West. He is credited with helping to change the way Asians were presented in American films.
Bruce Lee 80th Birthday Tribute #brucelee #bl80 #bruceleebirthday - YouTube
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Nov 22, 2020 14:08:31 GMT
I DISAGREE on some aspects.
I think Ash(ley) was innovative for two main reasons:
1- It was the very first time in horror movies where a "normal" guy - with no magic powers or a role related to the world of the occult - was pitted against a DEMON.
2- There was no horror movie before where they switch to a new lead character halfway of it, and make the victim/weaker character the new hero of the story.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Nov 14, 2020 18:26:28 GMT
I miss Ash.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Nov 10, 2020 1:40:48 GMT
He dropped the "Magneto" persona, hid as "human", fell in love with a woman and had a daughter.
But it seemed that... even at the very end of DOFP, he had embraced his terrorist mission again?
That's my explanation:
He was defeated by Xavier, Mystique did the right choice in the end and became a superheroine in public's eyes. This further revealed the existence of the mutants to the world (together with the Paris Accords Incident) and also made mutants look very good... (later, the X-Men have been literally "loved" as superheroes).
At that point, Magneto was tired. He had spent 9 years of life in a prison. And the ENTIRE world was behind him. So he just hid, fell in love like every other human being, and had a daughter. The daughter changed him. He wanted to protect her.
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Nov 7, 2020 1:30:30 GMT
Any feedback?
|
|
|
Post by Wolverine10005 on Nov 5, 2020 14:37:36 GMT
Spot on! The car and the human torch.
Thank you.
|
|