José Carriedo

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José Carriedo

José Carriedo

@ppCarriedo

Actor & Director. Biografía: En Construcción...

Mexico City(Chilangolandia) Katılım Şubat 2010
1.9K Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
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THUNDERBALLS
THUNDERBALLS@Thunderballs007·
Behind the scenes with Honor Blackman on location at RAF Northolt, South Ruislip, England during filming for Goldfinger (1964)
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Distracted Film
Distracted Film@distractedfilm·
Doomed intensity. James Dean. cu
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DepressedBergman
DepressedBergman@DannyDrinksWine·
Mel Gibson on how the waterfall sequence in "Apocalypto" (2006) was shot & a weird incident that happened during the filming: "Gibson: Well, it's a real waterfall. We used a SpiderCam. We put the Genesis on it. I think that's the first time that's happened. We had to span the waterfall and river with cranes and put the cables up. It was quite an elaborate setup to enable the camera to go over the guys shoulder, down on the water, over the edge, turn around and then pull back in one shot. Of course you're not going to make a real guy jump off something like that. He'll ki!! himself. A cow fell over one day. A cow was trying to swim across... it was just overtaken by the depth of water and it fell over the waterfall! It hit the water and I thought, "It's toast." It was about 170 feet, this waterfall. It came up somewhere on the other side and it was all busted up... then the waves got it, it was upside down, bouncing off the rocks... and it got into this deep water. One of the local guys, this is the weird thing of all... the cow's in the water, but this Mexican guy just goes up to it and it's like he said something to it, it was the weirdest thing I've ever seen, and the cow just walked up and started eating grass! Farhad Safinia: The cow was just munching grass. It felt like it didn't remember a thing. Interviewer: Is there any footage of that? Gibson: I kept telling them to turn the camera on. A lot of people wouldn't turn the camera on when I told them too. It used to make me crazy. With the guy jumping off the waterfall... we found a 15 story building in Vera Cruz and we hooked Rudy up to it on a wire and said, "Jump off, kid!" His knees banged together for a little but he did it 10 times. Then I'm watching and I'm giving him a hard time... afterwards all the stunt guys came up to me, and he'd put them up to it, they said, "I don't suppose you'd like to have a jump?" And I said, because I had to instill fear in the rest of the crew and I couldn't look bad, I just said, "Hook me up." They hooked me up and I went off. I would have presumed that they would have turned the cameras on, but they didn't. I'm like, "What?"" ("Talking Apocalypto with Mel Gibson and Co-Writer Farhad Safinia", Evan Jacobs, Movieweb, 2006)
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El Club del Arte 🎨📷📚🖼🕍🎼
Noctámbulos es la obra más emblemática de Edward Hopper, pintada en 1942. Representa un café nocturno en Nueva York, donde cuatro figuras permanecen sumidas en un silencio cargado de soledad y alienación urbana. Aunque a menudo se interpreta como una metáfora del aislamiento en la vida moderna, Hopper también la veía como un "faro de esperanza" tras el ataque a Pearl Harbor, representando la resistencia de la luz frente a la oscuridad de la guerra. Dato curioso: Las figuras fueron modeladas por el propio Hopper y su esposa, Jo. A pesar de su proximidad física, parecen desconectados y absortos en sus propios pensamientos. Arte en movimiento apoyado por Grok
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FilmoteCanet Cinema
FilmoteCanet Cinema@CanetCinema·
Agnès Varda
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James Bond
James Bond@007·
007 reporting for duty. On this day in 1963 DR. NO was released in America.
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cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
Monica Bellucci photographed by Piero Gemelli 📸
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Marie Ruiz-Vidal
Marie Ruiz-Vidal@RuizVidal7·
Bonjour (Gary Cooper - Cannes, 1953)
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Screenise
Screenise@screenisemovie·
Marlon Brando and Paul Newman in 1963.
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Marie Ruiz-Vidal
Marie Ruiz-Vidal@RuizVidal7·
Julianne Moore
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All The Right Movies
All The Right Movies@ATRightMovies·
What's the greatest movie car chase?
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Classic Horror Films
Classic Horror Films@HorrorHammer1·
Christopher Lee as Count Dracula, 'Dracula Has Risen From The Grave' (Hammer 1968)
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THUNDERBALLS
THUNDERBALLS@Thunderballs007·
A promotional still of Pierce Brosnan for Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
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Hollywood Golden Age of Cinema
Grace Kelly and Cary Grant in a romantic scene in Alfred Hitchcock's To Catch a Thief (1955). Frances Stevens: “Even in this light, I can tell where your eyes are looking”. [fireworks] Frances Stevens: “Look, John. Hold them. Diamonds ... The only thing in the world you can't resist. Then tell me you don't know what I'm talking about”. [fireworks] Frances Stevens: “Ever had a better offer in your whole life? One with everything?”. [fireworks] John Robie: “I've never had a crazier one”. Frances Stevens: “Just as long as you're satisfied!”. [fireworks] John Robie: “You know as well as I do: this necklace is imitation”. Frances Stevens: “Well, I'm not”.
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Roger Boylan
Roger Boylan@BoylanRoger·
Charlotte Rampling, 1971.
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DepressedBergman
DepressedBergman@DannyDrinksWine·
The premiere of Carl Theodor Dreyer's 'Vampyr' (1932) in Germany was delayed by UFA for nearly nine months since the studio wanted the American films "Dracula" (1931) and "Frankenstein" (1931) to be released first. But the film was still a financial failure. When it finally premiered in Berlin on 6 May 1932, the audience booed the film, and Dreyer reportedly removed several scenes following the first screening. When the movie was screened in Vienna, audiences demanded their money back. When this was denied, a riot broke out, and police restored order with night sticks. P.S: On this day, 96 years ago, 'Vampyr' (1932) was released in Germany.
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