Search Results

  1. LARiA
    Time is dead in a black hole.

    [​IMG]

    This is your answer
    It's calling you on
    Dive into the abyss​
    Post by: LARiA, Jul 1, 2012 in forum: The Spam Zone
  2. LARiA
    For me, it is ultimately a tie between Bill Bixby and Mark Ruffalo... I can't do this.

    It is with much hesitance that I cast my vote.

    Allow me to provide an elaboration;

    Bixby initially rejected playing Banner under the premise that any adaption of a superhero comic would be stupid. I admit that I hold this against him, regardless of whether or not he learned to like the role. He did. Make no mistake, he played an excellent Banner. However, he was not as open-minded as I would have liked...

    We have yet to see or hear much of Ruffalo. One might hold him at a disadvantage then, but I beg to differ. He is totally fresh, and there is a lot to hope for in him. Freshness is refreshing.

    These are subtle reasons, but it was a tie to begin with. So I reserve the right to form decisions based on half thought, silly reasonings.
    Thread by: LARiA, Jul 1, 2012, 7 replies, in forum: The Spam Zone
  3. LARiA
    A baby boy. Mm, I snatched his milk bottle from his tiny-winy fingers and downed it. It was delicious...
    Post by: LARiA, Jul 1, 2012 in forum: The Spam Zone
  4. LARiA
    Gets in between an athlete's toes; causes hallucinations; is edible. Those are only a few of the various functions those marvelous mushrooms offer. The last one is not so horrible, tho.
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 30, 2012 in forum: The Playground
  5. LARiA
    Damn fungi, cannot be trusted. Unless you mean shrooms?
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 30, 2012 in forum: The Playground
  6. LARiA
    Because...?
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 30, 2012 in forum: The Playground
  7. LARiA
    Oh no, you do not necessarily have to answer the person above you before proceeding with your own snapshot; the game would proceed too slowly that way. You are free to post as many as you wish, and free to quote poster's from several posts back if you suddenly recognise a snapshot. There is to be no sense of chronological order in this thread.

    That said, I imagine this one should be several times easier than the last. Cartoons are stylised by the artist himself, his nuances allude to his identity. It's trademark.

    [​IMG]

    ...a hint for the other? It is an adaptation of Patricia Highsmith's novel.
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 30, 2012 in forum: The Playground
  8. LARiA
    Guess where it's from.
    *Hint: Don't title the file its name, that would be a dead giveaway.


    [​IMG]
    Thread by: LARiA, Jun 30, 2012, 3 replies, in forum: The Playground
  9. LARiA
    [video=youtube;-TIkl-6xemw]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TIkl-6xemw[/video]
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 30, 2012 in forum: Music
  10. LARiA
    [video=youtube;kGygNUfWBQc]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGygNUfWBQc[/video]

    [video=youtube;-SvUKs0yNaM]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-SvUKs0yNaM[/video]
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 29, 2012 in forum: Music
  11. LARiA
    I don't know about favorite, but this one has been on continuous loop for hours now. Kudos to the He-man fans for introducing us.
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 29, 2012 in forum: Music
  12. LARiA
    The Incredible Hulk (1977) - The pilot behind the 1978 TV series. Right off the bat, props to them for even trying to stimulate a real-life Hulk. What with the lack of CGI, he is as silly as you would expect; a bodybuilder in body paint. Truly narmy at some points, while at others superb acting manages to distract just long enough to pull it off. The lead woman, Susan Sullivan, did well particularly in her final scene-- tearing up in the eyes of a shirtless muppet-looking creature, inspiring really the imagination that requires. There were a few... minor and major changes to the plotline, such as it being David Banner and not Bruce Banner, and I am not familiar with an Elaina Marks (granted I am not too familiar with the original storyline either). I did, however, note Betty Ross's absence. Her father was absent from the film as well. Now, I have not seen the show following the film, so I do not know if they are introduced later in...? Doubt it. I believe that most of (hint: all of) the plot was changed, not a very faithful adaption yet it managed to attain a similar feel. Good enough.

    6/10
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 29, 2012 in forum: The Playground
  13. LARiA
    In order to repent for inexplicit sins I volunteered to be sent to a sort of prison camp. The public was under the impression it was a place designed to allow prisoners to live together collectively; to start fresh in a healthy, controlled environment. Prisoners would be encouraged aka forced to participate in their community, completing various mindless tasks in exchange for food tickets. No efforts spent, no energy gained; work, or do not eat. The houses were but run down shacks, improvised, and the roofs were under a constant state of disrepair; the floorboards creaked, the walls were adorned with bullet holes and graffiti. It was not even creative, the graffiti-- the standard ugly sprawl. Comparable to D-Block from Xenogears, or perhaps to the Nazi ghettos...

    Most of the days wasted there in that wasteland were uneventful and were thus forgotten, though throughout my stay I can recall a vague annoyance at the soldiers standing guard, at the ordinaries who intermixed. They would treat me better than they would the rest, presumably because I volunteered and as such they saw no reason to punish me, they missed my logic. I met an unexpected soul in that Hell, a (somewhat) familiar face who had volunteered of his own free will. In order to protect his identify, I will not reveal that (somewhat) familiar face. Baffled it was at that point I realised, there was another like me...

    oOoOoOo

    A repost

    Post by: LARiA, Jun 28, 2012 in forum: The Spam Zone
  14. LARiA
    Post

    Bye.

    Take care, sensei.
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 26, 2012 in forum: Departure Hall
  15. LARiA
    2/10

    "I don't exactly know what I am required to say in order for you to have intercourse with me. But could we assume that I said all that. I mean essentially we are talking about fluid exchange right? So could we go just straight to the sex."
    ― John Nash, A Beautiful Mind​
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 26, 2012 in forum: The Spam Zone
  16. LARiA
    Yes, I do. Your nick be Christ. My God.

    When you spoke of the psychological thriller genre, it clicked. Granted you are a stranger to me, so give me some leeway to make guesses on your character. You are an awful lot like Frank, take it as a grain of salt. Who you admire? It's no secret, you admitted a few: Makaze, Sforzato, Ashwin.
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 24, 2012 in forum: The Playground
  17. LARiA
    Is transgendered, if memory serves me correct.
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 24, 2012 in forum: The Playground
  18. LARiA
    Mrrrow, I love your Kitty Pryde. You should work with more X-Men stock...
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 24, 2012 in forum: Arts & Graphics
  19. LARiA
    Frank. The name of a character from a later part of The Ripliad, a young boy who admires the mysterious Tom Ripley to the point of obsession. He quite innocently thinks himself a non innocent, quite cute really.
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 24, 2012 in forum: The Playground
  20. LARiA
    Tell them you are affected by their obnoxious behaviors. If they persist, laugh you vis-a-vis, then cut them off. They come to you with their problems, you say? Do you ever come to them with yours? If not, tear off the leeches. Nothing good can come of such a parasitic relationship. You should not have to put up with such poor treatment, you do not deserve it.
    Post by: LARiA, Jun 24, 2012 in forum: Help with Life