Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

Jul 03

(via )

dankmemeuniversity:

image

(via endless-endeavours)

Arctic Fox Sets Record In Walking From Norway To Canada -

@blackbackedjackal

(Source: NPR, via npr)

spine-tinglers:
“ Dolls (1987) dir. Stuart Gordon
Does the dog die?
”

spine-tinglers:

Dolls (1987) dir. Stuart Gordon

Does the dog die?

[video]

“Ignore fact and reason, live entirely in the world of your own fantastic and myth-producing passions; do this wholeheartedly and with conviction, and you will become one of the prophets of your age.” — Bertrand Russell, Mortals and Others (via philosophybits)

(via philosophybits)

(via horror-bmovie-punk-deactivated2)

Arctic Fox Sets Record In Walking From Norway To Canada -

@everythingfox

(Source: NPR, via npr)

horror-bmovie-punk-deactivated2:

image

nprfreshair:
“ ‘Midsommar’ Shines: A Solstice Nightmare Unfolds In Broad Daylight
Film critic Justin Chang:
“In the viscerally unnerving films of Ari Aster, there’s nothing more horrific than the reality of human grief. His haunted-house thriller,...

nprfreshair:

‘Midsommar’ Shines: A Solstice Nightmare Unfolds In Broad Daylight

Film critic Justin Chang:

In the viscerally unnerving films of Ari Aster, there’s nothing more horrific than the reality of human grief. His haunted-house thriller, Hereditary, followed a family rocked by traumas so devastating that the eventual scenes of devil-worshipping naked boogeymen almost came as a relief. Aster’s new movie, Midsommar, doesn’t pack quite as terrifying a knockout punch, but it casts its own weirdly hypnotic spell. This is a slow-burning and deeply absorbing piece of filmmaking, full of strikingly beautiful images and driven less by shocks than ideas. It’s not interested in frightening you so much as seeping into your nervous system.