Suspiria will be released on 4K Ultra HD on November 19 via Synapse Films, marking the distributor’s first foray into UHD. Wes Benscoter designed the new artwork; the original poster will be on the revers side.
Synapse’s 4k restoration of the uncut Italian 35mm camera negative, supervised by director of photography Luciano Tovoli, is presented in true 2160p with high dynamic range. Optional English subtitles are available.
It includes a new Dolby Atmos audio remix, along with an Italian 5.1 Surround mix and the original 4.0 1977 English language LCRS sound mix, presented in high-resolution DTS-HD MA 96kHz/24-bit audio.
Directed by Dario Argento (Deep Red, Tenebrae), the 1977 Italian horror masterpiece stars Jessica Harper, Joan Bennett, Alida Valli, Barbara Magnolfi, and Udo Kier.
A Blu-ray disc with the special features from Synapse’s recent Blu-ray edition will be included; they’re listed below.
From Shaun King’s instagram (warning video included):
This was Tuesday morning in Corpus Christi, Texas. In the past 5 years I’ve studied over 1,000 videos of police violence and have watched some of them hundreds of times so that I can understand just how each incident could have been prevented. This shooting WOULD NOT have happened in most countries.
Notice that the man is barefoot. This is a clear sign of distress. Before the shooting, people called 911 because they saw him and believed he was having a mental health breakdown. He clearly was. At that point, a mental health emergency team should have been called and dispatched to the scene. 99% of American cities don’t have such teams. They should. That team, as has happened around the world, would have then surrounded the man with plastic shields, and disarmed him, and used other less lethal methods first. I’ve seen it happen over and over again when men had knives, machetes, and pipes.
Notice that the officer continues to fire after the item was dropped. After the man’s back was turned he shot him in the back. In some states, 50% of people killed by police were having a mental health episode and needed an ambulance and a hospital, not a gun and bullets. Hospitals face moments like this almost daily. And they don’t shoot and kill people.
How is it that social workers, EMTs, rehab specialists, nurses, doctors, teachers, etc. are all capable of de-escalating a situation without pumping half a dozen bullets into a person?
When I got de-escalation training the instructor, who was older, literally told us that in all her years in social work she’s NEVER had to restrain an individual and emphasized how there are always ways to calm a situation down. This cop was told the man was having an episode, walked up to his face and then shot him down. Absolutely none of these actions indicate de-escalation was even considered. They just kill and move on.
All states and territories in Australia have laws that allow the incarceration of 10-year-old children.
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Of the nearly 600 children incarcerated in Australia each year, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander kids are over-represented. Close to 100 percent of the youths in jail in the Northern Territory are Indigenous Australians.

Ostracon of Prince Sethherkhepshef
It is a standing, figured profile of Prince Sethherkhepshef (who later ascended the throne as Ramesses VIII) in an adoration pose, with outstretched arms, a scepter in his left hand, and right hand, palm-forward. Behind Sethherkhepshef in a standard layout of figures and writing, is a vertical column of hieroglyphs reading “king’s son of his body, his beloved” with his name (Seth-her-kepesh) appearing at the end.
Egyptian ostraca were used for artist’s sketchings, cartoons-caricatures, letter documents, school–practice writing, and graffiti. This particular ostracon may be a sketch by an artisan working on the prince’s tomb.
From the Tomb (QV43), Valley of the Queens, West Thebes. Now in the Egyptian Museum of Turin. Cat. 5637




