19th January 2013

Photo reblogged from Suicide Blonde with 458 notes

suicideblonde:

Marilyn Monroe

suicideblonde:

Marilyn Monroe

Tagged: Marilyn Monroe

9th January 2013

Photo reblogged from Serendipity with 409 notes

Source: Flickr / angela_jay

29th December 2012

Post

This blog is moving!

If you want to continue following, please do it to following tumblr.

readingsexy1.tumblr.com

It’s almost the same adress, and when I delete this one eventually, I’ll change it to be the same.

27th December 2012

Photo reblogged from X V I I I with 3,539 notes

Source: sfranciscolover

27th December 2012

Photo reblogged from sloth unleashed with 105 notes

Source: olgas-house-of-shame

26th December 2012

Photo reblogged from EaT me - DrInK me with 9 notes

lulymoon:

A good read.

lulymoon:

A good read.

Source: lulymoon

26th December 2012

Photo reblogged from Ned Stark's Bastard with 34,426 notes

hipsterinatardis:

loveyahair:

Each sticky note marks the page where a character died.

Deathly Hallows, though.

hipsterinatardis:

loveyahair:

Each sticky note marks the page where a character died.

Deathly Hallows, though.

Source: her0inchic.wordpress.com

26th December 2012

Photo reblogged from with 64,065 notes

26th December 2012

Photoset reblogged from We sure are cute for two ugly people with 31,997 notes

fuckyeahbookarts:

The Lost Sketchbook of Guillermo del Toro:

Filmmaker Guillermo del Toro put all his ideas for `Pan’s Labyrinth’ in a notebook — then lost it.

The heavyset man ran down the London street, panting, chasing the taxi. When it didn’t stop, he hopped into another cab. “Follow that cab!” he yelled. Guillermo del Toro wasn’t directing this movie. He was living it. And it was turning into a horror tale.

The Mexican filmmaker keeps all of his ideas in leather notebooks. And Del Toro had just left four years of work in the back seat of a British cab. Unlike in the movies, though, Del Toro couldn’t catch the taxi. Visits to the police and the taxi company proved equally fruitless.

Del Toro’s films — “Chronos,” “The Devil’s Backbone,” “Blade II,” “Hellboy” — typically feature magical realism. Fate was about to return the storytelling favor.

The cabbie spotted the misplaced journal. Working from a scrap of stationery that didn’t even have the name of Del Toro’s hotel (just its logo), the driver returned the book two days later. An overwhelmed Del Toro promptly gave him an approximately $900 tip.

The sketches and the ideas in that misplaced journal — four years of notes on character design, ruminations about plot — were the foundation of “Pan’s Labyrinth,” a child’s fantasy set in the wake of the Spanish Civil War.

The director, who at the time wasn’t even sure he’d actually make “Pan’s Labyrinth,” took the cabbie’s act as a sign, and plunged himself into the movie.

Source: Los Angeles Times

26th December 2012

Photo reblogged from Ludovico Technique with 174,796 notes

Source: irianne-alicia