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Inca Trail, Cusco & Machu Picchu: Practical Trailblazer Guide to South America's Most Popular Trek, What to See and Do, Plus Other Treks
Book
Practical, all-in-one guide for hiking the Inca Trail. Includes Lima and Cusco city guides, route...
Damn Good Advice (for People With Talent!): How to Unleash Your Creative Potential by America's Master Communicator, George Lois
Book
DAMN GOOD ADVICE (for people with talent!) is an inspirational guide to creativity and success....
LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated The Devil's Rejects (2005) in Movies
Oct 10, 2020
Still largely prefer the viscera of gross circus-esque horror movie eye candy of ππ°πΆπ΄π¦ π°π§ 1000 ππ°π³π±π΄π¦π΄, but this one somehow might be more repulsive and disturbing. I'm astounded this movie even works at all, revisiting such ostentatious caricatures by way of Americana on-the-run crime movie should never have worked - but not only did it manage to be one of the best crime thrillers of the 21st century, but it also set the template for how more sequels oughta look into telling their story, by completely flipping the script and going with an entirely different genre while still maintaining the root of what makes the characters so great. Loaded with moody desolate (both physically and morally) cinematography, a deliciously over-the-top William Forsythe villain, pounds upon pounds of stomach-churning brutality, and a rich late-70s tone that takes over anything from the aesthetic to the soundtrack. Zombie has created some of the hall-of-fame best horror movie characters ever put to screen through Baby, Otis, and Captain Spaulding - not only gleefully cruel, unique, and uproariously riveting but also able to see the fault of their own detrimental wickedness yet still choosing not to change even if they could. Their own self-destructiveness isn't even allowed to take full hold because of the American system they're forced to act within, also the "Free Bird" ending is as amazing as everyone says.