A is for Angelica
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"My life is different now. I don't go to work. I don't have an office. I stay at home, hide behind...
Gotham High
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After being kicked out of his boarding school, 16-year-old Bruce Wayne returns to Gotham City to...
A Werewolf in Riverdale (Archie Horror #1)
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Who is the Riverdale Ripper? And why is Jughead waking up covered in blood? Based on the original...
If I Fix You
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When sixteen-year-old Jill Whitaker’s mom walks out—with a sticky note as a goodbye—only Jill...
The Arts of Love: Stories of Sensual Creativity
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You know what they say about those creative types... Playful, rebellious, sensitive and...
Erotic Romance Short_Stories
The Strange And Deadly Portraits Of Bryony Gray
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A Tim Burtonesque retelling of The Picture of Dorian Gray aimed at Middle Graders. The most...
Anthem of a Reluctant Prophet
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“Stan,” I said, and I said it kind of loud so of course he had to look up. “Tomorrow morning:...
Smith's Corner: Storm & Stone (The Heartwood Series #5)
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She’s overcome past obstacles, but is the wall, the man she love’s, too big to scale to win...
Contemporary Romance
Bob Mann (459 KP) rated Star Trek VI - The Undiscovered Country (1991) in Movies
Sep 28, 2021
Trek got firmly back in the fast lane again with this movie. The fun was back! David Warner becomes the only character to date to appear in two consecutive Trek films as different characters (with curiously Michael Dorn becoming the next – see below!). He gets a meatier part this time though. But he – and indeed everyone else – is upstaged by Plummer’s marvellously over-the-top performance.
Iman is memorable as a cigar-smoking shape-shifting alien, leading to some wonderful Kirk-on-Kirk action, and the delivery of one of the best lines of comedy in the series: surprisingly self-deprecating for the normally ego-centric Shatner. There’s also a welcome call-back to the ‘Kirk gets the girl’ joke of the original series, which you realise, with a shock, has been completely missing from all of the previous movie outings.
There are also a nice range of cameo appearances in here. Christian Slater – a lifelong Trek-fan – has a bit part: apparently he framed, rather than cashed, his cheque! And Michael Dorn – already playing Worf in “The Next Generation”, and to appear as Worf in the next movie – plays Worf’s grandfather, a Klingon defence attorney!
But my favourite piece of trivia relates to a completely different film. Al Pacino was filming “Frankie and Johnny” in the studio at the same time, and a scene (sadly cut from the final film) called for Pacino to look surprised after opening a door. So director Garry Marshall arranged for Shatner, Nimoy and Kelley in full Star Trek costume, to be standing behind the door when he opened it. (Garry Marshall quote here). Love it!
Bettie Page: Queen of Curves
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via Edelweiss "A treasure trove of never-before-seen playfully erotic photos of legendary pinup...
Pin ups