Tonight's episode continued where the last episode 6 left off with rude ass Ian Thomson, telling Kaitlyn all kinds of negative things about her character and ending it off with basically saying he didn't like her and quitting the show. Kaitlyn did defend herself before he took off. They got into a huge argument and what not. But ole Nick was right there to swoop in once Ian took off. He totally played his cards right, telling Kaitlyn how great he thinks she is and then sealing it with some heavy kissing action. Kaityn was totally sprung after that while the other guys just stood around at the bottom of the balcony, talking about "I wonder what Kaitlyn's doing?" Kaitlyn was getting drained of all of her saliva,lol!! Nick has just been one step ahead of them every time. Anyways, from there, Kaitlyn got rid of Justin Reich and Joshua Albers at the rose ceremony,...
- 6/23/2015
- by Andre Braddox
- OnTheFlix
Tonight's episode, kicked off with, host Chris Harrison, telling Britt she lost the vote to become the next Bachelorette and was out of here after shedding a few tears. Then Chris went and told the fabulous Kaitlyn that she was the new Bachelorette as it should've been in the first damn place. Yay!!! After that, Kaitlyn wasted no time getting back to business, flirting up her fellas. She shared a few, really steamy kisses with a couple of them. One guy actually told Kaitlyn he voted for Britt, but still wanted to stay, like Wtf? Keep your mouth shut. Anyways, the rose ceremony came next. During the ceremony, Brady Toops pulled Kaitlyn to the side to tell her, he wanted to go hunt down Britt, so he was out. However, I think they're going to revisit that in a future episode. From there, Kaitlyn ended up getting rid of: Shawn Evans,...
- 5/20/2015
- by Andre Braddox
- OnTheFlix
Recently, our trusty source, Reality Steve, delivered some very revealing spoilers for the upcoming "Bachelorette 2015" episode 2, and it sounds very interesting as it'll be a continuation of episode 1 where they will finally reveal that my homegirl, Kaitlyn, beat out awful Britt to be the one and only Bachelorette this season. Yay!! After, Kaitlyn is proclaimed the winner, Kaitlyn will engage in another cocktail party with the fellas and end up giving Shawn Booth an early, first impression rose. After that, Kaitlyn will make Shawn Evans, Ryan McDill (asked to leave before the rose ceremony), Josh Seiter, David, and Bradley Cox very unhappy men by sending them packing. Also, at one point, one of the guys, Brady Toops, will interrupt the rose ceremony and tell Kaitlyn, he had more of a connection with Britt, and basically split to go get her. Oh well. No sweat off Kaitlyn's back as she'll have...
- 5/18/2015
- by Derek
- OnTheFlix
"Alfred Hitchcock is the latest installment in Peter Ackroyd’s ongoing Brief Lives series," notes Peter Murphy in the Irish Times. "He’s probably written footnotes longer than this book; at 250 pages odd it’s a mere pamphlet compared with Bible-sized behemoths such as London: The Biography or Thames: Sacred River. In that light, Alfred Hitchcock seems less like a labor of obsessive love than a pleasurable dalliance." In the Financial Times, Ian Thomson agrees: "For all its insight, Peter Ackroyd’s biography is a deft synthesis of numerous other studies of 'Alfred the Great'; it is well written, however, and unusually well attuned to the religious element." We're collecting more reviews. » - David Hudson...
- 4/7/2015
- Fandor: Keyframe
"Alfred Hitchcock is the latest installment in Peter Ackroyd’s ongoing Brief Lives series," notes Peter Murphy in the Irish Times. "He’s probably written footnotes longer than this book; at 250 pages odd it’s a mere pamphlet compared with Bible-sized behemoths such as London: The Biography or Thames: Sacred River. In that light, Alfred Hitchcock seems less like a labor of obsessive love than a pleasurable dalliance." In the Financial Times, Ian Thomson agrees: "For all its insight, Peter Ackroyd’s biography is a deft synthesis of numerous other studies of 'Alfred the Great'; it is well written, however, and unusually well attuned to the religious element." We're collecting more reviews. » - David Hudson...
- 4/7/2015
- Keyframe
A fascinating book reveals the real-life scandal that lay behind Federico Fellini's La Dolca Vita
In glamorous Rome, Fellini's La Dolce Vita was the box-office hit of 1960, and launched Marcello Mastroianni as an international heart-throb. No film captured so vividly the flash-bulb glitz of Italy's postwar "economic miracle". After the drawn-out trauma of fascism, the nation was poised for a consumer boom of televisions, fridges and Fiat 500s. Daringly, Fellini disavowed the neo-realism of films such as Bicycle Thieves for the stylised fantasies of Hollywood. The Vatican not surprisingly objected to the scene in which Mastroianni makes love to Anita Ekberg in the waters of the Trevi fountain, and tried to have the film censored. Ever since, says the historian Stephen Gundle, Rome has endured as a fantasy of the "sweet life".
Yet all was not well behind the roseate flush of Italy's newfound prosperity. The miracolo italiano...
In glamorous Rome, Fellini's La Dolce Vita was the box-office hit of 1960, and launched Marcello Mastroianni as an international heart-throb. No film captured so vividly the flash-bulb glitz of Italy's postwar "economic miracle". After the drawn-out trauma of fascism, the nation was poised for a consumer boom of televisions, fridges and Fiat 500s. Daringly, Fellini disavowed the neo-realism of films such as Bicycle Thieves for the stylised fantasies of Hollywood. The Vatican not surprisingly objected to the scene in which Mastroianni makes love to Anita Ekberg in the waters of the Trevi fountain, and tried to have the film censored. Ever since, says the historian Stephen Gundle, Rome has endured as a fantasy of the "sweet life".
Yet all was not well behind the roseate flush of Italy's newfound prosperity. The miracolo italiano...
- 7/22/2011
- The Guardian - Film News
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