Dry Cleaning - Swampy
https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=orxd99npFJ8
WordAll #704 completed in 1m 03s
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wordall.xyz
Wordle 975 4/6*
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https://www.nytimes.com/games/wordle/index.html
#Worldle #759 1/6 (100%) (cheated)
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La palabra del día #774 3/6
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Le Mot (@WordleFR) #771 5/6 (hinds)
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Framed #710 (nope. I watched Eyes of Fire, on prime video, which is a rubbish film on multiple levels, but like an explanation of a beast in a medieval bestiary serves as an example of moral tale. It was an independent horror film from 1983, it had some good actors, and the the cinematography is often excellent. I'm not keen on film having perfect exposure and lighting because it's rare such perfect lighting and exposure occurs naturally, but Eyes of Fire mostly has perfect exposure and lighting, well composed scenes - no chopped off details in frame, which suggests a degree of competence not normally associated with late 1970s/early 1980s horror films. It's a perfect example of what happens when a person who is highly competent in one area of expertise assumes that their competence extends to a related, but not the same, area of expertise. It was written and directed by the same person. The accents are terrible, the actors do not seem to know what to do in some scenes, and the plot is fairly obvious from a third of the way into the film. Had the screenplay being written by, or with, someone highly competent in the field of screenwriting I think it could have been amazing. I don't know anything about the making or background of the film, because my bestiary of bad but interesting films is not a real thing, and it would take excessive time, but I think I'm probably right. I also started watching Brand New Cherry Flavor, which is excellent on every level so far, but Rosa Salazar is amazing - she reminds me of Richard Dreyfuss in Close Encounters of The Third Kind, and the rest of the cast are also great.)
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