If music be the food of love, play on.

43,823 notes

keepcalmandcarriefischer:

nylaporp:

keepcalmandcarrieunderwood:

I’d love to see a version of Julius Caesar where he takes the beware the Ides of March warning seriously like “oh shit. good heads up man thanks” and he goes into it with his own knife. He calms down a bit when he see’s all his best friends like “yea, the squad is here and everyone is strapped. nice”

I don’t know why this is making me laugh so hard

Because I am very funny

(via silverowlet)

44,754 notes

olliums:

popokko:

did anyone else grow up near a tourist attraction or historical site or something and feel completely blindsided when you eventually realized it was like. a bucket list item for hundreds if not thousands of people

image

(via silverowlet)

117,049 notes

jackironsides:

zecurlyone:

who-talks-first:

explodingplant:

mlder:

I can’t stop laughing at Carrie being told “NO” by Mark. Also, Harrison Always Knows Best.

This is from a documentary called “From Star Wars to Jedi” released in 1983. Thanks @wookieekisses because I found that bit thanks to your post!

They’re figuring out the beats of the scene –while Harrison is tied up–.

So what Mark said about them basically having to make everything up themselves (with Harrison as impromptu leader) is true.

The original films were only good by accident and thats why none of the prequels or sequels worked

The original films were good because a lot of non-George-Lucas people worked hard to make them so. Carrie, Mark and Harrison fixing the dialogue wasn’t an ‘accident’. Marcia Lucas didn’t fix three films in edit by ‘accident’.

The prequels and sequels didn’t work because they thought that George Lucas was the genius behind the films, when they were a success despite him, not because of him.

(via ellissullivan)