A list of puns related to "Darkest Hour (film)"
ONLY INTERESTED IN DISCOUNTS IF BUYING MORE THAN 2 MOVIES!!! Plz don't ask me for a $2 movie for a $1.
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Tenet has been delayed, and we aren't seeing any new films in theaters stateside for the foreseeable future. So here's something a bit different for those interested.
Finest Hour is the name I've given to my fan edit/supercut, which combines Dunkirk and Darkest Hour into a single, 155-minute epic war drama. I completed the edit a couple years ago, but just recently got around to creating a Blu-ray version of it. Special thanks to u/bradyhero-cgpzero for the additional motivation I needed lol. I'm not going to share links to the actual edit itself, but you can either use Google, look up my post history or PM me if you're interested.
What I can share is a clip of the last scene from the edit, in which I combined Winston Churchill's "We Shall Fight" speech with the beautiful original ending to Dunkirk. This should give an idea of the approach taken with Finest Hour.
https://youtu.be/y9DNl9QD0fQ
The biggest challenge for me was unspooling Dunkirk's narrative structure. It was a very interesting way to depict three different timelines, but when combined with a completely different narrative (Darkest Hour), it just didn't work anymore. So now, the events that originally unfolded across three different timelines in Dunkirk are now told chronologically.
As mentioned earlier, I've put together a proper Blu-ray release. It's a two-disc set...the first disc contains the feature in color, and the second disc contains the feature in black & white and gives both films a vintage, timeless look and feel. I've also thrown in custom menus and bonus features, just like any proper disc-based release should have :)
Here's the artwork, along with screenshots of the menus. I suspect I'll be making a DVD version as well, but the priority for me was to get the Blu-ray out the door! Enjoy!
https://imgur.com/gallery/WLlWwhe
###I know this is not all the films at TIFF. There's plenty of other great films there but this is just to keep a tally for the ones Reddit has shown the most interest in before release.
* = film premiered at TIFF
#120 Beats per Minute
Director: Robin Campillo
Rotten Tomatoes: 97%
Metacritic: 77/100
#Battle of the Sexes
Directors: Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris
Rotten Tomatoes: 75%
Metacritic: 69/100
#Borg McEnroe*
Director: Janus Metz Pedersen
Rotten Tomatoes: 65%
Metacritic: N/A
#Brad's Status*
Director: Mike White
Rotten Tomatoes: 83%
Metacritic: 70/100
#Brawl in Cell Block 99
Director: S. Craig Zahler
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
Metacritic: 72/100
#Breathe
Director: Andy Serkis
Rotten Tomatoes: 64%
Metacritic: 50/100
#Call Me By Your Name
Director: Luca Guadagnino
Rotten Tomatoes: 98%
Metacritic: 98/100
#Chappaquiddick*
Director: John Curran
Rotten Tomatoes: 50%
Metacritic: N/A
#The Current War*
Director: Alfonso Gomez-Rejon
Rotten Tomatoes: 25%
Metacritic: 42/100
#Darkest Hour*
Director: Joe Wright
Rotten Tomatoes: 83%
Metacritic: 75/100
#The Death of Stalin*
Director: Armando Iannucci
Rotten Tomatoes: 95%
Metacritic: 88/100
#The Disaster Artist
Director: James Franco
Rotten Tomatoes: 92%
Meta
... keep reading on reddit β‘The darkest hour is the recent movie about winston churchill's early days in office and the challenges of leadership he faced which was compounded by the events surrounding the Dunkirk evacuation. I honestly haven't seen Dunkirk yet, but watching the Darkest Hour makes me want to just because of how important that event was tied to the film's depiction of Winston churchill deciding to either meet with Hitler and discuss a peace treaty or to bunker down and challenge his expansion of Europe
I think I liked this combo because of the chronology of events.
What other set of movies would you suggest to me?
Thanks in advance!
I was lucky enough to grow up in Adelaide in the late 90's, traveling to the Adelaide Oval with my grandfather, and witnessing the peak of the Australian test cricket era; albeit lacking understanding of how rare it was. Witnessing Sachin in his prime, the emergence of Kallis, and the end of Lara, all while sitting in the packed Adelaide Oval members stand, taking it for granted.
Clearly the shorter format has dominated the last decade, while test cricket has taken a backseat, propped up by the money T20 brings in. Now the longer format has become an afterthought for many (namely the West Indies and England), and crowd numbers are dwindling, it leaves the question - where to now for test cricket?
I'd like to know what you'd like to see happen in the future of international test cricket. Can test cricket stand on its own two feet again? Also, I'd like to know what your memories of growing up with (test) cricket are like, from wherever you're from.
I'm a 4th year who has been on an ICU service for nearly 6 weeks now. I am not a seasoned attending used to the death, suffering, withdrawals of care, tough conversations, futile codes, tough goodbyes, or unnecessary exposures which define the ICU. My ICU rotation was supposed to be protected. What this was supposed to mean was that my ICU would be exclusively non-COVID patients with a different nonstudent/resident team taking care of the COVID patients. Then delta hit. Then the program stopped caring whether medical students went into COVID rooms or not.
I decided it was my time to get practice with arterial lines and central lines during night call. The only rooms that needed the procedures done were COVID patients. Fortunately and unfortunately, the night team only has one senior resident and a fellow, so I was first in line for procedures. I said I was okay to be in the room for what ended up being multiple procedures on a fully vaccinated patient in the ICU who had recently had a transplant and was on multiple immunosuppressive drugs. My night would be filled with what I thought was excitement at first. Donning and doffing of my N95, putting on my full body cover, my surgical cover, my eye+face cover.
Everything went downhill from there. I started my night with what only in my idealistic mind was a comforting conversation with the family of a decompensating patient. The patient was on the phone with his wife on facetime, unable to speak as the bipap machine was the only thing keeping his O2 saturations above 80%. His wife was talking to him and attempting to comfort while he gasped for air. I talked to his wife about their life, their kids, how they met, why they loved each other. This in my mind was a mistake. Then his O2 saturations started dropping, rather quickly. As the fellow grabbed the glidescope I put the phone in my patient's hand as I rushed out of the room to help set up.
Then we intubated him. Easy. Grade one view. O2 saturations returned to >90. On 100 FiO2, 14 PEEP. His cuff pressures started to show hypotension and hypertension. The resident let me put in an A-line, which got me pumped up. I got it first try. Cool, I said to myself. Then we put in a CVL to push pressors as his BPs began to drop.
As I set up the CVL, I needed to clear the table where the patient's belongings sat to create the sterile field for the CVL. I picked up his phone and the screen opened. I see messages from his wife who is labelled "my beautiful amazing
... keep reading on reddit β‘I've noticed this band getting mentioned more often in this sub so I decide to write a guide to help new listeners. Darkest Hour never really had acceptance in the metal community because of their ties to the hardcore scene, and they leaned a bit too heavily in the melodeath direction for metalcore fans. This is an ultra talented group of musicians who worked with some of the best producers in rock and metal throughout their 9 album discography.
The Misanthrope (EP) - 1996
Darkest Hour was born from the Washington DC hardcore scene. There first EP sounds nothing like their later works and is more in line with what other hardcore bands like Integrity and Snapcase were doing at the time. Definitely has that DIY sound, so check this one out if your interested in underground 90s stuff.
The Prophecy Fufilled (EP) - 1999
Sadly, I can't seem to find this one. From the one song I heard it seems like it's closer to 90s metalcore like Converge and Zao.
The Mark of the Judas (2000)
Their debut LP is where they transition into a melodic death metal band. The hardcore element to their music is pretty faint at this point and the sound is more reminiscent of Gothenburg style bands like Dark Tranquility, Soilwork, and of course, At The Gates. Since Darkest Hour were the first hardcore band to adopt Gothenburg riffs, they are now believed to be the first Atthegates-core band.
The first track off this album tells you everything you need to know about the band, fast relentless riffing, technical rhythm work, and strong vocal delivery. The remastered version is on Spotify and it sounds great. If you've only heard Darkest Hours later works, be sure not to miss this one.
So Sedated, So Secure (2001)
Their sophomore effort was released on Victory Records and features more of the same. The production is a bit rough but it's still an album worth listening to. The best melodeath bands are the ones who can put a unique spin on the Gothenburg riff while still retaining a sense of urgency and desperation, and they pull this off multiple time throughout the record.
My biggest problem with these first two albums is with some of the song writing. It feels like if they needed to fill some space in a song, they would resort to a standard tremolo riff. At some point after this album they would recruit a very talented guitarist by the name of Kris Norris, and many of these issues would be addressed on their next release.
**Hidden Hands of a Sa
... keep reading on reddit β‘In the former film, Churchill is seen as a respected advisor to the royal who seems to oppose Edwardβs marriage to Wallis Simpson, and is the one who suggests Bertie use King George VI as his name.
In the latter, King George seems to despise Churchill and they certainly donβt seem to have the relationship that they had in βThe Kingβs Speechβ (though they do develop one later). Churchill also states in that movie that King George βnever forgave him for supporting his brotherβs marriage to Wallis Simpsonβ.
Which of these portrayals more accurately represents the relationship of the two? Also, where did Churchill stand on Edwardβs marriage to Simpson?
I have multiple (full) codes of all movies/collections and accept PayPal (F&F) only.
Collections:
The Alfred Hitchcock Classics Collection [HD/UHD*] (MA) - $12
* With instructions to upgrade to 4K/UHD on MA,Vudu,FN,iTunes (requires an iTunes account)
Back to the Future [HD/UHD*] (MA) - $9
Bourne Trilogy 4K (MA) - $9
or 5 film series for $12 (The Bourne Legacy + Jason Bourne)
* With instructions to upgrade to 4K/UHD on MA,Vudu,FN,iTunes (requires an iTunes account)
The Cornetto Trilogy* [HD/UHD] (iTunes) - $9
* Ports out UHD to MA
Cloverfield [UHD] (iTunes) - $6
Despicable Me [UHD] (MA) - $10
Fast and Furious Series [HD/UHD] (MA) - $15
*Redeems HD but will update to UHD if you redeem it in your iTunes account linked to MoviesAnywhere. So first redeem in MA and then in iTunes.
**Will only redeem HD
Fifty Shades [UHD] (MA) - $8
Huntsman [UHD] (MA) - $6
Indiana Jones: The Adventure Collection (3 movies ONLY) [HD/UHD*] (iTunes) - $12
* HD codes but should redeem UHD
Jack Reacher [UHD] (iTunes) - $6
Jack Ryan Film Series [UHD] (iTunes) - $12
Jurassic Park Trilogy 4K (MA) - $9
Mission Impossible 4K (iTunes) - $12
Almost pissed myself laughing when I heard this... KFC has had to remove a bunch of items from their menu because of supply chain issues, due to our worst outbreak yet and thousands leaving their jobs to isolate.
https://preview.redd.it/8j7ldioi37b81.png?width=237&format=png&auto=webp&s=8024c3030a7b4a550df2d2b0d5bfd02604dc9093
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