Cortar al Azar

No comparto su ingenio, pero si su apellido. Por eso tomo prestado el significado que le dio Julio a nuestro nombre de familia. Cortar-al-azar: retazos de cosas que encuentro interesantes. Pedazos de pensamientos, gustos e ideas lanzadas al aire para compartir. (Luz Cortazar's tumblr)
LA FOTO DEL DÍA



gasdyedinked:

bohemea:

Vanity Fair Hollywood Portfolio, 2010 by Annie Leibovitz
The Hellions Quentin Tarantino with Christoph WaltzOne film together: Inglourious Basterds (2009).
From the raw material of an Italian-made late-70s Dirty Dozen knockoff called Quel Maledetto Treno Blindato (released as The Inglorious Bastards in the U.S.), Tarantino has whipped up his latest barmy bijou mashup: part World War II epic, part goofy Mike Myers comedy (literally—he’s in the movie), part grind-house gore-fest, part Eastwoodian revenge fantasy. The linchpin of this whole exercise—and the counterpoint to the film’s putative star, Brad Pitt—is the Vienna-born Waltz. As Colonel Hans Landa, he runs the gamut of cinematic Nazi-ness, from the cold menace of Ralph Fiennes in Schindler’s List to the high camp of Dick Shawn in The Producers. With his tight smile and pit-bull jawline, he bullies his way through his every scene, terrifying and electrifying. It’s the kind of performance that a prankster like Tarantino might call S-S-sen-sational.Photographed in Los Angeles on December 14, 2009.

LA FOTO DEL DÍA

gasdyedinked:

bohemea:

Vanity Fair Hollywood Portfolio, 2010 by Annie Leibovitz

The Hellions Quentin Tarantino with Christoph Waltz
One film together: Inglourious Basterds (2009).

From the raw material of an Italian-made late-70s Dirty Dozen knockoff called Quel Maledetto Treno Blindato (released as The Inglorious Bastards in the U.S.), Tarantino has whipped up his latest barmy bijou mashup: part World War II epic, part goofy Mike Myers comedy (literally—he’s in the movie), part grind-house gore-fest, part Eastwoodian revenge fantasy. The linchpin of this whole exercise—and the counterpoint to the film’s putative star, Brad Pitt—is the Vienna-born Waltz. As Colonel Hans Landa, he runs the gamut of cinematic Nazi-ness, from the cold menace of Ralph Fiennes in Schindler’s List to the high camp of Dick Shawn in The Producers. With his tight smile and pit-bull jawline, he bullies his way through his every scene, terrifying and electrifying. It’s the kind of performance that a prankster like Tarantino might call S-S-sen-sational.

Photographed in Los Angeles on December 14, 2009.

  1. marthasaurus reblogged this from fuckyeahannieleibovitz
  2. errolwiththepost reblogged this from bohemea
  3. shhherlock reblogged this from fuckyeahannieleibovitz
  4. boylovesseaside reblogged this from bohemea
  5. sippingonhaterade reblogged this from bohemea
  6. rachaelnorris reblogged this from suicideblonde
  7. sammybluejay reblogged this from fuckyeahannieleibovitz
  8. omilara reblogged this from fuckyeahannieleibovitz
  9. teapotsonfire reblogged this from weepyyoungdevotchka
  10. romance666 reblogged this from bohemea
  11. weepyyoungdevotchka reblogged this from isufferblind
  12. isufferblind reblogged this from suicideblonde
  13. seaofbirds reblogged this from suicideblonde
  14. imenandparker reblogged this from suicideblonde
  15. annmegg reblogged this from suicideblonde and added:
    I soo love quentin!! ang galing ng mga film nya :)
  16. lipsonanapkin reblogged this from suicideblonde
  17. -potato reblogged this from suicideblonde
  18. claireisanaspiringnovelist reblogged this from bohemea
  19. thatisamanda reblogged this from bohemea
  20. mouth-to-mouth reblogged this from rispostesenzadomanda
  21. silentalarm reblogged this from danielfaraday