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March 8, 2012
March 7, 2012
Whitney Houston Serge Gainsbourg Video Attribution Information
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Videos using this content
Video Attribution Information 3:24 Whitney Houston Serge Gainsbourg Incident Uncensored by dougmaet Videos using this content These videos were created using Whitney Houston Serge Gainsbourg Incident Uncensored 4:13 we love Whitney Houston!!! by zoombful View attributions 0:45 WHITNEY HOUSTON DIES ... » See Ya at » What Gets Me Hot
Cliff Richard Move Cheap Trick California Man
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Frances Cobain Looks Like Teen Spirit
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Hard Hráč--only thing in common with Europe is dynamic style
Hard Hráč http://whatgetsmehot.posterous.com/hard-hrac tucnak--only thing it has in common with Europe is a dynamic style and music. Music is an original idea and in my view more sophisticated than The Final Countdown. I would like to point out that after the first war taught in Slovak, Czech Slovak ... » See Ya at » What Gets Me Hot
Klaus Kinski "Fuck You" "I Need Love"
Klaus Kinski "Fuck You" "I Need Love"
Uploaded by weirdopedia on Jul 10, 2010
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You're here to masturbate yourself... "Vous êtes là pour vous masturber vous même" Fuck you ...Klaus KINSKI Booed by audience Interview: Yves Mourousi...autobiography...J'ai besoin d'amour...I need love...Interview ends badly...
weirdopedia has posted a video in response to Klaus Kinski 'Fuck You, I Need Love'.
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Coup de gueule et colère de Klaus Kinski
Interviewé par Yves MOUROUSI à propos de son livre autobiographique "J'ai besoin d'amour", Klaus KINSKI marque vite de l'énervement vis à vis du journaliste et de ses questions qu'il trouve stupides. L'interview se termine très mal. L'acteur, hors de lui, insulte Y. MOUROUSI "Vous êtes là pour vous masturber vous même".
Il finit par quitter le plateau en vociférant "Fuck you" et en se faisant huer par le public.
01/12/1990
7 videos klaus kinski
Klaus KINSKI Cannes Film Festival
At the Cannes festival is the presentation tonight of the film by Werner Herzog \ "Woyzeck \ " with Klaus KINSKI...
Le grand silence - Canalplay
Great Silence Movies - Western
Directed by : Sergio Corbucci Snowvillage in Utah. Silence is a bounty hunter whose vocal cords have been cut by ... Snowvillage in Utah . Silence is a bounty hunter whose vocal cords have been cut by the killers of his parents, so he denounces them Pas Wollf FRANK LOUIS Trintignant, KLAUS KINSKI, Luigi Pistilli Henry CHAPIER in Cannes on the films in the present day ... Preview of the film by Werner Herzog Preview of the film by Werner Herzog \ " Woyzeck \ ", with Klaus KINSKI et.Interview director Andrei Konchalovsky on his film Siberiade an epic telling the story of a century through a small village in Siberia ...
Darry Cowl about the film The Borsalini
Darry Cowl, interviewed by Michel Drucker who laughs a lot , talks about his role and the filming of Michael NERVAL ...
Darry Cowl, interviewed by Michel Drucker who laughs a lot, talks about his role and the filming of Michael NERVAL . Presence of Robert Castel who also plays in the Marie Christine Barrault film.Présence and Klaus KINSKI..
Ennemis intimes - UniversCine Documentary
Wernor Herzog has 13 years when it falls into the same apartment Klaus Kinski. He realizes
Klaus Kinski 'Fuck You, I Need Love' 7,327 views 1 year ago
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Klaus Kinski "Fuck You" "I Need Love" Uploaded by weirdopedia on Jul 10, 2010 only-video-embed inafr You're here to masturbate yourself... "Vous êtes là pour vous masturber vous même" Fuck you ...Klaus KINSKI Booed by audience Interview: Yves Mourousi...autobiography...J'ai besoin d'amour...I need l ... » See Ya at » What Gets Me Hot
March 6, 2012
Oral Cancer's Toll Can Be Cruel - Roger Ebert Goes Public with His Own Disfigurement // Current TV
Roger Ebert 's Disfigurement Cruel
PHOTO: Film critic Roger Ebert lost his jaws to complications from a head and neck cancer.
-- It brought a tough, All-Star NBA coach to tears this week. And it stilled the voice of a famous film critic.
Head and neck cancers are rare, but known to be severe -- they can strip away a person's voice, distort the face and rob the basic abilities to eat, drink and swallow. The cancer can be so disfiguring, some patients seldom appear in public.
In a tear-filled press conference this week, Denver Nuggets coach George Karl announced he has a type of neck and throat cancer.
Karl said he will continue to coach, but will miss some games and practices. His type of cancer -- a squamous cell tumor found on his right tonsil -- is the most common and expected to be treatable with radiation and chemotherapy.
Also this week, Esquire profiled film critic Roger Ebert, who also had a head and neck cancer. He suffered complications from surgery to treat the cancer that had spread to the salivary gland. The magazine published a full-page photo of the film critic, who no longer has a lower jaw.
Ebert spent little time feeling sorry for himself: "If we think we have physical imperfections, obsessing about them is only destructive. Low self-esteem involves imagining the worst that other people can think about you. That means they're living upstairs in the rent-free room," he wrote on his blog after the photo published.
While Ebert cannot speak, he continues to lambaste bad movies online.
Head and neck cancers include abnormalities in the nasal cavity, sinuses, lips, mouth, tongue, esophagus, salivary glands, throat, and voice box.
These types of cancers tend to affect men in their 60s who had histories of alcohol and tobacco, but, they are also striking younger people who don't drink or smoke. This is believed to be related to the human papillomavirus
"Now there's a viral cause to the cancer," said Dr. Carol Bradford, director of the head and neck oncology program at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer. "It is not viewed as patients causing their own cancer."There are about 50,000 cases of head and neck cancers every year, compared with 200,000 new cases for breast and prostate cancer.
Because of its rarity, there is less awareness of head and neck cancers, said Dr. Christine Gourin, director of the clinical research program in head and neck cancer at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
"There aren't many celebrities or public figures who have head and neck cancers that we can hold up as an example," she said. "If you see patients when they come with advanced tumors, they can't breathe, they can't swallow their saliva, they look disfigured and their speech is abnormal, their breathing is affected. I don't think there are many people who want to go out and be a poster child -- so there's little attention."
The disease and subsequent treatments could result in disfigurement.
More so than any other cancer, people who get head and neck cancer have a visible disability, said Dr. M. Boyd Gillespie, a past president of the South Carolina Head and Neck Cancer Alliance.
"There's a higher rate of people not being able to resume their professional life after the treatment, because nowadays the service economy and communication is so important," he said.
Even the process of eating can appear distressful.
Some patients do not want to be seen in restaurants choking, coughing and having difficulty eating, said Gillespie, who is an associate professor of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the Medical University of South Carolina.
"It just takes away your dignity, your ability to go out in public and do simple things -- like you can't go out to dinner," Gourin said. "It takes away things we take for granted -- eating, speech and appearance."
After the cancer has been removed, doctors can try to reconstruct the affected areas by using tissue and bone from other areas of the body. Ebert had several surgeries to reconstruct his throat and jaw by taking tissue and bone from his back, arm, and legs. But the reconstructions did not last, according to Esquire.
If the cancer is treatable with radiation and chemotherapy, the recovery is more positive.The cancer affecting Karl is believed to be caused by a virus. This means he has a better prognosis, his doctor, Jacques Saari said in a news conference.
The five-year survival rate for viral-related cancer is 80 percent compared with 40 to 50 percent for nonviral-related cancer.
A doctor discovered a large lump, measuring two inches in diameter in Karl's neck in December.
Karl's treatment will force him to miss some games. He expressed hopes to recover in time to coach the Nuggets in the playoffs.
"I think the major desire for me is to kick this cancer's butt," Karl said in this week's press conference. In 2005, he underwent surgery for prostate cancer.
The radiation and chemotherapy have side effects, such as burnt tissue, redness, inflammation of the lining of the mouth, permanent dry mouth, weight loss and difficulty swallowing. Taste buds can be permanently damaged in some cases.
Through the typical seven weeks of treatment, most people continue to work.
"Some feel the need to work during treatment to retain normalcy," Gourin said.
The voice box is usually not affected, so Karl could do what head coaches often do -- yell at referees.
Roger Ebert 's Disfigurement Cruel PHOTO: Film critic Roger Ebert lost his jaws to complications from a head and neck cancer. -- It brought a tough, All-Star NBA coach to tears this week. And it stilled the voice of a famous film critic. Head and neck cancers are rare, but known to be severe -- they ... » See Ya at » What Gets Me Hot
History Is Made at Night | Angie Magazine
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History Is Made at Night ****
History Is Made at Night, which Andrew Sarris has called the most romantic title in the history of cinema (and I'm not going to argue with him) is a patchwork quilt genre bender that stands as one of Frank Borzage's supreme achievements. Its producer Walter Wanger came up with the title, which Borzage loved, and the director began work without a script, filming everything on the fly. Borzage starts the film as a noir-ish society melodrama, switches gracefully to romantic comedy (facilitated by the talents of his gifted, high-strung leading lady, Jean Arthur) and then proceeds to deepen the feelings between Arthur and her leading man Charles Boyer until they reach the highest Borzagian spiritual love. A week before they finished shooting, Wanger arrived on the set and said that the whole thing was going to end with a shipwreck, which resulted in a surprise climax of breathless suspense.
This is a film where the craziness of its work conditions and the blending of styles was taken up by Borzage to stand in for the craziness and exposure of falling in love. There is no sexier or more joyous moment in all of Borzage's work than the point when Arthur's Irene, liberated from her psychotic husband (Colin Clive), blithely kicks off her shoes while she dances with Boyer's Paul, a suave headwaiter who knows the art of love as well as the art of gourmet food. The improbability of the plot serves as a sort of dizzying high, as if they were saying, "This is the movies, and we can do anything."
A special word should be said for Clive, a tormented man who died shortly after filming. He gives his character's obsessive jealousy a nasty, hysterical edge, and Borzage, who knew a thing or two about such jealousy, foregrounds Clive's performance so that the threat to his lovers is both real and lurid. It's a film that sets up a fearful contrast between Clive's deep but perverted feelings and the lyrical emotions of Arthur and Boyer. Another filmmaker might have made us see that these two kinds of love are in some ways similar, but Borzage won't traffic in nuances if they happen to lead to cynicism.
The unique quality of History Is Made at Night is its ability to turn on a dime, flipping from one extreme to another so that the extremes intensify each other—it's as if Borzage forced the Melodrama and the Romantic Comedy into a room and ordered them to make love. The film's seesaw effects are best exemplified by the use of an unforgettable character called Coco. Whenever Boyer wants to say something to Arthur but is too embarrassed to speak, he draws a little face on his hand, calls it "Coco," and lets Coco do the dirty work. Coco can be pretty outrageous: toward the end of the film, when the lovers are really in trouble, she pierces their desperate mood with her nonsense, and the tragic vibe lightens up into anarchic comedy. But Borzage uses this comic explosion to keep us off balance, unguarded, making us laugh so that when the lovers are reminded of their problems, we feel their pain much more deeply. Borzage uses the best things about several genres here in order to make us feel their properties more intensely, playing the audience like a piano, or a particularly inspired lover.
- Director(s): Frank Borzage
- Screenplay: Gene Towne, Graham Baker
- Cast: Charles Boyer, Jean Arthur, Colin Clive, Leo Carillo, Ivan Lebedeff, George Meeker
- Distributor: United Artists
- Runtime: 97 min.
- Rating: NR
- Year: 1937