The creepiest rabbit we have seen this side of Frank from Donnie Darko; this 200 foot long, 20 foot high, handmade, stuffed bunny sits in the Italian Alps. Why? The artist collective known as Gelatin put “Hase” there for you to visit while it slowly decays. Here is the full explanation in their own words:
"The things one finds wandering in a landscape: familiar things and utterly unknown, like a flower one has never seen before, or, as Columbus discovered, an inexplicable continent; and then, behind a hill, as if knitted by giant grandmothers, lies this vast rabbit, to make you feel as small as a daisy. The toilet-paper-pink creature lies on its back: a rabbit-mountain like Gulliver in Lilliput. Happy you feel as you climb up along its ears, almost falling into its cavernous mouth, to the belly-summit and look out over the pink woolen landscape of the rabbitÌs body, a...
"The things one finds wandering in a landscape: familiar things and utterly unknown, like a flower one has never seen before, or, as Columbus discovered, an inexplicable continent; and then, behind a hill, as if knitted by giant grandmothers, lies this vast rabbit, to make you feel as small as a daisy. The toilet-paper-pink creature lies on its back: a rabbit-mountain like Gulliver in Lilliput. Happy you feel as you climb up along its ears, almost falling into its cavernous mouth, to the belly-summit and look out over the pink woolen landscape of the rabbitÌs body, a...
- 5/12/2014
- by Chris Connors
- FEARnet
You'd think that by the time a series got around to releasing set 18, it'd be a bit stale, wouldn't it? Not so with the quintessentially British Midsomer Murders. Set 18 of the popular crime drama will hit DVD on September 6 with three new mysteries never before released nor aired in the U.S.
John Nettles prowls his way through all three adventures as Dci Tom Barnaby, who manages to solve all three cases without breaking his signature, inquisitive cool. He's accompanied by Jason Hughes as Detective Sergeant Ben Jones, Barnaby's less experienced but still efficient partner. Neither character is given much room for development in any of the three mysteries. Only Barnaby really has a distinct personality; Jones isn't given much at all.
The mysteries themselves are surprisingly great. The first, titled "Small Mercies," is the best of the set, featuring a series of murders centering around a model village in Little Worthington.
John Nettles prowls his way through all three adventures as Dci Tom Barnaby, who manages to solve all three cases without breaking his signature, inquisitive cool. He's accompanied by Jason Hughes as Detective Sergeant Ben Jones, Barnaby's less experienced but still efficient partner. Neither character is given much room for development in any of the three mysteries. Only Barnaby really has a distinct personality; Jones isn't given much at all.
The mysteries themselves are surprisingly great. The first, titled "Small Mercies," is the best of the set, featuring a series of murders centering around a model village in Little Worthington.
- 9/3/2011
- by Sam McPherson
- TVovermind.com
Liz Sladen says goodbye to Tom Baker's Doctor at the end of The Hand Of Fear:
Elisabeth Sladen, Doctor Who's very own plucky Metropolitan journalist and all-time great companion, has passed away at the age of 63.
Born in Liverpool on February 1st 1948, Elisabeth's performing roots started at a very young age, with a keen interest in dancing and one appearance with the Royal Ballet. Drama school beckoned after this, and by the early 1960s, she was working at the Liverpool Playhouse repertory company - where she met her husband Brian Miller (Dugdale from Snakedance).
Liz's first on-screen work was as an uncredited extra in Gerry And The Pacemakers film, Ferry Cross The Mersey in 1965. By the early 1970s, she was starting to gain roles in popular TV series such as Coronation Street, Doomwatch and Z Cars. She nearly won the role of Betty in popular sitcom Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em,...
Elisabeth Sladen, Doctor Who's very own plucky Metropolitan journalist and all-time great companion, has passed away at the age of 63.
Born in Liverpool on February 1st 1948, Elisabeth's performing roots started at a very young age, with a keen interest in dancing and one appearance with the Royal Ballet. Drama school beckoned after this, and by the early 1960s, she was working at the Liverpool Playhouse repertory company - where she met her husband Brian Miller (Dugdale from Snakedance).
Liz's first on-screen work was as an uncredited extra in Gerry And The Pacemakers film, Ferry Cross The Mersey in 1965. By the early 1970s, she was starting to gain roles in popular TV series such as Coronation Street, Doomwatch and Z Cars. She nearly won the role of Betty in popular sitcom Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em,...
- 4/20/2011
- Shadowlocked
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