Saturday, 12 February 2011

Two Great Movies!


Rob at the Movies!

Two Great Favourite Movie Recommendations

Hey everyone, it’s time for this week’s blog. I’m not going to go on and on in detail about a number of film’s or a specific subject this week. I’m simply going to talk about two films that mean a great deal to me and I couldn’t recommend more. There’s so many great films I love and you’ll probably here about some of them in future blogs on a similar topic... for example, the lovely chap below...


So, what’s been going on in my world this week? Well not loads of really exciting things but a pretty decent spread nonetheless, the ups and downs as you have it. Still waiting to sort out what’s happening with my benefit, I got some through but it still doesn’t seem they’ve got the facts I sent them to calculate it on right just yet. But I’ve got enough to manage for a bit, it just seems cuckoo!

Ah well. In other news, there was a rather interesting evening last night at St Marks where I helped with the visuals whilst sound expert Ben H did a cracking job as always... it was an evening hosted by Open Doors, a really fascinating charity that helps persecuted Christians in foreign countries, I won’t go on in great detail but it was rather a stunning evening as you can imagine. There was around 4 or 5 DVD’s showing what is happening in these countries, as well as prayer stations with facts and details to pray for and some testimonies from the Open Doors representatives. 

It’s a real eye opener to see what is happening and it just makes you realise how fortunate you are to be able to worship and pray without the persecution over here... and it’s definitely that requires as much prayer and help as possible for those people, and if you can afford to donate some money to it... I’d really recommend helping in every way you can. That was in place of our cell group, though we were mostly all there and chatted and met up still.

Other than that, just been chilling at home, looking for work and watching a fair few movies on the TV from Sky plus, such as the rather good From Hell with Johnny Depp as a unorthodox detective trailing Jack the Ripper... it’s rather daft but also rather gripping and Depp is no less than superb. 

Also watched the daft but rather rubbish Ninja Assassin, which made no sense and was just gory without half the fun, as well as Did You Hear about the Morgans? Which was passable rom com fare with a bit of action thrown in, rather average bar the always loveable Hugh Grant and the ever cool moustache of Sam Elliot... I’m talking about the dude! 

 

Also started watching the very fantastic Boardwalk Empire, a prohibition (banning of Alcohol) era TV drama from Martin Scorsese that is absolutely terrific as well as the welcome return of Dr House, and a cracking return it was too, both very funny and very moving as always.


I also saw a preview of Never Let Me Go at the excellent Liverpool One Odeon on Monday... such a downbeat but superb movie with three fantastic performances from Carey Mulligan, Andrew Garfield and (surprisingly) Keira Knightley, who my mother so correctly observed, doesn’t usually act very good. Don’t want to say too much, because it’s a film to discover as the plot moves on, but it’s devastatingly sad towards the end and very bittersweet but is a film not to be missed. 

That’s out now, and I’m very looking forward to seeing two films in the next week.... Jeff Bridges playing Rooster Cogburn in The Coen Brother’s True Grit remake and Pegg and Frost in Paul... two very different films, but both look absolutely terrific.


Time for the movie recommendations, two really great films that I couldn’t recommend any higher. Firstly, don’t forget your booties because it’s cold out there today....


Groundhog Day


Easily my favourite comedy movie of all time, and as close to perfection as I feel a comedy can get... far too clever and far too brilliantly written. The plot has become a well-worn trope by now, reliving something over and over and over, but this is the movie that started that trend as weatherman Phil Connors, played by a (I think) career best Bill Murray and that’s saying something from one of my all time favourite actors, goes off to Punxsutawney to cover the annual Groundhog Day festival... where they bring out the Groundhog to tell how long Winter will last from thereon in.

Phil is the usual curmudgeonly Murray character and hates having to cover this festival, so he’s thrilled when he can leave... until that is, a blizzard that he had reported would not be hitting actually does and he has to stay the night. Needless to say, when he wakes up... it’s Groundhog Day all over again, and if he ever wants to escape this mad time loop, he may just have to change his lives and etc and etc... But not without having a bit of fun with it first.

An easy way to explain just what I love so much about this film, and why I consider it so perfect, funny, charming and clever is to break it down into likes and even, dum dum dum, dislikes if there are any...

What I Love about it:
- Bill Murray. Normally that would enough, and in most ways it is. But as you’ll see there’s much more than the leading man to enjoy here, but what a leading man... doing his usual sarcastic shtick with aplomb, whilst also unveiling a sympathetic and touching side too as he becomes affected by his ‘special condition’ and learns to help more.... it’s a great performance, at times very very funny, with some great dialogue and also very touching and strangely romantic towards the end. I’ll always say Jim Carrey missed out big time when the academy snubbed him for Truman Show, here’s another unjustly ignored performance that surely warranted a nomination.

- The timeframe.... never does the movie ever explain just how long he goes through the ‘day after day’ symptom, but it could be anything from years to decades or maybe months... and I’ve always found that intriguing. Just how many of the things he learns to do day after day, from helping people to knowing everyone to romancing Rita (Andie MacDowell) to a fault. Its mind bogglingly clever just how day after day you could do so much, and how long does he do it for?

- Using the timeframe to his advantage. Yet another example of how clever and witty it is, there is a whole range of ways he manipulates the timeframe he finds himself in. Whether it be going on a drink drive rampage, being arrested and then waking up in his hotel Scott free; killing himself a whole number of times in elaborate ways; timing a bank truck delivery of money perfectly to simply waltz past and grab the cash in cinema’s easiest and best bank heist; or perfecting the art of a romantic dinner conversation with Rita about toasts and the best drink order. Every single time you watch it, you never fail to be impressed by the precise comic timing of these scenes and the subtle cleverness with which they’re concocted.

- Ned! Cinema’s most annoying person you can’t help but love, Ned Ryerson (Stephen Toblowsky) is the old bud from high school Phil doesn’t recall but who bumps into him every morning on the way to the festival, this is abused lovingly in a collection of different variations on the meet; from lovingly embracing him to an uncomfortable level, to guessing everything he’s going to say, through to simply (and hilariously) knocking his lights out in cinema’s funniest punch. A classic character for the ages, and cinema’s most ridiculous laugh... I got that one, raaaawlll!

- Just sublime, I could go on for hours and hours about how much I love this film... but I’m not going to. It’s brilliantly witty and funny, has a huge charm towards the end that I don’t want to spoil for those unfortunates who have yet to relive this film over and over and over and over... just watch out for that first step, it’s a doozy!


Any weak spots?
- To be fair, Andie MacDowell isn’t the greatest actress in the world. She does her part perfectly fair here, and having seen the film so many times it’s hard to imagine someone else doing it. But a truly great supporting actress to Bill would have been superb... perhaps Emma Thompson or even Lea Thompson, so underrated in Back to the Future and not seen in much else, except very sadly Howard the Duck, a career nadir for anyone.

- The same could be said of Chris Elliot, hardly a bad comic foil to Murray in some scenes but no great actor, but to be honest though he’s perfectly fine, and his auction scene is priceless.

Though are very brief niggles to a fantastic film that sits very high with my very favourite films ever, a clever and touching and funny movie that deserves to be seen over and over and over.... again x



High Fidelity


Music and love, they go together like cakes and cream. And those two ingredients is essentially what this film can boil down to, as John Cusack takes up through his past failed and success in relationships and love, all the while a soundtrack of absolutely fantastic music plays out for Cusack’s character Rob (great name!) is a music geek, working at a cool record shop and is busy sorting his collection out into alphabetical order whilst he narrates the movie. Alongside this, he has just broken up with long time partner Laura (Iben Hijele, so great here yet unseen much since) and is wondering where she will fit into the pantheon of what he deems his Top 5 Relationships.

This is a film that really means a great deal to me, as it not only started a small fascination with lists and countdowns, which many of you may know I do a fair few of... but it really genuinely kick started a deep love of Music, not least Mr Bossman Bruce Springsteen who an absolutely genius cameo here. 

Mixing his advice on relationships with the best of music and displaying an absolute love of music, it just made me appreciate and love music that much more, this being when I first saw it at the cinema, probably being around 14. It’s just a sublime movie, at points very funny and witty and at others really sad, poignant and heart warming... a really great movie and probably one of the best ever made about relationships, a love story (like 500 Days of summer) that doesn’t gloss over the faults that lie in the road to love.

Oh and it’s also the start of the rise of Jack Black, so you’ll either love it or hate it for that... but considering just how good he is here, I don’t mind at all, and from School of Rock through to Kung Fu Panda he’s done enough right, not to mention The D to win me over again and again. But this isn’t about him, its Rob’s story, and in that weird sentence lies an unsubtle irony, it’s a really human story and could apply to anyone hence its wide appeal x

What I Love about it:
- The music. From some Springsteen through to Katrina and the Waves via The Beta Band, you can tell this is a movie with immense respect and passion for music from the sublime soundtrack that permeates throughout. It’s a film about music, with music about people who sell music and live music and it seriously shows, from the main tracks through to the incidental stuff heard in the backdrop in many scenes. And is that Peter Frampton? Seriously, go buy this soundtrack!

- John Cusack. Ever the everyman, he anchors the film throughout with a great mix of charm, weakness, arrogance, humanity, humour, anger, and lots more besides... and he’s work it in all into a sympathetic everyman who makes mistakes but that’s life. As with Groundhog Day, this is I think Cusack’s finest hour, well very closely tied with Grosse Pointe Blank (which I’ll talk about in another blog at some point) and he’s fantastic throughout and really holds the film together from start to finish, a greatly engaging presence.

- Jack Black. You either love him or hate him, and this was his first big role that really showed him off to the world. Playing Rob’s loud and obnoxious employee but not without his usual charm, he’s a tour de force of energy from his morning tapes to crooning Marvin Gaye at the end and showing his surprising softer side. A true example of great scene stealing.

- The supporting cast. From sidekicks Black (already mentioned) and the lovingly geeky Todd Louiso through to on and off screen sister Joan Cusack (in greatly shouty yet loveable form)... as well as the camederie of great turns from all of Cusack’s exes, special mentions to Catherine Zeta Jones in one of her earlier Hollywood turns who is charming and feisty as well as a nice turn by the utterly lovely Lili Taylor (making up for The Haunting a year earlier). 

There’s also a sweet turn by Lisa Bonet as an up and coming singer who befriends Rob, and she is at turns utterly gorgeous and really sweet. It’s a great backdrop cast that really compliments the events and story. Look out also for Drake Bell (sans Josh) as a young Rob.

- Tim Robbins as Ian! Always a great presence in movies, Robbins is on delightfully snide and slimy form as Ian, the grey ponytailed creep whom Rob’s ex Laura is currently dating... best of all though are the fantasy scenes in which Rob and his music buddies wreak revenge on him in many crazy and hilarious ways!

Any weak spots?

- It’s pretty hard to be fair to pick out much really, and to be honest I’m not going to because at this moment I can’t think of what I don’t like about this film.

Simply put, it’s a truly great film that holds a special slot in my heart. From its great cast and great music through to its heartfelt and true story and heart... it’s a brilliant film through and through, and one that deserves to be thrown on the player every now and then for a spin. Did you really just ask for I Just Called to Say I Love You? x


And that’s it for this week’s blog, I’m off tonight for a lovely meal for my brother Matt’s birthday... we’re going to Old Orleans at The Printworks and it looks absolutely tops! Also there’s going to a epic service at church on Sunday no doubt so always looking forward to that, plus the usual ups and downs a week can provide. 

Best of all I’m going to see Paul on Thursday at AMC with my great cinema pal Dale Brooks, so that’ll be ace and the rest, and that segues nicely into... the Next Blog where I’ll be looking at Paul, which is the new film from Nick Frost and Simon Pegg as well as looking at their other films Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz as well as a quick review of True Grit, with Jeff Bridges taking on the John Wayne role of Rooster Cogburn. Until then, I hope you all have a really great week and most of all....


You stay classy.... Planet Earth! X

Saturday, 5 February 2011

Rob at the Movies! Disney Special


Disney- Their Latest and their Greatest

Hey everyone, and welcome to my second blog. Consider it the difficult second album, or the sequel that tries to live up to its predecessor. In life and all that stuff, it’s just been the normal... some great times at cell group hanging out with some really great people getting deeper into friendship and been reading my bible more every day (dropped a bit the last few days but it happens, and they have been busy days) but loving each Psalm that I come across. Plus I got to hang out with my great friend Dale, who lives in Manchester, who I worked with at St Mary’s and is a fellow film fan and all round cool guy and graphics guru. We went to see The Mechanic, starring The Stath (Jason Statham) as a hitman with a conscience, its typical stuff but manages to balance some great action at the end with some proper drama, a surprisingly good film.


Also we saw it at the AMC Great Northern, which is a cool cinema from the US chain AMC, so the cinema is a bit American-ish and has loads of screens and loads of great upcoming film posters that you wouldn’t see most places just yet (like Scream 4, Cars 2, Winnie the Pooh and A Turtle’s Tale, notable for the epic tagline 'He’s Turtly amazing!’) and it also has huge hot dogs. Anyway that was a fun evening, plus I saw Russell Howard live last night at the M.E.N Arena, which was hysterically funny and a great evening too. 

 

Also there’s the usual job seeking and stuff (annoyed a bit because I might be getting less money from Jobcentre but whatever) and seen some more good stuff on the TV (True Blood, How I Met Your Mother, 10 0’Clock Live and Glee tops of them all) but yeah usual fun in life, plus a special mention to Mr Ben Houghton, who is just back from a snowboarding holiday, just because he’s that cool that it’s good to have him back, he kinda’ exudes ‘chilled out’ ness. Anyway onto the blog after much rambling, and it’s time to visit the Magic Kingdom!


Disney’s 50 Animation- Tangled: The Verdict!

Disney have created a lot of films over their lifetime, from their Pixar collaborations that range from the sublime Up, The Incredibles and Toy Story through to the still pretty decent Cars; their live action efforts like Flubber, George of the Jungle and The Santa Clause and some LA/ Animation mixes like the masterpieces Mary Poppins and Who Framed Roger Rabbit?... but mainly they will always be known for their 2D animated classics from Snow White through to The Princess and the Frog. After this main bit, I am going to countdown my fifteen favourite of those, but now Disney have released their 50th animation, a CGI 3D effort called Tangled and it’s every bit as fun, romantic, adventurous, gorgeous and delightful as most of their previous output, it may not reach the heights of say Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King, Aladdin or Jungle Book but it’s still an absolute cracker of a movie.


Plot- A brand new spin on the classic fairytale of Rapunzel. Born to the king and queen of a magical kingdom, baby Rapunzel is born with magical hair that grows and grows, an evil crone named Mother Gothel discovers this and kidnaps the baby princess into a tower, so she can keep her youth eternally. Living there for years under the belief that Gothel is her mother, she is forbidden to leave the tower. On her 18th birthday, with Gothel away on a trip, she is visited by Flynn Rider; a thief on the run who definitely hid in the wrong tower!

Voicework (9/10) - Mandy Moore is a delight playing Rapunzel, a mixture of life and vigour and a tragic innocence but mixed with a steel and determinedness that you wouldn’t mess with her. It’s the same great sort of voiceover that brought previous classic heroines to life such as Belle and Ariel. Zachary Levi (as to be excepted, after all he’s always such a laconic delight in Chuck) is cracking as Rider, providing smooth and charming narration with a small bit of insecurity, he’s a totally charming lead. Completing the main trio, Donna Murphy is superb as Gothel, a really evil yet snidely charming villain who slowly shows her spots, one of Disney’s best villains in some time (bar Frog’s Dr Facilier) there’s also a great support from such familiar faces as Jeffrey Tambor, Ron Perlman and even Jaws himself, Richard Kiel as the various thugs and thiefs.

Writing/ Direction (9/10) – It’s hard to judge the direction of an animated movie, but it’s generally the way the animation and the characters and the music and the drama works together, and here it gels beautifully. It’s clearly directed with a superb flair, and the dialogue is brilliant throughout, both charming and on a lot of occasions, very very funny!

Tone (10/10) – What needs to be said? This is one of the funnest movies I have seen in a long time, and that in a nutshell is the magic of Disney. No matter how old you are, it will captivate your heart, make you laugh out loud endlessly, sing along, warm loads to the characters and cheer and boo at the right moments. It’s terrific fun, utterly lovely and very very funny and as such, the tone is pitched perfectly.

Look (10/10) – Put simply, it’s a Disney movie... they always look so great but this kinda’ hits another level and it’s very great to see a CGI movie look so indebted to 2D animation whilst carving a niche of its own, the fairytale atmosphere coupled with the CGI making it breath that little bit more, and if you choose to add the 3D it works that bit more brilliantly. The lantern scene alone helps the score hit that perfect 10, with the beautiful sight of the lanterns floating around as beautiful in 2D as it is breathtaking in the sublime 3D. Gorgeous!

Music (8/10) – Disney movies always have great music (though some have drifted to their detriment, Atlantis?) and this is no exception, none of the songs are up there with ‘Wanna Be Like You’ ‘Be Our Guest’ ‘Friend like Me’ ‘Heigh Ho’ ‘Colours of the Wind’ or even Hunchback’s ‘Out There’ or ‘Hellfire’ but there are still a lot of great tunes here; from the rowdy ‘What’s Your Dream’ performed by the thugs and bandits through to ‘Mother Knows Best’ by Gothel and ‘Finally see the Light’ which is the film’s beautiful love theme. Cracking tunes if probably not the best of the best.

Verdict- Easily put a huge delight from start to finish. Witty, charming, heart warming, exciting, hilarious and huge fun! A great slice of Disney magic for everyone of every age x
10/10



The Top 15 Favourite Disney Animation Movies

15) Robin Hood (1973)
Disney’s animal interpretation of the classic Sherwood tale, which may still be most people’s favourite has the outlaw as a Fox and the King John character as a tiger amongst others... hugely charming and fun, it’s a lovely little romp.



14) Mulan (1998)
A underrated late 90’s animation from Disney, taken from an old Chinese tale about a young woman who decides to take her father’s place in battle to save his life and goes undercover as a male solider. A different sort of story for Disney but one done with usual flair, great characters (Eddie Murphy’s Mushu is a top highlight, and for me is even better than Donkey from Shrek) and sumptuous animation and battle scenes. Very thrilling and sweeping stuff.




13) Fantasia (1942)
Disney’s now-classic experimental musical masterpiece, which fuses together classical pieces of music with dynamic animation segments. Most famous for the Mickey Mouse and broom-starring The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, also great are the absolutely terrifying and beautiful Night on Bald Mountain, the Nutcracker suite with the dancing mushrooms, the Pastoral symphony with the cute unicorns and gods and valleys which is gorgeous, plus the very bizarre segment with the dancing hippos and crocodiles set to Dance of the Hours. A delightfully intriguing part of animation history. This manages to be both beautiful and dynamic.



12) Oliver and Company (1988)
Taking the tale of Oliver Twist, and not only updating the setting but also changing the characters into cats and dogs... this late 80’s animated musical is very very underrated and is also a heap of fun. Featuring Billy Joel as head dog Dodger (very artful!) and casting Oliver as an orphan kitty lost in New York, this is cute and fun and charming in equal measure, with hints of darkness towards the end. An utterly charming tale.




11) Fantasia 2000 (2000)
Disney returned to the musical animation experimental phase 60 years later with this update of the format, which while not for most people, is superior for me... mainly for the Rhapsody in Blue and Pomp and Circumstance segments, the latter segment beautifully animated with Donald and Daisy duck trying to board Noah’s Ark and set it off, a beautiful piece of animation. Whilst the flying whale and the nature segments also take the breath away. Simply magical x



10) Hercules (1997)
Taking the Aladdin approach to the Greek myth, and going all wacky humour, Disney also changed their animated style with the help of Gerald Scarfe (you may know his work from Pink Floyd’s The Wall) and it works in spades... keeping the cracking Disney traditions of crazy humour, heart, great music and a great voice cast but turning it all on its head a bit (including a stunning CGI assisted fight with the Hydra).. a sadly underrated Disney classic that I loved tons as a kid and is still way too much fun



9) Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1938)
Disney’s first ever animated classic is still a masterpiece of movie-making, ranging from cutesy animated animals through to deadly dark forests straight out of Evil Dead and terrifying evil queens turning to sinister hags... it’s a great blend of the dark and the light, that still has the power to captivate literally anyone. Classic songs, classic characters (Dopey!) and beautiful animation. A masterpiece in every sense of the word



8) The Rescuers down Under (1990)
Probably one of the most underrated pieces of animation ever released by the Disney studio, this simply breathtaking adventure set in the wild outback starts off epic and never lets go... as mice duo Bernard and Bianca set off to Australia to rescue a small boy from a poacher out to catch a golden eagle. From blistering action sequences to simply gob-smacking animation of the outback, canyons and stunning sequences of flight on the eagle’s back that equal everything in How to Train Your Dragon ten years later. Simply epic in every sense



7) The Emperor’s New Groove (2001)
Simply manic and crazy in every sense, I guess a kind of nod to the Bugs Bunny style of cartoon... Disney’s Inca adventure from the early noughties started off a more serious movie before evolving into this madcap adventure, as a disgruntled assistant to the Emperor schemes to steal the throne by killing off the selfish and arrogant Emperor, but due to the daft machinations of her sidekick Kronk (stealing the whole film!) he gets turned into a Llama and goes on the run, teaming up with lowly Pacha to get back and re claim his throne. Simply hilarious in every sense from the wacky animation to the various animal transformations and antics through to the delightful chemistry between the two lead characters... a simply charming and hysterical film that couldn’t be more genius ally daft if it tried... squeaky squeaken?




6) The Jungle Book (1967)
One of Disney’s most beloved animated classics, a swinging musical take of Rudyard Kipling’s tale is an absolute joy from start to finish, with classic characters like Baloo, Shere Khan and the fantastic King Louie. Masterpiece tunes, great characters, brilliant dialogue and a cracking beat throughout, what needs to be said? It’s fab!




5) The Little Mermaid (1989)
The movie that started off Disney’s rise back to the top during the 1990’s and late 80’s, this musical take on the Hans Christian Andersen tale is simply divine from start to finish, with some of the most delightful characters you’ll see like Ariel, Sebastian and the sinister Ursula, fantastic tunes like Under the Sea, Poor Unfortunate Souls and Part of your World plus lovely animation and a heart warming story. A true delight in every way




4) The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996)
A much darkest and more gothic effort than people were used to at the time (coming after Lion King and Pocahontas) Disney’s adaptation of Victor Hugo’s novel is epic and powerful and charming in equal measure, striking a great story and great characters with a real heart and a real sense of darkness and power. Dealing with themes such as loneliness, religion, sin, temptation and cruelty... it’s a truly dynamic effort from Disney that makes you wonder why so many others don’t have quite as much power and ambition to be a bit more adult. Plus Kevin Kline’s dashing knight Phoebus is my animated doppelganger which helps!




3) Aladdin (1992)
One of the first Disney movies I saw, and still one of the most purely enjoyable. It’s the film that saw the ‘star factor’ step in, with Robin Williams stealing the whole show as the Genie, who is hilarious in every way and a truly brilliant character, as well as other great characters like the sinister villain Jafar and the scene stealing sidekicks like Carpet, Abu and Iago. Truly brilliant animation, fantastic songs and a rollicking pace make this a truly enjoyably fun piece of animated joy, a true diamond in the rough




2) Beauty and the Beast (1991)
Disney’s most successful and most enchanting and epic movie, the first to be nominated for a Best Picture at the Oscars, still holds the power to enchant and enthral. With award winning songs, some of the best ever produced by Disney, some superb characters like Belle, Gaston, Lumiere, Mrs Potts, Cogsworth, Chip, and of course the Beast... as well as sumptuous animation, a truly beautiful score and the most beautiful love story of all time. This movie has it all, what’s to say that hasn’t been said, be their guest! x



1) The Lion King (1994)
Always having been one of my all time favourite movies, it’s no surprise that this masterpiece wound up being my all time favourite Disney animation. An epic and bravado movie on all counts, from the majestic score by Elton John and Tim Rice plus the unforgettable songs they created such as Circle of Life, Can You Feel the Love Tonight? As well as songs like Hakuna Matata, Be Prepared and Just Can’t Wait to be King... through to the fantastic voice cast including Matthew Broderick, Jeremy Irons, James Earl Jones, Rowan Atkinson and Nathan Lane, the fantastic characters like Scar, Simba, Timon and Pumbaa, Zazu, Nala, Mufasa, and of course the delightful Rafiki... it’s a timeless tale that has enchanted thousands and will count to do so for as long as time allows. A truly original story with truly breathtaking content and scope makes one for the ages x



That’s it for this trip to the Magic Kingdom, sadly I won’t be visiting Epcot next week but will simply be laying down the knowhow on two absolute must see movies from the past that I highly recommend, both with one or two things in common. Enjoy your weeks, your food, your fun times, and stay safe and most of all....


You stay classy.... Planet Earth! X