Javier Rdz
twicr:

garabating:

Robots Feel Nothing When They Hold Hands by Joe Vaux and Dominic Bianchi (via Super Punch)

The title of this book says everything you need to know about why robots will eventually rise and destroy us.

twicr:

garabating:

Robots Feel Nothing When They Hold Hands by Joe Vaux and Dominic Bianchi (via Super Punch)

The title of this book says everything you need to know about why robots will eventually rise and destroy us.

oldhollywood:

Claude Rains & Susanna Foster in The Phantom of the Opera (1943, dir. Arthur Lubin) (via)

Genial movie!!

oldhollywood:

Claude Rains & Susanna Foster in The Phantom of the Opera (1943, dir. Arthur Lubin) (via)

Genial movie!!

twicr:

If you are celebrating Cinco de Mayo today, have fun and be safe … and please steer clear of any gun-wielding robot revolutionaries.

Viva la 1010010011010 !!!

twicr:

If you are celebrating Cinco de Mayo today, have fun and be safe … and please steer clear of any gun-wielding robot revolutionaries.

Viva la 1010010011010 !!!

laughingsquid:

Terminally Illin’, A Cancer-Ass-Kicking Comic Book

Just some bugs… Wait!!
laughingsquid:

Deconstructed Head Illustrations by Smithe
laughingsquid:

Neverlasting Miracles, Solo Art Exhibition by Pop Surrealist Todd Schorr

kateoplis:

Empire State Building, 1938 | Brooklyn Bridge, 1972

oldhollywood:


Bluebeard (1901, dir. Georges Méliès)
“King Bluebeard turned all the keys of the castle over to his wife, saying, ‘You may go anywhere in the castle, unlock everything, and look at anything you want to, except for one door, to which this little golden key belongs. If you value your life, you are not allowed to open it!’
‘Oh no!’ she said, adding that she surely would not open that door. But after the king had been away for a while, she could find no rest for constantly thinking about what there might be in the forbidden chamber. On the morning of the fourth day, she could no longer resist the temptation, and taking the key she secretly crept to the room, stuck the key into the lock, and opened the door.”
-Charles Perrault, Bluebeard

oldhollywood:

Bluebeard (1901, dir. Georges Méliès)

“King Bluebeard turned all the keys of the castle over to his wife, saying, ‘You may go anywhere in the castle, unlock everything, and look at anything you want to, except for one door, to which this little golden key belongs. If you value your life, you are not allowed to open it!’

‘Oh no!’ she said, adding that she surely would not open that door. But after the king had been away for a while, she could find no rest for constantly thinking about what there might be in the forbidden chamber. On the morning of the fourth day, she could no longer resist the temptation, and taking the key she secretly crept to the room, stuck the key into the lock, and opened the door.”

-Charles Perrault, Bluebeard