mrchris
Super Freak
great soundtrack to a great movie..
So... I know i may get beaten up cause of this. I was madly in love with this movie when i first saw it. After like a decade bought a dvd and now when i see it again, i dont feel a punch. The direction is superb and story is fine and again i may suck saying this but the dialog delivery was very poor in the movie. Again, i bought this figure but i am assuming the craze here, may be i need to see it with a fresh mind again.
Just saying ... No hate guys. I bought it too!
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I can't wait to display this next to his old man.(DX-04)...Will make an awesome but a some-what poignant display.
This is exactly what I would love to do too. Me and many others I suspect. It is fitting that, even if they didn't actually work together in life, they can do so now, and hopefully their most memorable roles.
It seems fitting, both as a display piece and as an ongoing tribute to them.
There are two soundtracks, BOTH are worth picking up. The score is awesome.
Making a playlist mix of the two is the way to go.
Perfect background music for a photoshoot of this figure when it arrives.
While the other one is perfect background music for a stripclub
The Cure is one of the BEST bands ever!!! !!
AND NO, it's NOT EMO...
Wiki said:Emo is a style of rock music characterized by melodic musicianship and expressive, often confessional lyrics. It originated in the mid-1980s hardcore punk movement of Washington, D.C., where it was known as "emotional hardcore" or "emocore" and pioneered by bands such as Rites of Spring and Embrace.
Cause from what I can tell..Emo seems to have been around for a long time.
When I went to High School..(LONG time ago 80's)
There was always a group of morose, withdrawn teenagres who, no matter how good their life was went aryong wearing black and looking hangdog all the time
Namely Cure Fans
I know they are popular and all but as a (Reallly) Old school Metalhead...I never got the appeal
So..what do You think..has Emo been around since the 80's?
Is The Cure the father of FOB and MCR?
Best Answer - Chosen by Asker
Technically speaking, no. The credit (or blame) depending on how you view the evolution of emo would have to go to Fugazi and Ian Mackaye. I'm sure he feels horrible about the mutated monster he set in motion. I forgive him and hope you will too. Hopefully the guilt isn't preventing him from making a new Fugazi album.
Yet, from a standpoint of common sense, if you were to take the word "emo" and really think hard which bands embraced overly negative emotions, two jump right out at you; The Cure and The Smiths. Both bands had two of the mopiest dudes you'd ever want to drown your sorrows out with.
Older Emo Goth's tend more towards The Cure, Interpol, Depeche Mode, Siouxie and the Banshees, Nirvana and Jimmy Eat World
Emo music is something that is rather ambiguously defined. It can be something that has heavy punk chords and influence such as what we've heard from the Sex Pistols, but it can also be something with soft melodic characteristics like what we've heard from the Cure.
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The Cure have been going strong now for over 20 years, writing songs that could make any 16 year old boy break into tears, even the football players. Their catchy guitar riffs and honest, emotional vocals have been mimicked by almost every emo artist to date. Another band from across the pond that has definitely influenced the emo music scene is Depeche Mode. They might be a primarily electronic band, but their moody lyrics and loner style has crept into every facet of the emo scene.
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Emo music got its roots from punk rock and the infusion of indie rock. The genre developed in the early 1980’s arguably from such influences as the Cure and Sunny Day Real Estate.
Perfect background music for a photoshoot of this figure when it arrives.
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