I thought perhaps it was Linkle. Hence the hooded glare at this “new female Link."
I thought perhaps it was Linkle. Hence the hooded glare at this “new female Link."
Parts of it are fugue, yes.
If it was underwhelming, then you weren’t listening well enough.
“I think that’s what Larry Kasdan taught me most of all, which is ‘Don’t work so hard,” Abrams continued. “Trust the audience. Trust the characters and that the audience will feel more, in a way, the less you explain the stuff to them. And the challenge is always to make it satisfying and clear and not feel like…
One of my favorite car photographers did the press shots for this car a while back.
Boxster S
Manual Transmission
$13,981
Reasons:
Porsche.
Convertible.
Mid-engine, more importantly IT HAS TWO TRUNKS
Porsche.
Seems about right. I happened to see a Ferrari Challenge race in New Orleans, and this happened...which I later found out was caused by all the grass they collected in the ducts from going off the track.
So basically NOLA GP was a shit show, which makes me very sad :(
From personal experience, 152 mph is about as fast as you can get these to go in a reasonable amount of space. Maybe could squeeze out a few more mph if you had limitless space, but not much more.
It's the shallow depth of field in the photos. (Only a small area is in focus at a time)
So it looks kind of toy-ish, especially in motion. Almost looks like tilt-shift in some frames.
Not so much filters as reduced contrast. It's a trick I've seen car photographers to do to try and make more detail visible in images with very bright highlights and dark recesses. I agree with you though. Not really a fan of it, but I know why he did it.
Either something to do with the shape of the shutter or possible a square lens hood. Or more likely it could be that the light sources themselves have hoods and the blur makes the light cutoff obvious where it wouldn't be if you were focused on it.
Honestly my favorite cayman color. Other than maybe carmine red on the 981 gts.
Considered there are some members on 986forums who have passed 300,000 miles with Boxsters, I'd say the answer is yes. That's not to say that these areas won't need maintenance in all that time, but I don't think it would be anything like a full rebuild until well beyond 150k.
This is actually where I bought my Boxster! I drove to their showroom in Dallas to pick it up. AutoAmerica does it right. Their whole showroom is filled with incredibly clean cars; they accept any kind of trade in, but only the best cars are sold through the dealership. Everything else is auctioned off elsewhere.…
more bokeh than reflection, but pretty nonetheless:
Yeah, she's pretty cute. The car helps.
He directed Rush, and that was really, really good.
Worth it.
That sound is what wet dreams are made of.