As does Volume IV, Made In Japan (Purple or Maiden, audience's choice), No Sleep Til Hammersmith, and a jillion other candidates.
As does Volume IV, Made In Japan (Purple or Maiden, audience's choice), No Sleep Til Hammersmith, and a jillion other candidates.
Weirdly? It's a remarkably smooth transition.
Looking around, TMC only produced two worthwhile shows, but its successor has done less.
Like the old M*A*S*H* joke went, military intelligence is a contradiction in terms.
Here's to hoping the footage matches the expectations inflicted by a certain Disqus commentator.
Hopefully the Valium produced the expected results.
Divorced from context, screaming Clown Fucker! beginning at 23rd and 3rd (with a detour down Irving Plaza) and ending at 14th and Irving Plaza would not only be a public service, but the beginnings of a claim to a Peabody.
hate the afactual post
doubly love the poster who owns up to their error
Dang I forgot that I forgot about The Military Channel.
The German footage is far more compelling that the Allies' footage, whether in b'n'w or in their weird-but-compelling color.
Thanks for the reminder, rest assured I will follow up but only in early 2016. I have an exceptional backlog of non-fiction books and AV to…
(gag) indeed, it sounds so jingoistic….
damnation i can't help but love the posters who pull-quote me for the purpose of finding the AVC's viscerally true natre
Thanks for not losing interest due to my overlong ramblings.
I haven't seen the series you referenced, but will acquire and get back to you (hopefully) within thirty days…
In reverse order:
damn I love that format
Luck wished on my part. The Republic needs all the sanity it can import.
Part 1 is definitely the weakest of the 7 parts. They imply the Russian Empire's embarrassing loss to the Japanese Empire in 1905 as a mere preliminary episode prior to the war, but the First (1912-13) and Second (August 1913) Balkan Wars set the regional stage for near-global conflict, and the series barely…
The short, first answer to your question: it's a BBC production
entitled "The Great War and the Shaping of the 20th Century". I'm
unsure as to the date of the initial broadcast, but Dench was a Dame by the time of the release/broadcast, and the production values strongly suggest 2010 or later, 2005 at the earliest.
One of my few memories fond memories of high school involved a debate where the proposition was "All You Need Is Love". IIRC this was Toronto 1978 September or October, grade 8, i was 13 at the time (IIRC).
Apparently my reasonably-toned and factually-responsible reply is too much for the fools that "moderate" this exchange. We'll have to find another site without an obnoxious morality in order for me to reply.
I just finished watching a seven-part BBC series on WWI wonderfully narrated by Dench with help from Mirren and Landau (among others). By nature I don't care/notice female narrators, but she did an outstanding job, and the seventh/final installment should be required watching for the warmongers infesting our society.
When was The Last Unicorn released?