Author Topic: RIP  (Read 28970 times)

Offline silverbullet

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Re: RIP
« Reply #195 on: August 08, 2023, 02:26:51 pm »
Are you saying John,that its a bit overboard like the Irish girls have a celebration night in Dublin when they came home from the WC without a win?…Me mate usta say to me….if ya cant find time to talk to me while Im alive….Dont bother coming to my funeral.It shows how RTE and the rest of the drivel media can create a frenzy out of nothing? My Sister is down on Bray beach and she said that she could not stand her.  These are the peoples who vote. ::fds

The Irish WE LOVE DEAD PEOPLE they cant contradict us .Dave Fanning said Christy Dignam fucked it up for the other lads in ASlan and his daughter called for him to be sacked .Gerry Ryan was a Junkie but is lauded ,remember it was the likes of him and other middle class pockets that brought Cocaine into this Country as they were the only ones that could afford it .Ben Dunne had a Coke Problem but the Gards never asked him where he sourced his white .We are a Country of Bleach Brains we remove any stain that dosent suit us .
I was reliably informed an ex-member of Boyz-one was the one to approach if you wanted Colombian confidence powder in the old Lillie's. Apparently, he supplied powder, not rock, that's for poor people...allegedly.

Offline John m

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Re: RIP
« Reply #196 on: August 08, 2023, 02:31:01 pm »
I think his daddy was once arrested for driving a Rolls without tax or insurance !
"Ahfuck

Offline Belker

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Re: RIP
« Reply #197 on: August 08, 2023, 02:41:59 pm »
Are you saying John,that its a bit overboard like the Irish girls have a celebration night in Dublin when they came home from the WC without a win?…Me mate usta say to me….if ya cant find time to talk to me while Im alive….Dont bother coming to my funeral.It shows how RTE and the rest of the drivel media can create a frenzy out of nothing? My Sister is down on Bray beach and she said that she could not stand her.  These are the peoples who vote. ::fds

The Irish WE LOVE DEAD PEOPLE they cant contradict us .Dave Fanning said Christy Dignam fucked it up for the other lads in ASlan and his daughter called for him to be sacked .Gerry Ryan was a Junkie but is lauded ,remember it was the likes of him and other middle class pockets that brought Cocaine into this Country as they were the only ones that could afford it .Ben Dunne had a Coke Problem but the Gards never asked him where he sourced his white .We are a Country of Bleach Brains we remove any stain that dosent suit us .
I was reliably informed an ex-member of Boyz-one was the one to approach if you wanted Colombian confidence powder in the old Lillie's. Apparently, he supplied powder, not rock, that's for poor people...allegedly.
Wrong thread.  ::fds

Offline silverbullet

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Re: RIP
« Reply #198 on: August 08, 2023, 02:46:32 pm »
Are you saying John,that its a bit overboard like the Irish girls have a celebration night in Dublin when they came home from the WC without a win?…Me mate usta say to me….if ya cant find time to talk to me while Im alive….Dont bother coming to my funeral.It shows how RTE and the rest of the drivel media can create a frenzy out of nothing? My Sister is down on Bray beach and she said that she could not stand her.  These are the peoples who vote. ::fds
Drugs lead to death...therefore I vote we keep it in.
The Irish WE LOVE DEAD PEOPLE they cant contradict us .Dave Fanning said Christy Dignam fucked it up for the other lads in ASlan and his daughter called for him to be sacked .Gerry Ryan was a Junkie but is lauded ,remember it was the likes of him and other middle class pockets that brought Cocaine into this Country as they were the only ones that could afford it .Ben Dunne had a Coke Problem but the Gards never asked him where he sourced his white .We are a Country of Bleach Brains we remove any stain that dosent suit us .
I was reliably informed an ex-member of Boyz-one was the one to approach if you wanted Colombian confidence powder in the old Lillie's. Apparently, he supplied powder, not rock, that's for poor people...allegedly.
Wrong thread.  ::fds

Offline silverbullet

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Re: RIP
« Reply #199 on: August 08, 2023, 02:49:18 pm »
"Your mother cooks socks in hell" What a line!!

William Friedkin, director of The Exorcist and The French Connection, dies at 87
The Oscar-winning film-maker has died in Los Angeles, leaving behind a career as one of his generation’s most admired talents

 Gallery: Friedkin’s life in pictures

Benjamin Lee
Mon 7 Aug 2023 18.37 BST
William Friedkin, Oscar-winning director of The Exorcist and The French Connection, has died at the age of 87.

1971, THE FRENCH CONNECTION
GENE HACKMAN Character(s): Jimmy Doyle Film 'THE FRENCH CONNECTION' (1971) Directed By WILLIAM FRIEDKIN 07 October 1971 AFA2144 Allstar Collection/20THCENTURY FOX **WARNING** This photograph can only be reproduced by publications in conjunction with the promotion of the above film. For Printed Editorial Use Only, NO online or internet use. 1111z@yx
The French Connection at 50: one of the greatest New York movies ever
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The film-maker died in Los Angeles, confirmed by Chapman University dean Stephen Galloway, a friend of his wife and former producer Sherry Lansing.

Friedkin was seen as one of the most daring and influential talents of his generation, winning an Oscar for best director for The French Connection in 1972. He was also nominated for The Exorcist in 1974. Both films were nominated for best picture, with The French Connection winning the Oscar.

Friedkin started his big screen career in 1965 with Good Times, a comedy starring Sonny and Cher. While the film received mostly negative reviews, Friedkin later said: “I’ve made better films than Good Times but I’ve never had so much fun.”


It was 1971’s crime thriller The French Connection that brought him his first real hit, a commercial and critical success, since viewed as one of the greatest films ever made. Friedkin has spoken about the studio’s lack of belief in the film and the surprise at its success. “It came out and immediately went through the roof like a rocket,” he said in 2021. “We don’t know why but sometimes that happens.”

The film remains an important influence on many of the directors to follow Friedkin. David Fincher, Steven Spielberg and Akira Kurosawa have all cited it as having an impact on their work.

It was followed up by another hit, an adaptation of William Peter Blatty’s horror novel The Exorcist. It became a blockbuster success, making over $425m worldwide from a $12m budget. In a Guardian interview, Friedkin claims he was “fired about five times” during production yet a reportedly troubled set didn’t stop the film from being named the first horror movie to ever receive a best picture nomination at the Oscars.

Martin Scorsese named it one of the scariest films ever made. He claimed it to be “as utterly horrifying as it was the day it came out”.

Linda Blair and William Friedkin during the filming of The Exorcist.
Linda Blair and William Friedkin during the filming of The Exorcist. Photograph: Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone/Getty Images

It led to a franchise as well as a TV series (a legacy sequel also comes out this year). Friedkin confessed to never having watched anything that followed.

Star Ellen Burstyn paid tribute to Friedkin in a statement to Deadline. “My friend Bill Friedkin was an original; smart, cultured, fearless and wildly talented,” she said. “On the set, he knew what he wanted, would go to any length to get it and was able to let it go if he saw something better happening. He was undoubtedly a genius.”

His next film, 1977’s action thriller Sorcerer, was initially seen as a critical and commercial disappointment yet has since been re-evaluated. The adaptation of Georges Arnaud’s novel The Wages of Fear has been cited as Friedkin’s favourite of his films. “I have no idea why it failed,” he said to the Guardian. “No seer has come to me with the reason. A lot of people expected from the title that it would be some sort of followup to The Exorcist, which it isn’t. It came out in cinemas the same week as Star Wars, I’ve heard that too. I think it wasn’t what people expected to see. And when that happens they get disappointed.”

His 1980 thriller Cruising, starring Al Pacino as a cop going undercover in New York’s gay S&M scene, led to controversy at the time with gay rights protestors unhappy with the portrayal. The production led to protests in the city and while the film was poorly received at the time – it was nominated for three Golden Raspberry awards – it was later given a re-appreciation. “I never intended Cruising to be any kind of statement about gay life,” Friedkin said in 2017. “To me, it was an exotic background for a murder mystery that had never been seen in a mainstream film.”

Friedkin’s later films included Jade, Rules of Engagement, Bug and Killer Joe starring Matthew McConaughey. His most recent film was the 2017 documentary The Devil and Father Amorth.

His final work will premiere at this year’s Venice film festival, the legal thriller The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial. The film stars Kiefer Sutherland and Jason Clarke and is based on Herman Wouk’s 1953 play.

Friedkin often spoke about the decline of American cinema, criticising superhero films and other studio blockbusters. “The whole idea of the art film, or experimental films, receiving an audience in theaters has virtually disappeared from the United States and so many other countries, except in fringe areas,” he said in a 2015 interview. “And when I was growing up it was a staple of cinema.”

Tributes have started to come in from figures in Hollywood. Actor Elijah Wood called him “a true cinematic master whose influence will continue to extend forever”. The Black Phone director Scott Derrickson also wrote that it was “an honor” to have lengthy chats with Friedkin and that The Exorcist and Sorcerer are two of “the greatest films ever made”.

Edgar Wright shared an Instagram tribute. “Friedkin was a blazing talent, a true visionary,” he wrote. “For once, it’s not hyperbole to say his groundbreaking techniques left an indelible mark on the industry.” Eli Roth also called him “One of the most impactful directors of all time”.




Offline watty

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Re: RIP
« Reply #200 on: August 08, 2023, 05:06:43 pm »
I dont believe Sinead was a Magdalinr Laundry girl but she was a great self publicist .Her Brother Joe O Connor says a lot of what she said happened never happened .The Feministas now seem to want to adopt her but when she was alive they steered clear of her insanity .Like I said she ripped up a Picture of the Pope to make what point in fact what point did she ever make .The media idolizing her now is FUCKING SICKINING .She was a disfunctional broken human being like a lot of us but not any sort of Iconic Figure .

Sinead O’Connor ‘gave us strength’, says Magdalene laundry survivor

Quote
A woman who suffered abuse in one of the same institutions as Sinead O’Connor said the singer “made Ireland a different place” by speaking out on church and state exploitation.  O’Connor spoke openly about abuse she faced in a Magdalene laundry as a teenager, where she spent more than a year.

<snip>

In 2022, a Journey Stone was unveiled by survivors of the Magdalene Laundries at St Stephen’s Green in Dublin.  The Journey Stone memorial was designed to commemorate the suffering of the women who were incarcerated in Magdalene laundries and similar institutions.  Ms Sullivan said O’Connor was integral to bringing the memorial to fruition.

She said: “Sinead came along, she done a charity single for us so we could get a monument. So, the monument was just thrown on the side, so I decided that I’d turn it into a Journey Stone, and it’s in the little museum in St Stephen’s Green.  “Sinead’s name never comes up much on that, but only for Sinead that Journey Stone wouldn’t be there today.  “It was for all survivors and she was very happy about that.”
Getting old is compulsory whilst growing up is voluntary.

Offline John m

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Re: RIP
« Reply #201 on: August 08, 2023, 06:11:38 pm »
Like I said She was a self Publicist .she was sent to Sisters of Our Lady of Charity Not A Laundry The Laundry was in Sean Mc Dermott Street .Her old man sent her to the Nuns to get sorted out .Her Brother the Author and Broadcaster Joseph O Connor says a lot of what she said happened is her recollection not his .
"Ahfuck

Offline watty

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Re: RIP
« Reply #202 on: August 08, 2023, 06:27:08 pm »
Wikipedia says: "At the age of 15, following her acts of shoplifting and truancy, O'Connor was placed for 18 months in a Magdalene asylum, the Grianán Training Centre in Drumcondra run by the Order of Our Lady of Charity.[32]."  And the supporting doc is a 2010 Washington Post letter/opinion piece written by her.  Presumably they fact-checked it?

Looks like the President and Taoiseach attended her funeral.  Some people believed her shtick...
Getting old is compulsory whilst growing up is voluntary.

Offline Octavia1

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Re: RIP
« Reply #203 on: August 08, 2023, 06:45:01 pm »
The feminists have hijacked her alrite ...but them owlones are jus off ther heads cause ther not gettin any willy  cause ther ugly ...or cause they fat lesbeans in dungarees....who gives  a bollix ....
Sinnead was a great singer end of .....
Yous irish do  have a habit of slaggin  an demonisin apes wen ther alive ....an then sayin great tings about them at the funeral ....an then it all wears off after a cople days an then yous start
Talkin shite about them again wen thers no danger of gettin sued ....
Yous are awful cnuts .... ::fight
Ide rather be a poor master than a rich servant

Offline John m

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Re: RIP
« Reply #204 on: August 08, 2023, 06:48:10 pm »
Wikipedia says: "At the age of 15, following her acts of shoplifting and truancy, O'Connor was placed for 18 months in a Magdalene asylum, the Grianán Training Centre in Drumcondra run by the Order of Our Lady of Charity.[32]."  And the supporting doc is a 2010 Washington Post letter/opinion piece written by her.  Presumably they fact-checked it?

Looks like the President and Taoiseach attended her funeral.  Some people believed her shtick...

Not a LAUNDRY that was in Sean Mc Dermott Street .
"Ahfuck

Offline watty

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Re: RIP
« Reply #205 on: August 08, 2023, 07:02:29 pm »
Are we arguing semantics now?  It wasn't a holiday camp!

https://www.thejournal.ie/nuns-adamant-that-girls-didnt-work-in-magdalene-laundry-despite-survivor-testimony-2-4718236-Jul2019/ --> as I read it, the Drumcondra place was beside a Magdalene laundry and the Govt accept the women were working in the laundry despite the nuns denying it...
Getting old is compulsory whilst growing up is voluntary.

Offline silverbullet

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Re: RIP
« Reply #206 on: August 08, 2023, 08:34:09 pm »
Are we arguing semantics now?  It wasn't a holiday camp!

https://www.thejournal.ie/nuns-adamant-that-girls-didnt-work-in-magdalene-laundry-despite-survivor-testimony-2-4718236-Jul2019/ --> as I read it, the Drumcondra place was beside a Magdalene laundry and the Govt accept the women were working in the laundry despite the nuns denying it...
My late mother was working in a Magdalene laundry doing priests vestments. She was incarcerated in High Park on GracePark Road amongst other institutions.

Offline John m

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Re: RIP
« Reply #207 on: August 09, 2023, 09:55:49 am »
Bullit Magdalin Laundries were set up as stand alone Laundries but most Convents had Laundries attached like they had Kitchens .I helped research Highbrasil in Kilmainham and if you ever get a Job from there the address for the Side Gate is the Laundry .

Highbrasil was an ancient Keltic religious self contained settlement .Highbrasil is named after it as when it was the Little Sisters of the Poor .The Nuns lived in a self contained unit .Roth Abbey to the rear of it was full of Allotments and they grew their own food and kept a few cows  ,The houses built adjacent to Suir Road are built over a Grave Yard where Nuns were buried and the Laundry was to the side .Girls sent to Magdalin Laundries were sent there to work in the Laundries Girls sent to Convents often worked in the Laundry or Kitchen or house staff .The Irony of Laundries was that the Girls sent there were usually deemed to be sinners and John Charles thought working with Soapy Water and Bleach might rub off their sins .Sinead O Connor may of worked in the or a Laundry in a Convent but she was not in a Magdalin Laundry .
"Ahfuck

Offline John m

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Re: RIP
« Reply #208 on: August 09, 2023, 09:58:46 am »
Are we arguing semantics now?  It wasn't a holiday camp!

https://www.thejournal.ie/nuns-adamant-that-girls-didnt-work-in-magdalene-laundry-despite-survivor-testimony-2-4718236-Jul2019/ --> as I read it, the Drumcondra place was beside a Magdalene laundry and the Govt accept the women were working in the laundry despite the nuns denying it...

It is not Semantics .There are people who were imprisoned in those institutions who could not get taken seriously when they spoke out .O Connor playing Wordgames never helped them .She was on a See Me buzz .
"Ahfuck

Offline silverbullet

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Re: RIP
« Reply #209 on: August 09, 2023, 03:38:01 pm »
Bullit Magdalin Laundries were set up as stand alone Laundries but most Convents had Laundries attached like they had Kitchens .I helped research Highbrasil in Kilmainham and if you ever get a Job from there the address for the Side Gate is the Laundry .

Highbrasil was an ancient Keltic religious self contained settlement .Highbrasil is named after it as when it was the Little Sisters of the Poor .The Nuns lived in a self contained unit .Roth Abbey to the rear of it was full of Allotments and they grew their own food and kept a few cows  ,The houses built adjacent to Suir Road are built over a Grave Yard where Nuns were buried and the Laundry was to the side .Girls sent to Magdalin Laundries were sent there to work in the Laundries Girls sent to Convents often worked in the Laundry or Kitchen or house staff .The Irony of Laundries was that the Girls sent there were usually deemed to be sinners and John Charles thought working with Soapy Water and Bleach might rub off their sins .Sinead O Connor may of worked in the or a Laundry in a Convent but she was not in a Magdalin Laundry .

My Mam was put into a children's home at the age of 4, and moved around the system by the authorities until the age of 17.
My uncle Bernard was a civil servant and used his connections to get her released, otherwise, like a lot of other women they died and were buried on site.

http://jfmresearch.com/home/preserving-magdalene-history/high-park/

We brought my Mam and Dad to see this play: https://www.irishplayography.com/play.aspx?playid=30790

My Mother laughed at the actresses ironing saying "We'd have been beaten if we ironed the vestments like that
"!
Eclipsed
OVERVIEW
Playwright
Patricia Burke Brogan

Synopsis
Framed by a present-day prologue and epilogue, the play is set in 1963 in a convent laundry at St. Paul's Home for Penitent Women in Killmacha, Ireland. Eclipsed explores the practice of making pregnant and unwed Irish mothers work as 'penitents' in church-run laundries. Supervised by nuns who regarded these women as mindless vessels of evil, the women were treated as virtual slaves and their infants were forcibly put up for adoption.

Play Type
Plays General
Number Of Acts
Full-Length

Cast Size Female
9

Cast Notes
Cast doubling is possible. See original production for details.

ORIGINAL PRODUCTION
Date of First Production
11 February 1992


 


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