Sara no longer remembers where she got this postcard, but she sends me summer greetings regardless.
I do like California poppies!
Sara no longer remembers where she got this postcard, but she sends me summer greetings regardless.
I do like California poppies!
If memory serves, I was headed to Walgreens to return a Redbox DVD.
I like the look of this house, though the appearance of a backhoe has me worried that soon this house will not be. Hopefully they are doing some renovation.
This is a fun message.
Here’s a two-part window display. The girl blows hearts that form a rainbow.
To a boy on the other side of the door.
I love a good random art find.
Directed by Drew Goddard
Written by Drew Goddard
I’m a sucker for stylish set design and once I saw the state line dividing the El Royale into California and Nevada sections I was all in.* Add more than one creepy mystery, a cast that owns the camera** and this was an excellent night at the movies.*** It was also just a tad too long, alas.
Cost: $2.00 via Redbox (They only had a Bluray copy so it cost more.)
Where watched: at home
*Have I stood with four limbs in four states at Four Corners? Why yes I have! Human-created lines of demarcation are fascinating.
**The film does a great job cycling through the motel guests’ stories. From the beginning, it seems like it’s going to be Jon Hamm’s movie, but that shifts as we see the stories of each guest.
***Don’t go in expecting a happy ending, though. Also, it would be interesting to represent in graph form Chris Hemsworth’s (Billy Lee) repelling and magnetic energy. And then segment out how much his naked torso is contributing to that magnetic energy.
The El Royale was built from scratch on a sound stage with much of the furniture and decor being custom made (including branded matchboxes and coasters for the bar). The color scheme was meticulously set out so that the California side was mostly yellows and oranges, while the Nevada side was purples and blues. Red was reserved for the borderline, jukebox, and chandelier, while green is almost entirely absent until the end.
There was no pre-recorded soundtrack, so all of Cynthia Erivo’s singing in the film is for real. For the lengthy tracking shot scene behind the hotel mirrors, Erivo had to perform “Try a Little Tenderness” 27 times.
Cynthia Erivo can SING!