Tuesday, 22 December 2009
Saturday, 19 December 2009
ilta puuro
I was at Polly's place an hour ago when my mum called me because she wanted to give her a little xmas present and I come back my place in order to pick it up.
By the way now I'm still at my place because this morning we found at esselunga the PORRIDGE!
Porridge is one of my favorite foods ever. So now I am eating porridge, or "puuro" in finnish, and later me, Polly and our friends will be together for a dinner <3
It will snow more!
here it is my lovely dish (:
Posted by le ombre nel cielo at 5:30 pm 4 comments
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Friday, 18 December 2009
summer hits!
when we were in finland me and polly used to do funny things.
in the morning we also used to watch some tv. the voice was the main music channel there and it was broadcasting always quite funny music as power metal and so on. this band was one of our "favorites".
Unklubi.
haha.
maybe depressing actually, but we were always laughing a lot :P
Posted by le ombre nel cielo at 8:09 pm 1 comments
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Thursday, 17 December 2009
Wednesday, 16 December 2009
Oulu Serie, "Oulun Palo 1822"
Oulu Serie
"Oulun Palo" 1882.
J. Walling.
Printed in Oulu, Finland
the other postcard I have about the more recent great fire of Oulu in 1882:
Posted by le ombre nel cielo at 1:28 am 1 comments
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Sunday, 13 December 2009
Monday, 7 December 2009
Chi l'ha vista morire 1972
Aldo Lado is the director of this early 70's masterpiece I have seen yesterday evening with Polly.
It is a thriller.
And it is exciting.
A strip of mysterious murders, the last one in Venice. The victims are little girls with red hair. Franco Serpieri's daughter is the last one murdered. The Police is not able to dicover the criminal behind these crimes so he tries to find the killer himself. Opening the Pandora's Box.
The film is populated with many characters so he has to cope with many suspects and the director uses a familiar formula: the likely suspects are killed off one by one, and the last man (or woman) standing is revealed as the murderer. But the process feels clumsier than it ought to here, and you are not able till the end to predict who is behind the murders.
Painterly cinematography and an intriguing score by the brilliant Ennio Morricone do their job to increase the suspance.
Recommended.
Posted by le ombre nel cielo at 10:51 am 6 comments
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