romance.
scene #1 city street. looking at the side of car at stoplight. average looking guy, average car.
scene #2 shot from over guys right shoulder inside car. guy is driving down city street. average car with tinted windows is passing to the right, barely visible. car slows down, now side-by-side. car speeds up again. slows back down. camera pans to right, focusing on car. the same speed-up-slow-down happens twice.
scene #3 close-up of guy from passenger side, upwards. he is a mixture of irritated and confused.
scene #4 [day 2] city street. looking at the side of car at stoplight. average looking guy, average car. different cloths.
scene #5 shot from over guys right shoulder inside car. guy is driving down city street with a cup of coffee. average car with tinted windows is passing to the right, barely visible. car slows down, now side-by-side. car speeds up again. slows back down. camera pans to right, focusing on car. the same speed-up-slow-down happens twice.
scene #6 [day 3] city street. looking at the side of car at stoplight. average looking guy, average car. different cloths.
scene #7 shot from over guys right shoulder inside car. guy is driving down city street. average car with tinted windows is passing to the right, barely visible. car slows down, now side-by-side. car speeds up again. slows back down. camera pans to right, focusing on car. the same speed-up-slow-down happens twice.
scene #8 close-up of guy from passenger side, upwards. he is a mixture of confused and amused.
scene #9 [day 4] shot from over guys right shoulder inside car. guy is driving down city street eating a sandwich. at gas station on left he sees tinted window car. a girl gets out of the car to fill up her car.
scene #10 close-up of guy from passenger side, upwards. he is a mixture of amused and interested. guy signals left.
St. Vincent And The National - Sleep All Summer
Orator
It is recorded in English since c.1374, meaning “one who pleads or argues for a cause”, from Anglo-French oratour, Old French orateur (14th century), Latin orator(“speaker”), from orare (“speak before a court or assembly; plead”), derived from a Proto-Indo-European base *or- (“to pronounce a ritual formula”). The modern meaning of the word, “public speaker”, is attested from c.1430. —from wiki
House of Waris (via Dossier Journal » Back to the Future with Waris Ahluwalia
∆∆∆ Good article on Waris Ahluwalia and his inspiration.
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work
everything is a study. experimental.
David Thomas Broughton - Why Are You Not Here
HUMDRUM
Main Entry: hum·drum
Pronunciation: \ˈhəm-ˌdrəm\
Function: adjective
Etymology: reduplication of humDate: 1553
: monotonous, dull