30 Day Disney Challenge: Day Fourteen

Your favourite kiss

I have absolutely no idea. Maybe the one between Belle and Prince Adam/Beast when he transforms at the end of Beauty and the Beast.


when you ship a ship so hard you don’t even care about the smut; you just want a billion page book about their entire lives beginning to end and how their lives are intertwined with one another’s and how beautiful their love is


radleys:

17/30 directorsRoman Polanski
“Every film I make represents a departure for me. You see, it takes so long to make a film. By the time you get to the next one you’re already a different man. You’ve grown up by one or two years.”



mrchristianbale:

tiredandtrueofheart:

in 2013 we’re getting new films from the Coen Brothers, Spike Jonze, Sofia Coppola, Michel Gondry, Steve McQueen, Jim Jarmusch, Wong Kar-Wai, Martin Scorsese, Hayao Miyazaki, Nicolas Winding Refn, Park Chan-Wook, Alfonso Cuaron, Terry Gilliam, Terrence Malick, Roman Polanski, and Guillermo del Toro

let that sink in for a moment

image


"She was a unique person. It’s difficult to describe her character. She was just utterly good, the kindest human being I’ve ever met, with an extreme patience. To live with me was proof of her patience, because to be near me must be an ordeal. She never had a bad temper, she was never moody. She enjoyed being a wife. The press and the public knew of her physical beauty, but she also had a beautiful soul, and this is something that only her friends knew about."
— Roman Polanski talking about his late wife, Sharon Tate (via sharonandromanlove)


lovesharontate:

Roman Polanski and Sharon Tate attending the premiere of Goodbye Columbus (1969)

lovesharontate:

Roman Polanski and Sharon Tate attending the premiere of Goodbye Columbus (1969)


"I should have left with her and I really didn’t feel very happy. I remember parting with her and I don’t know why the thought came that I may not see her again. That thought would have meant nothing if I had seen her again. I would have forgotten, I’m not at all superstitious as you know, but because it’s the last time I saw her, I remembered it…I remember when he told me, I thought it was a landslide because the house was right up against, right behind the hill, you know? That’s what I thought, I thought it was a landslide. Yeah, that’s what he said, ‘they’re all dead’. In my life, this was the greatest tragedy there’s no doubt about it. Everything collapsed."
Roman Polanski Age 78 (On Sharon Tate and parting with her in London)