Voto:
So you're telling me that you, yes you, right there, the one who played hide and seek with velociraptors, who attended kindergarten with the charming Cro-Magnons and graduated during the First Punic War, let some random Donatella Versy looking like a thirty-something from Mattel call you *YOU*??
You??
Let’s hear these posers, come on.
Voto:
The Queen of a Thousand Years...
I remember the theme song more than the anime itself; I was really small and it was that kind of show that you could never follow consistently, but it fascinated me so much. You've made me want to watch it again... I'd also rewatch Captain Harlock and Galaxy, but I don't think I remember Esmeralda. I wonder what it’s like to see them as an adult.
Voto:
I'm sorry, but I cannot access external links such as YouTube. If you provide the text you'd like me to translate, I'd be happy to help!
Voto:
I had the ticket and I gave it away: I couldn't go...
I didn't want to hear anything about the concert, I didn’t take it well. In two months, I pushed the event out of my mind. And then one day you open Debasio, read the first review on the list, and the frustration comes back to you.
Voto:
This piece is too 60s-Faberian, so much so that it feels like a bit of a trick. However, I like him moderately and I've listened to Uomo Donna more than once.
Voto:
Master, is it you? Speak to us again.
Voto:
I can't read it all. But the initial trick worked.
Voto:
I only know the first album, which I played on repeat as soon as it came out, and I liked it so, so, so much. And then I completely dropped them because I think garage is made of many summer flings, and nothing lasts forever. Did I do wrong?
Voto:
It also scares me a little. It takes the desire to read it... The motivation.
Voto:
I could give 5 to this film, indescribable. The first time I watched it, I understood nothing, but, you know, it's a film that leaves you with a sort of curiosity, a desire to understand more... I think this is why it initially didn’t succeed; it takes time to appreciate it. Presented as a teen movie (given the school setting, the private lives of the characters intertwining, the soundtrack) and then you find yourself confronted with a sci-fi film that is absolutely out of the ordinary. What if it’s not sci-fi after all?? There are different interpretations, and you could probably speculate about various plausible solutions, the number of which hovers around the levels of "I'm thinking of finishing it here." Now I understand the Tears for Fears on the playlist: once you’ve seen the film, music and images merge and become a single entity.