It was beloved by so many children of that decade, and it's been
the subject of a comeback in the last few years.
Not exact matches
ok, ok, ok, i get it both sides think they are telling the truth there are no lyers here on this blogs only misinform people talking about two separate
subjects yet thinking they are talking about the same thing the existence
of god... one side believe the other doesn't what's wrong with that... sooner or later they'll changed their minds and one side will believe and the other won't so the arguement will forever be the same about two separate aguement on the same blog... but its definitely entertaining to read the
comebacks... keep up the good work you all... its just as fun to read what the believer have to say as to what the nonebeliever have to say... after all it keeps all getting to know eachother better on what we believe right???
Jigsaw, the torture porn icon infamous for
subjecting those he deems bad or not knowing the true worth
of a life, makes his
comeback with an eponymous film that wishes it could be as thoughtful, slick, or as good at slaying as, say, Beyoncé.
So in a way, it makes sense that his storming
comeback comes from a film that looks again at the
subject matter
of sexual abuse, albeit from a very different perspective to that
of his 1998 Dogme picture.
War movies are sort
of making a
comeback and it's a genre usually steeped in controversy depending on the war that is depicted and the
subject matter explored within that story.
Surfing as a
subject of art has made a
comeback worthy
of Brian Wilson's Smile, as seen in Catherine Opie's photographs and Robert Longo's recent paintings, among others.
Joe Zucker: «Empire Descending a Staircase» (through April 27) This is something
of a
comeback show for one
of the most restless and ambitious painters to emerge from the 1970s, who habitually combines eccentric painting processes with weird
subject matter and weirder materials.