Monkey Shines (film)

Monkey Shines
Theatrical release poster
Directed byGeorge A. Romero
Screenplay byGeorge A. Romero
Based onMonkey Shines
by Michael Stewart
Produced byCharles Evans
Starring
CinematographyJames A. Contner
Edited byPasquale Buba
Music byDavid Shire
Production
company
Distributed byOrion Pictures
Release date
  • July 29, 1988 (1988-07-29)
Running time
113 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$7 million
Box office$5.3 million

Monkey Shines (also known as Monkey Shines: An Experiment in Fear) is a 1988 American science fiction psychological horror film written and directed by George A. Romero and starring Jason Beghe, Kate McNeil, John Pankow, and Joyce Van Patten. Its plot follows a young athlete who becomes a paralyzed quadriplegic, and develops a bond with an intelligent service monkey named "Ella" who becomes homicidal after she is injected with an experimental serum of human brain tissue. It is based on the 1983 British novel of the same title by Michael Stewart.

Producers Peter Grunwald and Charles Evans of Orion Pictures acquired the rights to Stewart's novel in 1985, and began production two years later, with Romero assigned to direct. The film marked Romero's first major studio feature, and was his second-most expensive film at that time, with a budget of $7 million. The setting was changed from Oxford, England, where the novel was set, to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, a city in which Romero had long resided and often set his films. Principal photography of Monkey Shines took place in Pittsburgh in the late summer and early fall of 1987. It had a protracted post-production and editing process, as Romero shot more film than he had on any of his previous projects, particularly due to the use of live monkeys.

Monkey Shines was released theatrically by Orion Pictures in July 1988, receiving mixed reviews and a lackluster box-office reception, grossing $5.3 million against its $7 million budget. In the intervening years, the film has been noted by critics as an offbeat entry in Romero's filmography, and has earned status as a minor cult film.[2]

Plot

Law student and athlete Allan Mann is struck by a truck and rendered quadriplegic following surgery. As his domineering mother and uncaring nurse try helping him, Allan, now in an SNP-equipped wheelchair, struggles to adjust. His friend, Geoffrey Fisher, suggests he get a Capuchin monkey as a service animal to lift his spirits and help around the house. Geoffrey has an ulterior motive: he is a research scientist under pressure to produce results. Geoffrey has dosed a monkey in his lab with a serum to boost its intelligence, and believes the serum's effects will be amplified if the monkey is around humans.

Geoffrey enlists Melanie Parker, a specialist in training helper monkeys. Geoffrey provides the Capuchin he has been experimenting on, claiming it is normal. Allan names the monkey Ella, and he and Melanie work closely training her. Initially, Ella is a huge help to Allan. Allan grows very close to Melanie.

Allan grows short-tempered and resentful. Ella, too, becomes aggressive. Allan dreams of running through the grass at night, and believes he has a telepathic link with Ella, whom he suspects can escape the house. Geoffrey finds evidence confirming this but, pleased with Ella's intelligence, does not tell Allan and Melanie. After the pet bird of Allan's nurse pesters him, Allan wishes it was gone - that night, Ella kills the bird and leaves it in the nurse's slipper, causing the nurse to quit in a rage.

Allan gets a second opinion about his paralysis and discovers he may have been misdiagnosed; another surgery may enable him to walk again. Before attempting the risky surgery, the doctor needs Allan to demonstrate some ability to willingly move an appendage. Rather than feeling happy at this news, Allan is furious with his original surgeon who is incompetent and egotistical as well as now dating Allan's former girlfriend. He fantasizes about burning the man's cabin down. That night, Ella kills the surgeon and his girlfriend by burning down the cabin with a pack of stolen matches.

After seeing the fire in a vision and having it confirmed by his mother, the horrified Allan believes that Ella is carrying out his dark impulses. He also realizes that when he is around Ella, he becomes easily enraged. Allan demands that Geoffrey take Ella away. With Ella gone, Allan becomes more relaxed; he spends the weekend at Melanie's house and the two have sex.

Allan returns home and tries to mend bridges with his mother, but feels a burst of rage at her utter contempt of Melanie. Allan realizes that Ella must be nearby. Allan's mother ignores his desperate warnings that she leave, and instead takes a bath. Ella kills her by dropping a hairdryer into the tub, electrocuting her. Allan briefly answers a call from Melanie before Ella disables the phone. Realizing Allan may be in trouble, Melanie departs for his house.

Geoffrey arrives and confesses that Ella was an experimental subject. The enraged Allan demands Geoffrey leave, upset at being used for an experiment yet concerned for his safety with Ella around. Instead, Geoffrey pursues Ella around the house, intending to put her down with one of the syringes of sodium pentobarbitone he has brought. Ella gets hold of a syringe and injects it into Geoffrey, killing him.

Ella returns to Allan, who is filled with self loathing because he believes that Ella is acting out his own impulses. He screams at Ella, but the monkey responds by urinating on him. Melanie arrives and Ella attacks her. This convinces Allan that Ella is not simply carrying out his desires, but is acting as a jealous romantic partner. Melanie falls and is knocked unconscious. As Allan rages at Ella, she ignores him and prepares to inject Melanie with Geoffrey's other syringe. Allan calms himself and moves his right arm to engage his tape deck. As peaceful music plays, he lovingly summons Ella to cuddle close to him, and she complies. When Ella comes near enough, Allan bites her on the neck and slams her body against the back of his wheelchair and into his tape deck, killing her.

Now that he has demonstrated a voluntary movement, the surgery can be performed and is a success. Melanie arrives at the hospital to pick him up, and Allan stands up from his wheelchair and gets into the van with her.

Cast

Analysis

Film scholar Tony Williams interprets Monkey Shines as a "complex film dealing with the ambiguous nature of human motivations," and humans' inability to deal with the consequences of their own desires.[4]

Journalist Michael Wilmington notes that the film's thematic weight rests in the presentation of the antagonistic monkey, Ella: "The audience that rejects her as a little toy-terror--or the movie as a piece of icy misanthropy which perversely trashes women, animals and quadraplegics--misses the point. Watching this movie, one loves Ella, bleeds for her, wishes desperately to preserve her from harm. But hell and humanity carry their own demands."[5]

Production

Development

United Artists had originally optioned Michael Stewart's novel, Monkey Shines (1983), for a film adaptation in 1984, having purchased the rights for $20,000.[6] The option included film rights to another novel by Stewart, Far Cry (1984).[6] However, seven months later, in 1985, the option expired, after which producer Charles Evans purchased the rights to the novel.[6]

Executive producer Gerald Paonessa commented that he had wanted George A. Romero to direct, as he felt he "had a wonderful, dark sense of humor."[7] Romero was convinced to direct after being shown script treatments of the project.[7]

Filming

The film features Boo, a Capuchin monkey, similar to the one pictured

Monkey Shines marked Romero's second feature film produced with a major studio, after 1982's Creepshow, as well as the second most-expensive.[8] The production budget was approximately $7 million.[6] The film was shot in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,[9] with principal photography beginning on July 31, 1987.[6] Romero, a longtime resident of Pittsburgh who set most of his prior films there, chose the location.[7] Additional filming occurred at the Mellon Institute at Carnegie Mellon University, as well as a private barn in Murrysville, which was converted into the monkey training center which Melanie operates.[10] Interiors of Allan's house were constructed by set designer Cletus Anderson, a longtime collaborator of Romero's.[8]

The film's shooting schedule was extensive, consisting of twelve-hour days.[8] Romero's wife and assistant, Christine (who also appears in the film) commented that it was the "toughest shoot we've ever had."[8] For filming Boo, the capuchin monkey portraying Ella, Romero required multiple monkey doubles.[8] Additionally, four puppets of the monkey were designed by Tom Savini, one of which was remote-controlled, each adorned with yak fur.[8] Helping Hands, a service animal program from Boston, assisted with the monkeys featured in the film.[7] Filming concluded in October 1987.[6]

Post-production

At the time of filming, Romero commented that "Post-production on this will be very heavy. I hope to be finished by the end of March. It's a huge edit. I'm shooting more film than I ever have because of the monkeys...  As our budgets grow, everything takes longer."[7] The film's distributor, Orion Pictures, was desperate for a hit, as it was in financial difficulty. First, the studio forced Romero to add a happy ending to the picture, a plot device which the director had long avoided in favor of more ambiguous endings; originally, Romero had intended to conclude the film in the same manner as its source novel, in which Allan does not recover from his accident.[11] Second, after poor previews, the studio recut the film without Romero's knowledge to add a "shock" ending.[9]

Another issue was the film's overall length, as Romero had completed a very long and involved shooting script that numbered over 240 pages. This resulted in a first cut of which 40 to 50% of the shot footage met the cutting room floor in the need to get the film reduced to a practical length. Upset with the way his project had been handled, Romero returned to independent films.

Alternate ending

The original intended ending of the film was unreleased until 2014, when it was included as a bonus feature on its debut Blu-ray release. In the original ending, prior to Dorothy and Geoffrey's deaths, Geoffrey's boss Dean Harold Burbage (Stephen Root) steals the remaining brain tissue serum and injects it into all of Geoffrey's remaining test monkeys. After Allan regains his ability to move on his own, Burbage is assaulted by animal rights protesters who had earlier attacked Geoffrey for experimenting on monkeys. Burbage insults them then returns to the lab where it's discovered that all of the remaining monkeys have completely taken control of his mind.

Release

Box office

Monkey Shines was released theatrically in the United States on July 29, 1988, opening in 1,181 theaters.[12] It grossed $1.9 million during its opening weekend.[12] It eventually went on to gross a total of $5.3 million in the United States over its 22-week theatrical run.[12]

Critical response

Several critics compared the portrayal of Ella to that of King Kong

Several critics praised Monkey Shines for its portrayal of its philosophical themes: David Kehr of the Chicago Tribune heralded it as Romero's "most complex and challenging creations... [Romero's] is a style of philosophical fiction that seems hardly to belong to the 20th Century at all, but rather to the 18th Century school of Swift, Diderot and Voltaire. Like those authors, he uses satire as one of his principal tools and principal weapons," concluding that, "Monkey Shines is an extremely thoughtful, provocative film; it's also a damn good horror movie."[13]

Other critics, such as the Los Angeles Times's Michael Wilmington, commented on the film's characterization of Ella, and the relationship between her and Allan; comparing Ella to King Kong, Wilmington noted: "The story’s dark pivot is the symbiosis between Allan and Ella: a match made in hell. Ella, preternaturally sensitive to all her master’s desires, becomes infected with his hatreds--just as, in the lab, she’s been made addicted to a serum containing human brain tissue. It’s not a matter of the beast emerging against the human--but of humans perverting the beast."[5] Richard Harrington of The Washington Post made similar observations about the character dynamic: "Alternating between comfort and revenge, [Ella] seems the ultimate victim, an unwitting pawn. Her scenes with Beghe are at once tender and terrifying as they battle it out to see who's the boss. Some closeups make Ella seem as ferocious as King Kong, but at other times she looks as if she's just been kicked out of the Garden of Eden."[14]

Roger Ebert was less enthusiastic about the film, awarding it two and a half out of a possible four stars; the film's main flaw, wrote Ebert, was its being overlong with too many subplots: "Romero loses momentum in the closing passages because he has too many loose ends to keep track of. Somewhere within this movie's two hours or so is hidden an absolutely spellbinding 90-minute thriller."[3] Caryn James of The New York Times panned the film, writing that the screenplay "wraps up more loose ends than anyone cares about, yet leaves some nagging bits of illogic," also criticizing the film for its "calm, and tedious, exposition."[15]

The film was met with criticism from some disability rights organizations such as ADAPT and Adapting Society, due to a depiction of a toy monkey in a wheelchair in initial promotional materials.[6][16] Members of ADAPT formed a picket line in wheelchairs at the Hollywood Pacific Theater the Saturday of the film's opening weekend.[6] Bill Bolte, a member of Adapt California, commented: "The idea of a monkey attendant turning into a monster is appalling."[16] On August 10, Orion Pictures issued a public apology, removing the content from media advertisements for the film, promising to consult disability experts for promotional materials of upcoming projects.[6]

Monkey Shines holds a 53% approval rating on the internet review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, based on 32 critic reviews, with its consensus reading: "While not one of horror legend George Romero's more evolved efforts, Monkey Shines delivers enough primal fear to satisfy more forgiving genre enthusiasts."[1] The film possesses a score of 71 on Metacritic based on 14 reviews.[17] Contemporary film scholar John Kenneth Muir deemed Monkey Shines a "harrowing and fascinating film," and praised its realistic depiction of the monkey, Ella.[18]

Several parodies exist, some notable examples are:

Home media

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Home Entertainment released the film on DVD on September 28, 1999.[19] Scream Factory released the film on Blu-ray for the first time in November 2014.[20] In November 2019, Scream Factory announced this Blu-ray would be going out of print in 2020.[21]

Trailer poem

One of the trailers showed a toy monkey banging its cymbals while sitting in a wheel chair. This trailer is known for its poem.

Once there was a man whose prison was a chair. The man had a monkey; they made the strangest pair.
The man was the prisoner; the monkey held the key. No matter how he tried, the man couldn't flee.
Locked in his prison, terrified and frail; The monkey wielding power, keeping him in jail.
The man tried to keep the monkey from his brain, but every move he made, became the monkeys game.
The monkey ruled the man, it climbed inside his head. And now as fate would have it... One of them was dead!

References

  1. ^ a b "Monkey Shines: An Experiment in Fear (1988)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 27, 2020.
  2. ^ McLean, Ralph (November 9, 2018). "Cult Movie: Monkey Shines a rare miss for chiller master George A Romero". The Irish News. Archived from the original on January 28, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  3. ^ a b Ebert, Roger (July 29, 1988). "Monkey Shines: An Experiment in Fear Movie Review (1988)". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  4. ^ Williams 2015, p. 154.
  5. ^ a b "MOVIE REVIEW : Well-Crafted Shivers in 'Monkey Shines'". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. July 29, 1988. Archived from the original on January 28, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Monkey Shines". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Los Angeles, California: American Film Institute. Archived from the original on January 28, 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e Blank, Ed (October 20, 1987). "Romero monkeys around on film in Moon". The Pittsburgh Press. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. pp. B7–B8 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Anderson, George (October 15, 1987). "Romero trades zombies for monkeys". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. pp. 17, 21 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ a b Williams 2015, p. 147.
  10. ^ "Good Morning". The Pittsburgh Press. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. September 27, 1987. p. 146 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Williams 2015, p. 161.
  12. ^ a b c "Monkey Shines". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  13. ^ Kehr, David (July 29, 1988). "'Monkey Shines' a Stylish Horror-Fantasy". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. Archived from the original on January 28, 2020.
  14. ^ Harrington, Richard (July 30, 1988). "'Monkey Shines'". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on January 28, 2020.
  15. ^ James, Caryn (July 29, 1988). "Review/Film; Identity Crisis: My Monkey, My Self". The New York Times. New York City, New York. Archived from the original on January 28, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  16. ^ a b Smith, Stacy (July 30, 1988). "Disabled Groups Assail 'Monkey Shines' Ads". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. p. 6 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ "Monkey Shines (1988)". Metacritic. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  18. ^ Muir 2010, p. 680.
  19. ^ Monkey Shines: DVD. ISBN 0792841336.
  20. ^ Jane, Ian (November 4, 2014). "Monkey Shines (Blu-ray)". DVD Talk. Archived from the original on January 28, 2020.
  21. ^ Squires, John (November 4, 2019). "Grab Them While You Can: These Scream Factory Blu-rays Go Out of Print Next Year". Bloody Disgusting. Archived from the original on January 28, 2020.

Sources

Read other articles:

Untuk desa, lihat Hutabarat, Pahae Julu, Tapanuli Utara. HutabaratTugu Si Raja Nabarat di Tarutung, Tapanuli Utara.Aksara Batakᯂᯮᯖᯅᯒᯖ᯲ (Surat Batak Toba)Nama margaHutabaratArtiBerlawananSilsilahJarakgenerasi denganSiraja Batak1Si Raja Batak2Raja Isumbaon3Tuan Sorimangaraja4Tuan Sorbadibanua (Raja Nai Suanon)5Si Raja Sobu6Raja Hasibuan7Guru Mangaloksa Hasibuan8HutabaratNama lengkaptokohSi Raja NabaratNama anak1. Si Raja Sosunggulon2. Si Raja Hapoltahan3. Si Raja Hutabarat PohanNa...

 

بيوتر جراباركزيك معلومات شخصية الميلاد 31 أكتوبر 1982 (العمر 41 سنة)أولشتين، بولندا الطول 2.00 م (6 قدم 7 بوصة)* مركز اللعب محور  [لغات أخرى]‏  الجنسية بولندي الحياة العملية الرقم 2 المهنة لاعب كرة يد  الرياضة كرة اليد،  وكرة القدم  الأندية الاحترافية* الأعوا

 

Battle during the Syrian civil war Battle of Jdaidet al-FadlPart of the Syrian civil war and the Rif Dimashq offensiveDate16–21 April 2013 (5 days)LocationRif Dimashq, Syrian territoriesResult Syrian Army victoryBelligerents Syrian Coalition Free Syrian Army Sunni jihadists Syrian Arab Republic Syrian Army National Defense Force Lijan militiasCommanders and leaders Muhammed Jameel Noufel  †[1] UnknownUnits involved Falcons of Damascus Republican Guard[2] 555t...

 

Irish writer Sarah FittonBornc. 1796Dublin, County Dublin, IrelandDied30 March 1874 (aged 78)Paris, FranceKnown forChildren's writerNotable workConversations on Botany (1817) Plate 2, Table of the Classes, Conversations on Botany, 1817, engraved by Thomas Milton Common red poppy, Papaver rhoeas, Conversations on Botany, 1817, engr. Thomas Milton Sarah Fitton (c. 1796 – 30 March 1874) was an Irish writer and botanist. Assisted by her sister Elizabeth, Sarah Fitton wrote Conversations on...

 

Milan Biševac Datos personalesNacimiento Kosovska Mitrovica, Yugoslavia (actual Kosovo)31 de agosto de 1983 (40 años)Nacionalidad(es) SerbiaFrancesaAltura 1,85 mmetrosCarrera deportivaDeporte FútbolClub profesionalDebut deportivo 2001(BASK Belgrado)Posición DefensaSelección nacionalSelección SRB SerbiaPart. (goles) 19 (0)[editar datos en Wikidata] Milan Biševac (Kosovska Mitrovica, Yugoslavia, 31 de agosto de 1983) es un futbolista serbio. Juega de defensa...

 

Mawaru Penguindrum輪るピングドラム(Mawaru Pingudoramu)GéneroComedia, drama, misterio, psicológico, sobrenatural, tragedia AnimeDirectorKunihiko IkuharaProducido porHiro HaruyamaShinichi IkedaEstudioBrain's BaseCadena televisiva MBS, TBS, TVA, AT-X, BS11Música porYukari HashimotoLicenciado por Siren Visual Sentai Filmworks Kazé UKPrimera emisión8 de julio de 2011Última emisión23 de diciembre de 2011Episodios24[1]​ Ficha en Anime News Network MangaCreado porKunihiko Ikuhara...

 

Kapadia à la Pichvai Exhibition à New Delhi (2018) Dimple Kapadia est une actrice indienne qui apparaît principalement dans les films en hindi[1]. Elle est découverte par Raj Kapoor, à l'âge de 14 ans, qui lui donne le rôle principal dans sa romance d'adolescente Bobby (1973), aux-côtés de son fils Rishi Kapoor[2]. Le film devient un énorme succès commercial et fait d'elle une star du jour au lendemain[note 1],[4]. Son rôle d'adolescente chrétienne de Goa lui permet de devenir un...

 

Martine Brunschwig Graf Martine Brunschwig Graf (* 16. März 1950 in Freiburg im Üechtland; heimatberechtigt in Hütten und Ramsen) ist eine Schweizer Politikerin (FDP-Liberale). Biografie Brunschwig Graf war von März 1988 bis März 1990 Präsidentin der Liberalen Partei des Kantons Genf. Von Oktober 1989 bis Oktober 1993 gehörte sie dem Genfer Grossen Rat an. Von Dezember 1993 bis Dezember 2005 war sie Mitglied des Staatsrats des Kantons Genf. Seit Dezember 2003 war Brunschwig Graf Mitgli...

 

Coordenadas: 40° 03' N 1° 0' E  Nota: Este artigo é sobre uma comuna italiana. Para outros significados, veja Gallipoli (desambiguação). Galípoli    Comuna   Localização Ficheiro:PUG-Mappa.png GalípoliLocalização de Galípoli na Itália Coordenadas 40° 03' 20 N 17° 59' 30 E Região Apúlia Província Lecce Características geográficas Área total 40 km² População total 20 513 hab. Densidade 513 hab./km² Altitude 12&...

 

Karin Stephen, a los cinco años, con otros miembros de la familia Robert Pearsall Smith (1894) Karin Stephen, de soltera Costelloe, (10 de marzo de 1889 - 12 de diciembre de 1953) fue una psicoanalista y psicóloga británica. Biografía Karin Stephen nacida como Catherine Elizabeth Costelloe era hija de Mary Costelloe (nacida Mary Whitall Smith, más conocida como Mary Berenson,1864-1945) que había sido cuáquera en Filadelfia, y de Benjamin Francis Conn Costelloe (1855-1899), un converso ...

 

2007 video game 2007 video gameAkinatorDeveloper(s)DolunayEngineLimulePlatform(s) Web browser iOS Android Fire OS Windows Phone Release2007Genre(s)Twenty questionsMode(s)Single-player Akinator is a video game developed by the French company Elokence. During gameplay, it attempts to determine what fictional or real-life character, object, or animal the player is thinking of by asking a series of questions (similar to the game Twenty Questions). It uses an artificial intelligence program that l...

 

Mahalasa Temple Mahalasa Narayani Temple is a Hindu temple to the goddess Mahalasa, located in Mardol, Ponda, in the Indian state of Goa. Presiding goddess Mahalasa is identified with Mohini, the female avatar of the god Vishnu. Mahalasa has four hands, carrying a Trishula, a sword, a severed head, and a drinking bowl. She stands on a prostrate man or demon, as a tiger or lion licks blood dripping from the severed head. She also wears the yajnopavita (sacred thread), which is generally dedica...

 

Akçakale Hilfe zu Wappen Akçakale (Türkei) Straße in Akçakale Basisdaten Provinz (il): Şanlıurfa Koordinaten: 36° 43′ N, 38° 57′ O36.71083333333338.947777777778Koordinaten: 36° 42′ 39″ N, 38° 56′ 52″ O Telefonvorwahl: (+90) 414 Postleitzahl: 63 500 Kfz-Kennzeichen: 63 Struktur und Verwaltung (Stand: 2021) Gliederung: 119 Mahalle Bürgermeister: Mehmet Yalçinkaya (AKP) Postanschrift: Fatih Sultan Mehmet Mahallesi,Abdulla...

 

Este artigo carece de caixa informativa ou a usada não é a mais adequada. Rua Barker, Casino Casino é uma cidade australiana localizada no estado da Nova Gales do Sul. Em 2011, sua população era de 9 629 habitantes, dos quais 4 613 são homens e 5 016 são mulheres.[1] Tem como código postal 2470. Referências ↑ Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 de outubro de 2012). «Casino (Urban Centre/Locality)». 2011 Census QuickStats. Consultado em 10 de abril de 2015  O C...

 

Pour les articles homonymes, voir Église Saint-Pierre-et-Saint-Paul. Cet article est une ébauche concernant l'Aube, les monuments historiques français et une église ou une cathédrale. Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?) ; pour plus d’indications, visitez le projet Aube. Église Saint-Pierre-et-Saint-Paul de Brienne-le-ChâteauPrésentationType Église CatholiqueDiocèse Diocèse de TroyesDédicataires Pierre, Paul de TarseStyle GothiqueHauteu...

 

Дискография Сергей Безруков Студийные альбомы 2 Синглы 18 Саундтреки 3 Видеоклипы 11 Дискография Сергея Безрукова включает в себя несколько музыкальных альбомов, а также аудиокниг, радиоспектаклей и дисков с музыкой к спектаклям, в которых играл Безруков[1]. Так же С...

 

Species of beetle Sisyphus longipes Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Arthropoda Class: Insecta Order: Coleoptera Family: Scarabaeidae Genus: Sisyphus Species: S. longipes Binomial name Sisyphus longipes(Olivier, 1789) Synonyms Copris helwigii Fabricius, 1798 Scarabaeus longipes Olivier, 1789 Scarabaeus minutus Fabricius, 1792 Sisyphus longipes, is a species of dung beetle found in India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar and Thailand.[1][2] ...

 

Football league in Bihar, India Football leagueBihar Soccer LeagueOrganising bodyBihar Football Association Shirsh Sports Pvt Ltd.Founded2021; 2 years ago (2021)CountryIndiaDivisions1Number of teams7Level on pyramid5Promotion toI-League 3Current: 2021 Bihar Soccer League, also known as Bihar State Soccer League,[1] is the top-tier state football league in the Indian state of Bihar, conducted by Bihar Football Association with Shirsh Sports Pvt Ltd. All matches are be...

 

After the hunt, 1870, by David Neal (1838–1915) Cultural depictions of dogs in art has become more elaborate as individual breeds evolved and the relationships between human and canine developed. Hunting scenes were popular in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Dogs were depicted to symbolize guidance, protection, loyalty, fidelity, faithfulness, alertness, and love.[1] As dogs became more domesticated, they were shown as companion animals, often painted sitting on a lady's lap. T...

 

Indonesian Choice Awards 2018Tanggal29 April 2018 (2018-04-29)LokasiSentul International Convention Center, BogorNegara IndonesiaDipersembahkan olehSarah SechanVincentDestaIkhtisarPenghargaan terbanyakSheila on 7 (2)Nominasi terbanyakIsyana SarasvatiRendy Pandugo (3)Album of the YearKereta Kencan – HIVI!Male Singer of the YearRendy PandugoFemale Singer of the YearRaisaActor of the YearAdipati DolkenActress of the YearChelsea IslanSitus webzulu.id/ica5/Siaran televisi/radioSaluranN...