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The years between Indian independence (1947) and the dominance of colour cinema (early 1960s) saw the emergence and fruition of a distinct, confident, and nuanced black and white aesthetic in Hindi mainstream cinema. Shadow Craft is an ardent and immersive study of cinematic craftings that emblematise the oeuvres of Kamal Amrohi, Raj Kapoor, Nutan, Bimal Roy, Guru Dutt, and Abrar Alvi. Films such as Aag (1948), Mahal (1949), Seema (1955), Pyaasa (1957), Sujata (1959), Kagaz Ke Phool (1959), Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam (1962), Bandini (1963) remain formative to the visual psyche of generations of South Asian viewers. This enduring visual language demonstrates a minutely attuned and sympathetic camera, evocative pools of shadow, affect-rich atmospheric composition, and the visual autonomy of performance. With seventy five rare and curated images from the archives, Shadow Craft offers for the first time a consolidated and intimate journey through this pioneering black and white cinema aesthetic at its most expressive and climactic moment.
What do you get when you mix necromancers, liches, and blood-thirsty demons? Heartburn. All I wanted to do was take a nap. Then, a strange man shows up at my house. Always how it starts… Worse, insects are also invading my house, and my phone won’t stop ringing. Can’t a man get some peace in his own house? But hey, you know me. Nothing’s ever what it seems at the Lester Broussard residence. A man’s gotta do what a man’s gotta do to survive—any lich way he can. I guess I’ll sleep when I’m dead. V1.0
The years between Indian independence (1947) and the dominance of colour cinema (early 1960s) saw the emergence and fruition of a distinct, confident, and nuanced black and white aesthetic in Hindi mainstream cinema. Shadow Craft is an ardent and immersive study of cinematic craftings that emblematise the oeuvres of Kamal Amrohi, Raj Kapoor, Nutan, Bimal Roy, Guru Dutt, and Abrar Alvi. Films such as Aag (1948), Mahal (1949), Seema (1955), Pyaasa (1957), Sujata (1959), Kagaz Ke Phool (1959), Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam (1962), Bandini (1963) remain formative to the visual psyche of generations of South Asian viewers. This enduring visual language demonstrates a minutely attuned and sympathetic camera, evocative pools of shadow, affect-rich atmospheric composition, and the visual autonomy of performance. With seventy five rare and curated images from the archives, Shadow Craft offers for the first time a consolidated and intimate journey through this pioneering black and white cinema aesthetic at its most expressive and climactic moment.
Zadie Lu is afraid of her own shadow. She's a teenager,so she REALLY should have grown out of by now, right? But something weird ishappening in her small town. Zadie could swear the shadows are coming to life.Watching her. Trying to KILL her. But how do you fight something you can't eventouch? And how does all of this tie into her FAMILY, of allthings? From the creative team that brought youthe Eisner-nominated SKYWARD, writer JOE HENDERSON (showrunner of Netflix'sLUCIFER) and artist LEE GARBETT (CAPTAIN MARVEL), join Zadie Lu as she venturesinto the shadows to face her fears, and discovers a legacy she never knew shehad. Collects issues 1-5
Who's lurking in the foggy forest? This title lets children to look through the trees and guess the shapes to find out whether it's a fairy queen on a trampoline, three brown bears on picnic chairs, or an ogre doing yoga.
Flying saucers, government cover-ups, shadowcraft, reptilians, Nordics, Greys... Stories about UFOs and alien contact have been around since the late 1800s, when newspapers reported sightings of mysterious flying airships. The fascination with unidentified flying objects has only intensified with time-every UFO sighting, movie, or television show that focuses on aliens creates a new set of fans. For more than 60 years, FATE magazine has reported on the strange and unexplained. This incredible collection of true accounts from the vaults of FATE includes stories on Roswell, alien agendas, and personal encounters. It features articles by some of the most prominent names in the field, such as Kenneth Arnold, George Adamski, Stanton T. Friedman, John Keel, and Ray Palmer, the founder of FATE.