Spooky Season is slowly en route as the summer sun fades and the leaves shift to orange. What better way to be extra-prepped for one of the funnest times of the year than to get an early-rush start on your Halloween costume?
On top of all the partying and pumpkin spice lattes, Halloween also allows us to live our innermost celebrity cosplay fantasies. Luckily, Amazon Canada is here to make our costume dreams a reality with its plethora of wigs, clothing and accessories.
Win every costume competition by scrolling and clicking below to see some of the best celeb-inspired Halloween costumes this year.
Read More: Adele Bought ‘Glitter Ball’ Clothes On Amazon For Beyoncé’s Renaissance Tour — How To Get Your Own ‘Fabulous Silver Fashions’
Wednesday Addams (L-r): Wednesday Addams, Aphratti dress, Hue socks, Sally Hansen nailpolish, Laza wig — Photos (L-r): Netflix, Amazon
Wednesday Addams wig: $27
Aphratti collar...
On top of all the partying and pumpkin spice lattes, Halloween also allows us to live our innermost celebrity cosplay fantasies. Luckily, Amazon Canada is here to make our costume dreams a reality with its plethora of wigs, clothing and accessories.
Win every costume competition by scrolling and clicking below to see some of the best celeb-inspired Halloween costumes this year.
Read More: Adele Bought ‘Glitter Ball’ Clothes On Amazon For Beyoncé’s Renaissance Tour — How To Get Your Own ‘Fabulous Silver Fashions’
Wednesday Addams (L-r): Wednesday Addams, Aphratti dress, Hue socks, Sally Hansen nailpolish, Laza wig — Photos (L-r): Netflix, Amazon
Wednesday Addams wig: $27
Aphratti collar...
- 9/11/2023
- by Emerson Pearson
- ET Canada
By Purple Romero
Manufacturing misery as one of mainstream media’s mortal sins is purveyed creatively with organic elan in “The Slums,” winner of the Heart On Award at the Busan International Kids and Youth Film Festival 2020. The mockumentary, directed by rising Filipino filmmaker Jan Andrei Cobey, goes for the jugular, as it eviscerates the media for its messianic complex and consequent propensity to depict the urban poor as people devoid of dignity.
“The Slums” centers on the Dela Cruz family, whose plight becomes the subject of a documentary film shot in the aftermath of a fire that razed part of a shantytown in Tondo, Manila. Cameras follow them as they move inside and outside their home, their interactions with different family members as well as their individual lives captured on film.
The movie introduces us to the dynamics of a family who is very much aware of the precarity...
Manufacturing misery as one of mainstream media’s mortal sins is purveyed creatively with organic elan in “The Slums,” winner of the Heart On Award at the Busan International Kids and Youth Film Festival 2020. The mockumentary, directed by rising Filipino filmmaker Jan Andrei Cobey, goes for the jugular, as it eviscerates the media for its messianic complex and consequent propensity to depict the urban poor as people devoid of dignity.
“The Slums” centers on the Dela Cruz family, whose plight becomes the subject of a documentary film shot in the aftermath of a fire that razed part of a shantytown in Tondo, Manila. Cameras follow them as they move inside and outside their home, their interactions with different family members as well as their individual lives captured on film.
The movie introduces us to the dynamics of a family who is very much aware of the precarity...
- 12/15/2021
- by Guest Writer
- AsianMoviePulse
Reviewing a film whose significance is so evident is always a hard task, and “Liway” definitely falls under this category. Kip Oebanda, however, has taken care of this issue for me, by directing a truly good film. Let us take things from the beginning, though.
Based on actual events, the story takes place in the mid-1980’s Philippines, in Camp Delgado, a makeshift prison inside a military camp for both rebels and criminals. Day and Ric (also a former commander), try to raise their 10-year old son Dakip (it means “captured”) and their infant daughter Malaya, both of which were born in captivity and have not seen the outside of the camp yet. In order to ease the consequences of their circumstances, Dei tells Dakip stories based on Philippine mythology, despite Ric’s protests, who wants the child to know the truth instead of indulging in fairy tales. One of these stories is about Liway,...
Based on actual events, the story takes place in the mid-1980’s Philippines, in Camp Delgado, a makeshift prison inside a military camp for both rebels and criminals. Day and Ric (also a former commander), try to raise their 10-year old son Dakip (it means “captured”) and their infant daughter Malaya, both of which were born in captivity and have not seen the outside of the camp yet. In order to ease the consequences of their circumstances, Dei tells Dakip stories based on Philippine mythology, despite Ric’s protests, who wants the child to know the truth instead of indulging in fairy tales. One of these stories is about Liway,...
- 10/28/2018
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
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