Reality TV star Kim Kardashian has asked US President Joe Biden to prevent another Armenian genocide. The 42-year-old star, who is of Armenian descent, has co-written an article with Dr Eric Esrailian for Rolling Stone, in which they plead with Biden to take action to protect Armenians from Azerbaijan, reports aceshowbiz.com.
“My Plea to President Joe Biden to Stop Another Armenian Genocide. It’s time for America (and the world) to take action to protect Armenians from Azerbaijan,” Kim shared a link to the article on X (formerly Twitter) and wrote.
Kim wrote that she and countless others are “descendants of Armenian Genocide survivors” and went on to detail how Azerbaijan’s actions have affected those living in Armenia.
She wrote: “Azerbaijan has blockaded the only lifeline between the indigenous Christian Armenians of Artsakh” and the rest of the world.
Adding that the war in Ukraine has meant some...
“My Plea to President Joe Biden to Stop Another Armenian Genocide. It’s time for America (and the world) to take action to protect Armenians from Azerbaijan,” Kim shared a link to the article on X (formerly Twitter) and wrote.
Kim wrote that she and countless others are “descendants of Armenian Genocide survivors” and went on to detail how Azerbaijan’s actions have affected those living in Armenia.
She wrote: “Azerbaijan has blockaded the only lifeline between the indigenous Christian Armenians of Artsakh” and the rest of the world.
Adding that the war in Ukraine has meant some...
- 9/9/2023
- by Agency News Desk
- GlamSham
David’s Quick Take for the Tl;Dr Media Consumer:
Genocide is the fourth and final title included in Eclipse Series 37: When Horror Came to Shochiku, a box set containing the sum total of a short lived experiment that the fabled Japanese studio conducted in the late 1960s. For a movie that doesn’t feature any giant monsters stomping on buildings or blasting victims with exploding laser beams, it otherwise manages to tick off just about every other item associated with Japanese post-apocalyptic sci-fi horror disaster cliches of its era:
a solemn moralistic condemnation of militarized atomic weaponry that both opens and closes the film in a book-ending framework the valiant effort of a few ordinary heroes who bravely put their lives at risk in order to save humanity from its self-inflicted demise involvement of hostile aliens who determine that humans are unworthy to survive after squandering the opportunity...
Genocide is the fourth and final title included in Eclipse Series 37: When Horror Came to Shochiku, a box set containing the sum total of a short lived experiment that the fabled Japanese studio conducted in the late 1960s. For a movie that doesn’t feature any giant monsters stomping on buildings or blasting victims with exploding laser beams, it otherwise manages to tick off just about every other item associated with Japanese post-apocalyptic sci-fi horror disaster cliches of its era:
a solemn moralistic condemnation of militarized atomic weaponry that both opens and closes the film in a book-ending framework the valiant effort of a few ordinary heroes who bravely put their lives at risk in order to save humanity from its self-inflicted demise involvement of hostile aliens who determine that humans are unworthy to survive after squandering the opportunity...
- 11/28/2016
- by David Blakeslee
- CriterionCast
DVD Release Date: Nov. 20 , 2012
Price: DVD $59.95
Studio: Criterion
It's the end of the world as we know it in 1968's Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell.
Eclipse Series 37: When Horror Came to Shochiku from Criterion contains a quartet of colorful horror and monster movies from the late 1960s produced by Japan’s Shochiku Studios.
Following years of Godzilla’s domination of the box office, many Japanese studios tried to replicate the formula with their own brands of monster movies. One of the most fascinating attempts was the short-lived one from Shochiku, a studio better known for its elegant dramas by the likes of Kenji Mizoguchi and Yasujiro Ozu. In 1967 and 1968, the company created four certifiably batty, low-budget fantasies, tales haunted by watery ghosts, plagued by angry insects, and stalked by aliens—including one in the form of a giant chicken-lizard. It’s all outrageous, oozy and wacky stuff!
All the...
Price: DVD $59.95
Studio: Criterion
It's the end of the world as we know it in 1968's Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell.
Eclipse Series 37: When Horror Came to Shochiku from Criterion contains a quartet of colorful horror and monster movies from the late 1960s produced by Japan’s Shochiku Studios.
Following years of Godzilla’s domination of the box office, many Japanese studios tried to replicate the formula with their own brands of monster movies. One of the most fascinating attempts was the short-lived one from Shochiku, a studio better known for its elegant dramas by the likes of Kenji Mizoguchi and Yasujiro Ozu. In 1967 and 1968, the company created four certifiably batty, low-budget fantasies, tales haunted by watery ghosts, plagued by angry insects, and stalked by aliens—including one in the form of a giant chicken-lizard. It’s all outrageous, oozy and wacky stuff!
All the...
- 8/29/2012
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
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