Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Moderators: waltsouza, mansildv
-
- Fanático
- Posts: 986
- Joined: May 14th, 2004, 4:11 pm
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Sporting eh eh. Lembro me que na altura as discussões começaram a ficar acessas. Aquele user que depois se tornou moderador e que fez porcaria por aqui.. Era dos piores. Joe acho eu.Rui Santos wrote:Isto aqui nesse aspecto do desporto é tão calmo que nem sei o teu clube!
Voltando ao topic, de certeza que há muitos users que não se importariam de ter o cargo se o mesmo não implicar a tal criação dos tópicos que acho devia ser deixada para os users!
Se eu chegasse aqui e quisesse falar duma estreia sem topic, criava eu!

Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Se não houver quem quisesse ser moderador a tempo inteiro, uma boa solução seria os outros moderadores poderem moderar essa secção, assim tapava-se lacunas temporais.
"You're not your Facebook status. You're not how many friends you have. You're not the smart phone you own. You're not the apps of your phone. You're not your fucking iPad. You're the all-planking, e-consuming crap of the world."
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Eu gosto da ideia do Rui Santos. É que cada um de nós tem muito pouco tempo para se dedicar ao fórum, e assim podíamos todos fazer a nossa parte no bocadinho de tempo em que estamos on! :)
- Rui Santos
- Site Admin
- Posts: 6208
- Joined: June 4th, 2001, 11:42 pm
- Location: Portugal - Lisboa / MAC
- Contact:
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
JRibeiro,JRibeiro wrote:Se não houver quem quisesse ser moderador a tempo inteiro, uma boa solução seria os outros moderadores poderem moderar essa secção, assim tapava-se lacunas temporais.
Mas vocês moderadores já tem acesso a moderar o cinema julgo eu. (depois verifico)
Mas essa opção é para mim óbvia ;)
Rui Santos - 54 Anos | 23 Anos DVDMania
DVD/BR | Jogos | Life is Short, Play More | FB Collectors HV-PT
DVD/BR | Jogos | Life is Short, Play More | FB Collectors HV-PT
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
BOA NOITE!
EU NÃO ME IMPORTO DE SER MODERADOR.
Prometo que vou fazer um excelente trabalho e quê! Chora agora!






















EU NÃO ME IMPORTO DE SER MODERADOR.
Prometo que vou fazer um excelente trabalho e quê! Chora agora!
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Então? ainda não sou moderador? Não estavam a precisar de um?
Chora agora!

Chora agora!
- Rui Santos
- Site Admin
- Posts: 6208
- Joined: June 4th, 2001, 11:42 pm
- Location: Portugal - Lisboa / MAC
- Contact:
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
pictures,
É óbvio que apesar de estares registrado à quase 8 anos, com 13 posts até estes mais recentes não terás o perfil para moderador.
E muito menos com essa linguagem.
Fim de conversa.
É óbvio que apesar de estares registrado à quase 8 anos, com 13 posts até estes mais recentes não terás o perfil para moderador.
E muito menos com essa linguagem.
Fim de conversa.
Rui Santos - 54 Anos | 23 Anos DVDMania
DVD/BR | Jogos | Life is Short, Play More | FB Collectors HV-PT
DVD/BR | Jogos | Life is Short, Play More | FB Collectors HV-PT
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Rui Santos lamento mas discordo
Foram 8 anos a consumir info deste forum para saber tudo sobre cinema e quê. Estou apto.
Chora agora!

Foram 8 anos a consumir info deste forum para saber tudo sobre cinema e quê. Estou apto.
Chora agora!
Last edited by pictures on March 10th, 2014, 2:02 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Para ficarem mais confiantes do meu trabalho vou escrever aqui uma critica para o Titanic. Escolhi este filme porque toda a gente o viu.
Titanic por Pictures 10 Março 2014:
I'll be perfectly honest. Going in, the main reason I was happy to finally be seeing "Titanic," director James Cameron's much-ballyhooed $200 million epic, was because it meant that I wouldn't have to watch that damn trailer anymore. When two studios get together and make a movie that costs more than their own privately funded South American guerrilla war, you have to figure they're going to make dead certain that the world feels it has to attend when they're done blowing all that dough. So, obviously, the first question that needs to be answered is, is the end result really worth all that money?
The answer is a resounding "yes," but with philosophical qualifiers. The money, as they say, is on the screen, but, happily, there's a lot more to it than that. Quite surprisingly, when you consider that he's usually more concerned with The Terminator theatrically pulling drunken bikers' arms out of their sockets, Cameron has devised a tender love story between Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio that serves as the main focus of "Titanic's" storyline, and it works beautifully.
I've been saying since the day that I heard Cameron was going to film the story that it was doomed to failure because the only thing anybody is interested in concerning the Titanic is that it took a dive. Incredibly, though, I got so caught up in his star-crossed lovers while watching the movie, I was actually surprised when that iceberg approached out of the darkness. This is the equivalent of watching "Star Wars" and getting immersed in the Han Solo/Princess Leia story while forgetting all about the Death Star.
Scene from movie
3.5M/47 sec./240x135
1.7M/47 sec./160x90
QuickTime movie
The film opens with a brief prologue in which Bill Paxton, as a modern-day treasure hunter, explores the wreckage of the real-life Titanic far beneath the Atlantic Ocean. Cameron actually took his camera 2 1/2 miles down to see the real thing, and the results are hauntingly impressive, with decaying railings and smashed bedframes reminding us that this was an actual tragedy, not a figment of some screenwriter's imagination. Paxton's character is looking for a huge diamond that was supposed to have been stored onboard the ship when it went down. His exploits are reported on television, and this brings him into contact with a 100-year-old woman (nicely played by 87-year-old whippersnapper Gloria Stuart) who claims to have been on the ship and in possession of the diamond at the time of the disaster.
Titanic
2 min. 20 sec. VXtreme video
As Stuart tells her story, a shot of the rotting wreckage morphs back in time to 1912 and the movie-proper begins. Rose is now a beautiful 17-year-old played by Kate Winslet, who isn't 17 but has the beautiful part down cold. She's boarding the ship for its maiden (and, of course, only) voyage with her super-wealthy, uber-snooty fiancée, Cal Hockley. Hockley is played by Billy Zane, and he's easily the weak link in the film. Cal is the only character that's poorly written, and Zane telegraphs his villainous line readings (and wiggles his eyebrows) like he's about to tie Tom Mix's girlfriend to the railroad tracks.
DiCaprio plays Jack, a free-spirited young artist who's so suddenly won a ticket on the voyage in a card game that he hops onboard with just minutes to spare. It doesn't take long before DiCaprio (understandably) starts salivating over the heavenly Winslet, and a Romeo and Juliet-type love story ensues. Except that Juliet is a rich dame with ritzy cross-Atlantic digs. Romeo is down below with the riffraff, but he's cute as a shiny new dime and his hair hangs in his eyes when he draws pictures. Doncha just want 'em to kiss?
Well, yes, you do. There's an honest sweetness to the love story. This is no scoop, but the two leads make for an attractive couple, and, though their dialogue is sometimes a little too junior high school love diary to be completely effective, Winslet and DiCaprio display a great deal of gee-whiz chemistry. For once, DiCaprio's boyishness works in his favor. Jack is less cocky than he is fun-loving. He revels in the elegance and spontaneity of his journey back home to the States, and the splendor of production designer Peter Lamont's letter-perfect sets is enough to turn anybody's head. The production as a whole is exquisite, a seamless re-creation of what was, until now, a once-in-a-lifetime journey.
Then everything smacks into a bunch of ice and sinks. I really can't believe it came to this, but (for about 15 minutes, anyway) the movie actually slows down when the ship starts filling up with water. It's ironic that the actual Titanic went down on April 15, considering how taxing Cameron's depiction of the event gets in its early stages. Zane's character, who's been doing an Edgar Kennedy slow-burn while his (previously miserable) fiancée happily cavorts around the ship with Mr. Cutie-Pie, goes through all kinds of histrionics trying to pry the two apart while the entire set gradually starts to tilt. This display includes handcuffing DiCaprio to a heating pipe, which forces Winslet to make like an action movie heroine, running through waist-deep water while waving an ax. Her lipstick never smudges, though, and her eyes remain blue.
However, once the compartments start exploding with H2O and everyone commences to clawing their way into the few lifeboats that were available, things pick up considerably. The sight of this magnificent vessel pointing several stories up in the night air and splitting in half is truly staggering. Cameron pauses periodically to insert moments of real poetry during the ordeal, most memorably when he dwells on a beautiful woman who's diaphanous gown swirls in the water above her after she's drowned. The hull's final moments as it slides into the water are astounding. There's also a magnificent shot of several hundred passengers floating in the icy ocean after the ship has made its final descent. It's a peerless intermingling of believable terror and movie spectacle.
Now for those philosophical qualifiers. I don't think it's even open to debate as to whether there are better things to do with $200 million than to make one movie. By that, I don't mean that the studios need to be spending their bucks on medical research. The industry is painting itself into a corner by upping the ante every time an effects director like Cameron steps behind the camera, and, since "Titanic" looks like it's going to be a hit, the end is not yet in sight. There are a lot of young directors out there struggling to make their voices heard above the mutli-zillion dollar glub-glub, and it won't be long before each and every one of them will have to abandon ship for the more forgiving waters of independent filmmaking.
"Titanic" is an unbelievable voyage, but not all big-bucks gambles pay off like this one has, with a formidable piece of popular art. Artistically and financially "Titanic" will probably win in the final tally, but (if the movies of the past several years teach us anything) it's a "Waterworld" after all. To have to be re-taught that at even one dollar, more than 200 million will be a hard lesson indeed.
Remember how much you liked the first "Rocky" movie, how delicate, exciting, and ultimately inspiring it was? Allowing for inflation, that movie today would cost 5 million bucks.
"Titanic" is one swell ride. The gradually building intensity of the plunge could scare young children, although my 9-year-old nephew who watched the movie with me loved it. Surprisingly, considering its rating, Winslet's bare breasts are in full view as DiCaprio sketches her. There's a God-awful Celine Dion song over the end credits for those of you who like that kind of thing. Everyone else will be forced to make a face. PG-13. 207 minutes, but they zip by.
Por Pictures 10 Março 2014.
Titanic por Pictures 10 Março 2014:
I'll be perfectly honest. Going in, the main reason I was happy to finally be seeing "Titanic," director James Cameron's much-ballyhooed $200 million epic, was because it meant that I wouldn't have to watch that damn trailer anymore. When two studios get together and make a movie that costs more than their own privately funded South American guerrilla war, you have to figure they're going to make dead certain that the world feels it has to attend when they're done blowing all that dough. So, obviously, the first question that needs to be answered is, is the end result really worth all that money?
The answer is a resounding "yes," but with philosophical qualifiers. The money, as they say, is on the screen, but, happily, there's a lot more to it than that. Quite surprisingly, when you consider that he's usually more concerned with The Terminator theatrically pulling drunken bikers' arms out of their sockets, Cameron has devised a tender love story between Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio that serves as the main focus of "Titanic's" storyline, and it works beautifully.
I've been saying since the day that I heard Cameron was going to film the story that it was doomed to failure because the only thing anybody is interested in concerning the Titanic is that it took a dive. Incredibly, though, I got so caught up in his star-crossed lovers while watching the movie, I was actually surprised when that iceberg approached out of the darkness. This is the equivalent of watching "Star Wars" and getting immersed in the Han Solo/Princess Leia story while forgetting all about the Death Star.
Scene from movie
3.5M/47 sec./240x135
1.7M/47 sec./160x90
QuickTime movie
The film opens with a brief prologue in which Bill Paxton, as a modern-day treasure hunter, explores the wreckage of the real-life Titanic far beneath the Atlantic Ocean. Cameron actually took his camera 2 1/2 miles down to see the real thing, and the results are hauntingly impressive, with decaying railings and smashed bedframes reminding us that this was an actual tragedy, not a figment of some screenwriter's imagination. Paxton's character is looking for a huge diamond that was supposed to have been stored onboard the ship when it went down. His exploits are reported on television, and this brings him into contact with a 100-year-old woman (nicely played by 87-year-old whippersnapper Gloria Stuart) who claims to have been on the ship and in possession of the diamond at the time of the disaster.
Titanic
2 min. 20 sec. VXtreme video
As Stuart tells her story, a shot of the rotting wreckage morphs back in time to 1912 and the movie-proper begins. Rose is now a beautiful 17-year-old played by Kate Winslet, who isn't 17 but has the beautiful part down cold. She's boarding the ship for its maiden (and, of course, only) voyage with her super-wealthy, uber-snooty fiancée, Cal Hockley. Hockley is played by Billy Zane, and he's easily the weak link in the film. Cal is the only character that's poorly written, and Zane telegraphs his villainous line readings (and wiggles his eyebrows) like he's about to tie Tom Mix's girlfriend to the railroad tracks.
DiCaprio plays Jack, a free-spirited young artist who's so suddenly won a ticket on the voyage in a card game that he hops onboard with just minutes to spare. It doesn't take long before DiCaprio (understandably) starts salivating over the heavenly Winslet, and a Romeo and Juliet-type love story ensues. Except that Juliet is a rich dame with ritzy cross-Atlantic digs. Romeo is down below with the riffraff, but he's cute as a shiny new dime and his hair hangs in his eyes when he draws pictures. Doncha just want 'em to kiss?
Well, yes, you do. There's an honest sweetness to the love story. This is no scoop, but the two leads make for an attractive couple, and, though their dialogue is sometimes a little too junior high school love diary to be completely effective, Winslet and DiCaprio display a great deal of gee-whiz chemistry. For once, DiCaprio's boyishness works in his favor. Jack is less cocky than he is fun-loving. He revels in the elegance and spontaneity of his journey back home to the States, and the splendor of production designer Peter Lamont's letter-perfect sets is enough to turn anybody's head. The production as a whole is exquisite, a seamless re-creation of what was, until now, a once-in-a-lifetime journey.
Then everything smacks into a bunch of ice and sinks. I really can't believe it came to this, but (for about 15 minutes, anyway) the movie actually slows down when the ship starts filling up with water. It's ironic that the actual Titanic went down on April 15, considering how taxing Cameron's depiction of the event gets in its early stages. Zane's character, who's been doing an Edgar Kennedy slow-burn while his (previously miserable) fiancée happily cavorts around the ship with Mr. Cutie-Pie, goes through all kinds of histrionics trying to pry the two apart while the entire set gradually starts to tilt. This display includes handcuffing DiCaprio to a heating pipe, which forces Winslet to make like an action movie heroine, running through waist-deep water while waving an ax. Her lipstick never smudges, though, and her eyes remain blue.
However, once the compartments start exploding with H2O and everyone commences to clawing their way into the few lifeboats that were available, things pick up considerably. The sight of this magnificent vessel pointing several stories up in the night air and splitting in half is truly staggering. Cameron pauses periodically to insert moments of real poetry during the ordeal, most memorably when he dwells on a beautiful woman who's diaphanous gown swirls in the water above her after she's drowned. The hull's final moments as it slides into the water are astounding. There's also a magnificent shot of several hundred passengers floating in the icy ocean after the ship has made its final descent. It's a peerless intermingling of believable terror and movie spectacle.
Now for those philosophical qualifiers. I don't think it's even open to debate as to whether there are better things to do with $200 million than to make one movie. By that, I don't mean that the studios need to be spending their bucks on medical research. The industry is painting itself into a corner by upping the ante every time an effects director like Cameron steps behind the camera, and, since "Titanic" looks like it's going to be a hit, the end is not yet in sight. There are a lot of young directors out there struggling to make their voices heard above the mutli-zillion dollar glub-glub, and it won't be long before each and every one of them will have to abandon ship for the more forgiving waters of independent filmmaking.
"Titanic" is an unbelievable voyage, but not all big-bucks gambles pay off like this one has, with a formidable piece of popular art. Artistically and financially "Titanic" will probably win in the final tally, but (if the movies of the past several years teach us anything) it's a "Waterworld" after all. To have to be re-taught that at even one dollar, more than 200 million will be a hard lesson indeed.
Remember how much you liked the first "Rocky" movie, how delicate, exciting, and ultimately inspiring it was? Allowing for inflation, that movie today would cost 5 million bucks.
"Titanic" is one swell ride. The gradually building intensity of the plunge could scare young children, although my 9-year-old nephew who watched the movie with me loved it. Surprisingly, considering its rating, Winslet's bare breasts are in full view as DiCaprio sketches her. There's a God-awful Celine Dion song over the end credits for those of you who like that kind of thing. Everyone else will be forced to make a face. PG-13. 207 minutes, but they zip by.
Por Pictures 10 Março 2014.
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
pictures wrote:Para ficarem mais confiantes do meu trabalho vou escrever aqui uma critica para o Titanic. Escolhi este filme porque toda a gente o viu.
Titanic por Pictures 10 Março 2014:
I'll be perfectly honest. Going in, the main reason I was happy to finally be seeing "Titanic," director James Cameron's much-ballyhooed $200 million epic, was because it meant that I wouldn't have to watch that damn trailer anymore. When two studios get together and make a movie that costs more than their own privately funded South American guerrilla war, you have to figure they're going to make dead certain that the world feels it has to attend when they're done blowing all that dough. So, obviously, the first question that needs to be answered is, is the end result really worth all that money?
The answer is a resounding "yes," but with philosophical qualifiers. The money, as they say, is on the screen, but, happily, there's a lot more to it than that. Quite surprisingly, when you consider that he's usually more concerned with The Terminator theatrically pulling drunken bikers' arms out of their sockets, Cameron has devised a tender love story between Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio that serves as the main focus of "Titanic's" storyline, and it works beautifully.
I've been saying since the day that I heard Cameron was going to film the story that it was doomed to failure because the only thing anybody is interested in concerning the Titanic is that it took a dive. Incredibly, though, I got so caught up in his star-crossed lovers while watching the movie, I was actually surprised when that iceberg approached out of the darkness. This is the equivalent of watching "Star Wars" and getting immersed in the Han Solo/Princess Leia story while forgetting all about the Death Star.
Scene from movie
3.5M/47 sec./240x135
1.7M/47 sec./160x90
QuickTime movie
The film opens with a brief prologue in which Bill Paxton, as a modern-day treasure hunter, explores the wreckage of the real-life Titanic far beneath the Atlantic Ocean. Cameron actually took his camera 2 1/2 miles down to see the real thing, and the results are hauntingly impressive, with decaying railings and smashed bedframes reminding us that this was an actual tragedy, not a figment of some screenwriter's imagination. Paxton's character is looking for a huge diamond that was supposed to have been stored onboard the ship when it went down. His exploits are reported on television, and this brings him into contact with a 100-year-old woman (nicely played by 87-year-old whippersnapper Gloria Stuart) who claims to have been on the ship and in possession of the diamond at the time of the disaster.
Titanic
2 min. 20 sec. VXtreme video
As Stuart tells her story, a shot of the rotting wreckage morphs back in time to 1912 and the movie-proper begins. Rose is now a beautiful 17-year-old played by Kate Winslet, who isn't 17 but has the beautiful part down cold. She's boarding the ship for its maiden (and, of course, only) voyage with her super-wealthy, uber-snooty fiancée, Cal Hockley. Hockley is played by Billy Zane, and he's easily the weak link in the film. Cal is the only character that's poorly written, and Zane telegraphs his villainous line readings (and wiggles his eyebrows) like he's about to tie Tom Mix's girlfriend to the railroad tracks.
DiCaprio plays Jack, a free-spirited young artist who's so suddenly won a ticket on the voyage in a card game that he hops onboard with just minutes to spare. It doesn't take long before DiCaprio (understandably) starts salivating over the heavenly Winslet, and a Romeo and Juliet-type love story ensues. Except that Juliet is a rich dame with ritzy cross-Atlantic digs. Romeo is down below with the riffraff, but he's cute as a shiny new dime and his hair hangs in his eyes when he draws pictures. Doncha just want 'em to kiss?
Well, yes, you do. There's an honest sweetness to the love story. This is no scoop, but the two leads make for an attractive couple, and, though their dialogue is sometimes a little too junior high school love diary to be completely effective, Winslet and DiCaprio display a great deal of gee-whiz chemistry. For once, DiCaprio's boyishness works in his favor. Jack is less cocky than he is fun-loving. He revels in the elegance and spontaneity of his journey back home to the States, and the splendor of production designer Peter Lamont's letter-perfect sets is enough to turn anybody's head. The production as a whole is exquisite, a seamless re-creation of what was, until now, a once-in-a-lifetime journey.
Then everything smacks into a bunch of ice and sinks. I really can't believe it came to this, but (for about 15 minutes, anyway) the movie actually slows down when the ship starts filling up with water. It's ironic that the actual Titanic went down on April 15, considering how taxing Cameron's depiction of the event gets in its early stages. Zane's character, who's been doing an Edgar Kennedy slow-burn while his (previously miserable) fiancée happily cavorts around the ship with Mr. Cutie-Pie, goes through all kinds of histrionics trying to pry the two apart while the entire set gradually starts to tilt. This display includes handcuffing DiCaprio to a heating pipe, which forces Winslet to make like an action movie heroine, running through waist-deep water while waving an ax. Her lipstick never smudges, though, and her eyes remain blue.
However, once the compartments start exploding with H2O and everyone commences to clawing their way into the few lifeboats that were available, things pick up considerably. The sight of this magnificent vessel pointing several stories up in the night air and splitting in half is truly staggering. Cameron pauses periodically to insert moments of real poetry during the ordeal, most memorably when he dwells on a beautiful woman who's diaphanous gown swirls in the water above her after she's drowned. The hull's final moments as it slides into the water are astounding. There's also a magnificent shot of several hundred passengers floating in the icy ocean after the ship has made its final descent. It's a peerless intermingling of believable terror and movie spectacle.
Now for those philosophical qualifiers. I don't think it's even open to debate as to whether there are better things to do with $200 million than to make one movie. By that, I don't mean that the studios need to be spending their bucks on medical research. The industry is painting itself into a corner by upping the ante every time an effects director like Cameron steps behind the camera, and, since "Titanic" looks like it's going to be a hit, the end is not yet in sight. There are a lot of young directors out there struggling to make their voices heard above the mutli-zillion dollar glub-glub, and it won't be long before each and every one of them will have to abandon ship for the more forgiving waters of independent filmmaking.
"Titanic" is an unbelievable voyage, but not all big-bucks gambles pay off like this one has, with a formidable piece of popular art. Artistically and financially "Titanic" will probably win in the final tally, but (if the movies of the past several years teach us anything) it's a "Waterworld" after all. To have to be re-taught that at even one dollar, more than 200 million will be a hard lesson indeed.
Remember how much you liked the first "Rocky" movie, how delicate, exciting, and ultimately inspiring it was? Allowing for inflation, that movie today would cost 5 million bucks.
"Titanic" is one swell ride. The gradually building intensity of the plunge could scare young children, although my 9-year-old nephew who watched the movie with me loved it. Surprisingly, considering its rating, Winslet's bare breasts are in full view as DiCaprio sketches her. There's a God-awful Celine Dion song over the end credits for those of you who like that kind of thing. Everyone else will be forced to make a face. PG-13. 207 minutes, but they zip by.
Por Pictures 10 Março 2014.
Pictures, explica-nos lá este link:
http://edition.cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/9712/29/review.titanic/
«The most interesting characters are the ones who lie to themselves.» - Paul Schrader, acerca de Travis Bickle.
«One is starved for Technicolor up there.» - Conductor 71 in A Matter of Life and Death
Câmara Subjectiva
«One is starved for Technicolor up there.» - Conductor 71 in A Matter of Life and Death
Câmara Subjectiva
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Não acredito
Parece que fui descoberto.
Mas prometo que vou fazer um bom trabalho de moderação.
Se quiserem meto aqui mais críticas para verem como realmente percebo de cinema.
CHORA AGORA!

Parece que fui descoberto.
Mas prometo que vou fazer um bom trabalho de moderação.
Se quiserem meto aqui mais críticas para verem como realmente percebo de cinema.
CHORA AGORA!
- NFCDS
- DVD Maníaco
- Posts: 2228
- Joined: October 28th, 2005, 11:09 am
- Location: Na melhor Margem do Tejo
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Eu acho que viste "filmes" a mais 

Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
...e daqueles que fazem chorar muito!!
Um cromo assim deveria era ser moderador num fórum chinês.
"#)..!*-%#>§_+"
(Tradução) - "LITE AGOLA"!!

Um cromo assim deveria era ser moderador num fórum chinês.
"#)..!*-%#>§_+"
(Tradução) - "LITE AGOLA"!!
Os meus 200 filmes inesquecíveis :
http://www.imdb.com/list/ls077088728/?s ... s077088728
http://www.imdb.com/list/ls077088728/?s ... s077088728
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
Eventualmente, por perceber tanto de cinema é que não tem parado de fazer fitas... 


Walk on the Sun! Dream on the Dark Side of the Moon!
-
- Especialista
- Posts: 1828
- Joined: September 17th, 2006, 2:20 am
- Location: Beja
Re: Novo moderador para Cinema e Filmes - Procura-se
pictures tal como o rui referiu, não me parece que com essa linguagem e muito menos com essa atitude tenhas perfil para moderador.