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After Curt reveals the bank has foreclosed the carnival, a frustrated Remy heads down to the boat of a fortune-teller named Madame Zonar and borrows a book of spells with one page depicting the Devil crying. Remy tells his friends his plan with the crying devil page while setting the book up for display at The Gates of Hell attraction. When ...
The accompanying music video for "Misery Business" was the third to be directed by Shane Drake for the band, and Alternative Press named "Misery Business" the Video of the Year in 2007. "Misery Business" is considered the band's breakthrough hit and is credited with introducing the band to a mainstream audience.
[8] Noel Murray of The New York Times wrote, "this jaw-dropper ending works because the writer Jesse Armstrong sets it up superbly, beginning with that long scene when everybody debates — with hilariously exaggerated politeness — the matter of whose body might best fit under a bus."
The Dallas Cowboys haven’t lost yet, but at least one fan isn’t waiting until the end of the game to start the waterworks. Late in the fourth quarter, with the Cowboys trailing 23-17 and ...
Deema Shehabi (Arabic: ديمة الشهابي) (born 1970) is a Palestinian poet and writer. She has widely published in journals and wrote her first book of poetry in 2011. She has widely published in journals and wrote her first book of poetry in 2011.
The song was composed and written by Tony Kakkar, and was released under the label Desi Music Factory. Music video of this song was produced by Anshul Garg, co-produced by Raghav Sharma and directed by Parth Gupta & Gurdas. The video features actress-model Neha Sharma. [3] The song and its music video was released on 8 May 2019.
Crying Ladies is a 2003 Filipino comedy-drama film directed by Mark Meily based on his Palanca-winning screenplay Bayad Luha. [2] The film stars Sharon Cuneta as Stella, Hilda Koronel as Aling Doray, and Angel Aquino as Choleng, who are hired as professional funeral mourners by a wealthy Chinese-Filipino family in Manila's Chinatown, while they deal with their personal problems.
The video has received positive reviews. [17] Writing for Billboard, Gil Kaufman related the concept to Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. [7] In Rolling Stone, Ryan Reed opined the video "mirrors the song's emotional journey. It opens with black-and-white shots of the singer crying and reclining in a bathtub before exploding with color in the nightclub."