Template:Better Than News/November 13: Difference between revisions
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File:Defending Your Life - A New Hope.jpg|link=Defending Your Life: A New Hope|'''''[[Defending Your Life: A New Hope]]''''' is a 1977 American epic space allegory film about a man who finds himself on trial a long time ago in an afterlife far, far away. | File:Defending Your Life - A New Hope.jpg|link=Defending Your Life: A New Hope|'''''[[Defending Your Life: A New Hope]]''''' is a 1977 American epic space allegory film about a man who finds himself on trial a long time ago in an afterlife far, far away. | ||
File:An American in Peristalsis.jpg|link=An American in Peristalsis|'''''[[An American in Peristalsis]]''''' is a 1951 American musical biology film inspired by the 1928 orchestral composition ''An American in Peristalsis by physiologist-musician George Gershwin. The story is interspersed with dance numbers which illustrate radially symmetrical contraction and relaxation of muscles that propagates in a wave down a tube, in an anterograde direction, choreographed by Gene Kelly and set to Gershwin's music. | |||
File:Order_Up_for_So_Crates.jpg|link=Order Up for So Crates|"'''[[Order Up for So Crates]]'''" is a prank where I say "Socrates" when the clerk asks for my name. | File:Order_Up_for_So_Crates.jpg|link=Order Up for So Crates|"'''[[Order Up for So Crates]]'''" is a prank where I say "Socrates" when the clerk asks for my name. | ||
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Revision as of 05:26, 11 March 2022
Defending Your Life: A New Hope is a 1977 American epic space allegory film about a man who finds himself on trial a long time ago in an afterlife far, far away.
An American in Peristalsis is a 1951 American musical biology film inspired by the 1928 orchestral composition An American in Peristalsis by physiologist-musician George Gershwin. The story is interspersed with dance numbers which illustrate radially symmetrical contraction and relaxation of muscles that propagates in a wave down a tube, in an anterograde direction, choreographed by Gene Kelly and set to Gershwin's music.
"Order Up for So Crates" is a prank where I say "Socrates" when the clerk asks for my name.