Spartacus.
To make a profit.
you can make food;cloth;really anything you want
You can make the words store, most, must, rust and mote out of the words customer. The longest word you can make is costume.
Just decide what you can make at home like sell cookies or sell some oragome. like i make name tags .you can see what you have around your house and make sure its OK with your parents.KID APPROVED
Well cows can be used for dairy to make a farm busness
spartacus
Spartacus.
Stanley Kubrick
Eyes Wide Shut
Stanley Kubrick.
Jan Harlan has: Played Himself - Guest in "The Charlie Rose Show" in 1991. Played himself in "Stanley and Us" in 1999. Played himself in "Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures" in 2001. Played himself in "Film Genre" in 2002. Played himself in "Creating A.I." in 2002. Played himself in "The 100 Greatest Scary Moments" in 2003. Played himself in "The 100 Greatest War Films" in 2005. Played Contributor in "3 Minute Wonder" in 2006. Played himself in "Vision of a Future Passed: The Prophecy of 2001" in 2007. Played himself in "Full Metal Jacket: Between Good and Evil" in 2007. Played himself in "Standing on the Shoulders of Kubrick: The Legacy of 2001" in 2007. Played himself in "Lost Kubrick: The Unfinished Films of Stanley Kubrick" in 2007. Played himself in "Strada" in 2008. Played himself in "Turning Like Clockwork" in 2011. Played himself in "How to Make a Film" in 2012. Played himself in "From Borehamwood to Hollywood: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Elstree" in 2014. Played Himself - Co-Presenter: Best Film in "Shortcutz Amsterdam Annual Awards" in 2014.
The 1960 movie Let's Make Love was directed by George Cukor, an American film director who mainly concentrated on literary adaptations and comedies. He was active from 1930 to 1981.
It's brilliant. Kubrick shot it several years after Anthony Burgess published the book "a Clockwork Orange" and made the book famous. It has remained the book Burgess is most remembered for. Kubrick is simply a genuis director. I found the images from the movie very stylish and absolutely unforgettable. The violence in the movie caused quite a scandal when CWO was released (early 70s, I believe), but from today's point of view, it is not particularly explicit - it's the atmosphere, the sound, the wonderfully chosen actors and above all Kubrick's work with the camera make it highly intense and provocative. The language is cool, too: Burgess invented a sort of artificial language called nadsat which consists of 'englishized' Russian words. The way he makes use of it through the characters is almost poetic! Kubrick chose plenty of phrases from and has them narrated by Alex, who is also the protagonis of the story. I felt that after watching the movie, I heard those funny terms reverberating in my head for several days, and after having read the book, I was astonished how much of the beauty of the language of the book Kubrick managed to put into this 2h or so movie. To make it short: Viddy the movie, droog! I's worth it!
First, make a pancake. Then you name it Stanley. Or you can ask it its name, but I doubt it will tell you.
Yes, Stanley did make friends at Camp Green Lake. :]
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