14k White Gold White gold is a mixture of pure gold and white metals (i.e., silver, nickel) topped with a rhodium coating. 14K white gold is the best mixture of durability, price, and longevity and can last many years with proper jewelry care before needing to be re-plated.
Amid the bank closings, bread and unemployment lines and an ever worsening Great Depression, Garbo was as rich and famous as you can get. Her legendary beauty radiated youthful energy from a lithe, athletic physique, topped with a face that was rumored to have stopped traffic more than once on Wilshire Boulevard (or was that Sunset Boulevard?) in the young Hollywood colony thick with stars and starlets who would give anything to be her. The naturally reclusive Garbo found Hollywood cold (isolated) from the rest of the world. Especially her native Sweden, where she was anxious to get home.
Silver Starlets Torrent
The ANZZI Full Body Rite Shower Panel features hard edged 90 degree modernist angles in a rich Mahogany finish with Tempered Deco-Glass. Twenty-eight high polished chrome plated Acu-Stream body jets provide a relaxing yet powerful water stream to massage the body. The swiveling Heavy Rain shower head hangs overhead releasing a steady torrent of soothing water from above. And finally, always positioned at the columnメs flank is the Euro-Grip hand held sprayer with free reign reach of up to 60 inches. And everything is controlled through two polished chrome plated thermostatic and diverter knobs.
Greta Garbo chose to never marry, but she sure loved to get around. The silver-screen icon went out with men and women, gays and straights, singletons and married people, and she did it all on her own terms.
The Warner Archive Collection DVD of She Had to Say Yes is okay but not exceptional, deemed good enough so as not to warrant a new transfer. Although acceptably intact, the presentation lacks the silver-screen shimmer of some remastered titles from its year. Ms. Young always looks great; we admire her ability to make her compromised character sympathetic, as opposed to simply attractive. Almost everyone else is an unpleasant sex offender of one kind or another. By not even commenting on the way the business world uses and abuses women, the script all but condones the situation. Flo must make the best of things on her own.
Art inspired by Apocalypse 12 has taken three forms. The earliest is of a narrative character, closely following the text of the book. Here are illustrations from manuscripts of the Apocalypse and commentaries thereon that date from as early as the ninth century. In them we see the woman pursued by the dragon, who tries to sweep her away in the torrent flowing from his mouth. Then the woman, given wings, flees into the wilderness, and her child is snatched up to heaven. Michael and the heavenly host hurl the dragon down to the earth.
From the Church of St. Kilian at Bad Heilbrunn, we have this statue of 1726. Set against a sunburst of silver rays, the ensemble is surrounded by a mandorla of small angel heads cast in silver. Heilbrunn is situated in the Rhineland, a short distance south of Heidelberg.
I'll say it right now: the only reason I watched this movie was because the chihuahua in this movie has the same name and breed as my own little dog. Was the movie worth it? I can't answer that properly, but at least I know what it's about now, right?Let me put it this way: I recently watched this movie on my birthday. There are better things you can do on your birthday. This movie isn't horrible, but it certainly is "eh". A solid 5/10.Plot: White family checks out a house that belonged to their however-many-greats-great aunt or grandmother or whatever. This is where the chihuahua comes in. Sophie was a silver-screen starlet of the early silent era, or a vaudeville performer, I can't remember. She haunts the house, because she's a dog ghost. I've never heard that one before. Really. Shenanigans ensure as Sophie tries to get them out. Not too big a part though, because she rather warms up to the family with the help of their ginormous love struck golden retriever, Homer.In general, I think this plot needs some polishing. First the family moves in, then Sophie the ghost chihuahua wants them out, then she falls in love with Homer the family dog, and then the family wants to sell the house. Then the kids pull pranks to keep the house from being sold. Then it's a matter of revealing Sophie to the parents. It's here to there. By the way, at one point it's revealed that Sophie's still there bc she was waiting on her old owners, who died in the titanic. This movie is a bit clumsy when it comes to moving from one part to the next. That titanic thing is more of a detail then a plot point. I think there isn't enough flow.I gotta mention though, when the kids try to prank some (mildly haughty) lady out of buying the house, they're absolutely awful. One of their plans is boiling broccoli to make the house smell bad. They insult the lady so much, and she's just trying to buy a house, it's almost funny. Anyways, absolutely none of their pranks discourage her from the house, she's just annoyed. But the thing that DOES drive her away is seeing the ghost chihuahua. That's kinda funny. This is where the title comes from I guess, when she meets the parents and says something like "I hate you guys and your dog and your chihuahua too!" Still a weird title.Acting: The acting ranges from "eh" to ok. If I had to pick, the best actor is Mr. Real Estate guy. He's ok. The family is the worst though. It's not hilariously bad, or painstakingly bad, just "eh" kind of bad. Needs work. The voice actors for the two dogs, too. Needs work.Characters: eh. Nothing new or too interesting. Just eh. The family acts like a cross between a Disney Chanel family and a stock photo. Trying to be quirky or a happy family at times, but lukewarm. The dogs are eh as well. There are moments where it's basically just everyone bonding. It endears and moves the plot along as much as you'd expect.Dialogue: there are some awfully cheesy lines here. These guys are trying to be quirky too much! Although there were two parts that made me chuckle.The first one is when white dad guy goes to the front door in the morning. He begins with something like "aw, the nearest Starbucks is miles from here". He looks down to see a pile of suitcases. His next words are "What in tarnation?"The next one is when the family discovers that the bathtub has been used (by Sophie the ghost) and they're wondering who used it. The guy starts humming the twilight zone theme. Kinda funny stuff.Final thoughts: This movie honestly could've been better as a Disney Chanel original movie. Better production value, better acting, better script sorely needed. At the end of the day, there are better movies I could've watched on my birthday of all days. I wouldn't recommend this movie per say, unless you want to spend an hour and twenty minutes doing something.But I'll appreciate this movie for what it is. (especially because the end credits said the movie was dedicated to a dead guy who always wanted to make a family friendly film and now I feel bad for ragging on this movie) This movie tried. It made a so-so way to spend some time, and I can appreciate the effort. It isn't bad, boring, mindless drivel. In the end, it's a movie. A movie about a ghost chihuahua. Is it a good movie? Not what comes to mind. Bad movie? No way. It is an ok movie. It could be worse. And at least I satisfied my burning curiosity to know what this movie about a chihuahua named Sophie could be about. This movie is the perfect 5/10. Somewhat better then what I expected from seeing that sparkly cover, I must say. A real "eh" with a shrug thrown in. Plus I love chihuahuas. 5.1/10. 2ff7e9595c
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