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Teena Marie Memorial (Venice beach) This cut has Teena marie and her daughter Alia Rose

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Teena Marie Memorial (Venice beach) This cut has Teena marie and her daughter Alia Rose

Somebody Else's Guy – Cuban Jazz Combo

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Cuban Disco Connection by
Cuban Jazz Combo – 2011

Monkee 2DR x Silvana Pedrozo | Break-Salsa Experiment

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Also available on Facebook @

Directed by 2DR Monkee
Shot by Christophe Meyer
Choreography created & performed by 2DR Monkee & Silvana Pedrozo
Music & video editing by 2DR Monkee
Special thanks to Albin Ramqaj & Nuno Oliveira

Songs:
– La Maxima 79 – Descarga Chango’ [2DR Monkee remix]
– Roberto Roena Y Su Apollo Sound – Que se sepa [2DR Monkee edit]
– 2DR Monkee – El Mulato

Follow 2DR Monkee on Soundcloud:

CHEESE PASTA | PASTA RECIPE | INDIAN STYLE PASTA | WHITE SAUCE PASTA RECIPE | PASTA IN WHITE SAUCE

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CHEESE PASTA | PASTA RECIPE | INDIAN STYLE PASTA | WHITE SAUCE PASTA RECIPE | PASTA IN WHITE SAUCE

The Croods: A New Age Review

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Rating:

7/10

Cast:

Nicolas Cage 
 Grug (voice)
Emma Stone 
 Eep (voice)
Ryan Reynolds 
 Guy (voice)
Catherine Keener 
 Ugga (voice)
Cloris Leachman 
 Gran (voice)
Clark Duke 
 Thunk (voice)
Leslie Mann 
 Hope Betterman (voice)
Peter Dinklage 
 Phil Betterman (voice)
Kelly Marie Tran 
 Dawn Betterman (voice)

Written by Kevin Hageman, Dan Hageman, Paul Fisher, Bob Logan

Directed by Joel Crawford

The Croods: A New Age Review

After seven long years of waiting, the Croods are back and 
 much different than you remember in the sequel The Croods: A New Age. Where 2013’s The Croods remains something of a minor animated classic brimming with the same heart and humor co-director and writer Chris Sanders lent to How to Train Your Dragon and Disney’s gallery of 90’s gems — namely Mulan, The Lion King, Aladdin and Beauty and the Beast — in its story of a cave dwelling family desperately trying to survive amidst a dangerous and ever-changing world of weird creatures and treacherous locales, A New Age, as directed by first timer Joel Crawford, feels more like a weekend acid trip with the neighbors during which the titular family gets stuck in a tar full of madness.

A New Age finds everyone’s favorite modern stone age family encountering the cultured and sophisticated Bettermans, a father-mother-daughter trio who have mastered the art of farming and carved a virtuoso paradise out of a tree replete with dining room, separate bedrooms (!) and windows. Predictably, Grug (voiced by Nicolas Cage) shrugs off everything he learned at the end of the first film — his acceptance of contemporary sensibilities and willingness to allow his children to make their own choices — and instead clashes with this newfound culture despite the obvious safety and comfort it affords.

To make matters worse, Eep (Emma Stone) and Guy (Ryan Reynolds) have become more romantic and, as all kids do, yearn to break away and explore the world on their own; or, at the very least, sleep somewhere outside of the family sleeping pile.

Cue the madness.

No, really. Cue. The. Madness. The Croods: A New Age devolves into something akin to a wild fever dream packed with lots of shouting, broad comedy and the type of wacky hijinks usually reserved for carnival fun houses. Is it funny? Absolutely. In fact, there are any number of moments that left me in stitches, including a bit where Grug joins Mr. Betterman (Peter Dinklage) in his literal mancave-cum-sauna and eventually spills his emotions amidst the overwhelming heat; a running gag involving Grug’s son Thunk (Clark Duke) and a window (the ancient equivalent of a TV); the scene in which Eep convinces the Betterman’s daughter, Dawn (Kelly Marie Tran), to explore the world beyond the wall surrounding her parents’ fortress of solitude, an adventure that leads to an unfortunate bug sting; and a mishap involving a stick and a seal chicken — or is it a chicken seal?

The zany adventures are rendered in gorgeous, jaw-dropping animation by the talented folks at DreamWorks who pack the picture with enough eye-popping color, vibrant imagery, land sharks, punch monkeys, and silly creatures to keep audiences visually stimulated for the film’s relatively brief 95-minute runtime.

And yet, despite the frequent jokes, madcap humor and impressive visuals, A New Age feels closer in spirit to Hotel Transylvania than its more nuanced predecessor. The film is entertaining, sure, but lacks the warmth and ingenuity of the original film and instead employs a whiplash-inducing pace to gloss over a rudimentary plot; and, worse, struggles to develop the Croods family in a satisfying way.

Grug, in particular, shifts from relatable, simple-minded fella just trying to do right by his family to an easily manipulated Homer Simpson-esque father figure driven by his own personal selfish needs. From a narrative standpoint, wouldn’t it be more interesting if he were the one yearning to break free from his family after adapting the ability to think in terms of more than just survival? And shouldn’t Eep, for all the excitement she displayed for Guy’s ingenuity in the original film, be more ecstatic about the Bettermans’ new age lifestyle? Her character still exhibits plenty of spunk, particularly in her endeavors to free Dawn from her familial prison, and during the action-driven finale in which the Crood women team up to form the “Thunder Sisters,” but mostly she throws angry tantrums when Guy focuses his attention elsewhere.

To be fair, after seven years, expectations might have been a bit to high, though watching all of these sitcom-y plot lines play out it’s easy to surmise that the makers of The Croods: A New Age returned to the well not out of some fundamental desire to continue the story, but because audiences demanded a follow up. As such, the results are indeed more but also wholly unnecessary; and the story concludes as most animated sequels do: with a handful of new, wackier characters drowning out the original pack.

In the end, you may wish for more time with the Croods and less time at the nuthouse.



Taylor Swift Releasing New folklore Film on Disney+

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Tomorrow at 3 a.m. Eastern, Taylor Swift will release folklore: the long pond studio sessions, a film recorded in the studio with her folklore collaborators, the National’s Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff. Airing on Disney+, the film is set in the National’s Hudson Valley studio Long Pond, where the three artists reunited to reflect on folklore and perform stripped-down renditions of the full record, having originally worked on it remotely. Bon Iver, who appears on album track “Exile,” makes a guest appearance. Check out the trailer below. (Pitchfork earns a commission from purchases made through affiliate links on our site.)

Swift recently confirmed that she would rerecord her back catalog in order to limit profits made by her former manager Scooter Braun, with whom she parted on acrimonious terms. 

Listen to the Pitchfork Review podcast “Taylor Swift Loves Indie, Too”:



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Teena Marie – Ooh la la la

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Canal Som Nostalgia, Raridades
a boa musica de volta para vocĂȘ

Cuban Jazz Combo – Remember Cal

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Track from Regroove Italy

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1000 SANDWICH RECIPE BY MY GRANNY | CHEESE SANDWICH | INDIAN RECIPES | STREET FOOD | POTATO RECIPES

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1000 SANDWICH RECIPE BY MY GRANNY | CHEESE SANDWICH | INDIAN RECIPES | STREET FOOD | POTATO RECIPES

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