Friday, March 27, 2009

Emo Hair Styling Tips For Emo Girls

Emo hairstyles are an increasingly popular trend among young people. They are a means of self-expression through personal appearance. However, achieving the perfect emo ‘do can sometimes be a struggle. Thankfully, there are some great tips to help you achieve the unique look you want.
Emo Hair Styling Tips

Since emo hairstyles are always straight, you will want to enlist some tools to help you get the sleekest texture. A flat iron is your best bet for a straight emo style. However, if you plan to use a heat-styling tool frequently, you will want to put a heat protective spray or cream on first.

Emo Hair Styling Tips

This keeps your hair from being completely fried, which is especially important for emo styles where hair has already been dyed and can be fragile. Also, once your hair is straight you will probably want to use a product to create a purposefully messy look.

Emo Hair Styling Tips

Your best options are to choose a firm holding gel or wax and simply tousle it through your locks. Stronger products help keep your style strong all day and prevent a lame, limp style from resulting. Be careful, though, to avoid products that make hair become hard. These end up looking gross after hours of wear.

Emo Hair Styling Tips

Emo Schoool Boys

Emo Schoool Boys

Emo Hair Tips For Styling Multi Colored Emo Hair

Emo Hairstyles are becoming more and more popular in 2008 and nowadays we’re seeing more and more boys and girls that wear emo hair. Maybe you’re one of those who would like to sport trendy emo but simply don’t know what kind of emo hair to wear (short, long or medium) and what kind of color to have (black or some more lively colors such as blond, red or pink emo hair)

You really shouldn’t be afraid to try something new, for the start you could go with some “easy to make” emo hair and after that you can build on your true emo hairstyle.


Do it step by step to achieve the desired emo look, but don’t forget to dress properly, because being emo is the way of life and life and fashion go hand in hand!

Another great and very trendy Emo hairstyle for Boys


Cute Emo Boy

Unique Cool Emo Hairstyles For Girls

Emo haircuts are very distinctive with asymmetrical styles, jet-black hair with some unique and colorful bold highlights

Characteristic of the Emo hairstyle:

Length-
The prime characteristic for an Emo hairstyle is length. The women Emo hairstyles are generally very short whereas there are various other kinds that are a bit long. On the other hand, the men’s Emo hairstyles are quite long for the guys, usually a bit longer then ear length.

Nice Emo Hairstyle


Color-
Majority of the individuals who wear Emo hairstyles often dyes their hair. Black Emo hairstyles are particularly common, while pink, blonde, or red Emo hairstyles are also quite in fashion. Any rainbow color usually works great.

Emo Hairstyle


Highlights-
The best feature of Emo hairstyle include highlights. The highlights could be of any rainbow color but red, blue, blonde and pink are among the common ones. The highlights are often very thick in the Emo hairstyles.

Emo Girls


Bangs-
Emo hairstyles unusually integrates the side swept bangs with sharp cuts.

True Emo Hair

Girl Emo Hairstyles 2008 Summer

Gallery full of pictures of emo girls hairstyles. Great place to get ideas for your new hair cut

Girl emo hairstyles
Girl Emo Hairstyles 2008 Summer
Girl emo hairstyles
Girl emo hairstyles 2008 Summer!
Girl emo hairstyles
Girl Emo Hairstyles 2008 Summer
Girl emo hairstyles
Girl Emo Hairstyles 2008 Summer
Girl emo hairstyles
Girl white emo hairstyles

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Double Feature: Two Tales of Trinity

They Call Me Trinity (aka "My Name is Trinity") (1971)
Starring: Terence Hill, Bud Spencer, Farley Granger, Steffen Zacharias, Dan Sturkie, Remo Capitani, and Riccardo Pizzuti
Director: Enzo Barboni
Rating: Eight of Ten Stars

Trinity (Hill), a shiftless drifter so lazy he has his horse tow him on stretcher instead of riding, arrives in a town where his his horse-thieving half-brother Bambino (Spencer) is pasing himself off as the new sheriff while looking for the best way to rustle horses belonging to the evil Major Harriman (Granger). Trinity has a habit of spoiling Bambino's plans and otherwise complicating his life, and soon the two find themselves protecting a group of pacifist Mormon settlers from both the Major and Mezcal (Capitani) and his banditos.


When I was a kid, my friends and I loved to rent Bud Spencer and Terence Hill videos. Whenever we spotted one of their movies we hadn't seen, it became our next rental. We also rushed to see them in the movie theater when they'd run them during the summer, or when new movies with either or both of them would be released. They never dissapointed, and the Trinity films were our favorites.

It was for this reason that I was a bit hesitant to watch "They Call Me Trinity" when I noticed that it was included in "Mean Guns", a 20-movie collection of westerns that the folks at Mill Creek Entertainment were kind enough to send me. I feared the film would not hold up to my very fond memories of it.

I am glad to say that, 25+ years later, this first Trinity movie is every bit as hilarious as it was when I was a kid. The comedy in this spaghetti western spoof--made by filmmakers who understood spaghetti westerns the best: Italians--is a fabulous bit of filmmaking from beginning to end.

With humor and satire that ranges from subtle to the basest of slapstick, good acting, excellent set and costuming, and the over-the-top fights and gunplay that we loved so much (not to mention Bambino's imperviousness and his trademark "fist-to-the-top-of-the-head" knockout blow) this film is a near-perfect western and action-comedy. It's the sort of film that "Shanghai Noon" and all three "Rush Hour" movies desperately tried to be, but none of them come even close.

If you like western and comedies, I think you'll enjoy the heck out of "They Call Me Trinity". I think you'll enjoy it even more if you watch "For a Fistful of Dollars" or "The Magnificent Seven" first, as both are poked fun at with great effect.



Trinity Is Still My Name (aka "All the Way Trinity") (1971)
Starring: Terence Hill, Bud Spencer, Yanti Somer, Emilio Delle Piane, Harry Carey Jr., and Pupo De Luca
Director: E.B. Clucher
Rating: Seven of Ten Stars

Shiftless drifter Trinity (Hill) and his short-tempered brother Bambino (Spencer) promises their dying father (Carey) they'll do something with their lives, so they set out to become successful bandits. It seems however that every robbery they try to commit ends up becoming a good deed (and costing them money instead of earning them any), and when they are mistaken for Federal Agents because Trinity wants to impress a beautiful farmgirl (Somer), they find themselves protecting a Catholic mission that's fallen under the thumb of smugglers and a frontier crimeboss (Piane).


"Trinity Is Still My Name" was a favorite of mine when I was a kid, and it's every bit as funny as I remember it. A sequel to the classic Spaghetti Western spoof "They Call Me Trinity" it's not only as funny as the original, but it also has an identity all its own as it's less concerned with lampooning other films than it is with offering up a unique film.

Hill and Spencer give their usual excellent performances, and they are ably supported by the gorgeous Yanti Somer and a whole host of regulars from the Spaghetti Westerns of the 1960s and 1970s. The film is also remarkable for the excellent dubbing and the voice actors who did the work. It is so well done and the voice actors so talented that you can hardly tell the film wasn't originally done in English.

"Trinity Is Still My Name" is another near-perfect action-comedy set in the wild west. The script may meander a bit at times, but the jokes are all top-notch--the scenes where Trinity and Bambino go to a fancy French restraunt, and the one where Bambino goes to confessional will have you laughing so hard you'll have to watch those parts of the movie again to catch everything--and the final free-for-all fight where Trinity and Bambino take on dozens of thugs in a fight over $50,000 in ill-gotten loot tops the one at the climax of the original Trinity film.

I recommend this film highly to lovers of light-hearted westerns and quirky comedies.



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