POOR LITTLE BUGGERS
To be, or not to be, moths?
We moths be not free not to be moths.
Be moths he or she moths, we moths
Wish wee moths were behemoths.
To be, or not to be, moths?
We moths be not free not to be moths.
Be moths he or she moths, we moths
Wish wee moths were behemoths.
arekhill1 10:41 am on March 4, 2015 Permalink |
Any moth that appears in my abode is summarily executed, Sr. Muse, on orders of my supervisor. No empathy is permitted.
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mistermuse 10:51 am on March 4, 2015 Permalink |
Your “supervisor” sounds like my wife, Ricardo. We don’t have moths, but any spiders that appear in our abode are summarily executed (if seen by her first – any that I see first, I catch and throw outside).
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lexborgia 12:45 pm on March 4, 2015 Permalink |
haha
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mistermuse 1:59 pm on March 4, 2015 Permalink |
On behalf of wee moths, I thank you.
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Don Frankel 7:52 pm on March 4, 2015 Permalink |
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Don Frankel 7:55 pm on March 4, 2015 Permalink |
So let it be written. So let it be done.
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mistermuse 9:30 pm on March 4, 2015 Permalink |
Don, I thought I’d heard of most of those old Japanese monster movies, but not MOTHRA. It made me curious enough to check it out in film critic Leonard Maltin’s Movie Guide, and surprisingly he liked it. Japanese monster movies – where wishes come true!
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Don Frankel 8:10 am on March 5, 2015 Permalink |
My first comment seemed to just disappear. Didn’t mean to post twice.
What made Mothra different I think, were the two little Princesses. And, you know what this trailer I’m remembering but also wondering who made their cute outfits? I mean they’re Princesses they can’t be doing it. Somebody with some real small needles right?
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mistermuse 10:58 am on March 5, 2015 Permalink |
Don, I haven’t seen the movie, but if Hollywood could do it (the Seven Dwarfs, Munchkins, etc.) in the 1930s, I’m sure Japan could do it by the 1960s.
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