"...they didn’t stop to think if they should."
December 11, 2019 10:17 AM   Subscribe

Every Movie of the 2010s, Ranked.
"Our critics pored over 5,279 of the decade’s films. Here’s the best, worst, and mehst." [David Edelstein, Alison Willmore, Bilge Ebiri, and Angelica Jade Bastién—Vulture]

(And if you just want to skip ahead to the Worst)
posted by Atom Eyes (64 comments total) 16 users marked this as a favorite
 
Well that got indefensibly silly real fast.
posted by Harry Caul at 10:30 AM on December 11, 2019 [5 favorites]


Huh, I'd heard the Suspiria remake was pretty good.
posted by Chrysostom at 10:31 AM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


Wow, that is some serious bullshit in how they just clump all those thousands of movies together, oddly enough including the entirety of a number of nations cinematic releases without virtually any attempt to note the distinctions between them as if they don't matter at all. They can pick whatever they want as their favorites and hates for all I care, but that pretense of consideration for the vast range of movies is really crappy, much worse than the usual ignoration they normally engage in. I guess they wanted to look like they were being worldly and impress with the fact they can list lots of titles, but the groupings have no coherent sense to them at all.
posted by gusottertrout at 10:37 AM on December 11, 2019 [4 favorites]


Just scanned through the first 50; I've seen one, Lincoln, which was very good. Most I've never heard of, they don't show these films in the city in which I live. The level of films sent to our large city is crap. I'd have to drive an hour or two through dreadful traffic to get to a place that shows decent films. I don't even try anymore and spend most of my movie viewing time on TCM.
posted by charlesminus at 10:38 AM on December 11, 2019


Huh, I'd heard the Suspiria remake was pretty good.

It was. The review is bizarre, and even more so given that this is apparently a consensus (but maybe they let people grind certain axes, if they wanted to). I do appreciate the bottom two, however.
posted by codacorolla at 10:46 AM on December 11, 2019 [2 favorites]


My dream is that that this article kicks off uncontrolled escalation of the "We Rank Things You Love (or Hate)" field to the point where if you're not doing work on the scale of "All Material Objects of the Oughties, Ranked" you need to exit the game.
posted by Sauce Trough at 10:46 AM on December 11, 2019 [4 favorites]


They put Avengers: Endgame at dead last, so I think this is more about "we're showing off how impressively cinematic we are". (They put Meloncholia first as well; not that I think it'd be bad, but I'm skeptical it was the best of the decade.)
posted by EmpressCallipygos at 10:51 AM on December 11, 2019 [7 favorites]


Someone please get to work on this:
Every MetaFilter Front Page Post Ranked From Best to Worst
posted by Atom Eyes at 10:54 AM on December 11, 2019 [36 favorites]


well, the top ten includes my personal fave of the past more than ten years ... and two movies I didn't make it to the end of, not because they were bad -- they just lost me. So as with all critic related matters, I agree with them when I agree with them.
posted by philip-random at 10:56 AM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


I've been thinking about whether to rewatch the new Suspiria; I burned it utterly in my review, but I did see glimmers of potential in the film. "The 2018 remake is a demonstration that it possible to be technically adroit and sophisticated as film-maker while being completely incompetent as a dramatist".
I think one reason it was so hated was because, beyond the surface, it was a deep inversion of the original film: while the original Suspiria was a slow investigation and revelation about the witch-craft, the new film just goes 'yep they're witches'. The Argento version has better pacing and palette; the Guadagnino version is plodding and in an oppressive palette of browns and grays, leavened only by a rare flash of red.
I'm not willing to throw out the Guadagnino version entirely, I mean he's trying at least, but on a surface level of cinematic enjoyment, the Argento original is much more accessible and enjoyable to a casual viewer.
posted by LeRoienJaune at 11:09 AM on December 11, 2019 [1 favorite]


I get how people think First Reformed is a great movie. As someone blown away by Winter Light though, it just feels so icky. That it should rank ahead of movies that I truly enjoyed for their originality like Winter's Bone and The Master is ugh.
posted by Fukiyama at 11:09 AM on December 11, 2019 [1 favorite]


Our critics pored over 5,279

This seems maybe against the Geneva Conventions? Yeah, not clicking unless this is akin to "Top-Selling Singles by Decade, 14,500s BCE - 2010s CE"
posted by gwint at 11:09 AM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


Did you know that the ten hottest Metafilter posts on record were posted during the last 20 years?
posted by hat_eater at 11:09 AM on December 11, 2019 [6 favorites]


This is the longiest, wordiest way of saying "We are unhappy with the current state of the film industry" that I can imagine.
posted by mstokes650 at 11:13 AM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


Ah, End-of-Year Lists Season. One of the top 5 most wonderful times of the year!

Personal crusade: Any list that includes Ex Machina but excludes Automata has made a terrible omission.
posted by chromecow at 11:20 AM on December 11, 2019 [2 favorites]


That Mother made it into the top 1000 is a clear indication that the list is worthless.
posted by grumpybear69 at 11:28 AM on December 11, 2019


I made the mistake of scrolling through the worst and seeing the (rightly included) Hobbit trilogy, and now I'm weirdly angry just remembering it exists.
posted by grandiloquiet at 11:30 AM on December 11, 2019 [12 favorites]


I will now present my definitive ranking of every movie ever made. Ahem.

1. Who Framed Roger Rabbit, which is legit awesome
2. All the other movies
3. A universally beloved movie inexplicably dead-last. Now go to social media and talk about how terrible this list is.
posted by sugar and confetti at 11:34 AM on December 11, 2019 [14 favorites]


Not quite universally: I hated Endgame (for its cynical ending, for one thing). I'm now off to read some support for that opinion for the first time.
posted by not_that_epiphanius at 11:37 AM on December 11, 2019 [2 favorites]


I'm shocked, shocked that Atlantic Rim (2013) has not been allowed to participate in this ranking, given that Atlas Shrugged was given a seat.
posted by belarius at 11:42 AM on December 11, 2019


For the record, that's not Aronofsky's Mother! at #40, but Bong Joon-ho's Mother (no exclamation point).

I did not like Endgame, for a variety of overinvested fan reasons, but I still think putting it dead last is clickbaity contrariness, like haha, the highest grossing movie of the decade is actually the actual worst!! the masses have terrible taste!! And while I rolled my eyes at a lot of the Top 50--a lot of them seem like exactly the kinds of movies critics love but that are inaccessible to a lot of the public, one way or another, which is an indictment of both the film industry and maybe the public, I suppose--I was pleasantly surprised to see A Dark Song at 46.
posted by yasaman at 11:43 AM on December 11, 2019 [8 favorites]


I'm not sure about the top 50 but 5239 (The Borne Legacy), 5251 (This Means War) and 5259 (Labor Day) are exactly right.
posted by The_Vegetables at 11:43 AM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


i don't think those critics even know what a movie is or is supposed to be anymore. though i can't complain about the high position of a hertzfeldt.
posted by sapagan at 11:45 AM on December 11, 2019


That pretense of consideration for the vast range of movies is really crappy

I have to say I feel opposite of this, and that's because I have a film on this list. And, as a nice bonus, it escaped ending up in the 'worst' category. I should mention that I'm not the biggest fan of most critics, and the usual 'top 10' lists often trigger me personally in a funny way. I'm used to being passed over so much, to having my work marginalized and shown in sidebars, that to even show up on a list like this is a small miracle to me. I agree that it would be nice if maybe there was a little more thought given to the organization and info for some of the other films not in the very top, but then again, perhaps the point we can take from this list is the unbelievable breadth and amount of content that was created these past 10 years. It is simultaneously overwhelming, and amazing to be alive in a time where there are so many films available for almost anyone, anywhere to watch.
posted by PBR at 12:01 PM on December 11, 2019 [10 favorites]


Hell or High Water at 13 is a crime against God though.

I have a film on this list.

I assume Psychohydrography, in the top 5% even, wow!
posted by fleacircus at 12:25 PM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


5,238. Mary Poppins Returns

I would have ranked it a little lower, but whatever.
posted by vverse23 at 12:36 PM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


I agree with every word of the Suspiria review, but surely there were worse movies in the last 20 years.

At any rate, we all have opinions.
posted by crush at 1:02 PM on December 11, 2019


I should mention that I'm not the biggest fan of most critics, and the usual 'top 10' lists often trigger me personally in a funny way.

I'd be more than fine with the idea of listing which movies were considered, there's at least some value in knowing which movies they are selecting from, so providing the titles isn't the issue so much as the way the blithely pass it all off as ranking them, which is a conceit that is antithetical to any appreciation of movies or any art. I get the want to highlight favorites and maybe even hates and finding some enjoyment in reading those kinds of lists is perfectly understandable just for providing opportunity to talk about the movies over the past however long.

But when they just lump everything together as if there is no difference between one or another film on the list, then it suggests they take their rankings as if they actually mean something or have any application at all to the variety of experiences and concepts that are being expressed in all those films. The entire movie output of, say, India is rendered equivalent to Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules, its all interchangeable, none of it really means anything much more or less than that, I mean it's all just entertainment and "liking" after all.

It's the same thing that bugs me about how movie sites and critics rely so much on star ratings or percentage of tomatoes or whatever else. It starts to determine how people think and talk about movies, as an experience to slot into some grab bag categories of "liked-ness", the viewer's enjoyment becoming the measure of all things. Thumbs up or thumbs down, will I or did I get my money's worth. It's fucking ugly and dumb and epitomizes the capitalist consumer ethos. Consume, rank, and move on. There are a lot of movies that don't deserve much respect for just seeking to get a few bucks out of that system, which is why they shouldn't be lumped in with all those movies that are actually trying to express something of meaning to their audiences. That is when they can find them, which this list won't help them to do.
posted by gusottertrout at 1:05 PM on December 11, 2019 [1 favorite]


In case you were concerned that this is something other than clickbait, here's Vulture's mostly-positive review of their "worst film of the decade" from way, way back in April of this year.

And their follow-up a few weeks later listing it as "one of the best 33 films over 3 hours."
posted by robhuddles at 1:19 PM on December 11, 2019 [7 favorites]


Hell or High Water at 13 is a crime against God though

yeah, another movie I didn't make it through. I didn't hate it but ... the word ponderous comes to mind. And predictable. Spoiler alert: screenwriters of the world (major award winners, hacks, it doesn't seem to matter), can we please have one likeable cop sidekick who doesn't get killed before the end credits?
posted by philip-random at 1:24 PM on December 11, 2019 [1 favorite]


Wind River as one of the worst? Is this opposite day? What a garbage take.
posted by zardoz at 1:26 PM on December 11, 2019 [2 favorites]


I was moderately on board until I saw the "worst movies" list.

You're Next is a great little inversion of the home invasion genre and Suspiria is not only a great film but contains literally one of the most visceral horror scenes committed to screen (involves dancing, unpleasant contortion).

Reflecting on this and since we're talking films of the decade, horror in general has had a good decade that gave us Get Out, Witch, A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night, Berberian Sound Studio, Under the Shadow, Hereditary, The Wailing, It Follows, Kill List, Blackcoat's Daughter, Green Room, Mandy...

At least A Dark Song, The Babadook and Under the Skin make it into the top camp.

/I have Feelings about horror movies.
posted by slimepuppy at 1:40 PM on December 11, 2019 [12 favorites]


...and What We Do In The Shadows should be #1 of every list.
posted by slimepuppy at 1:42 PM on December 11, 2019 [7 favorites]


The middle tier is puzzling: too many things too lumped together. Lots of quality decent films in there with stuff that I think is objectively worse than a lot of their “worsts” (that second, somehow even more execrable [Snow White and the] Huntsman film, really? in the same tier with respectable but not amazing stuff like Testament of Youth?)

On a brighter note, this whole thing has made me aware of PBR’s work. Time to check some of that out.
posted by verbminx at 1:44 PM on December 11, 2019


I'm pretty sure that Bastién, Edelstein and company are trolling us here and we're taking the bate. I mean Edelstein gave Endgame a generally positive review in Vulture so I doubt that he really thinks it's the worst film of the last ten years.
posted by octothorpe at 1:48 PM on December 11, 2019 [1 favorite]


Hmm, it’s definitely representative of a bad trend in film in the last decade (Disney hyper-dominance of the marketplace, also probably industry-wide attempts to establish “cinematic universes” in the case of other licensable IPs: hit that “do I have to be a fan of EVERYTHING? do I have to watch 15 hours a week of superhero shows just to call myself a fan?” fpp from the last day or two for further discussion).

But I don’t find it that contrarian. Endgame was ok for the kind of film it is, but wore out a lot of its character-and-humor-based goodwill with its running time and the absolute excess and incoherence of the climactic battle scene. It’s essentially Ready Player One: MCU Edition*. It’s exhausting and was no fun to sit through.

Still, I think everyone is right to call a degree of trolling here.

*I realize you have to have seen both films to get what I mean, so: both have scenes that depict past events and both culminate in a huge battle that feels like it was inspired by a box of mixed action figures being poured into a large aquarium.
posted by verbminx at 2:03 PM on December 11, 2019 [4 favorites]


Popstar at 52, making it one of the best comedies of the decade. I think not.

Paddington 2 in the also rans is the act of imbeciles.
posted by biffa at 2:03 PM on December 11, 2019


The middle tier is puzzling: too many things too lumped together.

The middle part is a gimmick - it's basically a "top" and "bottom" list and those lists aren't too awful.

Reflecting on this and since we're talking films of the decade, horror in general has had a good decade that gave us Get Out, Witch, A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night, Berberian Sound Studio, Under the Shadow, Hereditary, The Wailing, It Follows, Kill List, Blackcoat's Daughter, Green Room, Mandy...

Yeah - especially surprised Get Out didn't make the top 50. Everybody else is going to have it, so maybe they just wanted to be mildly contrarian, but because of the tiers thing a lot of the movies it gets lumped with look very unfair to it.
posted by atoxyl at 2:57 PM on December 11, 2019 [2 favorites]


I tried to get into Tree of Life and really had a hard time. The cutting to nature really took me out of the flow and didn't always connect me to the larger themes as it was ostensibly supposed to. I know people loved it but man I bounced off pretty hard.
posted by Carillon at 3:06 PM on December 11, 2019


I didn't really like "Mary Poppins Returns", but ranking it among the worst of the last decade is stupidity, unless "worst" somehow means something like the biggest gap between what you were hoping/wanted and what you got. It was watchable. The cast was likable. The songs were... pretty forgettable.

The worst movies of the decade should be unwatchable. Not just "disappointing" or "underwhelming", but the sort of movie where you look at your watch every 30 seconds wondering when it will be over. The sort of movie where, if you watch it at home, you'd have to hide the remote to keep yourself from fast-forwarding over the entire thing. The worst movies of the decade should make you angry that you wasted your time watching this. Merely thinking about the movie should piss you off, even years later.
posted by It's Never Lurgi at 4:22 PM on December 11, 2019 [8 favorites]


Y'all I conducted some investigations and discovered indisputable evidence that the rankings are poo poo. Behold, Fred: The Movie, released September 2010.

Fred: The Movie did not turn up on the worst list.

Ergo, the list = poo poo.
posted by mannequito at 4:34 PM on December 11, 2019 [2 favorites]


Wasn't that guy like the proto-pewdiepie? I assume he's probably a Nazi by now, too?
posted by Atom Eyes at 4:57 PM on December 11, 2019


Huh, I'd heard the Suspiria remake was pretty good.

I have rarely been so excited to watch a movie as I was to see Susperia. It’s very thoughtful, richly textured, and actually has serious things to say, unlike a lot of films. Also, unlike the original, it is about dance. Well worth every minute, although I thought Madame Blanc would have choreographed a better Black Mass.
posted by GenjiandProust at 5:27 PM on December 11, 2019


Not the worst top 10, I... think? At least The Florida Project made the cut.
Did I miss Roma? The Turin Horse? Moonrise Kingdom?

(also: I found Spielberg's 'Lincoln' to be kinda stiff & achy...
'Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter' was a much more interesting film.)
posted by ovvl at 5:30 PM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


The list feels stunty, and like it mostly exists to make A POINT with its last two entries: the canonical franchise film, and the obvious end product of an industry obsessed with franchises. I'm fine with it, and it's about as valuable as any listicle ever is (not very beyond starting discussion / generating clicks).
posted by codacorolla at 5:46 PM on December 11, 2019 [1 favorite]


I was glad to see Two Days, One Night and We Are the Best! get relatively high placement. They're two of my personal favorites of the decade but I haven't seen them show up on anyone else's lists.
posted by fleacircus at 6:38 PM on December 11, 2019


I liked the original Suspiria, and I think the remake is even better. And it's very different. This is such trolling.
posted by SoberHighland at 6:59 PM on December 11, 2019 [1 favorite]


One more comment: I was blown away by the then unknown to me Jennifer Lawrence in Winter's Bone. One of the best portrayals of a teen in the middle of nowhere. Completely real. I thought the movie went too far to make its point, but she was perfect.

I know she's a bazillionaire now, but she should get a new agent or something. She obviously has talent, but the movies she chooses to do are... not great.
posted by SoberHighland at 7:07 PM on December 11, 2019 [3 favorites]


I resent that list because there's no way that Now You See Me is in the worst movie list of the decade. I have an irrational love of that movie.
posted by WaterAndPixels at 7:20 PM on December 11, 2019


I'm pretty sure that Bastién, Edelstein and company are trolling us here and we're taking the bate. I mean Edelstein gave Endgame a generally positive review in Vulture so I doubt that he really thinks it's the worst film of the last ten years.

Edelstein absolutely loathes Lars von Trier (except Kingdom) and generally appreciates super hero movies on their own terms, so clearly he lost some arguments.

Or didn't care, because lists are stupid exercises to begin with stupider on this scale. An observation, incidentally, that is #3 on my list of why this will be a long December here on MetaFilter.
posted by mark k at 7:28 PM on December 11, 2019 [2 favorites]


I used to watch lots and lots of movies. Somewhere around the turn of the century, I stopped going to movies in the theater, and unless I catch them, randomly, on TV, I don't see them. (I do still watch (and rewatch) a lot of black and white films and other classics.) The last "regular" movie I saw in the theater was "It's Complicated" in 2009.

So, my list was very, very odd, and the only two movies from their top 53 I've seen were The LEGO Movie and The Martian, and neither are representative of my tastes. I tried to read every title, but still only came up with 22 from this last decade I'd seen. I'm sure I've seen more, though probably not many more.

A United Kingdom (about Prince Seretse Khama of Bechuanaland) was the only one that you might call a film, rather than a movie.

And The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society was not on the list anywhere I could find.
posted by The Wrong Kind of Cheese at 9:17 PM on December 11, 2019 [2 favorites]


I used to watch lots and lots of movies. Somewhere around the turn of the century, I stopped going to movies in the theater, and unless I catch them, randomly, on TV, I don't see them. (I do still watch (and rewatch) a lot of black and white films and other classics.)

I've only recently realized the same. My wife joked a while back that we could try watching a movie made after 1965, but it doesn't happen much. Not really on purpose, I don't know what happened.


Out of the top and bottom 50 I've seen 2.
posted by bongo_x at 10:16 PM on December 11, 2019


I'm don't think Melancholia deserves it's place, but on the other hand I really appreciate the sequence of the two three for the juxtaposition.

I enjoyed Tree of Life quite a bit, and now I find that thinking about it also makes me think of the equally delightful A Ghost Story, which features a similar scope and audacity but didn't make much too much of a splash and is in their middle tier here.

Wind River wasn't a great movie, but it's placement here seems to be mostly punishing it for not living up to the social justice awareness that it makes a claim at. I'm sympathetic to that, and the line between raising awareness and exploitation is a tricky one. But while it might be fair to knock it down for that, going all the way to the worst of the worst is too much.
posted by vibratory manner of working at 10:47 PM on December 11, 2019 [1 favorite]


I thought this list was a blast. It's a fun mix of sincere (they clearly like the films at the top, and have problems with the ones at the bottom) and goofball (since they clearly don't expect anybody to believe this is an objective ranking of 5,279 films.) It's a fun conversation starter, which is all that a Best Film List is supposed to be.

My own reactions, presented in the same please-don't-take-this-too-seriously spirit:

• I'm glad to see Lincoln getting some love. It's weird to say that a multi-Oscar-nominated film was underappreciated... but it's even weirder to think that Lincoln lost best picture to Argo, of all things.

• Their inclusion of La La Land in the top 50 is incorrect. La La Land is an iconically middling movie. It is practically a tribute to the middling musicals of the 1950s. It ended up being the best big-budget Hollywood musical of the year only because Hollywood forgot to make a good musical that year.

• The actual best Marvel movie is Captain America: Winter Soldier. The actual worst one is Avengers: Infinity War.

• I am relieved to see somebody finally acknowledge that I, Daniel Blake is a very bad movie with very good politics.
posted by yankeefog at 1:13 AM on December 12, 2019 [1 favorite]


I want to see ticket stubs. (AKA receipts)
posted by filtergik at 5:49 AM on December 12, 2019


This is a ridiculous list, but it reminded me that I haven't rewartched Holy Motors in a while and I do so love that movie.
posted by thivaia at 6:14 AM on December 12, 2019


They're both in the worst 50 list, but the fact that Atlas Shrugged came before Avengers Endgame shows that the ranking of the second was pure trolling. I tried watching Atlas Shrugged with my stoner roommate while both of us were under the influence of both THC and alcohol. After 20 minutes, we found it in ourselves to get up the energy to turn it off. (We then made the mistake of trying the second one, which is worse. We lasted 10 minutes before giving up on that one.) They mange to make the Star Wars Holiday Special ok line a piece of brilliant filmmaking.

Endgame was merely lousy. It was far too competent to be worse than Atlas Shrugged. I was able to watch it on an airplane and not feel physical revulsion or pain. If someone does manage to make something worse than Part 2, the Supreme Court would be fully justified in rolling that the first amendment does not apply to this person's works, the same way that obscenity is not covered.

Also, I'm a little disappointed that they didn't bother to rank the middle more than slightly, but that pales in comparison to the endorsement (even slightly) of a cinematic crime.
posted by Hactar at 6:55 AM on December 12, 2019


Interestingly, I've seen exactly 4 of the top 50 and exactly 4 of the bottom 50. I enjoyed all 8 of those movies (except maybe The Hobbit), but don't think that any of them are either the best or worst movies I've seen in the last 10 years (although The Favourite is certainly up there).

Indeed, the absolute worst movie I've seen in recent memory (La La Land) is at #53, so whatever.
posted by Ben Trismegistus at 7:43 AM on December 12, 2019


Suspiria is absolutely one of my favorite movies of the decade. That said, I get that it's not everyone's cup of tea (I wouldn't recommend it to very many people). It's weird and dense and symbolic. It spoke to me in a very particular way.

But calling it one of the worst movies of the decade feels out of proportion. As someone said above, I feel an axe is being ground.
posted by Laura Palmer's Cold Dead Kiss at 10:18 AM on December 12, 2019 [1 favorite]


I liked La La Land well enough; it's not Band Wagon and Gosling and Stone aren't exactly Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse but it was reasonably fun viewing for an evening out. I don't think that I've thought much about it since and it shouldn't have been a contender for best picture but I didn't hate it.
posted by octothorpe at 4:25 PM on December 12, 2019


I enjoyed Tree of Life quite a bit, and now I find that thinking about it also makes me think of the equally delightful A Ghost Story

I group them with Melancholia in a bin I call, "The Cosmic Significance of White People Feelings." I liked Tree of Life fine, though I don't think it'd be in my top 50.

This list clearly seems to be a bit of fun, and I don't think it takes itself so seriously as to be trolling or grinding axes or seeking to ruin any particular mefite's December. I find the lists that do take themselves more seriously and churn out the same auteur-focused wank to be far more vexing.
posted by fleacircus at 4:59 PM on December 12, 2019 [1 favorite]


I group them with Melancholia in a bin I call, "The Cosmic Significance of White People Feelings." I liked Tree of Life fine, though I don't think it'd be in my top 50.

That's probably fair under the interpretation of it being about middle-class depression, but I've always seen it being more about climate change (same with Antichrist). It's about different reactions to facing down a (then) distant threat of complete annihilation while maintaining a normal life. Dunst's character does not. Gainsborough's character does. It's a story about how we stare down the apocalypse. I think this also maps onto depression, but mostly insofar as the concept of apocalyptic irreversible climate change is also depressing.
posted by codacorolla at 8:55 PM on December 12, 2019 [2 favorites]


I disagree.
posted by aspersioncast at 1:10 PM on December 15, 2019


With what?
posted by fleacircus at 7:40 PM on December 15, 2019 [1 favorite]


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