Mont Blanc Meisterstuck Classique Fine Liner Pen
Simple yet captivating, this elegant fine liner pen by Mont Blanc projects a refined and professional image.
Mont Blanc pen
Stainless steel gold tone accents
Brand name stamped on pen
Made in Germany
Imported
This quality duffle bag from Timberland is built to absorb the rigors and stresses of travel so that you can simply enjoy yourself.
Inline skate wheel system
Telescoping and swiveling handle
Two hand straps
Equipped with support footing for horizontal and vertical standing
Main storage pocket zip entry at top
Two side zip pockets
Approximately 30 in. L x 15 in. W x 14 in. H
Available in olive with black
Poly with TPE backing
Imported
Vivian L. Tettamanti brings you a new simple and elegant hand-made wallet to match her Toquilla handbags.This Paja Toquilla wallet is designed with black dotted, zigzag and diamond toquilla straw, hand-woven by native women in the Andean highlands of Ecuador.
The leather accented wallet has a magnetic mini-strap closure.
Inside you will find room to store everything you need.
The wallet boasts nine card slots, one long front pocket, two separate compartments, and one zippered main compartment providing a secure place for your loose change.The handcrafted nature of this product will produce minor differences in color and sizing. Subtle shade variations will occur from piece to piece, adding to its unique qualities. Measurements are approximate.Imported.
Bumbling busboy Walter Paisley (Dick Miller) works at a beatnik coffeehouse populated by artists, poets, and dope addicts. He longs to belong and, inspired by the poetry around him, tries his hand at sculpting. When he accidentally kills a cat and covers it with clay, it becomes a celebrated work of art. Soon Walter has moved on to killing people and is the hit of the local art scene. Roger Corman regulars Barboura Morris and Anthony Carbone are the couple running the coffeehouse who are first exalted by Walter's success and then rather worried. Director Corman shot this little gem of black comedy in an amazing five days for $50,000. It's since become a true cult classic, practically inventing its own genre and perfectly satirizing the self-righteousness of the then-emerging beatnik movement, not to mention the whole world of contemporary art. Miller lends pathos as Walter, and the rest of the cast is just hilarious, particularly Julian Burton as the pretentious and portly poet whose recitation on the artist (accompanied by jazz sax solo) opens the film. Corman reused the same general tone and story for THE LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS the following year.DVD Features:Region 1Keep CaseDolby Digital Mono - EnglishFullscreen - 1.33:1
Copyright (C) Muze Inc. 2005.
For personal use only.
All rights reserved.




