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Do you want to play shadow?

It's a copycat game. You ask your victim "Do you want to play shadow?" If the respond with "yes' begin to copy everything they say like a shadow.

Me: "Do you want to play shadow?"
You: Sure
Me: Sure
You: What
Me: What
You:Oh hell no
Me: Oh hell no
(etc..)

by TessaLynnK March 4, 2014

10๐Ÿ‘ 3๐Ÿ‘Ž


Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2

In my honest opinion, arguably the most underrated film of all time. It is a sequel to The Blair Witch Project, and is set in live action as opposed to the handycam filming of the first.

Directed by Joe Berlinger, the film is metaphorically about the craze and phenomenon of the Blair Witch Project a year or less after it is released. Five obsessed fans go on a tour in the Maryland town the film is set in, led by a man (Jeff Donovan) who is recovering from a stay at a psychiatric ward. After a long night of partying, the group find their campsite demolished and make base at the tour guide's massive house/factory, in an effort to use their film and piece together what happened that night. Before their final revelation, the psychological paranoia and "group hysteria" begins to set in, along with something else.

Also, the film is intellectual and speaks on many different levels. The way the tour guide says to a tourist, "Video never lies, but film does" sets the goal for the film, and explores the dangers of blurring the line between fiction and reality (as many did with the Blair Witch Project), and the film makes you question what's really happening, what's real and what's not. On top of that, the question is invited if the Blair Witch is actually messing with the protagonists's minds, or if it's simply group hysteria. In the end, the events of the film which are videotaped by the tour guide reveal to be slightly different from what the stars think they saw...or perhaps the events happened, but the tapes have been altered by the Blair Witch. On another deep level, the film's stars, the five fans of the Blair Witch phenomenon seem to represent different types of fanbases, for example a Wicca girl trying to set the record straight for what the Blair Witch hysteria really means, a Goth girl doing it mainly out of it being a fad, a tourist couple just interested in the subject without much inner knowledge of it, and mainly the tour guide, representing the ones trying to make a buck off a fad, further distorting our lines between fiction and reality, which is what the film is mainly about.

I think "Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2" is (at least one of) the most undderated film of all time.

by TheLiberalWhoIsACatholic January 14, 2009

26๐Ÿ‘ 15๐Ÿ‘Ž


get the groundhog to see his shadow

my dear breaking bad fans, it means to get a boner

marie: If I can get the groundhog to see his shadow, you get on right out of this hospital Hank. (paraphrased)
hank: I never get erections

by terribleDefinitionsInc August 25, 2022


shadow wizard money gang

The infamous internet group of shadow wizards.
we love casting spells!

BTW, You can find me in Rettrostudio on roblox spreading the news of the gang :P
My username is sharkgamer0322.

You: Whats the shadow wizard money gang?
Me: They love casting spells!!!

by litterallynothing April 9, 2023

6๐Ÿ‘ 37๐Ÿ‘Ž


I'd shadow her/his cabinet

An expression of lust about a member of parliament in the UK. Preferably (though not necessarily) in the opposition party.

Usage: <Exclamation>, <Member of Parliament> I'd shadow her/his cabinet

Example:
Pwoar, Nicola Blackwood - I'd shadow her cabinet anyday.
Jeremy Hunt - I'd love to shadow his cabinet.

by Frank Gorshin May 31, 2011

3๐Ÿ‘ 1๐Ÿ‘Ž


Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death)

Holy Wood was a concept album released by Marilyn Manson in 2000 following the Columbine High School massacre and serves as their rebuttal at the accusations leveled at them. Their frontman has described it as "a declaration of war".

The record make numerous allegories to pop culture history to show how everyone had a participating role in Columbine: From Abraham Zapruder to the JFK Assassination, from the Beatles' White Album to the Charles Manson murders and from the Crucifixion to the Dead Rock Star celebrity worship phenomenon, the band left no stone unturned to give america a righteous ass-kicking.

Notable themes:

1.Guns, God and Government - rightwing America's main obsession that, arguably, fucked Klebold and Harris up more than any 'rock' or 'metal' album.

2.Celebritarianism - a word coined by Manson to describe a devotion to celebrity and celebrity culture. In the album it is a religion that canonizes dead celebrities into saints in the same way the crucifixion canonized Jesus Christ into a superstar messiah and celebrity. In effect, the crucifixion is the root cause of shit like reality TV, Jersey Shore, TMZ and Harris and Klebold's desire to become famous by murdering people.

Holy Wood was never a commercial success and received mixed reviews from music journalists who said the band's artistic pretensions overshadowed the powerful lyrical indictment contained in it. Despite this, many people view it as the band's finest hour.

Kerrang Magazine: ...There has still not been as eloquent and savage a musical attack on the media and mainstream culture as Manson achieved with Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death).

Me:If you thought what Manson said about Columbine in Michael Moore's documentary was incisive, you should see how Holy Wood throws his detractors hypocrisies right back into their faces.

by Industrial rock FTW! February 5, 2011

4๐Ÿ‘ 2๐Ÿ‘Ž


Banana Shadow Taco of Ultimate Demise

1. Banana Shadow Taco of Ultimate Demise is often used to poke fun at anime by screaming non-sensible words while throwing you hands into an "attack position".

The rude jock screamed Banana Shadow Taco of Ultimate Demise while throwing his hands forward so that the lower portion of his wrist touched the corresponding segment on his other hand as the weeb walked by.

by Megalomaniac Of Idiosyncrasies December 1, 2020