Bakjwi – Thirst [2009][DVDRip][XviD-NODLABS] | Movie
Author: | ambjtjontee10 | 19 December 2009 | Views: 16
Plot Sang-hyun, a priest working for a hospital, selflessly volunteers for a secret vaccine development project intended to eradicate a deadly virus. However, the virus eventually takes over the priest. He nearly dies, but makes a miraculous recovery by an accidental transfusion of vampire blood. He realizes his sole reason for living: the pleasures of the flesh.
Author: | ambjtjontee10 | 19 December 2009 | Views: 10
Quote: Video Length: 1.22.20 Frame width: 640 Frame Height: 480 Data rate: 1300 kbps Total Bitrate: 1492 kbps Frame rate: 29 frames/second Audio Bit Rate: 192 kbps File size: 884 MB
Journey to the West is thought to have been written and published anonymously by Wu Cheng'en in the 16th century.[1] At the time, the trend in writing was to write in Classical Chinese and imitate the literature of the Tang Dynasty and Han Dynasty; Wu, influenced heavily by popular stories and folk tales ever since his childhood, chose instead to write this novel in vernacular Chinese, the "vulgar" language used in everyday life among the common people, and published it anonymously because of the ill repute such works had at the time.[1] For at least three centuries, most of China believed the novel had been written by another man, a Taoist priest named Qiu Chuji (Wade-Giles: Chiu Ch'u-ki). The people of Wu's hometown, however, attributed it early on to Wu, and kept records to such effect as early as 1625; thus, Journey to the West is the earliest Chinese novel for which the authorship is officially documented.[1]