Werner (test vid)
This is my favorit part from Werner. This is the first time I used windows movie maker thats why the quality sucks. Sorry for that. Hope you enjoy.
This is my favorit part from Werner. This is the first time I used windows movie maker thats why the quality sucks. Sorry for that. Hope you enjoy.
AT 83 Cecily Werner has decided it's time to jump out of the saddle at the Rockhampton store that has borne the family name since the 1920s.
The sale signs are up at the shop - Werner's Saddlery and Western Wear in William St - and once the stock has gone, Cecily will ride off into the sunset with a lifetime of memories.
And the city will lose one of its last links with its past.
To enter the shop with its cluttered shelves and bewildering array of cowboy supplies and apparel, is to step back to a period before discount warehouses, piped music and retail therapy in air-conditioned comfort.
It's a shop where you can rummage, make discoveries and wonder where on earth you will be able to buy such a thing once the closed sign is hung on the door for the last time.
There are saddles and harnesses, ropes and hats and boots and swags and shirts and a thousand bits and bobs and thingamajigs
Cecily sits in a white plastic chair at the back of the store and reminisces.
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"When Pop, (her late husband's father Robert Stanley Werner) started there weren't many cars in Rockhampton. "Everyone had horses and he'd been an apprentice saddle maker. He started the business in his sister's shed. He used to win prizes for his |
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Brit Marling stars as a brilliant student who drinks too much, and ends up killing people with her car in this Darren Aronofsky film, which won this year's Alfred P. Sloan prize at the Sundance Film Festival. The movie deals with the aftermath, |
"Our customer teams provided us with valuable suggestions and stated their wishes for the various fields in which the car is used," quattro managing director Werner Frowein said in a company statement. "We have close ties to our customers and analyzed
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For his latest feature film documentary, director Werner Herzog traveled to that state to take a closer look at this divisive topic by focusing in on a horrific crime and the two young men who were brought to justice and met very different fates. |
They delight in his bizarre interview questions about something as simple as squirrels or as complex as living in the trunk of a car. Filmmaker Werner Herzog, Investigation Discovery's Henry Schleiff and documentarian Albert Maysles.
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