Oct 12, 2011

Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

By Steven Mandzik

Halloween Series

The most famous movie couples for Halloween

The best movie costumes for Halloween (Guys Edition)

Now the ladies…

 

Desperately Seeking Susan

desperately seeking susan movie costume jacket madonna rosanna arquette Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

desperately seeking susan madonna necklace jewelry Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Awesome necklace.

Lady Gaga


lady gaga fame glasses costume disco heaven Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Captain Jack Sparrow

johnny depp pirates of the carribean movie sword gun hat uniform costume Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Vulcan

vulcan female girl saavik kirstie alley cosplay star trek costume Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Softball Player

softball player live action diving throwing sun catching sliding baseball Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Tron

tron movie costume halloween female girl Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Corpse Bride

corpse bride tim burton halloween costume girls adults wedding dress getting married Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Kelly McGillis

charlie blackwood top gun kelly mcgillis tom cruise movie jets air force girls Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Mary Poppins

 

mary poppins julie andrews movie umbrella disneyland Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

mary poppins movie poster cartoon julie andrews Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Marie Antoinette

marie antoinette wig dress hair costume halloween Fabulous movie costumes for Halloween (ladies edition)

Runners Up

Film StripNinja turtleScarecrowVoltronCatwomanMad Hatter,  Medusa, Felicity, Kate Beckinsale (vampire, Underworld), Annie, Wicked/Good Witch, Cowardly Lion, Pat Benatar, & Hermione.

Guys Edition

 

Best movie costumes for Halloween (guys edition)

 

Costumes on Amazon

Marie Antoinette

Lady Gaga

Girl Pirate

Vulcan Ears, Female Star Trek Uniform

Corpse Bride

Mary Poppins

Photos

we_heart_heartbreaker (susan’s jewelry), PopCultureGeek.com (vulcans), Jeff Christiansen (Mary Poppins-white), d4rr3ll (Mary Poppins-red), PopCultureGeek.com (Tron-blonde), madmarv00 (Tron-dark hair), SD Dirk (sliding softball player), ÇP (standing softball player), Max Waugh (throwing softball players), Molly Pop (child Corpse Bride), Meddy Garnet (action figure Corpse Bride), Sketch (rocker Corpse Bride), & Naomi Lir (Lady Gaga costume).

 

MORE…

 

The most famous movie couples for Halloween

The best movie costumes for Halloween (Guys Edition)

5 Comments

  • Kelcy says:

     think the solution to a happiness-based model is really just “based on people working less and owning less.”  You need to think deeply about  what “work” is.  Are we defining it as soul-sucking time spent acquiring money in order to pay debts built from acquiring stuff?  Does it include a sense of satisfaction at seeing something created, sustained or used. How is work tied to the stuff we acquire and what additional costs are part of working (e.g. commuting).  I would look to the Maker movement and the challenge and satisfaction of creating our own things.  But I would stipulate that “working less” may be something very different depending on what work we do.  

    • 1X57 says:

      thanks kelcy. DIY and the Maker movement is definitely on our radar. we specifically asked Dale Dougherty to be a part of the event we’re producing in Vancouver b/c of this: http://www.expertclick.com/NewsReleaseWire/Futurist_Inventors_Welcome_Dale_Dougherty_to_Vancouver,201136588.aspx

  • Urchin says:

    As I read this, I had multiple thoughts:
    - Is your premise true that consumer-driven growth model broken?  Your anectdotal evidence of contemporary capitalism, which is causing a global crisis of unconscionable proportions – with food and energy prices soaring, world populations surging, and weather-related disasters like tornadoes, tsunamis, droughts, fires and floods increasing in frequency and scale…I’m not sure you can prove cause & effect???
    - In order to answer the question, I think you would want to find the actual causes or variables that make up consumer-driven growth: generational, cultural, periods of war, and so on.
    - Digging deeper into the second bullet, I believe would give you a better chance in studying the question & coming up with some plausible solutions. 

    • @Urchin -  I totally agree. I was at the dinner with them and I felt like the blame was being placed in the wrong area.

      I would argue that we are not a consumer driven society in the first place. That’s like saying my garden is a vegetable based operation. It totally ignores all the extreme effort it takes to create the vegetable. The soil, the tilling, the weeding, the watering, the harvesting, and then finally the eating.

      I think we have let economists define us using an easy measure of production. I can measure my garden by saying how many vegetables it produces but it only covers about 10% of the process.

      This is especially problematic considering that all the change, innovation, and failure is occurring in the process before consumption. Look at cars for example. We are still buying cars, a lot of them, but the car industry still collapsed. They needed to change their process and the like.

      In food, the same is true, we have an ever increasing demand for food but are ignoring the process behind it. Prices are rising for reasons totally unrelated to consumption.

      On the whole I would recommend a definition  of life-cycle consumption. Determining an economic measurement that quantifies multiple levels in the creation and consumption process. Each one is interrelated and can be tracked for growth, weakness, etc.

  • Kelcy says:

    I just came across an interesting article that discusses aspects of what you are trying to define.  I haven’t read the books they reference near the end, but they may also give some additional insights that have value to this quest. http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/stefan-stern-behind-corporate-walls-the-masters-of-the-universe-weep-2297910.html