It is so, so useful and I honestly recommend that everyone that either doesn’t have photoshop or a desktop download it. It has so many capabilities such as stickers, filters, and my favorite- the ability to change the canvas. Any apps made on this app benefits you and doesn’t seem like just another cash grab for money by people that think you’re stupid. Ever since I’ve opened this, it feels like my hobby as a gif/photo editor has changed completely. However, I was recommended this app by an editor that I like. For about 6 years, I’ve tried multiple apps and they all couldn’t even come close to the capabilities of Adobe.
If you are enjoying ImgPlay, please leave us reviews.īugs? Feedbacks? Suggestions? Feel free to contact us.įor the longest time, I’ve wanted photoshop to do fancy edits with transparent backgrounds and being able to overlay gifs on top of each other.
Ramírez was an effete snob! He died on his knees. Ramírez's blade did not cut deeply enough. take care of her, you overdressed haggis.
You've got your sheepskins on.and the boots I made for you. Where else? Darting down the mountainside, the sun is shining. In the years to come, will you light a candle and remember me on my birthday?ĭon't see me, Connor. Jeff Shannonīecause I love you as much now as the first day we metĪnd I love you. All in all, Highlander: Endgame is surprisingly worthwhile.
While the movie's chaotic construction is regrettable, the frequent battles (including dazzling work by Honk Kong action star Donnie Yen) are adequately impressive, and Douglas Milsome-cinematographer of Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket-ensures that every scene is strikingly photographed.
The movie is incoherent to the uninitiated, but established fans will be reasonably impressed by Endgame's cagey mix of romance, swordplay, and history-spanning action. These appealing stars make a fine onscreen duo, and Paul is a terrific choice to keep the franchise alive-strikingly handsome but possessing enough gravitas to make the prospect of future sequels unexpectedly promising.
This is the "torch-passing" chapter, in which the Immortal Connor MacLeod (Christopher Lambert) passes his life force to his heroic brother, Duncan (Adrian Paul, star of the 1993-96 Highlander TV series). Despite a typically haphazard plot, Highlander: Endgame is a marked improvement over previous sequels.