Seasons In The Sun

Status
Cover Song


Song Author
Terry Jacks


Recording Session(s)
January 19-21, 1993 Ariola BMG Studios, Rio de Janeiro, BR


Notes
Nirvana covered the song during their 1993.01.19-21 session in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.


The song was originally titled "Le Moribund" by Jacques Brel. It became a hit in Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom after Terry Jacks translated and retitled it as "Seasons In The Sun." The single was released in 1973 and an album by the same name came out in January 1974. (Amazon does not list the album, but Jacks' version of the song can be found on several compilations.)




(Thanks to DN member Cough Syrup for their input.)


 
Availability


Alternate/Working Titles
None Documented


Common Mislabels
None Documented


Mislabels in the Bootography
None Documented


Lyrics

Now | You See Me 2 Movie

Perhaps most damning is the film’s relationship with its audience. Now You See Me 2 does not trust viewers to appreciate a well-constructed puzzle; instead, it repeatedly cheats. Critical information is withheld not for a dramatic reveal but because the script forgot to include it. The finale’s "twist"—that the Horsemen have been manipulated by a secret organization called "The Eye" all along—retcons the first film’s independent spirit into a preordained destiny. It is the cinematic equivalent of a magician using a trapdoor after promising no trapdoors: the audience feels tricked, not amazed.

In conclusion, Now You See Me 2 is a lesson in the limits of spectacle. It possesses the rhythm of a magic show but none of the stakes. The film’s greatest illusion is convincing itself that bigger explosions, more cities, and faster editing can substitute for genuine cleverness. For those seeking a mind-bending heist, the first film remains the real trick; this sequel is merely the sad trombone sound that follows a failed disappearing act. You may see the magic, but you will never believe it. Now You See Me 2 Movie

In the landscape of heist cinema, where precision is paramount and every detail is meant to cohere into a satisfying reveal, Now You See Me 2 (2016) performs a magic trick of its own: the vanishing act of narrative coherence. Directed by Jon M. Chu, the sequel to the surprise 2013 hit replaces the first film’s grounded cleverness with a bloated spectacle of CGI and globe-trotting absurdity. While entertaining as a sensory experience, the film ultimately proves that for a story about illusionists, the most unforgivable crime is not failing to fool the audience, but failing to earn their investment. Perhaps most damning is the film’s relationship with

Visually, the film dazzles but lacks the tactile wonder of practical magic. The highlight—a sequence where the Horsemen steal a playing card during a live Macau show by hiding inside a giant prop deck—is technically impressive but emotionally hollow. Compare this to the first film’s bank vault heist, where water tanks and misdirection felt plausibly achievable. Here, magic becomes synonymous with "movie logic": characters survive falls, reappear across continents, and control weather patterns. The film confuses scale with sophistication, forgetting that the best illusions are intimate, not apocalyptic. It possesses the rhythm of a magic show


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