Passages

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mfunk9786
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Re: Passages

#1726 Post by mfunk9786 »

What a terrible shame. One of those things that you always expected to happen, a la Elliott Smith, but it doesn't leave any better of a feeling in your gut about it.
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GoldenPilgrim
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Re: Passages

#1727 Post by GoldenPilgrim »

What a shock. I was just watching his tribute to Benjamin on the Benjamin Smoke DVD last night...
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The Elegant Dandy Fop
Joined: Thu Dec 09, 2004 7:25 am
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Re: Passages

#1728 Post by The Elegant Dandy Fop »

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GoldenPilgrim
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Re: Passages

#1729 Post by GoldenPilgrim »

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Dadapass
Joined: Thu Oct 09, 2008 10:57 pm

Re: Passages

#1730 Post by Dadapass »

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devlinnn
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 7:23 am
Location: three miles from space

Re: Passages

#1731 Post by devlinnn »

Roland S. Howard, RIP.

One of the more influential guitarists and songwriters of his time lost his battle with cancer today, aged 50. He can be seen in a couple of films, most notably in Wender's Wings of Desire, playing with his beloved cohorts in Crime and the City Solution. Other bands included The Boys Next Door, The Birthday Party and These Immortal Souls.
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Michael
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 4:09 pm

Re: Passages

#1732 Post by Michael »

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George Kaplan
Joined: Mon Jan 31, 2005 11:42 pm

Re: Passages

#1733 Post by George Kaplan »

david hare wrote:George, hasn't the "Marnie" statement become an axiom of cinephilia, even if too many people misread it as a form of exclusivism?
David,
Yes, I'm sure you are right. Though it is meant as a provocation, I think it is also a sincere statement. Substitute VERTIGO or REAR WINDOW for MARNIE and far fewer people, if any, would wonder at what he could have meant. Yet, I think that MARNIE, like the other two films functions as a self-reflexive statement about the nature of cinema, spectatorship, voyuerism, and art generally. Wood's lifelong appreciation of MARNIE as a major work of Hitchcock's always led me to hope that he would write about it more extensively. (A few years ago, Richard Dyer, whom I had the great pleasure of getting to know slightly while he guest lectured at NYU, mentioned that he thought Wood might be working on a monograph for the BFI series.) I would assert that MARNIE is both more complex in its formal strategies than the two earlier films, if arguably less successful in this regard, and more challenging (little argument on this point unless one dismisses the film altogether). In fact, I've always imagined that part of the pleasure for Hitchcock, in making MARNIE, was constructing a film that sought to frustrate and challenge all of the strategies of visual pleasure developed by the cinema to that point and return to something more fundamental with regard to the relationship between the subject and the object; what I tend to think of as the trompe l'oeil effect, wherein the viewer understands and fully accepts the illusionistic nature of the work, something that the realism(s) of classical and contemporary cinema continue to move further and further away from (CGI anyone?); something that needs little or no contextualizing to grasp when discussing painting, music, literature, etc.

This no doubt seems a bit of a muddle here; perhaps, now, I must write it all out, because I continue to see MARNIE as Hitchcock's supreme statement on the nature of cinema, art and life.

In Africa, in Kenya, there’s quite a beautiful flower. It’s coral colored with little green-tipped blossoms, rather like hyacinth.
If you reach out to touch it, you discover that the flower was not a flower at all, but a design made up of hundreds of tiny insects called fatid bugs.
Now, they escape the eyes of hungry birds by living and dying in the shape of a flower.
-Mark Rutland, MARNIE
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perkizitore
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Re: Passages

#1734 Post by perkizitore »

Marnie and Gertrud are easily available.
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perkizitore
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Re: Passages

#1735 Post by perkizitore »

I am not that familiar with the late or last movies of major 'Golden-era' American directors like Billy Wilder, but maybe you have to reach a certain age in your life to appreciate them. You will have seen all their 'major' films many times by then and reached a certain kind of awareness.
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mfunk9786
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Re: Passages

#1736 Post by mfunk9786 »

Artie Lange, possibly
Derek says:
January 3, 2010 at 8:22 am

Buddy on Hoboken amb squad said that he drank bleach, and had tried to commit suicide. I know that sounds outlandish, but person it came from is not one to sensationalize. He really didn’t even know who he was, so far as his celebrity is concerned. He just knew I was a fan of show. Said call involved self inflicted wounds on wrists and torso, and purposeful ingestion of bleach. Also let me know it did not look like the wounds were bad enough to be fatal. But could not speak for what was going on internally. I know it sounds out there. But I got this phone call a full hour before any news broke. I hope that guy can reel it in. He is a great talent. I wish him the best.
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MyNameCriterionForum
Joined: Sat Jun 21, 2008 9:27 am

Re: Passages

#1737 Post by MyNameCriterionForum »

Iván Zulueta

A great, unerappreciated director. I just recently watched his Arrebato and several of his shorts. The utterly hypnotic A Mal Gam A (1976) is epecially interesting; I was struck by how many images and sounds it shared with Lynch's work, particularly Eraserhead and INLAND EMPIRE: muffled soundtrack, needle on spinning record, a tree's leaves undulating in slow motion, decaying images of starlets, etc.
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Caligula
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Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 6:32 am
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Re: Passages

#1738 Post by Caligula »

Donal Donnelly has died. He'll probably be best remembered around here for his role as Freddie Mallins in John Huston's The Dead.
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dadaistnun
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 12:31 pm

Re: Passages

#1739 Post by dadaistnun »

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MichaelB
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Re: Passages

#1740 Post by MichaelB »

Critic and filmmaker Ron Holloway, one of the few native English-speaking experts in eastern European cinema. He's probably best known round these parts for his Paradjanov documentary, the major extra on Kino's The Color of Pomegranates.
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GoldenPilgrim
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Re: Passages

#1741 Post by GoldenPilgrim »

I had no idea Lhasa was battling cancer - what a shock! The music community has taken too many blows lately...
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tavernier
Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2005 11:18 pm

Re: Passages

#1742 Post by tavernier »

Caligula wrote:Donal Donnelly has died. He'll probably be best remembered around here for his role as Freddie Mallins in John Huston's The Dead.
Sad to hear this...I was able to see him on Broadway in two Brian Friel plays, Dancing at Lughnasa and Translations.
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knives
Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm

Re: Passages

#1743 Post by knives »

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ellipsis7
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 5:56 pm
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Re: Passages

#1744 Post by ellipsis7 »

Michael Dwyer film critic/correspondent of The Irish Times & founder Dublin Film Festival... Daniel Day Lewis gave the eulogy at the funeral...
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zedz
Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm

Re: Passages

#1745 Post by zedz »

Aw, shit. Calling him William (who are you, his mother?) meant this didn't sink in at first. He's responsible for some of the greatest music of the 70s.

This slice of perfection seems about the most appropriate tribute.
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knives
Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm

Re: Passages

#1746 Post by knives »

I just don't like how Willie looks. I know how absolutely important he is to not just Al Green, but that whole, I'm not sure what the appropriate name is, sound.
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MichaelB
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Re: Passages

#1747 Post by MichaelB »

Albert Green, surely?
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dad1153
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Re: Passages

#1748 Post by dad1153 »

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lubitsch
Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 8:20 pm

Re: Passages

#1749 Post by lubitsch »

Aljoscha Zimmermann, accompanist and composer of scores for many German silent films like Dr. Mabuse or Oyster Princess died aged 65. A major presence on the silent film circuit and a great loss.
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HerrSchreck
Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm

Re: Passages

#1750 Post by HerrSchreck »

WOW... that was totally unexpected, eh? He also did the Transit/FWMS edition of Der Golem, which I think was the first time I'd heard him.

I do think his Mabuse one of his best. Many Americans don't get the chance to hear much of his work broadcast on Arte that never makes it to DVD. I don't know if it's Der Rosenkevalier or Mr West In The Land of the Bolsh..., but I recall a very good score from him on that front.

Certainly enjoyed his work far more than Donald "Nyquil PM" Sosin.

RIP.
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