FOLLOW US ON:
GET THE NEWSLETTER
CONTACT US
Man casually takes unusual drink during live news broadcast
05.21.2014
12:16 pm
Topics:
Tags:


 
No, this isn’t going to be political post, it’s actually about the man with the Peter Dinklage hairdo sitting coyly behind the newscaster during his report from an election night victory party. You see him there to the far left? Yeah, that guy. Just wait and watch what he does. You’ll have to stick with it for a moment, it’s worth it.

 
Update: looks like the video was removed. Here’s a shortened mirror of the video (not nearly as funny, tho)

 
Via reddit

Posted by Tara McGinley
|
05.21.2014
12:16 pm
|
Class war: The making of Lindsay Anderson’s revolutionary film ‘If…’
05.21.2014
11:07 am
Topics:
Tags:

mcdporif.jpg
 
David Sherwin was eighteen years old when he co-wrote a script about two schoolboys (Mick Travis and Johnny Knightly) returning from the freedom of the summer holidays to endure the horror and torture inflicted in them by their public school teachers and elders—floggings, beatings, buggery. The story concluded with Travis being expelled for having a relationship with one of the younger pupils. Called Crusaders Sherwin and his writing partner John Howlett, touted the screenplay around different agencies where it was considered promising, but more suitable as material for a documentary than a feature film. Sherwin disagreed and kept faith with the adventures of Mick & co.

Eventually he met with director Lindsay Anderson, who encouraged Sherwin and Howlett to turn Crusaders into something far more extraordinary. Sometimes however this encouragement was often to dismiss the script as “drivel” and “rubbish,” but Anderson believed the screenplay had great ambition and merit and offered something more intelligent to the kind of movies being made at the time.

A chance meeting with Albert Finney brought on board actor Michael Medwin as producer. Medwin was best known as a character actor with a long list of films and hit TV series to his name. He was then producing Finney’s movie Charlie Bubbles. The partnership of Anderson and Medwin made it easier to win financial backing from Paramount Pictures—who had little idea what sort of film they had commissioned.

The casting was painstaking and according to Sherwin Malcolm McDowell improvised “the best audition in the world” with a scene with actress Christine Noonan set in a cafeteria. McDowell was an unknown and hadn’t learnt his lines. It didn’t matter as McDowell and Noonan were soon rolling around the floor of the rehearsal room behaving like wild animals. This scene was later recreated in the film.

Filming started in January 1968 with a “terrified” Anderson uncertain where he would point the camera. It was just first night nerves as Anderson held everything together delivering the complete film in November of that year, as Sherwin recorded in his diary:

Lindsay has completed his final cut of If… Paramount are so shocked by what they think is madness that they try to sell it to an American art-house chain. The art-house chain think it is madness too. If… will never be shown.

 

 
He shouldn’t have worried as If… opened in London on December 19th 1968. Most critics were harsh, disgusted and horrified by the film and by Anderson’s reputation as a Marxist. This was 1968, the year of the Paris riots, Vietnam, Mao’s cultural revolution and social unrest across Europe. The film was seen as a threat against the values of the establishment, and as promoting violent and bloody revolution.
 
gnsif.jpg
 
In an interview in 2012, McDowell explained some of the background to these fears:

“After the Second World War in England, the establishment thought they could just carry on like they did before the war. Young people were fed up. So, slowly, they started to rebel. There was not a revolution in streets like there was in Paris. It started in its own way; it started in 1956 with the play Look Back in Anger – which was a beautifully written and violently anti-establishment play. Its main character was very compassionate, very robust, very intelligent. It sent shockwaves which spread everywhere [and influenced] painting, poetry, music,” McDowell told me in explaining the social context of Lindsay Anderson’s film.

“It showed the schools that have been there for a thousand years – and they were incredible schools. In Britain, aristocrats sent their children there to educate them, to send them out to rule the empire. And so the revolution takes place in one of these schools. That sent shockwaves. In England – oh, God! – it was like heresy. And If… was the end result of this period.”

In a question-and-answer interview written by Anderson in 1968, the director gave his own view about the meaning and significance of the film:

The work is not a propagandist one. It does not preach. It never makes any kind of explicit case. It gives you a situation and shows what happens in this particular instance when certain forces on one side are set against certain forces on the other, without any mutual understanding. The aim of the picture is not to incite but to help people to understand the resulting conflict….

It is about responsibility against irresponsibility, and consequently well within a strong puritan tradition. Its hero, Mick, is a hero in the good honorable, old-fashioned sense of the word. He is someone who arrives at his own beliefs and stands up for those beliefs, if necessarily against the world. The film is, I think, deeply anarchistic. People persistently misunderstand the term anarchistic, and think it just means wildly chucking bombs about, but anarchy is a social and political philosophy which puts the highest possible value on responsibility. The notion of someone who wants to change the world is not the notion of an irresponsible person.

The critics may have sniffed but the public loved it, and If… went onto win the Palme D’Or for Best Film at Cannes in 1969.

Cast and Crew brings together the key individuals involved in the making of If…: producer Michael Medwin, writer David Sherwin, assistant director Stephen Frears, cameraman Miroslaw Ondricek, editor David Gladwell, along with archive footage of Lindsay Anderson. The format of the show (guests interviewed in a studio) is a wee bit cosy, especially for such a revolutionary film, however, there is plenty of fascinating insight into the making of this classic movie.
 

Posted by Paul Gallagher
|
05.21.2014
11:07 am
|
There is a wall of reactive mechanical phalluses because… art
05.21.2014
10:25 am
Topics:
Tags:


 
While the recent death of H. R. Giger left a mechanical phallic hole in all our hearts, we can carry on in the knowledge that artists like Peiqi Su are here to fill it (heyoooooo). Su’s 3D printed kinetic sculpture, The Penis Wall, is her graduate thesis for the Tisch School of the Arts at NYU. It’s also a wall of of 81 uniformly 3D printed, motorized dicks. It has visual sensors that can respond to passers-by, or it can be programmed to react to real-time data like the stock market (How’s that for some metaphorical masculinity?). Su’s attraction to the penis as a subject is both intellectual and aesthetic, but she doesn’t deny there’s some humor to her work. Her personal statement:

Why Penis

When talking about the penis with friends, I found there are a thousand “understandings” in a thousand people’s “mind.” Scary, power, ego, evil, elegant, loose-control, funny, crazy… I’m astonished to find so many contradictory feelings about the penis; as well as diverse topics around it such as feminist, man-power, freedom, politics, Wall Street and more. I hope to provide a chance for people to discuss penises and things related by creating an interactive installation.

For myself, I’m also interested in the behavior of penis. It’s soft and hard, up and down, small and large, smooth and rough. It may be the most attractive and intuitive interface.

Below is a short footage of The Penis Wall interacting with with some giggling participants, but there are a lot more videos, plus info on The Penis Wall’s construction, on Su’s Vimeo channel. Check it out, for art’s sake.
 

Posted by Amber Frost
|
05.21.2014
10:25 am
|
‘100 Monologues’ by Eric Bogosian performed by many different actors
05.21.2014
10:07 am
Topics:
Tags:

100 Monologues
Michael Stuhlbarg, Michael Shannon, Sam Rockwell, and Dylan Baker take on Bogosian’s memorable characters
 
From the 1970s through the 1990s, if not longer, the two reigning titans of whatever you chose to call it, “spoken word,” “performance art,” at any rate the self-generated monologue form, were Spalding Gray and Eric Bogosian. They couldn’t have been more different, Gray was measured, confessional, usually quiet, and literate, Bogosian volatile, chameleonic, electrifying. As I was growing up in the 1980s, Gray and Bogosian, more than any other two people, represented a pinnacle of an intelligent, probing, “downtown” performance that on their own made New York City seem a worthwhile place to live. (I ended up seeing Gray three times, Bogosian upward of a dozen.)

To be glib about it, Gray was the better writer; Bogosian the better actor. (For Gray, the acting didn’t matter so much, because he was always up there representing himself.) Bogosian’s art depended on an uncanny ability to inhabit a wide range of “types” who generally weren’t represented onstage all that often. Freed of the requirements of the sturdy, well-crafted drama, Bogosian’s pieces, usually only a few minutes long, allowed him to bring on stage (and savagely mock) Wall Street bankers, backyard barbecue mavens, homeless addicts, rock and roll warriors, religious gurus, Hollywood celebrities, and on and on. Bogosian’s loser’s gallery certainly qualify as satires, but that classification need not preclude understanding or finely observed detail. He could make each (preponderantly male) bully, con artist, or pot smoker as individuated as his acting ability (which is profound) could muster. 
 
100 Monologues
100 Monologues (front and back cover)
 
It’s been a few decades since Bogosian has been at the monologue game, and they have piled up over the years, which have appeared in collections with titles like Drinking in America; Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll; Pounding Nails in the Floor with My Forehead; and Wake Up and Smell the Coffee. To celebrate his majestic career of actorly impersonation, Theatre Communications Group has published 100 Monologues, a book that is destined to become a prime resource for aspiring actors all across the United States and most probably elsewhere as well. For a few weeks last autumn, Bogosian performed a handful of the monologues each night (the specific monologues changed each night). I was lucky to catch two of those memorable performances. 

There’s a website dedicated to the book that features a good number of filmed recordings of the monologues, but the twist is, the monologues, so closely associated with their writer and performer, are now being essayed by other actors. (Bogosian is directing the short movies.) The videos are being produced under the auspices of the Labyrinth Theater, whose most prominent member was Philip Seymour Hoffman, and a new video will appear on the site every week. (Right now 18 of them are up.)
 
Eric Bogosian and Dylan Baker
Eric Bogosian directing Dylan Baker
 
The array of actors the project has attracted is impressive, including Sam Rockwell (Moon, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, Galaxy Quest), Michael Shannon (Boardwalk Empire, Man of Steel, Revolutionary Road), Michael Stuhlbarg (A Serious Man, Seven Psychopaths, Hugo), Dylan Baker (Kinsey, Road to Perdition, Happiness), Jessica Hecht (Sideways, Breaking Bad), and Stephen Lang (The Men Who Stare at Goats, Avatar).

Here are four of the new Bogosian-penned monologues. Enjoy!
 
“26. Journal,” Sam Rockwell:

 
“32. No Problems,” Dylan Baker:

 
“33. Godhead,” Michael Shannon:

 
“89. The Quiet Man,” Michael Stuhlbarg:

 

Posted by Martin Schneider
|
05.21.2014
10:07 am
|
Iggy Pop has a wider vocal range than Whitney Houston?
05.21.2014
09:59 am
Topics:
Tags:


 
At least, that’s the word from concerthotels.com’s list, “The Vocal Range of the World’s Greatest Singers.” Obviously, “world’s greatest singers” is a pretty subjective category, and I’m not quite sure how extensive their research is on each singer, but the data is nonetheless compelling. The ranges measured are obviously from each artist’s catalog (not like they could trap them in a room and make them do scales, especially since quite a few of them are dead), and you can see everything in an easy-to-read graphic, as stretches of notes across a keyboard.

It actually makes a lot of sense if you think about it. Anyone who’s ever heard “Candy” know’s Iggy’s quite a crooner, and Houston was most famous for her belting—a vocal technique that one can only achieve in a narrow range. I was surprised at Axl Rose’s top ranking, but even more so by Sam Cooke’s spot almost at the bottom—I suppose sometimes brilliance is just doing more with less, eh?

Below is a slice of how the graphic is arranged, but you really need to see the whole thing to get the full effect.
 

Posted by Amber Frost
|
05.21.2014
09:59 am
|
‘The Filthiest Person Alive’: Divine profiled on ‘Night Flight,’ 1986
05.21.2014
09:01 am
Topics:
Tags:


 
Night Flight was an all-night, only on the weekends “underground” and “cult” TV programming block show that began airing on the USA Network in the early 80s wild west days of cable television. Before Law and Order:OMGWTF existed to fill every time slot on every cable channel in existence, Night Flight was an essential weekly download of deeply weird underground film and music. It was how I found out that Divine existed.

I don’t recall Night Flight ever showing an actual John Waters movie straight through, but they used cut-up segments from his films in their fucked up interstitials and bumps. So when I got to college and had a roommate with a beater VHS tape filled up with nth generation dubs of Mondo Trasho, Multiple Maniacs, Pink Flamingos, and Female Trouble, I knew right away that THAT was the the tape I was going to wear through to thinness while getting high as hell.

But on top of the clips in the interstices, Night Flight showed this substantial interview segment, a wonderful introduction to the talented and genial actor and drag performer, and I don’t just say that because it was my introduction. Check it out.
 

Posted by Ron Kretsch
|
05.21.2014
09:01 am
|
‘23 Minutes Over Brussels’: The legendarily confrontational Suicide concert, 1978
05.20.2014
10:17 pm
Topics:
Tags:


 

“SHUT THE FUCK UP! THIS IS ABOUT FRANKIE!”
—Alan Vega

“23 Minutes Over Brussels” is a recording of an incendiary performance given by Suicide in Brussels, Belgium on June 16th, 1978. Martin Rev and Alan Vega were opening for Elvis Costello and the audience, let’s just say, didn’t like them very much. In fact, they hated their fucking guts and let them know it in no uncertain terms, including booing loudly, snatching the microphone from Vega’s hands and even breaking his nose!

Suicide hated them back and the result was performance art meets a full-scale riot, perhaps the most legendarily confrontational ur-punk moment this side of Iggy and The Stooges’ Metallic K.O. After Suicide escaped with their lives, Elvis Costello and The Attractions came onstage, but Costello was furious at how the crowd had treated Suicide and played an extremely short set that was also short on pleasantries. The crowd went nuts when they refused to return for an encore and the riot cops were called in armed with teargas.

All in a day’s work for Suicide. When the band toured with The Clash that same year, Vega was physically attacked several times:

“I got my nose busted in Crawley… In Glasgow someone threw an axe by my head! In Plymouth The Nazis got me in the dressing room.”

The Brussels set was recorded on cassette tape by a friend of the duo and it was released as a legit bootleg (with a Berlin show from same tour) and as a flexi-disc. Eventually it got released on CD as a bonus track. Vega and Rev once referred to their music as “punk, funk and sewer music.”
 

 
Below, Suicide on Paul Tschinkel’s legendary InnerTube cable access program doing “Ghost Rider” in 1978:
 

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
05.20.2014
10:17 pm
|
If David Lynch directed ‘Return of the Jedi’
05.20.2014
03:09 pm
Topics:
Tags:


 
As some of you probably already know, David Lynch was approached by George Lucas to direct the third film in the Star Wars trilogy, Return of the Jedi.

Here’s a short excerpt from an interview David Lynch did with MTV in the 80s addressing the Return of the Jedi rumors:

MTV: Is it true you almost directed “Return of the Jedi”? How close did you come?

Lynch: Not close at all. I had a meeting with George [Lucas]. I like George. It was his thing. I said, “You should direct this. It’s your thing! It’s not my thing.”

MTV: Did he flat-out offer it to you at the time?

Lynch: Yeah!

MTV: But you immediately declined.

Lynch: I called him the next day.

YouTuber “C-SPIT” re-imagined Return of the Jedi as if Lynch had actually directed it.

 
Below, an animation of David Lynch recalling his first meeting with George Lucas.

 
Via Nerdcore

Posted by Tara McGinley
|
05.20.2014
03:09 pm
|
High school senior’s hilarious yearbook prank
05.20.2014
01:31 pm
Topics:
Tags:


 
Clayton County, Georgia high school senior Paris Gray could possibly be held from walking at graduation this year due to her—IMO, brilliant—yearbook quote. Paris’ clever quote, “When the going gets tough just remember to Barium, Carbon, Potassium, Thorium, Astatine, Arsenic, Sulfur, Uranium, Phosphorus” which translates to on the periodic table “Back That Ass Up.”

In its entirety:

When the going gets tough just remember to back that ass up.


 
Paris, who’s a senior class vice president, a member of SADD, the Beta Club, and a leader on campus said, “I think their reaction was beyond what it should have been because nobody understood it.”

Paris was kept from participating in the senior walk, and she was slated to give the inspirational speech at the graduation ceremony, but says an assistant principal told her she was out

.

snip~

“My first reaction was, you are such a nerd,” said Gray’s mother Zarinah Woods.

Paris’ mother is meeting with the area superintendent and the principal today to sort everything out. I really hope Paris gets to walk in the graduation ceremony. She deserves it.

via BuzzFeed and WSB-TV

Posted by Tara McGinley
|
05.20.2014
01:31 pm
|
‘Pere Ubu is like a cup!’ insists David Thomas
05.20.2014
11:48 am
Topics:
Tags:


 
In this brief and entertaining clip from the late-night ITV program Rocking In The UK circa 1989, Pere Ubu frontman/lifeblood David Thomas responds to the questioner’s innocuous-only-maybe-not question about Thomas’ perception of the various incarnations of Ubu over the years with an ontological disquisition guaranteed to blow the minds of undergraduates everywhere.

The answer seems a mite overdetermined, perhaps fitting for a band whom the admiring Allmusic.com refers to as having a “long, convoluted career” in the first sentence of their bio. So Thomas is overcompensating, right? But representing the Cleveland nonconformist (malcontent?) point of view, Thomas’ disquisition has a certain salience, n’est-ce pas?

For the sake of posterity, here’s the whole speech, which makes more sense if you know that he’s moving a styrofoam cup around and pointing at it through most of it.
 

You see, you look at that. You say, “That’s a cup. I’ll buy that cup, I recognize that cup.” But this cup is also this, and it’s that, and it’s looking at it this way and that way and all sorts of ways of looking at it. Now you wouldn’t buy that, you wouldn’t go to, they wouldn’t advertise a cup like this in a store and say “Buy this” ‘cause you’d say, “What’s that?” and you’d say, “Oh yeah, that’s a cup. Uhhhh, I don’t want to buy that. No, no.” But that’s the cup, too. All of this is the cup. So you have to see it from all different angles. You know, one album we do is gonna be like this, and you’re saying, “Well that’s not a… I’m not gonna buy that, that’s not a cup. That’s a… I don’t know what that is.” That’s the cup. This is the cup, that’s the cup, that’s the cup. So we set out to do a career in which you would see, you would look at something like this. You would look at Pere Ubu like this, you would look at what we’re talking about like this, and you would know what a cup was. If you only know a cup this way, you don’t know the cup. Thank you and good night.

 
If you want to hear some of the band’s early high points, you can’t miss with The Modern Dance or Dub Housing or you can get the essential early box set Datapanik in the Year Zero.
 

Posted by Martin Schneider
|
05.20.2014
11:48 am
|
Page 810 of 2346 ‹ First  < 808 809 810 811 812 >  Last ›