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Alejandro Jodorowsky interview on BBC TV 1991
10.12.2010
06:13 pm
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British TV personality Jonathan Ross interviews Alejandro Jodorowsky on the BBC in 1991. Jodowsky had released Sante Sangre a year earlier and had just completed The Rainbow Thief when this show was filmed.

“Most directors make films with their eyes; I make films with my testicles.”

“I ask of film what most North Americans ask of psychedelic drugs.”
 

 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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10.12.2010
06:13 pm
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‘The Mind Benders: LSD and The Hallucinogens’: Drug scare film from 1967
10.12.2010
12:29 am
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The Mind Benders: LSD and Hallucinogens. Good production values give this drug scare film from 1967 the sheen of respectability, but it’s still full of the same old bullshit. At a time when kids needed a Psychedelics For Dummies instructional manual, we got the kind of spooky propaganda that caused more bummers than strychnine-laced STP.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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10.12.2010
12:29 am
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‘The British shouldn’t play rock and roll’ proclaims Lou Reed on New York TV in 1983
10.11.2010
05:37 pm
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I love me some surly Lou Reed. The interviewer is WBCN’s Bill Boggs.

Watch and discuss among yourselves.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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10.11.2010
05:37 pm
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Banksy reveals himself to the public and gives us an exciting glimpse into his day to day life
10.11.2010
03:33 pm
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Finally! And such an ordinary chap.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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10.11.2010
03:33 pm
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The Paranormal Peter Sellers
10.09.2010
07:23 pm
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Many actors are superstitious. Some like Peter Bull kept a collection of Teddy bears to bring him good luck; others like Jack Lemmon said the words, “It’s magic time,” before filming each scene. But few have ever been quite as obsessed with superstitions and the occult as comedy genius, Peter Sellers.

Sellers’ introduction to the Occult came via fellow Goon, Michael Bentine, the “Watford-born Peruvian,” who had grown-up in a household where seances and table-turning were regularly practiced. Not long after they first met, Bentine told Sellers of his psychic abilities - how during the Second World War, when Bentine served in the Royal Air Force, he had been able to tell which of his comrades would die before a bombing mission. Bentine claimed if he saw a skull instead of his colleague’s features, then he knew this person would be killed. How often Bentine was correct in these predictions is not known. No matter, Sellers was greatly impressed by the shock-haired comic and was soon obsessed with all things paranormal.

From then on, Sellers collected superstitions, as easily as others collect stamps. He refused to wear green or act with anyone dressed in the color. If anyone gave him something sharp, he gave them a penny. He read his horoscopes every day so he would always know what he should do.

Sellers often said he had no idea who he was: “If you ask me to play myself, I will not know what to do. I do not know who or what I am.”  This was his way of renouncing any responsibility for his actions.  He claimed he found comfort and stability in consulting clairvoyants and fortune tellers, which again only underlines the fact he did know who he was - a control freak, who wanted power over his future. It was inevitable, therefore, that once under the spell of sooth-sayers and psychics, Sellers was open to fraudsters, tricksters and con-men.

The clairvoyant who had most influence over his life was Maurice Woodruff, the famed TV and newspaper astrologer, whose syndicated column reached over fifty million people at the height of his career. Woodruff received over 5,000 letters a week, asking for advice and had a Who’s Who of of celebrity clients, including composer Lionel Bart and actor Diana Dors. Woodruff had famously predicted the death of President John F. Kennedy and the end of the Vietnam War. Sellers was devoted to Woodruff, consulting him before he accepted any film roles, and regularly had tarot readings performed over the telephone. But Woodruff was heavily in debt and open to the persuasion of earning a little cash when film studios asked him to suggest film scripts to Sellers.

One famous tale, recounts how Woodruff was asked to suggest the initials of director Blake Edwards as being very important to Sellers. Unfortunately, Sellers failed to connect ‘B.E.’ with the famous Hollywood director. On return to the Dorchetser Hotel, his usual residence when in London, Sellers was smitten by the sight of a beautiful, young blonde-haired woman at reception. When he enquired who was this vision of loveliness, he was told Britt Ekland. Sellers recalled Woodruff’s prediction and married Ekland within weeks.

 
More on the paranormal Peter Sellers plus bonus clip after the jump…
 

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Posted by Paul Gallagher
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10.09.2010
07:23 pm
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D.M.C.‘s heartfelt tribute to John Lennon
10.09.2010
01:37 pm
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From the heart.

Posted by Marc Campbell
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10.09.2010
01:37 pm
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Andy Warhol: The Velvet Underground and Nico 1966
10.08.2010
01:32 pm
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The complete and original Andy Warhol footage of The Velvet Underground and Nico from 1966. Richard Metzger posted a shorter version of this last year, and wrote an insightful piece about it, check it out here.

 

 
More clips of Warhol’s The Velvet Underground & Nico after the jump…
 

READ ON
Posted by Paul Gallagher
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10.08.2010
01:32 pm
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Star Wars dating tips: Luke Skywalker, sex machine
10.07.2010
04:48 pm
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A mashup of a 50s instructional film on dating and Star Wars. Quite funny.
 

 
Via Have you seen this?!

Posted by Marc Campbell
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10.07.2010
04:48 pm
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John Lennon double dose of goodness: Copping a feel with Andy Warhol and Ready Steady Go interview
10.07.2010
03:24 pm
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I want to hold your gland.
 
If Lennon hadn’t chosen music as his profession, he could have had a career as a comic actor. Here he is being a brilliant wiseass on Ready, Steady, Go.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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10.07.2010
03:24 pm
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Superstars Divine and Holly Woodlawn on the ‘Tomorrow Show’ with Tom Snyder, 1979
10.06.2010
02:52 pm
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Tom Snyder interviews Divine, Andy Warhol superstar Holly Woodlawn and playwright/director Ron Link in July of 1979. Link wrote “The Neon Woman” which starred Divine and ran off-Broadway in 1978.

This is wonderful. Part of the fun is watching Snyder struggling to fathom the whole thing. By the end, Snyder seems ripe for a lifestyle change.
 

 
Parts two and three after the jump…

READ ON
Posted by Marc Campbell
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10.06.2010
02:52 pm
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