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Real things, often bad, reenacted with 3D animation

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Double landslide





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如廁男被 揸 下體 差 啲 姦埋





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US Airways Flight 1549





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Woman's body went unnoticed for two days in public pool





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The Rhode Island nightclub fire





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Tsunami





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Nine-year-old forgotten by his parents at highway station





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Paul Walker Crash Site





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A Day in Pompeii





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Trying to escape the sinking Titanic





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Kurt Cobain 3d model crime scene greenhouse Seattle april 1994





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Malfunctioning toaster





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Girl, 14, dies after secret slumber party drinking session





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Germania





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The Herald Of Free Enterprise capsizing





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Crime Scene Body Example





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JFK Assassination





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Hadramaut





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Heating Unit Explosion





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Pan Am 103 - Lockerbie Disaster





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Evidence used to convict Amanda Knox





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Seattle Earthquake Simulation





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Tupac Shakur's Murder





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DMT Trip Simulation





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School stabbing: teacher, 3 students killed by parent





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The Sinking of the Costa Concordia





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Motorcycle Accident Reconstruction





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Two news helicopters crash over Phoenix, Arizona





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JetBlue flight diverted after pilot flips out





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GTA4 DEATH TUNNEL





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Rhinoplasty





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Meteorite hits Earth






*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Thanks for your thoughts on Kubelka's work. I disagree with you, of course, but that's showbiz, ha ha. Have I not had a decent Paul Bowles Day here? Maybe not. That's very strange, isn't it? Hm. Let me see what I can find and how I can make something, even focused on one of his books, if need be. Thank you for the alert and push. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh! Ah, I'm so happy to hear of your enthusiasm for Kubelka's work! I totally agree about its militancy and purity, yes! I feel so lucky to have been at the right age and inclination to have gone to ... gosh, I'm forgetting what the series was called, but there was an amazing experimental film series in LA in the early 70s. My friends of the time and I were total devotees. It took place at this little theater that no longer exists in the last western-most block of Melrose right before it merges with Santa Monica Blvd., and I think later the series moved to LAICA on Robertson? I think the guy who ran and hosted it was named Doug (something)? They showed the works of all the great experimental filmmakers of that era and before, including your dad's, and I saw so many amazing things there and had my sense of art and what was possible completely enlarged and reinvented. I was just at this amazing bookstore here, Section 7 Books, last night, and they had a book of photos of the SF punk scene by Bruce Conner, which I had no idea existed, and which was really unexpected. Maybe I'll just read the early part of Kim Gordon's book about her Cal Arts and Mike Kelley days because that sounds extremely interesting, yes. ** Sypha, Hi, James. I'm looking forward to that reissue/expansion of 'England's Hidden Reverse' too. I don't think of that as being about recent rock history except maybe in loosest sense. It would spectacular if you want to and have the time to finish the 'La-Bas' post, obviously! Thank you very much for wanting to! ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. I looked a little into the dogging phenom, and, yeah, it's kind of depressing. But interesting, of course. Great about the panel, and whoo-hoo about the meeting on Friday! ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! Me too. About the video. No, 'Candy' was not to be found at the bookstores I hit yesterday, but I realized that I can just order it, so I will. It's always so nice to buy a book in a bookstore, but Paris is not exactly a treasure trove of English language bookstores. You're heading into thesis writing? That sounds so intimidating, but I never wrote one myself. I quit university, for better or worse. Those interviews do sound really interesting. Do you have people in mind whom you want to talk to? Does your thesis have an overall theme or, I don't know, point? My day was good. Uh, my pal Zac and I saw a show of work by the architect Renzo Piano and then hung out and then went to probably my favorite bookstore in Paris, Section 7 Books, and spent way too much money buying things. It was nice. I hope your day is one that is worthy of you. ** Steevee, Hey. Yeah, what's sad to me is that people who are serious about film now mostly act like the great experimental filmmakers don't exist and aren't a significant part of film history. When I make posts about people like Kubelka and am looking for texts and links, I realize that very many of the major film critics of the 60s, 70s, and even into the 80s a bit wrote about and reviewed experimental films in prominent places. Now, well, you hardly ever see experimental film written about seriously or even referenced in prominent English language newspapers and magazines. I have the impression that a lot of newer film critics literally have not even seen that work. I guess that's part and parcel of a general conservatism about and neglect of non-narrative film, writing, theater, etc. these days, but I find that depressing, naturally. Fantastic news about your interview with Tsai Ming-liang! I'll be very excited to read that! Very cool! ** S., Hey. Well, me too. I could do chords but leads sand complicated stuff, no way. I think I mostly liked the guitar's weight. Actually, Beck played a gold flaked number, or he did at the point that I was into him. I forgot about Valentines Day until you just mentioned it. Huh. They do do it over here. Another post! Everyone, S. follows up his very recent new work/post, as you were alerted to yesterday, on his always enticing blog, with this new thing which looks equally attractive and disturbing in that way that only S. can manage to devise. Hit it. ** Armando, Hi. Don't feel even the slightest bit bad, my friend. I just wanted to point that out because you made me think about the blog and my relationship to it and to the relationships I have here. It was just some air clearing. We're good, and everything is totally cool. ** Brendan, Dude, that is one very big painting you made there. And it's very awesome! Cool that Kubelka effected you. Me too. Sweet that you'll get to hang out on the periphery of your friend's film and beyond its periphery. Chunneling over here is super quick and easy, so, yeah, please do! I'd love to take you to dinner too. So, I guess that means we'll have to have two dinners. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Really nice interview with Gregory over at Fanzine. Last I heard, our producer people had managed to get the DVD release held back until early summer, and we're currently scrambling to try to set up screenings of the film in the US before the DVD/axe falls. Based on my experiences in that regard, I have to say that film programmers in general are about the flakiest people I have ever had to deal with. I saw a guest-post by you in my mail this morning! Thank you, thank you! I'll set it up and get back to you with the launch date right away. Woods ... do I not know of them? I think I don't. Or I'm spacing out. I'll go look. Thanks! ** Misanthrope, I kind of figured. About Kubelka. But there are probably as many American English words rooted in French and Spanish as in Latin. I just feel like learning Latin at this point would be about as useful as learning how to repair a transistor radio. That story about your co-worker is really, really sad. Jesus. Sad. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris. It is, right? 'Pause!', I mean. Cool, I'm really glad the post interested you. Wow, that's great news about the Zachary German book! For me too because my copy is sitting in my apartment in Los Angeles. Thank you! Everyone, Chris Dankland tips all of us to the fact that 'Thank You', the new book by the great Zachary German, former d.l. of this blog and author of the contemporary classic novel 'Eat When You Feel Sad', is now a pdf that you can download for free! This is big! Don't deprive yourselves by not clicking on this link and getting yourselves a copy now. Fantastic! Thanks a lot, Chris! Best day to you! ** Rewritedept, Hi. Neu! is a nice way to spend one's ears' time. No, my hair was never great. It's just there and always has been. But I guess I always figure out a way with work it. My favorite Cure album is 'Pornography'. Hope your day is a goodie. ** Right. Today's post results from some whim I had one day not unlike posts here occasionally do. Hence, there something is. See if my whim is infectious or not. See you tomorrow.

Please welcome to the world ... Zachary German Thank You (AVF Press)

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'He’s here. Scholars of online identities foretold of a great writer gone from the internet who would return once more to their digital flock. Rumors flew like those psychotic birds in that Hitchcock film, think the name of it is Birds. A writer would return to restore order to alt lit. Zachary German is that writer.

'Zachary German left the internet a mere boy. Living the ‘IRL’ lifestyle taught him who his true friends are. They are here, on the internet, willing to pay him vast quantities of money. He needs their love. But he needs their money even more. He wants their Paypal accounts.

'How did Zachary German obtain such enlightenment? Did he do a lot of drugs? Knowing him, yes, but Zachary German is drugs. Drugs can’t guide you. They only drain users’ already strained bank accounts. No, Zachary German wanted true enlightenment. And there’s only one place for true enlightenment: Sarasota, Florida.

'I mock Florida a lot on here. Florida is pretty mock-able. It is a state of plastic, with huge shrines built in the name of tackiness. Yet I am afraid of Florida. Look into Florida and you’ll see America’s soul: trashy, weird, sprawling, unsustainable developments. I lack the guts to find myself in such a harsh, false environment. But I’m not Zachary German.

'A plane landed in Sarasota not long ago. It contained Zachary German and his girlfriend Megan Boyle. They went to Florida for spring break. Florida they felt represented salvation from things like culture or taste. It begged them to explore it, to discover what secrets it held, as a final resting place for millions of elderly New Yorkers.

'Megan Boyle and Zachary German immersed themselves into Sarasota, Florida ‘Stranger than Paradise’ style. That meant doing a whole lot of nothing. Zachary German was up to the challenge. He’s very good at doing nothing for prolonged periods of time. Like the movie, they went to the beach, wandering aimlessly. Like the movie they went to a shitty dog racing track. To finish their homage to Jim Jarmusch’s movie, they stayed in a crummy, dank ass hotel.

'Since quitting the internet Zachary German had grown long hair. He kept his trademarked oversized glasses. He drank. He lived in dirty, unwashed clothing. Half the time he was barely conscious. The rare times he remained conscious were spent watching local news and old repeats of classic 90s sitcoms.

'The turning point came when Zachary drank a beer. It was a beer that would change his life. It was a Coors Light and it had done more than tapped the Rockies. It had gone to the top of the mountain and seen the light. Zachary placed the beer can into a Pringles can. That activated the spiritual awareness of the beer can. Slowly it began to clear its throat.

'“Zach, return to the fucking internet.” The anthropomorphic beer can loved the internet.

'“I have everything I want here IRL. Fuck the internet. It is filled with a bunch of assholes. The internet can eat my cock fuck. One of them said I was an underwear model. I wish. I don’t own a pair of underwear. I hang out at Laundromats and steal clothing from total douchebags. That’s how I dress.”

'“I’m a fucking anthropomorphic beer can. Do what I say.”

'“Okay, sure, whatever. I think I still have some links to my writing on Muumuu House. Think it changed the writing world forever or something.”

'From then on, Zachary heeded the call of the anthropomorphic beer can. He kept his day job of walking dogs. At night he’d bother people on the internet. In fact, he became considerably more optimistic. Now he’s working on a new book, a sequel to Eat when you feel sad entitled Eat when you feel rad. Here’s a sneak peek at the genius at work:

'“Robert sits on the beach. He is completely naked. Somebody gives him $400,000 for existing. He laughs loudly. He looks at his cat. Robert says ‘Fuck, I rule so hard.’ His speech is overpowered by the surf. Robert cries.”

'Prepare yourself for the second coming of Zachary German.'-- Beach Sloth



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Further

'Who Is Zachary German?'
'AN INTERVIEW WITH ZACHARY GERMAN'
'On Zachary German’s “Eat When You Feel Sad”'
'Zachary German, The Void Of New Literary Microcelebrity, an Interview with Adam Humphreys'
'TWENTY AND BORED AND ALIVE'
'the nike swoosh is beautiful'
'BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE 2010: ZACHARY GERMAN'
'9 Reasons To Watch My Film'
'Zachary German Explained'
'Book Notes - Zachary German ("Eat When You Feel Sad")'
Zachary German @ Soundcloud
'What's Eating Zachary German?'
'QUICK QUESTIONS WITH ZACHARY GERMAN'
'Zachary German isn’t dead (he just doesn’t give a shit)'
'Guest Post by Zachary German: Thoughts On Kanye West’s New Record'
'Zachary German is an Underwear Model'
'interview with Zachary German'
'ZACHARY GERMAN WAVVES ROBERT EAT WHEN YOU FEEL SAD REVIEW INTERROGATION'



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Extras


Zachary German - For


zachary german eating cake in fabulous port jervis ny


Baseball (short film)


Shitty Youth (2012)



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Interview (2010)
from 3:AM Magazine




3:AM: How much – in a percentage – is Eat When You Feel Sad autobiographical?

Zachary German: One hundred percent, or zero percent. It seems like we’re all mother nature’s children, in a way, and so my story is your story is [something]. I’m being serious…

3:AM: How much – in a percentage – are you happy with the finished novel?

ZG: Ninety five maybe. Sometimes I think about things that could have been made more consistent. I never went through it thinking about the climate, and trying to make the weather correlate with seasons in a way that would make sense. So I sometimes fear there may be some inconsistencies there. There are other things I probably could have done, times when I should have expanded on dialogue or something.

3:AM: How long have you been working on it?

ZG: I worked on it from autumn 2007 to autumn 2009, pretty much, I think. So two years. The majority of that time was spent editing – I had written most of the text within the first six months.

3:AM: Since its publication, is there a part/scene that you are unhappy with, and wish you could edit out/change?

ZG: No. I think all the scenes work. For the Bear Parade draft there was one scene in which the narration went into first person, which a few people seemed to like, but in the end it seemed too inconsistent, so I took it out. Nothing like that in the final draft.

3:AM: Stylistically it is consistent throughout, written in a very pared-down, minimalist way – “Robert turns off the light. Robert turns on the light. (etc)” – Did you find these stylistic choices ‘trapping’ or ‘freeing’? How did you come to choose this style to write in?

ZG: I found that style very freeing. I am easily overwhelmed when looking at a blank Word document, and it is a lot easier if I know exactly what I’m going to write. So I can just say “This is what happens” and write that down, in a very specific format. The part I like the most is the editing I do later, where I change the word “Robert” to the word “He,” or vice versa, things like that. Having very small, specific choices seems fun.

3:AM: Is the character of Sam actually Tao Lin? And in Shoplifting From American Apparel, is Robert you?

ZG: Oh… it’s just a novel, Chris.

3:AM: Okay, I know what you mean. But I also feel interested in knowing a little more about that ‘overlapping’ scene in both books – page 117 in Eat When You Feel Sad and page 78 in Shoplifting From American Apparel. Was there some sort of conscious decision made between you and Tao at some point to include this overlap between events/conversation/names etc? Or did it just occur naturally, due to the autobiographical natures of both books?

ZG: [question not answered]

3:AM: What question would you most liked to be asked in an interview like this?

ZG: What is your favorite Blink-182 song and why?

3:AM: How often – if ever – do you think of the title of your novel as an acronym?

ZG: Between 1/3 and 2/3rds of the time, probably. Like when I think with sounds it’s ‘Eat When You Feel Sad’ but when I think with pictures it’s ‘ewyfs.’ Not sure if that is true, makes sense, sorry.

3:AM: You said you enjoy the line-editing part most. Do you have a specific memory of a time/place when you felt especially happy with how your novel was going? If so, please describe it.

ZG: No real specific memories of feeling happy with how it was going, more memories of feeling it sucked but could easily be so much better. One morning I got up early and lied down in McCarren Park in Brooklyn and read a printed out draft all the way through, making notes and line edits, and feeling really good, like I was a genius who had just found a really shitty book that I could quickly change into something just terrific. Then I made the changes and probably the next time I read it all the way through I thought pretty much the same thing.

There were a number of drafts like that, where I felt each new set of edits was a revolution or something. As time went by that feeling got less and less, until it started to just seem like a pretty finished novel.

3:AM: Similarly, was there some point during the writing of the novel when you felt something along the lines of, ‘Oh no, this a complete fucking piece of shit, I’m going to give up on it’? If so, please describe.

ZG: Oh, well, I think I only ever really thought about giving up on it in fall of 2007, soon after starting it. I forget why exactly, I know I had a gmail conversation with Tao Lin about it so could probably look it up, but yeah I was just tired of doing it, and that’s when I asked Tao if he thought I should just make it a Bear Parade thing, and he said it could probably be both, and so that’s what happened.

3:AM: How do you think you and your writing would be perceived by the following people: a) a 26-year-old Italian/American female poet/blogger, who occasionally reads online journals like 3:AM, HTMLGIANT, but who also cites people like Virginia Woolf, Emily Dickinson and T.S. Eliot as influences.

ZG: Probably negatively, a woman named ‘Oriana’ who I believe roughly fits that description has already written an in-depth scathing review on Goodreads.com.

3:AM: b) an American, somewhat alcoholic, on-the-brink-of-retiring, divorced male English Lit. professor, who at one time in his life had the desire to write fiction but never did so.

ZG: Feel he would either disregard it completely or like it a lot.

3:AM: c) an English, 38-year-old male, who reads “everything from McEwen and Palanuk (sic) to greats such as Dickens and McNab (ha ha)” – note: he reviews DVD box-sets constantly on Amazon.

ZG: Feel he would get a real kick out of shit-talking it on Amazon/not like it.

3:AM: d) ‘someone’s mom’

ZG: Damn, depends on if it’s ‘my mom’ or not. ‘My mom’ would ‘say she liked it,’ if memory serves. Others’ moms would probably not read it all the way, I feel. If they did they would probably feel disturbed … in a bad way.

3:AM: Your author biography on the back page of the novel reads: ‘ZACHARY GERMAN was born on December 17th, 1988 at Shore Memorial Hospital in Somer’s Point, New Jersey. In 2006 he dropped out of high school. In 2007 he published his first short story. In 2008 he moved to Brooklyn. In 2009 he works as a dog walker on Manhattan’s Upper West Side and maintains two websites: thingswhatibought.com, and eatwhenyoufeelsad.com, which collects videos of people eating while feeling sad’. Do you think you could carry this third-person sentence-per-year biographical description on to provide a speculative description of the years of your life from 2010-20/30/40/whenever-you-get-bored?

ZG: [question not answered]

3:AM: What is your favourite Blink-182 song and why?

ZG: ‘Untitled’ off Dude Ranch. Seems really catchy/memorable with several distinctive sections. Confused as to why I wrote ‘with distinctive sections.’ I have good memories of running around the track in tenth grade gym class with Colin Gilmore singing this song. Seems apt to a number of situations, lyrically. Don’t like how there’s a weird talking thing at the end of the studio version though. That should make it lose points. So maybe ‘Josie,’ also off of Dude Ranch.



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Book

Zachary German Thank You
AVF Press

'Kortprosa. Amerikansk. Om minner. Formgitt av Håkon Pagander.

'John asked what we were cooking for breakfast and when I told him I was trying to learn how to poach eggs he said he was very good at poaching eggs. He offered to show us the video that taught him. He brought out his computer and I paused the new Interpol album, which seemed no worse than we’d expected. He said that the guy in the egg video was weird, but that it was a good video. He said we could fast forward through the beginning.

'Thank you is unfortunately sold out in print. Download here.'-- AVF Press

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Excerpt

I slept through the stop at 30th Street Station and woke up in the White Marsh Mall parking lot. I looked through old emails on my phone, found Katherine’s number and called her, the only person I thought I might know in Baltimore.
    I hadn’t seen her in two and a half years, during which time she had married and become estranged from Joseph, once my very close friend. She didn’t answer, and I was shopping for a ticket back to Philadelphia when she called back, saying she’d meet me at the McDonald’s in forty-five minutes.
    On her father’s porch swing we drank his warm, imported beer, and I feigned happiness about Joseph’s recent book deal. We talked about the end of their marriage, and recalled fondly a time she and I had visited the Overstock.com outlet store near Druid Hill Park.
    Around eleven AM we walked to a bar called DeMitri’s where we drank Southern Comfort and played Keno. We made out at the bar and bought condoms at 7-11. In the late afternoon her father walked in as I was going down on her, to ask about some pain pills he couldn’t nd. It was later established that his roommate’s son had taken them.
    John asked what we were cooking for breakfast and when I told him I was trying to learn how to poach eggs he said he was very good at poaching eggs. He oered to show us the video that taught him. He brought out his computer and I paused the new Interpol album, which seemed no worse than we’d expected. He said that the guy in the egg video was weird, but that it was a good video. He said we could fast forward through the beginning.

*


I didn’t drink for something like forty days shortly after New Year’s, knowing that the lease I shared with Katherine would soon end, the money I had inherited from a friend of my father’s would soon run out, and that clearing my head for a little while was not generally a bad idea.
    I stopped drinking Heaven Hill all day and night and started drinking Cafe Bustello all day and night. I’d go to a café called e Dew Inn when it opened at four in the morning and read the paper, then go home and fall asleep watching Netix on an iPad with a cracked screen that Keith had given me.
    In mid-February my parents traveled to Florida. I looked after their dog and ate their frozen pizzas. One night I drove to Belco Liquors, in Mays Landing, New Jersey, where I purchased a beer called Coors Extra Gold, which I had long seen advertised in a certain bodega in Brooklyn but had never before seen for sale. I drank the six-pack on the sofa next to the dog, watching basketball.

*


The last time I saw Mark was at Bushwick Country Club, although now I can’t remember if it was Mark or it was his boyfriend, Jean-Eric, that I saw there. It was only one of them, as they’d recently broken up.
    Whoever was at the bar, Mark, or Jean-Eric, was there with a large group of friends I’d never met. They had accumulated too many cans of Pabst, which they offered us when they left, and we thanked them for, but didn’t drink. That was another bout of sobriety. It was the night Rachel and I met Andrew, on the L platform at First Ave. He was holding a piece of crumpled up gift-wrap, or a bow, I forget. Rachel asked him about it and he said it was from a present he’d given a friend, or that she’d given him.
    The next summer at a dinner party, one of Andrew’s roommate’s friends talked about working for Fantastic Man, which was then in the process of launching a women’s magazine. I said, “But isn’t Fantastic Man basically already like a standard women’s magazine?” He said no and asked if I’d ever read Fantastic Man. I had, in fact, and didn’t know what I’d meant by the comment. I still don’t, it had just been something to say.

*


It was during the few weeks I lived with my parents in between living with Katherine and living with Rachel, both exes by that point, that my father sent me to Woodbury, New Jersey to pick up lumber. Because of, and as a neces-sity to, the nature of his business, he has an arrangement with certain of the region’s wholesale lumber yards such that when an amount of stock is damaged, or returned, or just left to sit on the lot too long and go grey, he will pick it up, or at times have it delivered, for pennies on the dollar.
    Long-term financial pursuits have not panned out for my father, as a rule. Describing the low prices he pays for lumber, as compared to the high prices one would normally pay, is perhaps the chief memory I have of his expressing pride, a satisfaction at having gotten the best of an unjust system.
    He gave me rope and directions to the lumberyard. I used an FM transmitter attached to my iPod to listen to the FIDLAR album, and missed my exit. I turned around at a Canal’s Liquor Store just before the Delaware Memorial Bridge, bought a liter of Evan Williams and asked for directions.
    At the yard the man who I was to talk to was with another, ostensibly paying, customer, who seemed to be leaving as I approached. The clerk looked my way, as if to address me. When I identied myself as my father’s son he announced that he knew who I was, brusquely.
    I loaded the wood and tied it as well as I knew how. I don’t remember my father ever using ratchet straps, although in the time since I have learned their value, and would recommend their use on any similar transport of lumber.
    I made no stops from the lumberyard’s gate until a mile or two from my parents’ home, where the Toyota Tundra was struck from the side by a Mercedes-Benz GLK which had run a stop sign. The other driver and I parked in front of an eighteenth century Presbyterian church and exchanged insurance information.
    By the time I got to the house my parents had already received a phone call from the driver, who acted graciously in our brief dealings with him. The truck’s damaged metal was removed and sold for scrap and, with the insurance money, my father was able to build a new truck bed, tailgate and racks, all of mahogany, on which he had the name of his business and his phone number professionally gold leafed.




*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, Yes, Doug Edwards! I'd heard he had died. A lot of people from LA, heavily including me, owe him a lot. I really like early Bertolucci, as this weekend's post will make clear, but, man, I think his Bowles film is really dreadful. But I think we've had that conversation before? ** Tosh Berman, Gosh, thank you, Tosh! Focusing on Bowles' music would make for a very interesting and not typical Bowlesian post. I wonder how much of his music is online for sharing. I'll check. In any case, terrific idea, thank you! ** James, Hi, James! My pleasure. Yes, I have the new Kobek on the way to me as well. Exciting. An ex-boyfriend of mine was really into Lilly when he and I were together, so I heard a lot about him, although I don't think I ever actually read any of his books. What a nice effect his stuff is having on you! The Cobain one is quite rudimentary and not shocking or anything. Enjoy Austin. I enjoyed it the one time I was there. Mm, I used to have friends in Austin, but I don't think any of them live there anymore. I think a d.l. of this blog who hasn't been around here in a while lives there. Love back to you! Have big fun! ** Steevee, Hi. Well, sure, that's understandable. I would imagine that venues for film writing are not exactly chomping at the bit to commission or even run things on non-narrative film, so that's no doubt part of the problem. I just wish that wasn't the case. It would be so interesting to read takes on non-narrative/experimental film by younger film writers/buffs. If you really search around online, like I do for those posts, there are random younger people fascinated by that kind of film who post about it on their blogs and things, although they mostly quote older critics' writings. ** Tomkendall, Hi, Tom! Things are relatively pretty good with me. Migration stress sounds really stressful. Hopefully after the preliminary hassle, you'll be warmly embraced. Those stories sound super interesting. Yes, of course, I would love for you to do a Day about the book! Please do whenever you and it are ready! That would be really awesome, thank you! Best of luck with everything, my pal. ** S., Hi. Nice blog post, dude. Hot. I used to be able to play chords, but that was it. I was always the rhythm guitarist in the two and half bands I was in. But one of those bands used to do some covers of early/ contemporaneous Velvet Underground and Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd and other kind of complicated stuff, so I must have been okay at chording to be able to keep up, I guess. Bon Jovi has a good quote about love? That I can not believe, I'm sorry. Thanks for the Avital link! I'm in the mood! ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! Me too, about reading books in their original language, but the 'sad' thing is that I mostly read fiction by French and German and other non-English authors, well, except for new books 'cos the US is having its amazing renaissance of daring new fiction writers right now. Having that paper is a good thing, yeah, probably worth sticking to school for. I just wanted to be a writer, so I didn't really need to have a degree. If I was into teaching for a living like most of the writers I know, I would be in trouble now without it. Yeah, that's a great subject for your thesis, obviously. Incredibly rich area. Wow, how did I not know that Marching Church is playing here on the 24th? Weird. Thank you for telling me, my friend. I'll get on that pronto. Have a superb Friday! ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Ha ha, I almost included that Tiger Woods one, but it didn't make my final draft for some reason. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Yeah, it's unpleasantly weird about that shared trait among film programmers. They also have a consistent tendency to say they'll get right back to you about your submission and then go completely silent and not respond ever again. Super obnoxious way to do things. Our new film is pretty different, yeah. It has single narrative and a single cast of characters/performers unlike 'LCTG'. 'LCTG' is about sex and desire, and the new film isn't about that at all. I'm sure there'll be some holdover in terms of how the material and so on are approached cinematically. That's Zac's doing, and we haven't talked about that yet. We want to get a producer nailed down first. But Zac's visual ideas, while various, are pretty distinct, and Michael Salerno will be doing the cinematography again, so, no doubt whatever shifts happen won't be entirely radical. Thank you asking. Sure, we can Skype. When do you want to? Let me know by email or here or something. Oh, and your guest-post, which is wonderful, of course, will run here a week from today, on the 18th. Thank you again so much for that! And, yes, I'll pass along your GH interview. I spaced on doing that yesterday. Everyone, the fine, fine fella and scribe Jeff Jackson, who goes by Chilly Jay Chill when he's here, has interviewed the fine, fine fella and scribe and fellow d.l. Gregory Howard about his great recent novel 'Hospice' over the always crucial Fanzine, and you can read it right here. ** Brendan, Hi, B. Well, while it's nigh on impossible to judge a painting based on snaps, I think I can safely say it's fantastic. Call it my intuition or super-powered eyes or something. Yay! About the chunneling! And the two! ** Misanthrope, Oh, that's good, isn't it? I think there are a number of drugs happening in 'Enter the Void', but, yes, I do think DMT is very prominent among them. Oh, what I meant was that Americans use French and Spanish words in their day-to-day talking all the time. It's just you guys' flat American accents that make them sound like unusually spelled English words. It's in the 20s here right now pretty consistently, and it's not that cold. But I think I'm not a weather wuss. Except when it's a high temperature. Then I become a whiny bitch. ** Bill, It's weird, right? I was surprised. I just started looking for them on a whim, and then ... bonanza. So sorry about your allergies interfering with you. Fuck them. Just fuck them. With a sledgehammer. With five sledgehammers at once. That should do it. Love, me. ** Right. So, Chris Dankland's alert yesterday that the new Zachary German book is out and available for free download got me so excited that I quickly put together a post to welcome it. And there it is. All please hail Mr. German. See you tomorrow.

Bernardo Bertolucci Day

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'Very few international directors in the past four decades have managed to remain at the “critically successful” as consistently as Italian filmmaker Bernardo Bertolucci, whose career has straddled three generations of filmmaking, four continents, and several movie industries. Alongside his provocative explorations of sexuality and ideology, his highly kinetic visual style – often characterised by elaborate camera moves, meticulous lighting, symbolic use of colour, and inventive editing – has influenced several generations of filmmakers, from the American “movie brats” of the 1970s to the music video auteurs of the ’80s and ’90s. Perhaps the most important reason for Bertolucci’s continuing relevance has been the intensely personal nature of his movies: although he makes narrative features, very often based (albeit loosely) on outside literary sources, Bertolucci’s films over the decades reveal distinct connections to their creator’s private dilemmas and the vagaries of his creative and intellectual life. In other words, he has been able to fulfill his dream of being able “to live films” and “to think cinematographically” – to lay bare his inner life through his work.

'Bertolucci was born to a prosperous family in Parma, Italy. His father, Attilio, was a well-known poet and writer. He exerted a considerable influence on the young Bernardo, who became an award-winning poet himself at the age of 21 and spent his teen years enamoured with the cinema, thanks to his father’s work as a film critic. At around the same time, Bernardo entered the world of filmmaking as an assistant to another Italian poet, Attilio’s friend Pier Paolo Pasolini, on the writer’s first feature, Accatone (1961). A five-page treatment by Pasolini led to Bertolucci’s own first feature, The Grim Reaper (La commare secca) (1962), an episodic, Rashomon-style investigation into the murder of a prostitute seen through the points-of-view of the dispossessed denizens of a Roman park. The impression of youth shows: The Grim Reaper, despite showing some early signs of Bertolucci’s personal style (expressionistic lighting, a highly mobile camera, and an inventive, time-hopping narrative structure), feels more like a Pasolini film, not the least because of its subproletarian milieu.

'Many of Bertolucci’s early films work simultaneously as homages and exorcisms. Pasolini and Jean-Luc Godard were the filmmaker’s twin spiritual fathers in the 1960s, and the latter’s influence is clearly evident in Partner (1968), Bertolucci’s third feature, an attempt at the elliptical, playful, highly symbolic, and politically active style of Godard’s post-nouvelle vague filmmaking. A loose adaptation of Dostoevsky’s The Double, Partner is the story of a young idealist (Pierre Clementi) who is faced with his politically revolutionary, socially active, and possibly psychotic doppelganger. Full of attempts at Brechtian distanciation (onscreen text, direct address to the camera, etc.), the film today retains a certain fascination for the ways in which the power of Bertolucci’s burgeoning lyricism and cinematic confidence clash with the fragmented, highly declarative style of Godard’s more political films.

'In between these two cinematic homage/exorcisms, Bertolucci made a remarkable work imbued with the personal style he would go on to develop further. 1964’s Before the Revolution (Prima della rivoluzione), the director’s second film, tells the story of Fabrizio (Francesco Barilli), a bourgeois youth torn between his revolutionary aspirations and the decadent comfort of his surroundings. Introducing a political element that would later become even more refined, the film worked as an exorcism of a different sort:

'"I needed to exorcise certain fears. I was a Marxist with all the love, all the passion, and all the despair of a bourgeois who chooses Marxism. Naturally in every bourgeois Marxist, who is consciously Marxist, I should say, there is always the fear of being sucked back into the milieu he came out of, because he’s born into it and the roots are so deep that a young bourgeois finds it very hard to be a Marxist."

'In essence, Bertolucci used Before the Revolution to explore the nature of political doubt: Fabrizio abandons one type of patriarchy (his conservative family) for another (the ideological demands of Marxism). As in most of the director’s films, this dichotomy is accompanied by sexual tension: While left-wing politics and haute bourgeois surroundings provide the milieu for Revolution, the main narrative (a very loose adaptation of Stendhal’s The Charterhouse of Parma) concerns Fabrizio’s affair with his aunt Gina (Adriana Asti). But unlike in his later works, Bertolucci doesn’t quite manage to reconcile the film’s sexual politics with its more overt ideological content. Try as we might, it’s hard to read Gina as a symbol for anything – she simultaneously represents sexual freedom and Fabrizio’s stuffy family relations; it’s hard to divorce her from the rest of the world, even though she is clearly an outcast in her own surroundings. (It’s also possible to read the incest taboo as a sublimation of homoerotic desire; several early scenes are devoted to Fabrizio’s clearly gay, suicidal young friend Agostino [Allen Midgette], whose death is one of the centerpieces of the film.) Ultimately, what emerges from Before the Revolution is not a coherent vision but a brilliant, highly kinetic portrait of a very confused young man – made, perhaps, by a brilliant and very confused young man. Bertolucci even throws in a beautifully filmed, lushly scored ode to the environment, in which a minor character delivers a lyrical monologue to the decaying Po River, right near the end – a gorgeous sequence that almost feels like it deserves to be its own short work.

'The early 1970s proved to be a significant period for Bertolucci’s cinema. The Spider’s Stratagem (La strategia del ragno) (1970), an expansion of Jorge Luis Borges’ brief short story “The Theme of the Traitor and the Hero”, and The Conformist (Il conformista), a major adaptation of Alberto Moravia’s novel of the same name, are both among Bertolucci’s most highly regarded works, with the latter considered by many to be his best. Stratagem, produced soon after the filmmaker entered psychoanalysis, begins as a modern-day story about a young man, Athos Magnani Jr., (Giulio Brogi) arriving at the small town of Tara to investigate the death of his partisan father, Athos Magnani (also played by Brogi), ostensibly at the hands of Mussolini’s fascists. The film then flashes back to the scenes of the elder Magnani’s exploits as a small-time Resistance leader. However, Bertolucci creates a jarring effect by casting the same older actors as Magnani’s comrades both in the present and the past, without trying to make them any younger. Coupled with the fact that the same young actor plays both Magnani Senior and Junior, the film appears to take place in a world divorced from reality – a landscape of the mind, perhaps, where the present and the past intermingle freely. It’s a highly symbolic work, tempered by Bertolucci’s expressive camera moves and bursts of vivid, at times surreal, colour (it was shot by Vittorio Storaro, who would become one of the director’s most cherished collaborators); as such, it perfects Partner‘s faltering attempts at a blend of the self-conscious and the conventional. Indeed, although Stratagem is by no means an “easy” work, it features several scenes of heightened suspense that suggest Bertolucci could be at home in the thriller genre. (Incidentally, one of his dream projects since the late 1960s has been to film Dashiell Hammett’s detective novel Red Harvest.)

'The Conformist tells the tale of Marcello Clerici (Jean-Louis Trintignant), a young man in Mussolini’s Italy desperate to create the illusion of “normality” by rejecting his past, which includes a homosexual incident and a murder in his youth, and joining the Fascist Party, which entrusts him to locate his old Professor in Paris and assassinate him. Clerici, who has also embraced marriage to a petit bourgeois girl (Stefania Sandrelli) as part of his attempt to conform to society’s expectations, travels to Paris, only to fall in love with the Professor’s bisexual wife (Dominique Sanda). Whereas Moravia’s novel relied on a purely linear mode of storytelling, beginning with Clerici’s childhood and going all the way to his demise during the fall of Mussolini’s government, Bertolucci begins his film closer to the end, with Clerici waiting in a hotel room in Paris for the phone call that will whisk him away to the Professor’s assassination. The past then begins to play out while Clerici rides in his car, chatting with his fascist bodyguard. Even the flashbacks themselves have flashbacks – a visit to a priest on the eve of his engagement leads to a remembrance of the homosexual encounter where Bertolucci locates Clerici’s psychosis.

'What distinguishes The Conformist’s structure from other works that rely on framing devices – including the director’s own The Last Emperor (1987), which replicates The Conformist‘s structure in a more conventional fashion – is Bertolucci’s avoidance of standard cinematic grammar, shirking dissolves, track-ins, voiceovers or other motifs that would traditionally indicate a flashback is about to occur. It certainly works to keep the audience from settling into a conventional story, but it also portrays something more profound. As Millicent Marcus has argued:

'This ordering technique also says something about the moral and existential consequences of adherence to Fascist thought. By privileging the car ride, which would merit no attention at all in a sequential telling of the story, the film is able to concentrate our attention on the present of decision-making whose results Bertolucci identifies with Fascism itself. The journey is really one agonizing process of choice – will Marcello intervene to save the life of his beloved, or will he watch her murder in complicitous passivity?…Marcello’s original motives in undertaking the journey are heroic, activist, interventionist ones…The car ride to Savoy is fascism in its movement from a seemingly heroic ethos to a passive and cowardly one.

'In other words, the film’s style, both in movement and design, is symbolic of Fascism’s rise and fall: Just as Marcello Clerici’s attempts to order his life according to society’s harsh rules lead to his eventual psychic disintegration, so too do Fascism’s attempts at regimentation and authoritarianism lead to anarchy and chaos. The earlier parts of the film, full of the clean, imposing spaces of Mussolini’s Italy, are directed with a highly orderly aesthetic – symmetrical compositions, lateral, precise tracking shots, and very tight, controlled movements by the actors, particularly Trintignant. The later parts are draped in shadows, or shot through with unflatteringly harsh lights, working to create a unique sense of violent social turmoil. The scene where the Professor and his wife are murdered is full of rough, handheld camerawork and jump cuts. The finale of the film, set in a dark, dank prostitute-riddled corner of the Colosseum on the night of Il Duce’s fall, with distracting searchlights and other odd lighting effects, is a far cry from the cleanly lit, orderly spaces of the earlier scenes. The mixture of homosexual and heterosexual hustlers (among them the gay chauffeur Marcello thought he had killed as a child), the disorderly political protesters, the collapsing symbols of fascism’s fall, all create the sense that the protagonist has wound up in a world where everything he sought to suppress has come out of hiding and into full view.

'If The Conformist is today Bertolucci’s most critically lauded film, his next two were probably his most notorious, in more ways than one. Last Tango in Paris (1972), the story of an American widower (Marlon Brando) and a young French woman (Maria Schneider) engaging in anonymous, raw sexual games inside an unfurnished Paris apartment, burst onto the scene thanks to its explicit content and the middle-aged Brando’s intense performance. The critic Pauline Kael, in an infamous review, compared the film’s New York premiere to the first performance of Stravinsky’s The Rites of Spring, calling it “the most powerfully erotic movie ever made” and speculating that it “may turn out to be the most liberating movie ever made” as well. Today, some of Last Tango‘s explicitness has dated, but the potency of its characters’ acting out of their aggressions through sexual encounters reveals the film to be the primary influence on later films as diverse as Cedric Kahn’s L’Ennui (1999), Louis Malle’s Damage (1992) and Paul Verhoeven’s Basic Instinct (1992).

'The enormous popular success of Last Tango allowed Bertolucci to assemble a massive budget and an impressive cast for his next film, the impossibly ambitious 1900 (Novecento) (1976) a politically committed 5-hour-plus epic about 20th century Italy starring Robert De Niro, Gerard Depardieu, Burt Lancaster, Donald Sutherland, Sterling Hayden, Dominique Sanda, Stefania Sandrelli and the late Laura Betti. However, the film’s vast running time and its explicitly Marxist political stance caused a major rift between Bertolucci, his producer and his studio. The film was recut twice and finally released by Paramount in the US with no publicity in a compromised 4 hour version.

'1900‘s immense running time was not just a stunt: Bertolucci cut a wide swath through history, telling the story of two boys born on the same day in 1901 (the date of Giuseppe Verdi’s death) – Olmo (played by Depardieu as an adult) is the son of peasants and destined to be a socialist; the other, Alfredo (De Niro as an adult) is the son of landowners and destined to be a hopeless bourgeois, an unwitting defender of fascism, and an inadvertent propagator of crimes against his labourers. The vast historical melodrama that ensues is one of Bertolucci’s most committed and audacious works. Paradoxically, for most of its running time, 1900 is also probably the director’s most conventional film, full of war and conflict and love and sex. Its last act, however, sharply divided audiences, with Bertolucci depicting a Red Flag-waving trial of the landowners after the fall of fascism – a purely fantastical scenario that was closer to a Maoist show trial than anything that occurred in Italian history. Addressing those critics of his – many of them from the Italian Communist party – who claimed that these final scenes were inconsistent with historical fact, Bertolucci himself confirmed this: “This entire sequence is an anticipation”, he said in 1978. “It is a dream of something yet to be” (4).

'The popular failure of 1900– still one of the most ambitious works ever made by a major filmmaker – left Bertolucci scarred, but an American studio releasing a Communist film at the height of the Cold War seems downright surreal even now, and it’s to Bertolucci’s credit that he managed to mount such a contradictory production in the first place. The film’s reputation has increased over the years; the full version was restored in 1995 and finally released properly in the US, garnering significant critical praise.

'In the wake of the debilitating struggle over 1900 (he has often described the experience as akin to having all his bones crushed) Bertolucci’s next two films could be seen as a calculated retreat: Luna (1979) is the small-scale, though no less gorgeous, story of an American opera singer (Jill Clayburgh) struggling with her disaffected teen son (Matthew Barry) and his drug addiction during a trip to Italy. One senses in the film a deliberate attempt by Bertolucci to reinvigorate his career by re-examining his work, especially in the charming manner in which the film becomes a travelogue through the director’s earlier career – from the farm in 1900 to an appearance by Pasolini regular Franco Citti, to a small but inspired moment when the boy’s father, right before his sudden death, discovers a piece of gum stuck under a balcony railing – right where Brando’s character in Last Tango left it, immediately before his own demise.

'Luna was not a hit, and it was followed by Bertolucci’s last truly Italian film, The Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man (Tragedia di un uomo ridiculo) (1981), an intriguing political thriller featuring Ugo Tognazzi as an industrialist whose son is kidnapped by Communist activists. A film that sits uncertainly on the border between Bertolucci’s earlier work and his later films, Tragedy not only begins to express the director’s disillusionment with Marxism, but it ties up some loose ends as well.'-- Bilge Ebiri



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Stills






























































































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Further

Bernardo Bertolucci @ IMDb
'Bernardo Bertolucci on being burned by Hollywood'
'How Bernardo Bertolucci Found Himself'
'Bernardo Bertolucci on Returning to the Director’s Chair'
'Even Making a Cup of Tea is Erotic'
'Maria Schneider vs. Bernardo Bertolucci vs. Marlon Brando'
'Bernardo Bertolucci and the Fascist Mind'
'YOU, ME, AND BERNARD BERTOLUCCI'
'BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI BREAKS DOWN SOME OF HIS GREATEST SCENES'
'A Conversation With Bernardo Bertolucci'
'Emotion and cognition in the films of Bernardo Bertolucci'
'MEMORY, HISTORY, AND POLITICS IN THE FILMS OF BERNARD BERTOLUCCI'
'Poetic Surrealism in the Films of Bernardo Bertolucci'



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Extras


Bernardo Bertolucci - Honorary Palme d'Or at Cannes


Intervista a Bernardo Bertolucci 1970


Bertolucci interviewed about 'The Conformist'


Bertolucci shooting 'Moi & Toi'


Bernardo Bertolucci Interviewed by Scott Feinberg



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Interview




A good way to start would be talking about Pasolini, and how your relationship with him began.

Bernardo Bertolucci: I don't know if I told that in the interview on the DVD, but my father was an Italian poet, Pasolini was young, and one day–I think I was 14 or 15–he knocked at the door of our house. I went to open it, and there was this man. It was a Sunday afternoon after lunch. My parents were sleeping. I saw this quite young man, dressed up for a Sunday, with a white shirt and a tie, and a very intense look, very intense eyes. He said, "I want to speak with Attilio Bertolucci." So I said, "Okay, wait." I went to knock, and my father was asleep, and I said, "There is somebody, but I think it's a thief." He said, "Who is it?" I said, "He wants you. He's called Pasolini. But I think he's a thief, and I closed him outside the house, on the landing." He said, "Oh, what are you doing? He's a great poet, go open the door!" So that was the first meeting. He was so intense, I thought there was something wrong. Soon, later, he came to live in the same building as my family. We were staying on the fifth floor, he was staying on the first floor, with his mother.

Did you have a lot in common? Did you share a similar sensibility?

BB: I started to read his poems when I was 15, 16. I was very influenced, immediately. I was writing poems when I was young, you know, because my father was a poet, so it was absolutely normal to follow my father. At that point, I had a new father, which was Pier Paolo. I was writing, and then I was flying down the stairs to the first floor, knocking at his door, giving him the new poem. He was telling me what he was thinking. In fact, when I was 20 or 21, he introduced me to a publisher, who published my first unique book of poems, called In Search Of Mystery.

So he was your poetic mentor?

BB: Yeah, he was my mentor. But I must have been a young man looking for many mentors, because then in '59, I had–I think in English it's A-level, my exam at the end of high school. It went well, so my family paid for a trip to Paris. I went to Paris with my cousin. I saw Breathless, which was just out in the theaters. I completely fell in love with it, the cinema, the film. Then we are back in Rome, and Pier Paolo one day meets me at the entrance of the building, and says, "You are a poet, but you want to do movies? Okay. You will be my assistant."

Was Breathless the first film that had that kind of impact on you, that made you want to be a filmmaker?

BB: I wanted already to be a filmmaker after I saw La Dolce Vita. La Dolce Vita was, for me, such a shock, in a good sense. I went to see it when it wasn't finished. I think I was 18. My father took me to Cinecittà. [Federico] Fellini started to be anxious about if the movie was able or not to be released in Italy, because he was afraid of having the Church or the Vatican against it. There are many allusions to religion in La Dolce Vita. So he was doing this screening for intellectuals, his friends, et cetera. So I remember that we went with Pasolini, Giorgio Bassani, who was the writer of The Garden Of The Finzi-Continis, and my father, in a little screening room in Cinecittà. We saw the movie before it was dubbed, in a kind of language which was in English, Italian, and I remember Nico [Otzak] was speaking Swedish. It was very mixed up; it was fantastic. You would hear often, the voice of Fellini [offscreen], saying "Anita, don't be stupid," to Anita Ekberg. "Smile!" It was an extremely naughty film. That's when I decided there were too many poets around me, and I had to do something else. Then I saw Breathless in Paris, and I completely fell in love with that style, that language, that freedom.

What about Godard appealed to you? What do you think he meant to you and to cinema as a whole?

BB: I think that, in some way, his first movies were so free, as I said. Going against all the rules and inventing a new way to tell a story. He also used this passion for contamination, when you bring together different genres... Pollution, in a good sense. Mixing up very different materials, and this new kind of editing with jump cuts.

The French New Wave, particularly Godard, was influenced by American filmmakers of the '40s. Were you interested in them as well?

BB: It was great to go to watch good Hollywood films of the '30s and '40s. After Godard and [François] Truffaut and all those guys had liked them, and in a way, starting from them. I mean, they weren't just imitating the Americans. They were just using these materials, evolutioning... But you know, the movies I like are always movies where cinema is reinvented like if it was the beginning of cinema.

It seems like that was how you felt about Pasolini's first film, that he was sort of reinventing cinema as well.

BB: Yeah, yeah.

What was it like working for him at such a young age?

BB: First of all, it was the first time I stepped into a movie set. I said to him, "I've never done movies, how can I help you?" He said, "Me too, it's the first time for both." In a way, knowing how close he was, I felt he was very generous. Since we were living in the same building, every morning we were leaving together to the set. I was going with him in his car. I was still living with my parents. I was 20 and I didn't have a car. He was driving, and I remember this drive to the set, which was the other side of Rome. It was very silent, and suddenly he was starting to tell me what he dreamt. In a way, in a very indirect way, his dreams were becoming part of what he was doing. But he was very strict about what he wanted to do, and very precise. He had decided that his model was the icons of 14th-century Tuscan art, from Giotto [di Bondone] to the Sienese, these bunch of fantastic painters in Siena, like Simone Martini, et cetera. Which means, at the end, this kind of beatific vision, kind of sacred. Like if his actor was a saint. The camera was always still. In parts where the camera was moving, he would follow them always in order to keep the same distance. The first few weeks were close-ups, and always a still camera. That's why doing a movie from a story for Pier Paolo, which was meant, when we wrote it, to be in the style of Pier Paolo, when they asked me to do it, I felt like going completely against the style of [Pasolini's debut film] Accatone. I wanted to find my own style, which was the opposite. The shots in Accatone are so still, and the shots in La Commare Secca are constantly moving. There is a camera which is moving all the time.

The irony is that when it came out, everyone said it was very much like Pasolini.

BB: Yeah. Not at all! It's the fact that the context was Pasolini. The story is kind of mobs, kind of lumpen, very poor people. You know, Pasolini always had a kind of religious, mystic vision of reality. I think that La Commare Secca and my other movies don't have that kind of vision, don't have that kind of religious obsession that he always had. You see Accatone, and you see [Pasolini's 1974 film] The Gospel According To St. Matthew, and you see that the music is the same, like if Accatone was a martyr.

What did you learn from Pasolini?

BB: I think that what I learned then, I didn't know I was learning. I just knew that I was very privileged to see somebody who was a writer, a great poet, and very smart-faced. Suddenly he becomes a director, so he has to invent cinema. It was like watching the invention of cinema. I was very impacted by the New Wave–Godard, Truffaut, [Agnès] Varda, [Jacques] Demy, [Jacques] Rivette, all these guys. But I found out also that Pasolini taught me a lot. It was, especially, the kind of respect that he had for reality. He had kind of epiphanies in his movies, like when a moment becomes full of grace, and it is like as if it was the most important moment in the life of a character. That's what I learned from Pier Paolo. There's a moment of tension, a peak, and then you go back down. And again you go to the peak. But he was doing it in a way that, to me, seemed very primitive. Like in the cinema of origins. Only recently, like when I did Besieged, which is a movie where they speak very little, I was thinking like Pier Paolo, like the beginning of cinema. The origins.

You talked about being inspired by the New Wave, and by Italian filmmakers like Fellini. How do you compare the respective film cultures in those countries at the point when you began making movies?

BB: In Italy, we had great directors like [Roberto] Rossellini, [Vittorio] De Sica, [Luchino] Visconti, Fellini. But I was seduced by the nouvelle vague, because it was really reinventing everything. And the Italian cinema that one would see in the theaters in the late '50s, early '60s was Italian comedy, Italian style, which, to me, was like the end of neo-realism. Neo-realism, like Open City or Bicycle Thief or Ossessione by Visconti was a fantastic explosion. I think cinema all over the world was influenced by it, which was Italy finding its freedom at the end of fascism, the end of the Nazi invasion. It was a kind of incredible energy. Then, late '50s, early '60s, which means more or less 15 years after the end of the war, the neo-realism lost its great energy and became comedy. If you see Italian comedies, they all are a bit like neo-realist cinema, but like if neo-realism became pink in a way. It lost its first impact. So, there we are, and from France comes The 400 Blows, or Jules Et Jim, or Breathless, Vivre Sa Vie, and all these movies which were really a new beginning. I think Hollywood has been influenced by it. The problem in Hollywood is that they try to become the only kind of cinema in the world, okay? The imposition everywhere of a unique culture, which is Hollywood culture, and a unique way of life, which is the American way of life. But Hollywood has forgotten that, in the past, what made Hollywood great and what made it go ahead was the fact that Hollywood was fed with, for example, Jewish directors coming from Germany or Austria and enriching Hollywood. Still, after the war also, Hollywood was influenced by cinema coming from all over the world. In 15, 20 years, Hollywood became imperialistic. In this movement, in this kind of imperial tension, there is its own distraction. Cinema goes ahead when it is marriaged by other culture. Otherwise, it turns on itself.

There has to be sort of an intermingling of other cultures.

BB: All the time. And I think that Hollywood should also be influenced by directors from Hong Kong. You see how Quentin Tarantino is really the example of how you can develop, and how you can go ahead if you accept the existence of different cinematic cultures. There you have Quentin playing with kung-fu. That's why the independents are the most interesting.

Marlon Brando recently passed away, and you directed him in probably one of his last really great performances. He had a reputation for being eccentric and difficult to work with. Can you talk a little about what it was like working with him on Last Tango In Paris?

BB: I think that he was the greatest, because he was accepting, without knowing it, or maybe knowing it, to take risk with me. What I wanted was to wipe off his mask, his Actor's Studio mask. I wanted him, the real Marlon, on the screen. And he accepted to give me that. I think it remains one of his greatest performances. He kind of opened his mystery with me. But then he was very upset, because it went much more far than he thought he was doing it. So he was upset for a long time, and then it was very nice in the last 10 years. We had a lot of conversations. It was great.

It seems like you're going full circle with The Dreamers, which is very much about the film culture of the '60s, when you made your first film, and about falling in love with movies for the first time. How similar is the experience of the characters in The Dreamers to your experiences as a young cinephile?

BB: What I was talking about was, of course, very autobiographical–'68 was the moment when all the young people were incredibly excited, because when we were going to sleep, we knew we would wake up not tomorrow, but in the future. There was a sense of future that was the result of the mixture of politics, cinema, music, the first joints. And the movies were a very important part of that cocktail.

It seems like sex was a big part of it as well.

BB: Oh yeah, completely. It was a way of leading all these different materials, they always mix up with sex: politics and sex, cinema and sex, et cetera.

You've said that what happened in '68 had a profound impact on the world as a whole. What did you mean by that?

BB: The life before '68 was very different from the life after '68. Before '68, our days were full of authoritarian moments. There were authorities everywhere. In fact, the movement of '68 was young people against their authorities, children against their parents. And that remained. The most important thing of all, the thing that lasted, was the first feminist movement and the position of women in society. That completely changed and that was very, very important.



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14 of Bernardo Bertolucci's 25 films

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Before the Revolution (1964)
'The 22-year-old Bertolucci made an impressive debut in 1962 with The Grim Reaper, a Rashomon-style thriller about the murder of a prostitute scripted by his mentor, Pier Paolo Pasolini. But it was his second film, Before the Revolution (1964), that made his name. Semi-autobiographical, partly inspired by Stendhal's The Charterhouse of Parma, and set in 1962 in his native Parma, the film is deeply indebted to the French new wave and centres on Fabrizio, a 20-year-old introspective haut bourgeois student both attracted to and repelled by middle-class conformity and revolutionary Marxism. He has an incestuous affair with his attractive young aunt (a recurrent theme in Bertolucci's work), and it is altogether a dazzling film, both continually vital and something of a time capsule.'-- The Guardian



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Partner (1968)
'Combining Marx and Freud, as was his wont in his early days, writer-director Bernardo Bertolucci, along with co-scenarist Gianni Amico, used Dostoievski’s 1846, pre-imprisonment novella The Double: A Petersburg Poem, which they moved to Italy and updated to the pro-Vietcong student-protest present, as a springboard for Il sosia, a dark, often opaque and arty, although witty and intriguing film about a young avant-garde theater teacher, Giacobbe, who longs to muster the will and boldness to pursue his Clara and bring his revolutionary promptings to the world of political reality. Enter his doppelgänger, on one level to spark this will, but on another level, vis-à-vis him, dramatizing his ambivalence, paralysis. Note what isn’t the first word of this paragraph: Blending. Perhaps Bertolucci, then in his mid-twenties, felt (if only now and then) that he had to choose between Marx and Freud, politics and psychoanalysis. While it is true that he was en route to his most political film, The Conformist (1970) is set in the Fascist era and, postwar, right after, and Bertolucci himself was headed for the first time to his psychoanalyst’s couch.' -- Dennis Grunes



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The Conformist (1970)
'In one of the greatest of all art films comes Bernardo Bertolucci's The Conformist; a film that combines the controversial topics of politics and sexuality into one of the most fascinating and complex character studies in all of film history. The Conformist tells the story about the rise and fall of Italian Fascism between the years of 1920 until 1943; and it also makes for an interesting contrast with the main character Marcello Clerici who has an obsession with conforming to what he sees is normal and acceptable in Italian society. He joins the Italian Fascist movement not because he necessarily believes in it, and gets engaged to a boring and dull housewife, not necessarily because he is in love with her. He just wants to fit in on what society looks at as acceptable and will live his traditional life not how he truly wants to live it but rather how others think he should. Marcello is a weak and impressionable individual; whose reasoning behind most of his motivations seems to stem from a repressed homosexual experience early on in his childhood. The story of The Conformist was based on a book adaptation by Alberto Moravia, as the structure of the film is shot mostly through several non sequential flashbacks and memories through Marcello all while Marcello and his loyal chauffeur make their drive to commit an assassination on an exiled anti-Fascist who was once Marcello's college professor. The Conformist is not only brilliant in its mysterious and complex character study of the ordinary man, but of its fascinating Freudian themes of sexuality and politics, showing how a man will mindlessly sacrifice his own individual values just to blend it with society.'-- Classic Art Films



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The Spider's Stratagem (1970)
'Bernardo Bertolucci's The Spider's Stratagem, made in 1970, the same year as his masterpiece The Conformist, is another look at fascism, heroism, betrayal, and the lies and secrets of history. Like Bertolucci's more famous (and more fully realized) fascist parable, this film examines the deformation of character that occurs under fascist oppression, as well as the ways in which such regimes inevitably prey on the weaknesses and flaws of the people they subjugate. The film opens with a man (Giulio Brogi) arriving in the small country town of Tara. Everywhere he goes through the streets, he finds the name of Athos Magnani, a local hero commemorated with street signs and statues and buildings. This is the name of the man's father, and his own name as well, a name that's famous only in this local community, where Athos the father was an anti-fascist hero, a rebel who resisted the fascists and paid for it with his life, assassinated in a theater during an opera performance. Many years later, Athos the son has been invited to visit the town by his father's mistress Draifa (Alida Valli), because she believes that only the son can uncover the truth about the father's murder. Once he arrives, this son who looks so much like his father — Brogi plays both generations of Magnani men — wanders through this sleepy town where his father's life and death still seem so fresh after so long, where the old people (and the town is populated almost exclusively by old people, barring a few children) remember every detail of the now legendary story as though it had happened yesterday.'-- Only the Cinema



the entire film



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Last Tango In Paris (1972)
'Bernardo Bertolucci's Last Tango in Paris is one of the great emotional experiences of our time. It's a movie that exists so resolutely on the level of emotion, indeed, that possibly only Marlon Brando, of all living actors, could have played its lead. Who else can act so brutally and imply such vulnerability and need? For the movie is about need; about the terrible hunger that its hero, Paul, feels for the touch of another human heart. He is a man whose whole existence has been reduced to a cry for help -- and who has been so damaged by life that he can only express that cry in acts of crude sexuality. Bertolucci begins with a story so simple (which is to say, so stripped of any clutter of plot) that there is little room in it for anything but the emotional crisis of his hero. The events that take place in the everyday world are remote to Paul, whose attention is absorbed by the gradual breaking of his heart. The girl, Jeanne, is not a friend and is hardly even a companion; it's just that because she happens to wander into his life, he uses her as an object of his grief. This movie was the banner for a revolution that never happened. "The movie breakthrough has finally come," Pauline Kael wrote, in the most famous movie review ever published. "Bertolucci and Brando have altered the face of an art form." The date of the premiere, she said, would become a landmark in movie history comparable to the night in 1913 when Stravinsky's "The Rite of Spring" was first performed, and ushered in modern music.'-- Roger Ebert



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1900 (1976)
'Bernardo Bertolucci's 1900 is truly what the French call a film maudit , or "cursed" film. The original Italian-language version of the film ran five hours and 11 minutes, but in its 1977 U.S. release, it was in English and cut by more than an hour. Now, Paramount has restored the footage--under the guidance of Bertolucci's master cinematographer, Vittorio Storaro--and re-recorded the soundtrack in Dolby stereo. But it's still in English. Only subscribers to the now-defunct Z Channel ever saw the full-length Italian version. It was aired by that innovative L.A. pay-cable service six years ago, using English subtitles, and that is by far the best way to see the movie. Yet even in the full-length Italian version, 1900 is too emotionally extravagant ever to be considered a masterpiece. Rather, it's a monumental achievement like such original and impassioned but scarcely flawless screen epics as D. W. Griffith's Intolerance, Fritz Lang's Metropolis and Abel Gance's Napoleon.'-- The LA Times





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Luna (1979)
'The film begins with a typically Bertolucci-esque scene of Oedipal symbolism, and it's probably a good indication of what to expect from the rest of the film. A young baby is fed honey by his beautiful mother (Jill Clayburgh) in a seaside villa somewhere in Italy. The baby starts to cough, and cries. A man comes by with a crate of fish and begins gutting them. In the background, an elderly woman plays a piano. The mother, seemingly in defiance, puts on a pop record by Peppino di Capri, comes up to the man, and begins to do the twist with him. (The man holds a knife in one hand, and a fish in the other, giving their dance an oddly suspenseful edge.) The baby begins to walk away from this scene, but he gets stuck on some twine, so that as he walks the twine stretches back to the mother, a symbolic umbilical cord. The film then cuts to a twilight bicycle ride between baby and mother in which the baby looks up and sees her face framed with the full moon behind them. The moon (aka, la luna) thus becomes a symbol of the mother -- more specifically, of the child's connection to the mother. After this intro, the film jumps ahead a number of years. The mother, Catherine, is a world-famous soprano living in Brooklyn with her businessman husband and her teenage son Joe (Matthew Barry, making quite an impression in his film debut). After the husband dies suddenly, Catherine takes Joe to Italy, where her neglect and self-absorption help lead him into heroin addiction. When Catherine realizes that her son is spinning out of control, she tries to intervene and to help him. Unfortunately, one of her ideas is to actually buy him heroin and to try to help him administer it. The desperation of this relationship between mother and son, which has always hovered on the edge of taboo, eventually leads to incestuous longings. The scandalous nature of the interaction between Catherine and Joe tends to color most viewers' reactions to the film. But look closer and you'll see that Bertolucci creates a very subtle back-and-forth here, where the son's adolescent desperation helps unravel Catherine's own feelings of inadequacy and loneliness. Bertolucci's previous films had focused on father figures; in Luna we see how the absence of a father figure sends the respective parts of this family spinning off in their own directions. The man that died in Brooklyn is eventually revealed to not be Joe's real father; his real dad is that shadowy figure dancing with Catherine in the opening scene. Luna thus turns into a search for a father figure, an attempt to complete this broken nuclear family.'-- The Live By Night



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Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man (1981)
'Tognazzi plays a rich Parma dairy farmer forced to sell up his greatest love - his material possessions - to meet the ransom demanded by a gang of terrorists who have kidnapped his son. In an attempt to fathom the siege mentality induced in an Italian society which had by then accepted terrorist violence as a commonplace, Bertolucci inverts the son-in-search-of-the-father theme of his most widely admired film, The Spider's Stratagem, and his small ensemble of lead characters begin to spin webs of deception - on each other, on us. The result is a mordantly witty tragi-comedy which matches the sombre tones of Carlo Di Palma's cinematography, but the style is no less flamboyant and seductive than that of Bertolucci's earlier films.'-- Time Out (NY)



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The Last Emperor (1987)
'Bernardo Bertolucci’s The Last Emperor won nine Academy Awards, unexpectedly sweeping every category in which it was nominated—quite a feat for a challenging, multilayered epic directed by an Italian and starring an international cast. Yet the power and scope of the film was, and remains, undeniable—the life of Emperor Pu Yi, who took the throne at age three, in 1908, before witnessing decades of cultural and political upheaval, within and without the walls of the Forbidden City. Recreating Ching dynasty China with astonishing detail and unparalleled craftsmanship by cinematographer Vittorio Storaro and production designer Ferdinando Scarfiotti, The Last Emperor is also an intimate character study of one man reconciling personal responsibility and political legacy.'-- The Criterion Collection



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The Sheltering Sky (1990)
'The Long-Awaited Film Version of Paul Bowles's landmark 1949 novel of an American marriage heading for oblivion in North Africa is a wincing embarrassment. The only thing director Bernardo Bertolucci (The Last Emperor) has gotten right is the atmosphere. Camera whiz Vittorio Storaro conjures up genuine drama out of sand, heat and pestilence, something Bertolucci and co-writer Mark Peploe fail to manage with the film's three main characters as they set out for the desert. John Malkovich is Port Moresby, and Debra Winger is his wife, Kit, loosely based on Bowles's wife, Jane. They have come to Algeria with their friend Tunner (Campbell Scott) – a dilettante whom both Port and Kit find alternately attractive and repellent. Tunner intends a short trip; the Moresbys plan to stay indefinitely – they're drawn to the unknown as a means to discover or lose themselves. On the page, Bowles made something uniquely spare and poetic of the Moresbys' existential quest. Though Bertolucci has cast the eighty-year-old Bowles in a small role – he sits in a cafe in Tangier and supplies occasional narration – the director hasn't found a way to reimagine the author's thoughts in film terms. Endless shots of flies on meat and humans in a sexual fever do little to fill in the blanks.'-- Peter Travers



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Little Buddha (1993)
'Bernardo Bertolucci is still widely perceived as the high priest of Freudianism and Marxism, of an intellectual art cinema rooted firmly in his Italian origins. But he has been steadily edging into the international arena. Since teaming up with the producer Jeremy Thomas, he has gone in for expensive, spectacular extravaganzas: The Last Emperor and The Sheltering Sky. Now he has moved further down the mainstream route with Little Buddha, which he has been calling a children's film, and also, perhaps as a selling point, the final part of his 'oriental trilogy' (although it seems slightly specious to yoke together Morocco, the Himalyas and China into a single geographic entity). So did Bertolucci sell out? I'd say not: this is an audacious project and one which, for all its flaws, has much to commend it. It is refreshing to find a heavy-hitting European auteur telling his story with such directness, and delightful to see a serious, artistically exacting film for children, even if you suspect it will soar over that audience. It's just at times you feel he's taken on too much and it flashes through your mind that, if not trod carefully, the Middle Way looks uncomfortably like compromise.'-- The Independent



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Besieged (1998)
'Shandurai (Newton), an African refugee in Rome, pays her way through medical school as a live-in cleaner for English pianist and composer Kinsky (Thewlis). Shy and timid, he woos her with gifts and music, but she rejects his overtures; her husband's a political prisoner in her homeland, she says. Kinsky responds with an act of love simple, profound and pivotal. Like Welles' The Immortal Story, this is a beautiful cameo from a mature artist. The scale doesn't signify a retreat - unless love is counted a minor theme - but it does seem to have had a liberating effect on the director, who embellishes a piquant short story by James Lasdun with dazzling mise en scène: delirious travelling shots, jumpcuts and an innovative soundtrack, all edited with seamless flair. This is cinema with music's fluid purity of form - indeed, it runs for 15 minutes before Bertolucci has recourse to anything so base as the spoken word. Kinsky plays Bach and Mozart; Shandurai, Salif Keita and Youssou N'dour. Some may find it pretentious, but Thewlis (clumsy, remote, rarefied) and Newton (contained, honestly bewildered) provide innumerable points of entry. It's a film about the limits of art, about civilization at this moment of flux, and about a gentle connection between a man and a woman.'-- Time Out (London)



the entire film



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The Dreamers (2003)
'Bertolucci's engrossing, elegant film is a seductive adaptation by Gilbert Adair of his novel The Holy Innocents. In Paris, as a student in the spring of 1968, Matthew (Pitt) is a young American usually to be found glued to the smoke-stained silver screen at the Palais de Chaillot. There, during a demo against the government's firing of Henri Langlois as head of the Cinémathèque, he meets and falls in with Isabelle (Green) and Théo (Garrel), a brother and sister as beautiful as they are bent on making their lives resemble the movies they adore - Les Enfants Terribles, perhaps? When they invite him to move into their apartment while their parents are on holiday, the relationship becomes more intimate, and intense. Meanwhile, things are also heating up out on the streets. An evocative reminiscence of an era when cinema and politics could count for as much as carnal passion, this delicious movie is written and directed with feeling and flair, and played to near perfection by its appealing young leads. The film benefits hugely from the fact that Bertolucci and Adair were caught up in the exhilarating mood of change that made '68 a year to savour. Besides being stylish, sexy and witty, the film feels authentic. The ménage-à-trois and its members are treated sympathetically but never romanticised; the cinéphile allusions are many, correct, illuminating but never overdone; the music is equally well chosen and expressive; the shifts between the erotic hothouse atmosphere of the apartment and the heady air of liberation outside skilfully handled. A real pleasure.'-- Time Out (London)



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Moi & Toi (2012)
'Bertolucci, and his actors Antinori and Falco, sketch out the growing and touching relationship that develops between the pair: not quite friends, not lovers, perhaps not even siblings exactly – but strange allies against all the unhappiness that this world can throw at them. There is a great moment when Olivia starts singing along to David Bowie's rewritten Italian version of Space Oddity, Ragazzo Solo, Ragazza Sola (Lonely Boy, Lonely Girl), and somehow this music contributes to the sense that, though sharp and lively, this 2012 movie could have been made 40 years ago. The final freezeframe is perhaps a nod to Truffaut, although the ending as a whole is maybe a little rushed. Bertolucci's witty, potent little film showed Cannes that he is still a force to be reckoned with.'-- The Guardian



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*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Yeah, no, I think his 'Sheltering Sky' adapt is an overblown bore. You mean 'The Dreamers', right? I've never actually watched the entire film, but I wasn't into what I did see. Oh, God, I really don't think I can read even one more word about the JT Leroy thing. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi Dóra! Yeah, I find that here in France -- that a lot of French readers I know are more into English language lit than their own. It's interesting. Safety zones can be good, yeah. Writers generally don't earn a lot of money from their work, as you no doubt know, so you'll probably be glad you have a fall-back thing that can generate income on the side. But, yes, I hope you get free to throw yourself into your writing asap! Hm, I don't think I know of Sylvester Ulv? Hold on, let me google him and see. No, I don't think I've seen him before. He certainly looks very good. He mentioned my books on his blog? Wow, that's cool. I wonder if he knows one or more of my Danish artist friends, a couple of whom do fashion photography/shoots? Anyway, thank you for telling me that. That's really nice to know. I hope your weekend rocks. Do you have any fun or special plans? ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. I'm not sure if you saw, but you can download ZG's book in pdf form for free. I highly recommend it. The book is beautiful. Oh, so you went with Rebel Satori, lucky them. Great! I'm very excited to read that, and I'll start twiddling my thumbs. I saw something about the Harmony Korine show. The paintings looked quite interesting. My weekend? Well, Gisele is finally back in Paris briefly from the ongoing spate of non-stop touring of our theater pieces, so she and I will have a powwow about the puppet TV show script. I saw Terrence Malick's new film 'King of Cups' the other day, and it blew me totally away, and I keep thinking about it, so I might go see it again. And I'm trying to find gigs/showings for 'LCTG', so I'll keep trying to sort that out too. And do work or something. Should be okay. Enjoy yours to the max. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Oh my God, that's crazy that they forgot to include your piece! Wtf?! I'm sorry, but I'm completely positive that the forgetting was just some weird glitch. Still, bleah, and fuck them. Well, while you're waiting on Monday, make your weekend count, buddy. However one does that, and whatever 'counts' means. ** Unknown/Pascal, Hi, P! Yeah, a new book by Zachary G. is a big gift. It's been way too long. And It's wonderful! I love his writing a ton. You getting some writing done is all that matters, man, in my humble opinion. Maybe Rohmer's just not your thing? I know a fair number of people who just aren't into his work. It happens. You have a great weekend too! ** Steevee, Hi. Huh, I don't know Jim Finn's work at all. I'll investigate him this weekend. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. It was a total pleasure to get to talk with you. Thanks, and me too re: our new film. I'm dying to get its parental figure nailed down so we can start planning and scheduling. We'll see. I know Michael Palmer's poetry. I haven't read him in quite a while. I liked it, but I didn't feel passionate about it. There are/were people who were/are very into his work. I ... don't think I know J.H. Prynne. I'll check around. Thanks, Jeff. Have a swell next couple of days. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris. The ZG book is so good. It's very him, but there's a shift in the style, and I think it's a great move. I would love to go to AWP this year. And it being in LA makes that really possible. I just need to figure out my work schedule and see if I can swing a trip home around that time. Yeah, there are so many writers and publishers and people whom I read and admire tremendously whom I would really love to meet and talk with, you highest among them. So I sure hope I can. Let me pass along ... Everyone, Here's Chris Dankland with a question. Listen up. Him: 'is anybody else from the blog gonna be in LA for [the AWP, March 29 to April 3]? if so, we should meet or hang out or something -- feel free to message me on facebook or cdankland@gmail.com ...i think m kitchell is going, & grant maierhoffer.' Bon weekend my friend! ** Okay. Bernardo Bertolucci. For me, pretty much all of his films up through 1979 are varying degrees of great. 'Luna' is one of my very favorite films. But, after that, it's like he lost his vision and his raison d'être or something, and I don't think he ever approached greatness again. But that's just my opinion. And you, no doubt, have another. And there's a lay-out of his oeuvre and related stuff for you to pore over this weekend, if you so choose. See you on Monday.

'We are all equally weird but I just happen to be the medium that accepts weirdness from almost anyone but then Im a whore as you can see': DC's select international male escorts for the month of February 2016

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VainBitch, 22
Rotterdam

I can make u hot till drop make u moan like ur shouting find internal peace etc just hire me.

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Consent
Fucking Versatile
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Dirty No
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Client age Users between 18 and 44
Rate hour 65 Euros
Rate night 175 Euros



_________________




DEEP_INSIDER, 19
Cologne

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Guestbook of DEEP_INSIDER

sunsun - 06.Jan.2016
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Dicksize L, Uncut
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Oral Versatile
Dirty No
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________________




love4love4you, 22
Nottingham

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SP00K, 21
Paramaribo

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henrihornee, 18
Brickfields, Kuala Lampur

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__________________




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Munich

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Sparky, 24
Mira Mesa

I am an extremely cerebral person and have a very hard time turning off my mind. I would love to find clients who I had good physical chemistry with also would view on the same or higher mental level as myself. It's a turn on and also will hopefully turn off that indignant acerbic monologue that has played in my head in the past when I've whored before for men who I was not impressed with.

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Guestbook of Sparky

Anonymous - 07.Jan.2016
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Dicksize L, Uncut
Position Top only
Kissing No entry
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Oral No entry
Dirty No
Fisting No entry
S&M No entry
Fetish Sportsgear, Uniform, Formal dress, Jeans, Worker
Client age No restrictions
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__________________





Stephane21000, 21
Paris

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Guestbook of Stephane21000

welcoming - 16.Nov.2015
one slogan: Go whole hog.Smear yourself with a cute boy who knows more than three words in a row, close your eyes and go on Happiness Highway.

Anonymous - 27.Mar.2015
So that night I met Stephane, very charming boy, calm.
Also I admit his look made me so horny I admit I did go literally insane, I would have hired him just to look at him and his incredible look every minute.
But no, my greed was too waked! For one hour, the greatest of my life, I returned myself to when I was a blind infant and sucked each part he put before me, mouth, pits, cock, ass until they leaked life into me like the mother's teat.
Gentlemen please use the boy as a map, you will not be disappointed.

batardchescort69 - 12.Mar.2015
My ideal in terms of escort: leather, long hair rings tats punk assets. Delicious cum and urine. In addition you will discover a charming and attentive waiter. What more.

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position Top only
Kissing Yes
Fucking Top only
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting Active
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Leather, Rubber, Boots
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_________________




DoctorBoy, 19
Zurich

Find yourself naked before a teenage doctor in uniform and finally live your fantasies!

You enter the examination room, you undress and put on your patient Regulatory shirt, sitting on the exam table you expect the arrival of the doctor. After a general review (nipples, testicles, penis, ...) and a digital rectal exam, you will lie and firmly strapped to the examination table (wrist fasteners, anchors and other straps). Then you must resign yourself to succumb to the hands of the practitioner to be genital examinations (CBT, catheter, ...) or an anal exploration (dildos, ...). Poppers provided by Doctor Boy

Hospitalization in a private clinic: For patients seeking hospital treatment in the context of a clinic waiting room, exam room, bedroom and operating room, hospitalization (min 2 days) can be organized in a "clinic" in Germany.

This is just a game between a consenting adult person and a teenager, it is in no case medically ethical. I do not have the official status of physician.

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Top only
Kissing No
Fucking Top only
Oral No
Dirty No
Fisting Active
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Leather, Rubber, Uniform, Sneakers & Socks
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



________________



Xav75032, 18
Paris

I am young escort diagnosed autistic who is nice, and doesnt make trouble .... I am very hug, kisses, I am passive asset. I'm 18, I take care of my appearance etc ... I'm not Gay ... I am disappointed, I am effeminate, that is different. I am tender, nice, cool, well behaved & know how to behave with peoples, autistic, I am what I am, which is nice ...

Guestbook of Xav75032

Alziary - 30.Jan.2016
yes very strange.

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking More bottom
Oral Versatile
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M No
Fetish Sportsgear, Rubber, Underwear, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 150 Euros
Rate night 400 Euros



________________




here, 20
Bucharest

im here !

...................................JUST FOR YOU HERE ! ..............................

...........Say Something ! ...........................

Guestbook of here

brazilian-fake - 10.Jan.2016
fakeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

MYTHO

MYTHO

MYTHO

FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAEK FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE FAKE

FAKE
FAKE
FAKE

MYTHO
MYTHO
MYTHO

FAKE
FAKE
FAKE

Dicksize XL, Cut
Position More top
Kissing Yes
Fucking More top
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting Active
S&M Yes
Fetish Skater, Uniform, Formal dress, Jeans, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 100 Euros
Rate night 250 Euros



_________________



FUCK-UP1, 22
Brighton

Bi, on a break from women. On the DL. 22 year old fast food employee living in Brighton. Hot, I'm told, looking for experienced Gays to pay me and WAM! Not into big cocks, normal size. Not looking for one Gay to lock it down with, wanting to play the field. I will only reply to messages that make sense. I mean, to me.

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Consent
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty No entry
Fisting Active / passive
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Underwear, Uniform, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 10 Pounds
Rate night 50 Pounds



_________________




Beyonce, 20
Abidjan

Bae you like my ass comming bak comming

Guestbook of Beyonce

Anonymous - 20.Jan.2016
His poverty makes me sick!

Anonymous - 20.Jan.2016
oh yeah ..
PS:
Greetings to the lung cancer!

Anonymous - 18.Jan.2016
I am a top and I like to be in charge. He did everything I want. There is nothing better than having boys do everything I want.

Anonymous - 08.Jan.2016
HIV and gonorrhea is 8 Dollars inclusive!

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Yes
Fucking Bottom only
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M No
Fetish Techno & Raver
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 8 Dollars
Rate night ask



__________________




KirkPeterson, 18
Jacksonville

I've recently turned 18 and decided to download this because I've always been very broke and very into old men.

I only accept one-on-one situations because I can't handle being somewhere with more than 6 people without thinking how to kill them.

"Beneath the arms lies a sacred cave."

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty No
Fisting Active / passive
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Rubber, Underwear, Skins & Punks, Boots, Lycra, Uniform, Formal dress
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 50 Dollars
Rate night 150 Dollars



_________________




weirdbutcute, 18
Biarritz

Im weird, thats all that needs said. Im a sex whore but really picky but will fuck most but no one older than 65.

Do you want a cock or ass but need to get laid but want to go out but not spend the evening in good company? Here you get it.

We are all equally weird but I just happen to be the medium that accepts weirdness from almost anyone but then Im a whore as you can see.

I'm genderfluid, hate my life. Sex is the only reason I dont kill myself. Whenever I have to think of something to say I just start talking.

Oh and yes I'm 18. I'm not even close to 19 yet, thats way off. Bask in it because I can indeed drive a car.

Guestbook of weirdbutcute

Anonymous - 28.Jan.2016
I booked him for a weekend. He's casebook Bipolar. Sometimes that made him angry for no reason and sometimes it made him depressed for no reason. But he's a total slut I won't complain.

Blackcresent - 26.Jan. 2016
He's not that weird but he sure does pretend to be.

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position Versatile
Kissing No entry
Fucking Versatile
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M No entry
Fetish Underwear, Sneakers & Socks
Client age Users under 65
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



____________________




poseidon, 23
Milan

I am a word without translation, hoping to understand myself as a compass in search of his north. I'm finding me in sex, rediscovering, recreating and redecorating. Like an old painting, hungry for new brushstrokes. I am an equation that does not end. I'm nothing. I'll never be anything. But it is precisely in this nothing that I find everything I need.

Guestbook of poseidon

Anonymous - 05.Feb.2016
Remember snitches get stitches and your mouth can be sewn shut just to be busted the fuck open again

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position More bottom
Kissing No
Fucking More bottom
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting Active
S&M Yes
Fetish Skater, Underwear, Uniform, Techno & Raver, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans, Drag
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 100 Euros
Rate night 400 Euros



_______________



Sam, 21
Kelowna

Maybe I'll like this website.

Likes: everything

Dislikes: nothing

Favorite Music: Skinny Puppy, Cradle of Filth, Psyclon Nine, Grendel, Suicide Commando, Angelspit, Combichrist, Dawn of Ashes, Doubting Thomas, Download, Ministry, KMFDM, Throbbing Gristle, Velvet Acid Christ, Hocico, Front 242, Funker Vogt, SPK, Suicide, Cyberaktif, God Module, Deathstars, Unter Null, the Sisters of Mercy, Misfits, Bad Brains, Fishbone, Nirvana, Dead Kennedys, Rob Zombie, Leathermouth, Underoath, the Used, Nasum, Wormrot, Alesana, etc.

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Underwear, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



________________





LavaMaker, 20
Warsaw

My name is Svanbjörn, friends call me Svan. I am from Húsavík, Iceland. I used to play soccer, I kinda stopped. I love poppers and with them I'm a power bottom. I'm not really new here but I deleted my profile because I had a nervous breakdown, but I think I am much more stable now.

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty Yes
Fisting Active
S&M No
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_______________



Fuckyouhot, 20
San Francisco

Hello, My real name is not going to be Announced here although I'm going to said that I'm one of those People who have a Fascination with Serial Killers, and my favorite one is Richard Ramirez. Me and him seems to shared a Interesting bond, a Bond that Concludes a Interest in Satanism. I was Molested as a kid a lot, and I hate Myself for having a Fuck-up Life filled with Abuse and Torture, but Richard Ramirez Life helped Cheer me up(: I bend in with Ramirez Personality, only difference is he wanted ladies and I want men, I think he was the most Intelligent Serial Killers, and properly the one to Remember. I'LL FUCK ALMOST EVERY MAN WITH $$$ IN THIS USELESS WORLD!!!!!!! Annoying ass Men, Douchebags and Assholes, Church going Men who tell others to believe in the Douchebag known as God, Fucking slow-ass Men, Smartasses, Teachers who don't do exacts Shit at all, Child Abusers, Bullies, Fucking Pop and Country Music lovers, God (If he Exists or not, is freaking Useless)!

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Top only
Kissing Consent
Fucking Top only
Oral Bottom
Dirty Yes
Fisting Active
S&M Yes
Fetish Leather
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 30 Dollars
Rate night 300 Dollars



_______________



formerlyteenpig4men, 18
St. Johann im Pongau

Available now! 8:01 am to 8:30 pm!!! Come in, use my little cunt, go away, leave 30 € !!! Apartment door is open, I'm waiting nude with eye mask, hand cuff. You come in to fuck my holes and go again !!! No thoughts !!!

Guestbook of formerlyteenpig4men

Anonymous - 21.Jan.2016
18 since 10 yrs

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Yes
Fucking Bottom only
Oral No entry
Dirty No
Fisting Passive
S&M No
Fetish Sportsgear, Underwear, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 30 Euros
Rate night 30 Euros



_________________





Ambitious_guy, 24
Forrest Hill

I am an ambitious guy, who has my own company .. Looking for the same successful man.. If u are successful businessman , just drop me a note :)) XOXO

Guestbook of Ambitious_guy

Anonymous - 30.Jan.2016
In addition to his acumen in the world of business, he can make you fly away so high with his amazing tongue.

Dicksize XL, Cut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting No entry
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Formal dress, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



________________



The-Hard-Young-Rapist, 21
Madrid

i am a Sex addicted ,it means that Sexuality and Me are [[[ONE]]]
i am here for you Only..don't forget it

I have been wild ,since i have been a child.....
As teenager i was so HAPPY about everything turns me on ......
Now I am a man ,and completely on my own ,been no one else but [[[Me]]] ....⭐

I don't like LIMITS ,but aware what i´m doing .
I feel MATURE
I don't let myself falling down
I got enough self confident

remember:⭐
AIDS is treatable, it doesnt kill!
Nothing protects you!
It is not a issue, but a problem of yours!
Therefore: Dont be pussy, open ass and take the load!

Ok you loser pigs, time is wasting..say what you want

Guestbook of The-Hard-Young-Rapist

Paypig - 10.Nov.2015
Thank God that he was able to pull the trigger on me again.

hotspanish20x5 - 15.Aug.2015
life is amazing !!!!

Anonymous - 04.Jul.2015
..hot yogurt.. be thirsty ...

Anonymous - 11.Mar.2015
Rape Me! i am only born to please your teen monster cock. i am an inferior old slut only born to pleeeeease you. RAAAAPE me!

Anonymous - 07.Feb.2015
Hello, how are you? My name is Tom. I'm scout of models of STAXUS. We are one of the Largest porn companies in Europe. We are looking for new models for our next shoot on february and I think you fix very good in the profile we are looking for. Have you ever thought about to shoot a porn scene? The conditions and money is pretty good. We are paying per scene plus flights, hotel and food (cause our studio is in Prague). You can visit the city in your free time.

Anonymous - 07.Feb.2015
felt like a whore under him -today uufff, he finished me off.

Anonymous - 06.Feb.2015
He Jerked off into my mouth and I swallow all like a slut, yes I am you slut

Anonymous - 18.Jan.2015
I still want to clean your toes

Anonymous - 08.Jan.2015
We had sex, it made me fall inlove with him all over again,

PR_BRAND_AMBASSADOR - 04.Jan.2015
firsttime i geting raped this much Cruly wat a stamina for hard fuck; he got a very heavy strong body; wat a great kisser my lips bleedng i cant stand properly BCE every part of my body is paining i feel i died under his body

Anonymous - 03.Jan.2015
i really liked ur sperm taste

Dicksize XXL, Cut
Position Top only
Kissing No entry
Fucking Top only
Oral No entry
Dirty WS only
Fisting Active
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Underwear, Lycra, Uniform, Jeans, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_______________



asisaidiamnumberone, 23
Kuala Lumpur

very very very cute top guy here with big tool 60 to blow me for 30 minutes
do not ask me to measure it for you as that irritates me
in short what that means is that i lead, youre led
yeah i know you might say what a d... but let's be honest I am only here to notify winners

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Top only
Kissing Consent
Fucking Top only
Oral Top
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M No
Fetish Underwear, Boots, Formal dress, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 100 Dollars
Rate night 450 Dollars



________________





SweetBum, 18
London

He's 18 years old, he was a little bunny, but now he has sex unstoppable. He is 6 feet tall, naturally blond twinky published model. With long ballet legs and a thick Croatian cock he's a favourite among dominant tops and sperm collectors alike. Well-spoken and educated he will be the perfect listener with a rational, down to earth input whether you are cooing sweet nothings or manipulating him with subtle mind games. He is willing to be whoever he needs to be to whoever knows they need it. The dick of death for him.

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing No
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting No
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Skater, Rubber, Underwear, Skins & Punks, Boots, Lycra, Uniform, Formal dress, Techno & Raver, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans, Drag, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 100 Pounds
Rate night 350 Pounds



_______________



helpmyhornyness, 21
Johannesburg

im and young boy, looking of a man that can help my horny-ness.

i leet you to find a way to me and after we see.

Im nice boy but i dont trust all people so make me to trust you !

i look young and old and love white party chms please help me.

Guestbook of helpmyhornyness

simasialovee - 31.Jan.2016
Dear God in heaven, thank you for creating this boy in all your wisdom! Thank you for making him horny and poor enough to put out for an ugly old man! Thank you for giving me sufficient income to be able to afford him! Amen.

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position Versatile
Kissing No entry
Fucking Versatile
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting Active
S&M No entry
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 200 Euros
Rate night 500 Euros



________________





Gabriel_xl_19Yo, 19
Wuppertal

I'm 19 years old and I'm still a Virgin haha. I have yet to hook up with anyone. To be honest I had another account before I had my paranoid. Now I'm grounded, even-kieled, have a girlfriend, and a dog. I'm a boy next door, maybe your door? My fantasy is for my first Time to do it for money with a older man but not over 30. No matter, if you want to go for a walk or if you want to fuck my thin asshole or. I don't really know what I'm into so a little help would be nice.

Guestbook of Gabriel_xl_19Yo

Gabriel_xl_19Yo - - 22.Jan.2016
apparently

moviestar1962 - 22.Jan.2016
not more than 31!
30 life is over?

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting No entry
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Sportsgear, Uniform, Jeans
Client age Users under 31
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_______________




HugeBone, 24
Boston

I'm a guy who just came to America and look for a man to hire me as prostitute for forever or very long time only. I was a football player on the Berlin regional league.

For a prostitute, he must take the sex. I'm sure that it won't be a problem for me. Just let it come as often as you want and fuck hard as possible. If I could be hired by my Mr. Right 24/7, I have sex morning noon and night no limits. I've learned martial art since 6.

This country is new to me, i know nothing in this society. Living by myself without any supports is hard. Finding a job is not very possible because of my poor English. Being permanent slut of a sugar daddy is my final goal.

Honestly, I am a little bit picky about choosing my sugar daddy since I wanna find the right one and to be fucked by him permanently. I like hard fucks, it looks manly. When u message me, please tell me what kind of hard sex you will give and what kind of life I will get into. I would like to know each other's will before meeting.

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position Bottom only
Kissing No entry
Fucking No entry
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M No entry
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Rubber, Underwear, Boots, Uniform, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



________________




BOYWITHUGECOCK, 19
Dubai

This January 31 is my birthday. I am here for 6 weeks, than I will move to North England. I want to know what rape fells like. It will be better if you can show me yours. Hoop to find rich and unsatisfy men in Dubai who can rape me everywhere! And need money!! Money is everything, for money you can buy what you want, I really love wealth!! Smooch!

Dicksize XXL, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking More bottom
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting No
S&M No
Fetish Sportsgear, Underwear, Uniform, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_______________






Botom17cm, 21
Budapest

Hello intimate size 17cm.can be screwed. if you look for a girlish boy then on bad place you walk, I am a boyish boy I would ask the bull ones how they should be found away and let them be left over the hokinál. I am that kid for who to bloom or you should swagger. Because i don't care what and how much there are for me what counts that you one hour together existence with me. A passív szerepet20 a thousand ft-is worth I undertake it when the weekend things to cook vein is lime here NEM.

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty Yes
Fisting No
S&M No entry
Fetish Boots, Formal dress, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 50 Euros
Rate night 500 Euros



_______________






blondsugar, 18
Berlin

I am a slim small pretty boy with a shockingly wide open hole experienced in extreme anal and huge toys... I have the deepest and widest asshole you will find. Things I love having in my ass include liquid chocolate, wine, ice cream, cream, ice-cubes, and more! This doesn't mean that I don't understand that classical sex is fun for most people. Ask me what I can handle and what you can feel inside.

Guestbook of blondsugar

L-U-X-E - 28.Jan.2016
he's real allright, but with a boy like this the word real is relative. what i did with him (wild churning fisting far past my elbow) should have killed a horse much less a skinny little twink like him. the houdini of sex, this boy. lord!

Anonymous - 21.Jan.2016
Even when he was 12, I had my leg in his hole

blondsugar - 21.Jan.2016
I do not have fantasies, it's just that I'm harassed by a pimp who wants me to work for him, so I change profile, what would you do in my place? But we can meet to discuss :)

batardchescort69 - 21.Jan.2016
No, you're just a joker who has changed her profile three or four times last week. Apparently it's not just customers who fantasize ....

Dicksize S, Uncut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Consent
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Versatile
Dirty No entry
Fisting Passive
S&M No entry
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Skater, Rubber, Underwear, Uniform, Sneakers & Socks
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_____________






3decigeci, 20
Budapest

love sperm? love to spread it over your whole body? already looked at bukkake videos and want to luxuriate in a ton of spunk? If so, then you can get:

SEX-FREE SPERM!

I love to collect my cum. Every day, 2-3 times, I shoot into a bottle and freeze it. Now I've decided to sell my cum collection to someone who would appreciate it. Such an amount has not yet been collected before. :) Who would like to receive it?

PRICE PRIVATE!

My sperm has the most thick, sweetish taste (I do sports regularly, eat a lot of fruit, do not drink alcohol, do not smoke !! !!) I am perfectly healthy (so far I've only been with a total of two boys, both HIV-, and my HPV test is negative as of 2015 December).

OTHERS fail to respond to your requests, but I do NOT!

if this doesn't work out for you, thank you for reading and I wish you every success in the future.

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position No entry
Kissing No entry
Fucking No entry
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M No entry
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



______________






Walkaway20, 23
Paris

I only get fucked bare. I don't allow condoms so if you want them, find someone else to fuck. When I get fucked, you must always cum inside of me until all of your cum is out (so maybe you'll get more than 1 fuck for the same price if you are not emptied of cum.) Kissing is preferred also. I love to have your tongue in my mouth while you shoot in my hole. Available to fuck instantaneously 24 hours every day. Send me a message and if you're located in the relative center of Paris and if I'm not being fucked at that time you can have your cock inside me within minutes. Open to a very brief conversation.

Dicksize No entry, Uncut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Yes
Fucking Bottom only
Oral No entry
Dirty WS only
Fisting No
S&M Soft SM only
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 100 Euros
Rate night 400 Euros



_______________





ViserysIII, 18
Philadelphia

French metalhead who hate a lot of things. Need money and thought Id try this craphole. I'm a Targaryen and I will conquier Westeros for my Khaleesi. I ship out to the army Tuesday (February 2nd, 2016) so I dont have much time left.

Guestbook of ViserysIII

Anonymous - 30.Jan.2015
Generations of compound inbreeding have preserved in the Targaryen bloodline the classic Valyrian features of silver-white (platinum blonde) hair, and very fair, pale skin. Allegedly, this also preserved in their bloodline the ability to successfully bond with and ride dragons. They also seem to be somewhat more tolerant of extreme heat and high temperatures than other people, though they are by no means invulnerable to fire – or at least, not all of them.

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position More bottom
Kissing Yes
Fucking More bottom
Oral Versatile
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Skater, Rubber, Underwear, Boots, Lycra, Uniform, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans, Drag, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 150 Dollars
Rate night ask




*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. I haven't seen 'Agonia'. Hm, I don't know how/why I missed it for the post. Thank you! And for your excellent thoughts on his wok in general. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. I agree with you about the unfilmability of the Bowles novel, or certainly that Bertolucci didn't get it right at all. Cool anecdote about him! ** Bill, Hi. Bowie knives, ha. Oh, good about the new Amber Sparks. I haven't gotten it, but I'll lay my hands on it asap. I hope your weekend went beautifully. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! Well, you never know. The strangest and most unexpected things can happen with success. I mean, I used to be great pals with David Sedaris when we were both younger, and I and other writer friends really championed his writing, thinking that it and he himself were so truly odd that it would be hard for him to get published and known, and then, bang, he became one of the most successful and famous writers out there. So, you just never know. That's so nice about Sylvester. I'll ask my Danish friends if they know him the next time I talk to them. Staying home and writing and watching movies can be the best weekend, if you ask me. I hope it/they were. My weekend was pretty good. Got some work done and progress on some projects. But, wow, I sure am sick of rain. It's been raining almost nonstop here for almost two weeks. Happy Monday! ** Misanthrope, Hi. I know people who really 'The Dreamers'. I've only seen stretches of it, like I said, and I wasn't so keen, but, now that I live in Paris, I should watch it and see if knowing the context much better makes a difference. Well, if it's any consolation, the French use a lot of American words in their day to day conversations, and their pronunciations are pretty funny, but, being French, lyrical too. ** Etc etc etc, Hi there, Casey. I'm good, yeah. Still too swamped with other stuff to dive back into my fiction, but it's to the point where I'm going to go a bit crazy if I don't, so I probably will soon. Yeah, still heavily in work on the TV show pilot. And having to scout screening possibilities for 'LCTG' because our distributor people suck. And new/next film stuff. And Gisele is pushing me to get to work on our next theater piece, so, yeah. If you disliked 'To the Wonder' that much, I'm not sure you'll be into 'Knight of Cups'. It's a better film, for sure, but it's a further evolution of what he was doing in 'TtW'. People who want Malick to be the filmmaker he was before 'Tree of Life' don't seem to be liking or getting 'KoC'. So, hard to tell. It knocked me out, like I said. Well, it sounds like your situation is not unlike mine, i.e. trying to clear things away to be able to work on the true project. I hope that happens swiftly in your case. ** Sypha, Hi, James. ** S., Aww, you're so sweet, my pal. Thank you for that! HVD to you a teeny bit late. ** Steevee, Hi. Ooh, cold. I like super cold weather, but you're not me, so I send you toasty vibes and hugs on that front. I feel like that Rihanna album just kind plopped down and didn't make much of an impact at all. Maybe only over here? I'm not very interested in it, unsurprisingly. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. Yes, curious to hear your report on the Korine show. Mike Kelley works on paper, nice. I think Christopher Wool is insanely overrated, but ... hey. Did you get to Chris Goode's launch? I have to buy his book. How is he? I miss him. Cool that you like Lucrecica Dalt. Very happy to have provided a pointer. I like awards shows too. The simple structure of build and release and lull and repeat is strangely satisfying. ** _Black_Acrylic. Hi, Ben. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. 'The Spider Stratagem' is amazing. It seems to get overlooked a lot because it was released the same year as the mighty 'Conformist'. Do I not know Eduardo DiGregorio's films? I don't think I do? I will look into him and his work right away. Thank you. 'Knight of Cups' is definitely a continuation/evolution of the filming and editing style Malick started using in 'Tree of Life'. I think 'ToL' is a great and profound film, but I think the frenetic editing has really reached fruition in the new film. The editing is where the film is almost entirely happening now, where its meaning most resides, and it's incredible. The editing is astonishing -- this relentless searching, wandering, trying, occasionally resting on things and moments that seem to hold meaning or importance then rushing onwards in impatience, shifting locations and settings and situations in a way that progresses everything in the film but is not driven by narrative. And while he still employs his classic combo of private, self-examining voice overs and emotionally compromised dialogue, they've become almost detritus in the film's visual rush. The characters' self-exploration isn't given the same weight as in his old films. The 'profound' statements are skimmed over by the film's visual style, and only very once in a rare while does Malick allow a moment where the visual and textual align and briefly leak something emotional and cathartic. It's a deeply experimental film, which I think is why so many critics who continue to want and expect Malick to do what he used to do aren't getting the film. I think they don't get how the balance within his work has shifted away from being text/emotion-heavy. I think, in retrospect, 'To the Wonder' is a very transitional film wherein Malick hadn't quite gotten the new editing style in its proper place. In 'KoC', it's a fully evolved thing. The film has excited and inspired me more than any film I've seen in a long time. So, yeah, it's really something, I think. ** Okay. It's that day of the month when the escorts get to take over this place, and there's nothing anyone can do about that, and I hope you all get through the invasion in one piece. See you tomorrow.

Cutaway Illustrations Day

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Hudson’s Department Store, Detroit
J.L. Hudson Company was founded in 1881 and as Detroit prospered so did the city’s flagship department store. The Hudson’s building, at one time, was the tallest department store in the world and the second largest by square footage. Due to declining sales, mainly due to decreased population in the city, the flagship Hudson’s store closed its doors in 1983. The building was imploded in 1998.





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Watch






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Foot





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The Electric Sea Serpent
The illustrations herewith show Mr. Walter Stenning’s idea of the sea serpent which sundry and divers travelers have reported having seen at different times since 1555. It was built in Paris and during the past summer has been one of the attractions of the Jardin d’Acclimation. Our French contemporary, La Nature, says concerning the sea serpent: “The visitors to the Jardin d’Acclimation arrest themselves stupefied when they perceive circulating softly in the alleys, through the foliage, this rolling monster.” And we do not blame them. The serpent is about 100 ft. long and 6 ½ ft. in diameter; it consists of an electric locomotive drawing a train of cars carrying the necessary storage batteries to furnish current. Each car is covered with a ring of the animal’s body.






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Lifeboat





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Human skin





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Autumn leaf





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Casette recorder





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Mechanical calculator





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Root canal





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The Queen Mary





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Grenade





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The Murder Castle
H. H. Holmes was a charismatic young lady killer who constructed a hotel, timed perfectly for the Chicago Worlds Fair, which operated as a massive murder machine. He used it to systematically trap and kill young women, then clean and articulate their skeletons to be sold to universities. The hotel was riddled with trap doors and hidden rooms, where guests would be trapped and tortured before ultimately being thrown down the chute to the basement.





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Camper Built Inside a Car, 1952
Lucius Sheets of Huntington, Indiana, converted his Nash into a camper that allowed him to sleep, cook, and eat on the road, saving motel expenses. The right rear door, where the woman stands, was the meal center where basics could be stored. A piece of plywood attached to hooks near the food center and served as the table. Mr. and Mrs. Sheets preferred to stand while eating.





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Two women pregnant with cats





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Penis





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Cadillac One





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The White House





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Mattress





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A kiss





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Musee d'Orsay





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SpongeBob SquarePants





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2001 Space Station





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Thorax





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Fake waterfall





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Lizzie Borden Murder House
Shortly before noon on August 4, 1892, the body of Andrew Borden, a prosperous businessman, was found in the parlor of his Fall River, Massachusetts, home. As neighbors, police and doctors arrived at the scene, the body of Abby Borden, his wife, was discovered in an upstairs bedroom. A week later, Andrew’s younger daughter, Lizzie, was arrested for the double murder. In an era when women were considered the “weaker” sex and female murderers were nearly unheard of, the trial—and subsequent acquittal—of Lizzie Borden made her a media sensation. Officially, the case remains unsolved, but Lizzie Borden may very well have taken an ax and ended her parents’ lives on that sweltering summer day.





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Greenland's Ice Sheet





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Bank and Monument Tube Stations





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Piccadilly Circus Tube Station





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Refrigerator train car





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Shoe





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Medieval castle





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Ampex DCT Digital Video Recorder





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The tomb of Seti I
Painstakingly chipped into high limestone cliffs above the Valley of the Kings, also home to the tomb of King Tut, Seti I's tomb, the most ornate and largest in the valley. is among the hardest to reach—and it's growing.





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The Matterhorn ride





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The Mary Rose, Henry VIII’s flagship





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Typical Roman house





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Teen





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Piano Action Mechanism





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ROC Monitoring Post
Between 1955 and 1991, more than 1,500 of these underground facilities were located right across the UK, roughly 10 miles apart mainly in remote rural locations. They were of a standard design and constructed of 12 inch thick, steel-reinforced concrete 20 feet beneath the ground. In the event of a nuclear attack, these posts would have been manned by three members of the Royal Observer Corps (ROC). These bunkers had no mains water, electricity, gas, or heating. The only communication with the outside world was by way of a simple Tele-Talk system to headquarters and 3 to 4 other nearby ROC posts in the ‘cluster group’. The occupants may not have been able to leave the safety of the bunker for many weeks after fallout due to the harmful effects of radiation. Most ROC bunkers were reasonably waterproof but they would have been intensely cold and damp.





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Motorcycle engine





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Oasis of the Seas Cruise Ship
It is the largest digital illustration of a cruise ship produced to date. It took over 1000 hours of work.The line drawing was done in Adobe illustrator with 84 layers, The rendering was done in Adobe photoshop on 368 layers. The final files size is 5.57 gigabites, it is 200 inches in length at a resolution of 300dpi. No photography was used in the illustration of the ship.




Amphitheater


Boardwalk


Central Park


Chops Grill


Dining rooms


Floating bar


Children pool


Spa


Pool decks



Solarium


Flowider and sports deck


Royal promenade


Jade Sushi Restaurant


Centrum


Second dining room


Theater


Windjammer Cafe


Schooner Bar



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Royal Opera House, Covent Gardens





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Automatic rifle





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Boy's small intestine





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Bomb shelter





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Wyld’s Monster Globe
Wyld's Monster Globe was an attraction situated in London's Leicester Square between 1851 and 1862, constructed by James Wyld (1812–1887), a distinguished mapmaker and former Member of Parliament for Bodmin. At the centre of a purpose-built hall was a giant globe, 60 feet 4 inches (18.39 m) in diameter. The globe was hollow and contained a staircase and elevated platforms which members of the public could climb in order to view the surface of the earth on its interior surface, which was modelled in plaster of Paris, complete with mountain ranges and rivers all to scale. Punch described the attraction as "a geographical globule which the mind can take in at one swallow." In the surrounding galleries were displays of Wyld's maps, globes and surveying equipment.





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The H.L. Hunley
The H. L. Hunley was a submarine of the Confederate States of America that played a small part in the American Civil War. The Hunley, nearly 40 feet (12 m) long, was built at Mobile, Alabama, and launched in July 1863. She was then shipped by rail on August 12, 1863, to Charleston, South Carolina. The Hunley (then called Fish Boat) sank on August 29, 1863, during a test run, killing five members of her crew. She sank again on October 15, 1863, killing all eight of her second crew, including Horace Hunley himself, who was aboard at the time, even though he was not a member of the Confederate military. Both times the Hunley was raised and returned to service. On February 17, 1864, The Hunley attacked and sank the 1240-short ton (1124 metric tons) screw sloop USS Housatonic, which had been on Union blockade-duty in Charleston's outer harbor. Soon afterwards, the Hunley sank, killing all eight of her third crew. This time, the ship was lost.





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Electric stingray







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Two Story Travel Trailer Car, 1952
This trailer, from Holan Engineering from Elmwood, IN, has two stories and an attic, a plastic-tiled kitchen and bathroom, and a living room with a picture window.





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Urogenital Diaphargm





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Radio City Music Hall




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Braces





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Villa Capra, Venice





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Female millipede genitals





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The Batcave






*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Touché! Ha ha. I looked yesterday for Eduardo de Gregorio's films or excerpts in hopes of making a post, and there is literally not a trace of them that's not locked behind a pay wall, so I'll wait a while and see if anything gets freed up at some point. I don't think I know David Brooks' film, but I will look into it immediately. Thank you a lot! ** Bill, Hi. Is that true? Because of the way I slowly assemble those posts, I don't notice the locations so much. Funny you should ask about Stephane21000 because I've actually seen him around on the street and in the metro a number of times. I think he must live near the Recollets. When I came across his ad, I was, like, Holy shit, it's that guy! So the answer to your question is: not 'run into' him exactly but encounter, yes. I still haven't seen 'It Follows'. Damn. It must be on French Netflix by now. ** Sypha, Hi. Yes, and he says he likes everything. Do I hear wedding bells? ** Dóra Grőber, Hi. Well, I'm an eternal optimist. It's weird, but I am. Even though, in this case, my own income from my books has never been enough to live on in and of itself. But then my work is not exactly blockbuster material, and I knew that from the beginning. It's stopped raining here today! I should say 'so far'. But it's gotten quite cold. But I love the cold. I know 'Bodies without Souls'. I made a huge impression on me. Especially since I had seen some of the porns that guy had made before seeing the documentary, which reinvented them into something even more disturbing. I've never seen 'Angels But Not Angels'. Is it as good? Is it a similar kind of film? I hope you have a very fine and productive day, my friend. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Oh, yes, yes, I would love to have that guest-post! I'm also a fan of her work, as I think you know. That would be wonderful, if you don't mind. Thank you a lot! ** Steevee, Hi. Ha ha, it seems technically possible that screwing an escort could bring inner peace. If you're skeptical of Malick's turn beginning with 'ToF' you may well not like 'KoC' since it's very much a further development of what he's been doing since. I did read that Koehler piece, yeah. I thought it was a particularly vehement version of the general argument against Malick's recent work among a contingent of critics. I think Koehler is freighted with expectations regarding what he thought Malick was doing in his earlier work and simply isn't paying attention to the new work. I thought his take was stubborn and conservative and wrongheaded. His loss. ** Thomas Moronic, Oh, man, cool. Firing up is a post's Nobel Prize equivalent. Yes, please give Chris Goode my best and tell him I would be very happy if he feels like popping in here or emailing or something, but no pressure. I'm about to restart work on the TV script today after getting Gisele's feedback. Zac's out of town, so I'll start drafting up a sketch/revision and send it to him, and then we'll powwow when he gets back. We're about 2/3 of the way through the second of three episodes. No actual work on the novel, but I have been thinking about it and strategizing and daydreaming about what I will write during a great potion of every recent day. What are you working on? ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Interesting, yeah, I think you might be right about Malick's editing having started to shift during 'The New World'. Huh. That's fascinating. I hadn't thought of that. I'm going to re-watch 'The New World' asap with that in mind. I think what he's doing now with the voiceovers is pretty interesting, and I suspect that he'll probably evolve them some more before he removes them, if he does. Based on 'KoC', I feel like there are still possibilities to enmesh and reposition them and have their effect change yet again. We'll see. The actors function in the new film similarly to how they have in his films starting with 'ToL'. They are basically presented as continually earnest, sincere, introverted, confused, hiding their confusion. I think the actors' performances are essentially textures and focal points, compasses, neutral but modulating and neither likable nor unlikable. Quite interesting. Yes, I'm super excited about 'Weightless'. Its title is extremely promising in and of itself. And of course for his forever-gestating mostly cgi history of the world film. ** Misanthrope, Hi. Classy, ha ha. The French would laugh were they a generality. I, not being French, know what you mean. Your friend is nuts. French and Italian cuisines have almost nothing in common. What a strange opinion. Schlinder's List? Boy, I really didn't like that film. But people do. Like you! God love you! Snow! You bastard! Grr! Not your fault, I know, but 'grr' anyway! ** Armando, Hey. Dude, don't call my opinion politeness before I even give it. That's rude. Anyway, I just read it quickly because I can't concentrate on anything well when I'm doing the p.s., but I liked it. It's very clean and sharp and economical, and I like the tone. That's a quick, first opinion. And it's not polite! Ha ha. ** Right. Gosh, I got on this little jag of fascination with 'the cutaway illustration' and with the particular, small, but not inconsiderable pleasure it gives. And I made a post. That's how it works around here sometimes. See you tomorrow.

Spotlight on ... Steven Millhauser Edwin Mullhouse: The Life and Death of an American Writer 1943-1954 by Jeffrey Cartwright (1972)

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'Whether the point of this novel is to show us the adult that lies latent in the child or to reveal to us the child that the adult never manages to quite fully outgrow is a question that is difficult if not fruitless to answer. What is certain, however, is that the novel Edwin Mullhouse is brilliantly conceived. It is also shockingly well written, replete with uncannily accurate descriptions of childhood perceptions that can at times be overwhelmingly sympathetic. It is at turns funny, sad, insightful, and even profound; but above all else, it is deeply creepy: It reveals -- almost imperceptibly at first, but then slowly, incrementally, the inertia builds, like a snowball rolling down the hill of your neighborhood cemetery -- the dark, lurking, unconscious desires that shadow what we might otherwise simply take to be our bright, waking, thoughtful acts.

'Originally published in 1972 by a then twenty-nine year old Steven Millhauser, Edwin Mullhouse is not the sort of novel that you would expect to be produced at that time by someone of that age. It is a novel out of synch with its time, but also ahead of it as well. It prefigures, albeit in a unique -- and most likely inimitable -- fashion, much of contemorary criticism's obsession with positing the inseparability of act and artifact, and capturing creativity in mid stride. And by exposing a connection between adult obsessions and nostalgic recollections of childhood behaviors it provided and continues to provide a bounty of insight into contemporary adult psychology.

'A single conceit enables this amazing feat: We are to believe that this book is the work of twelve year old Jeffrey Cartwright. During the course of this novel the perceptions, conceptions, recollections and general over-all mind-set of a young boy left fatherless by WW II are conveyed with all the skill and adeptness that only an experienced and highly practiced adult writer could possibly accomplish, yet we are to believe that it is the work of a sixth grader. And, implausible as it may sound, we do. While the language used in the writing of this book is clearly that of an adult, it somehow manages to seem-- at the actual moments of its reading-- that it is that of a child. How exactly Millhauser manages to pull this off it is extremely difficult if not impossible to know. Suffice it to say that Edwin Mullhouse constitutes a classic example of taking something which is in fact an arduous nerve-wracking task and making it seem as though it were mere child’s play.

'The single most pronounced aspect of the prose that constitutes this work is the pyrotechnic language of its descriptive passages. In capturing the visual perceptions of children-- or at least boys-- it is simply unsurpassed.

'It is at times hard to resist-- during and after the reading of this work-- the thought that Edwin Mullhouse is the secret font of a stream that has been irrigating and nourishing some distant and obscure fenced off field of popular culture about which we think we might have heard tell a tale or two but are never quite sure as to the veracity or accuracy of the reports. In the literature, film and-- perhaps especially-- the comics of the last few decades, we can’t help but notice faint hints of flavor, subtle aromas, and distant echoes which seem, now, after becoming familiar with it, to have somehow emanated from this work.

'The inescapable conclusion one reaches after completing Edwin Mullhouse is that it has earned the right to be considered as a fixture in the firmament of 20th Century American literature. It may not shine as brightly as some others, but it is there nonetheless, its light traveling to us on a unique wavelength, neither replicated nor even approximated by any other.'-- The Copacetic Comics Company



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Further

Steven Millhauser @ The New Yorker
SM @ Harpers Magazine
Steven Millhauser @ Facebook
Steven Millhauser @ goodreads
'Is Steven Millhauser America’s Best Short Story Writer?'
'Eisenheim the Illusionist', by SM
SM interviewed @ Transatlantica
'The Fantastic Realist'
'A Daydreamer in the Night: An Introduction to Steven Millhauser'
'Understanding Steven Millhauser'
'Steven Millhauser's 6 favorite story collections'
'The Fascination of the Miniature'
'Steven Millhauser the Illusionist'
'MATCHING STYLE AND THEME IN STEVEN MILLHAUSER’S “MIRACLE POLISH”'
'What Can We Steal From Steven Millhauser'
'Steven Millhauser's stories of everyday wonder'
'The Edge of Comprehension: On Steven Millhauser'
'Recycling in Steven Millhauser's Fiction'
'A Master of the In-Between World'
Buy 'Edwin Mulhouse'



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Extras


Steven Millhauser: 2012 National Book Festival


"Home Run" by Steven Millhauser - An Electric Literature Single Sentence Animation


"The Dome" by Steven Millhauser, read by Alec Baldwin


Mary Caponegro and Steven Millhauser Read From Their Work


The Story Prize 2011 at The New School



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Interview
from BOMB




Jim Shepard: Perhaps as much as any American writer I can think of, you’ve been drawn to the novella. Are there aesthetic advantages and disadvantages peculiar to the form? Does it even have a form?

Steven Millhauser: Is it possible not to be drawn to the novella? Everything about it is immensely seductive. It demands the rigor of treatment associated with the short story, while at the same time it offers a liberating sense of expansiveness, of widening spaces. And it strikes me as having real advantages over its jealous rivals, the short story and the novel. The challenge and glory of the short story lie exactly there, in its shortness. But shortness encourages certain effects and not others. It encourages, for instance, the close-up view, the revelatory detail, the single significant moment. In the little world of the story, many kinds of desirable effect are inherently impossible—say, the gradual elaboration of a psychology, the demonstration of change over time. Think of the slowly unfolding drama of self-delusion and self-discovery in Death in Venice—a short story would have to proceed very differently. As for novels: in their dark hearts, don’t they long to be exhaustive? Novels are hungry, monstrous. Their apparent delicacy is deceptive—they want to devour the world.

The novella wants nothing to do with the immense, the encyclopedic, the all-conquering all-devouring prose epic, which strikes it as an army moving relentlessly across the land. Its desires are more intimate, more selective. And when it looks at the short story, to which it’s secretly akin, it says, with a certain cruelty, No, not for me this admirably exquisite, elegant, refined—perhaps overrefined?—delicately nuanced, perfect little world, whose perfection depends so much on artful exclusions. It says, Let me breathe! The attraction of the novella is that it lets the short story breathe. It invites the possibility of certain elaborations and complexities forbidden by a very short form, while at the same time it holds out the promise of formal perfection. It’s enough to make a writer dizzy with exhilaration.

JS: And how do such characteristics impact the novella’s form? Is it worth trying to talk about the peculiar nature of that form, or does that simply head us into the land of “There are as many forms as there are…,” etc.?

SM: The novella isn’t really a form at all. It’s a length, and a very rough length at that (sixty to a hundred pages? Seventy-five to a hundred and twenty-five pages?). In this it’s no different from the short story or the novel, which are frequently called “forms” but are in fact nothing but rough lengths. A true literary form exists only in the fixed poetic forms: the sonnet, the villanelle, the sestina, and so on. But having said that, I don’t mean to suggest that nothing more can be said about the novella. Length invites certain kinds of treatment rather than others. Just as a very short length is likely to concentrate on a very short span of time (say, a crucial afternoon), in a tightly restricted space, with a very small number of characters, and an extensive length is likely to cover a great stretch of time, in a wide variety of settings, with many characters, so the novella length seems to me peculiarly well suited to following the curve of an action over a carefully restricted period of time, but one wider than that suited to the short story, in a small number of sharply defined spaces, with two, three or perhaps four characters. To be more precise than that is to risk insisting on proper behavior. But the novella is much too alive to be asked to behave properly. Compared to the short story, it’s a length that hasn’t even begun to be explored.

JS: Part of the revelation of Edwin Mullhouse for many readers was its ability to render the intensity of attention involved in childhood perception: how certain objects, especially for children, become luminous, if not numinous. Does what you’re doing—when it’s going well—feel like aesthetic problem solving, or more exalted than that?

SM: Hmmm: aesthetic problem solving. That sounds like the sort of thing a sly critic might wish to say about a book he particularly dislikes. Of course, there’s no getting around it—one thing you relentlessly do when you write is solve aesthetic problems. But to leave it at that! No, when things are going well, the feeling I have is much more extravagant. It’s the feeling that I’m at the absolute center of things, instead of off to one side—the feeling that the entire universe is streaming in on me. It’s a feeling of strength, of terrifying health, of much-more-aliveness. It’s the kind of feeling that probably should never be talked about, as if one were confessing to a shameful deed.

JS: And is that a feeling that seems important in terms of understanding childhood?

SM: Yes, so long as it’s clear that, for me, childhood is above all a metaphor for a way of perceiving the world.

JS: In that we’re all, if we keep our eyes open, in the position of confronting barely apprehensible wonders?

SM: Exactly.

JS: Don Juan in “An Adventure of Don Juan,” the second novella in The King in the Tree, longs for “a madness of desire, a journey into feeling so intense that he would ride through himself like a conqueror of unknown inner countries.” Is that what fiction should enable?

SM: I’m fanatically reluctant to say that fiction ought to do one thing rather than another. I do know what I want from fiction. I want it to exhilarate me, to unbind my eyes, to murder and resurrect me, to harm me in some fruitful way. But that said, yes, the journey into intense feeling and the conquest of unknown emotional territory is something fiction can make possible.

JS: Your Don Juan also says of his host that “the irrepressible squire had a way of making you feel like a 12-year-old boy following an adventurous 14-year-old brother.” Is that also an ambition of your fiction?

SM: Fiction is an adventure or it’s nothing—nothing at all. What’s an adventure? An invitation to wonder and danger. If what I write doesn’t lead a reader into the woods, away from the main path, then it’s a failure. Somebody else wrote it. I disown it.

JS: Does that mean that your fiction is always in some ways a fiction of initiation?

SM: I would never myself put it in those words. That is, I would never say to myself: Now I am writing a story about initiation, or Now I have written a story about initiation. But if you define “initiation” to mean more or less what I mean by adventure and the wayward path, then it must be true that in some ways my fiction is a fiction of initiation.

JS: The narrator of “Revenge,” the first novella, in her opening paragraph compares houses where doors open right into living rooms to “being introduced to some man at a party who right away throws his arm around your shoulders,” and says she prefers instead “a little distance, thank you, a little formality.” Do you find yourself making aesthetic choices with the same sort of preferences in mind?

SM: Yes, I do. But words like “distance” and “formality” are easily misunderstood. To say I prefer distance isn’t to say I prefer coldness, haughtiness, lack of feeling, deadness. In my view, it’s precisely that “little distance” that permits genuine feeling to be expressed. My dislike of warm, cozy, chummy writing is that it always strikes me as fraudulent—a failure of feeling. Passion, beauty, intensity—everything I care about in art—is made possible through the discipline of distance. Or to say it another way: Powerful feeling in art takes place only through the particular kind of distance known as form.

JS: Many of your works play off literary antecedents in affectionate and complicated ways. Does that mean you’ll reread The Romance of the Rose or “The Cask of Amontillado” half thinking it might engender a story of your own? Or do you continually tell yourself you’re just reading?

SM: It may be that I’m deluding myself, but I never have the sense of looking for inspiration in my lustful, wildly irresponsible reading. What I’m looking for, I think, is pleasure so extreme that it ought to be forbidden by law. As for the engendering of stories: that, for me, is a mystery I don’t pretend to understand. I not only don’t know what gives me the idea for a story, I don’t even know whether it’s proper to say that what comes to me is something that might be described as an “idea.” It’s more like a feeling, vague at first, that becomes sharper over time and expresses itself after a while in images and then in oppositions that might develop into protodramas. A murky business, at best. But once a story starts taking shape in my mind, if that’s where it takes place—I think it takes place all over my body—then it’s fed by everything in my experience that can feed it. And part of my experience is a mile-high mass of books, which I sometimes draw on deliberately to create certain effects. I’m reluctant to talk directly about my work, for fear of harming it with deadly explanations that I’m bound to regret, but let me try just a little. When I wrote Edwin Mullhouse, I made use of a number of models, such as Leon Edel’s five-volume biography of Henry James, Nabokov’s Pale Fire and Mann’s Doctor Faustus. But to say that any of those books somehow engendered my own would be, I think, false. My book came from something deeper, more personal, more intimate, more ungraspable, more obscure than other people’s books, though at the same time it was pleased to make use of those books in order to become itself, in order to give birth to itself. Books as midwives—maybe that’s what I mean.

JS: Books as midwives makes sense. But when asking about how much your reading engendered in you, I didn’t so much mean ideas as feelings: so much of your fiction seems to come from deeply personal responses to already-created worlds, to previous stories: Tristan and Isolde’s, or Don Juan’s, to cite the most recent examples. Is that another way of maintaining what you called that discipline of distance?

SM: It’s true that I sometimes make deliberate use of existing stories, though it’s also true that I very often don’t. Insofar as I do, it is, yes, one way of maintaining a necessary distance, for the paradoxical sake of closeness. But I think something else is also at work. When I make use of an existing story, I take pleasure in participating in something beyond myself that is much greater than myself, and equal pleasure in striking a variation. I take pleasure, you might say, in acknowledging the past and then sharply departing from it. And there is something to be said for releasing oneself from the obligations of relentless novelty; a certain kind of insistent originality is nothing but the attempt of mediocrity to appear interesting to itself.

JS: Given your delight in wonders and your interest in the forbidden, does it surprise you that you haven’t taken an even greater interest in monsters? The Lernean Hydra shows up in Don Juan, for example, but it’s a special effect in a theme park.

SM: Legitimate, bona fide monsters do in fact make occasional appearances in my work, but what interests me is something quite different. What interests me—not exclusively, but in relation to the monstrous—is the place where the familiar begins to turn strange. When things cease to be themselves, when they begin to turn into something else, which has no name—that is a region I’m always drawn to. This, I think, accounts for my interest in night scenes, in childhood, in bands of prowling adolescent girls, in underground and attic places, in obsession, in heightened states of awareness. In this sense, it might easily be argued that the wondrous and the monstrous are very much the same. My plan for Mr. Juan was to estrange him from his familiar world of loveless conquest and lead him toward the terrifying world of genuine feeling.

JS: So is the stress on “terrifying” intended to crucially complicate the novella’s overall design as a moral fable? Or would you claim that it has only the shape and not the intent of a moral fable?

SM: If I hear a piece of writing described as a moral fable, my instinct is to head for the hills. I’ll never admit to having written one myself. But let’s say that, by some oversight on my part, a moral fable did slip out. In that case, then yes, the design is crucially complicated through the new discovery of feeling. Don Juan’s fate isn’t to be punished for sin, but to be led—or shall we say initiated?—into human feeling. To put it somewhat differently: In traditional Don Juan stories, the hero is punished by hellfire. Here, his fiery punishment is unrequited love. Meanwhile the underworld becomes, as you wittily put it, only a theme park.



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Book

Steven Millhauser Edwin Mullhouse: The Life and Death of an American Writer 1943-1954 by Jeffrey Cartwright
Vintage

'Edwin Mullhouse, a novelist at 10, is mysteriously dead at 11. As a memorial, Edwin's bestfriend, Jeffrey Cartwright, decides that the life of this great American writer must be told. He follows Edwin's development from his preverbal first noises through his love for comic books to the fulfillment of his literary genius in the remarkable novel, Cartoons.'-- Vintage


Excerpts























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Behind the rich blue luminous curtain, rippling, the pale blue luminous letters ripple, mingling with bright blue luminous melodies jingling with jujubes, in the black-crow licorice dark. In light, caught, the letters, transfixed, stiffen. Brighter than licked lollipops, livelier than soda in sunlight, lovelier than sunshine on cellophane the colors shine: popsicle orange and lemon-ice white, cotton-candy pink and mint-jelly green, cherry-soda red and raspberry-jello red. Cellophane crackles in the green-and-red-tinted dark. Thick with purple shadows, a dim room appears. In the center stands a vertical ladder, from the top of which a narrow shaft of yellow light falls diagonally down, cutting across one end of a bed and illuminating two round white feet sticking up at the bottom of a blue blanket. A white rabbit, wearing one red nightcap on each tall ear, lies on his back, asleep. As he exhales, with a whistling sound, the blanket under his chin rolls down to his feet. As he inhales, with a snoring sound, the blanket over his feet rolls up to his chin. Over his head a dream appears: he is sawing a log in half. As the saw cuts through the log a piece falls out of the dream and hits him on the head. He sits up, rubbing his head. A red throbbing bump grows higher and higher, pushing up his hand, and then grows lower and disappears. The rabbit yawns and stretches and removes both nightcaps. Putting on a pair of large round black eyeglasses he walks over to a little stove and begins to fry an egg, flipping it up in the air and catching it in his pan. He changes hands, flips it up in the air, and holds out the pan waiting. The egg does not return. Sighing, the rabbit walks over to the ladder and begins to climb.He pokes his head out of his hole into a bright green clearing. In the near distance stand several thin black trees, each with three or four leaves. Beside the hole lies the fried egg. The rabbit picks it up and disappears into his hole. From behind one tree an orange snout with a black nose pops out, followed by a V-shaped frown. In long white eyes, little black pupils move to the left and right. The fox tiptoes quickly to another tree, no thicker than one of his eyebrows, and disappears entirely behind it. His foot peeps out and tiptoes across the grass, followed by his leg, which stretches to twice its length and stops behind another tree; the rest of the fox shoots across to the new tree in an orange blur and disappears behind it. His frowning head peeps out. He looks to the left and right. With hunched shoulders he tiptoes over to the hole. He is orange except for his white toes, his white fingers, and the broad white patch that stretches from the top of his chest to the bottom of his belly. Reaching behind his back, he brings forward a huge red firecracker. He lights the firecracker, pushes it upside down into the hole, and tiptoes a few paces away. With his back to the hole he squeezes his eyes shut and blocks his ears with his fingers. The rabbit flips his egg and holds out the pan. The egg does not return. Frowning. He looks up and sees the firecracker. The egg is speared on the sizzling wick. He climbs the ladder, removes the egg, and pushes the firecracker up out of the hole. The firecracker rolls along the grass and stops behind the fox, who stands with his fingers in his ears. After a while he opens his eyes, removes his fingers from his ears, and turns around. When he sees the sizzling firecracker at his feet his eyes spring out of head an the ends of springs. He dives headfirst onto the grass, landing with a crash and covering his head with his arms. The sizzling wick goes out. The fox looks up. He rises to his feet, walks to the firecracker, picks it up, and smiles. The firecracker explodes. When the smoke clears. The fox is still standing. He is entirely black, except for his white eyes and his white smile. The rabbit sits in a rocking chair by the stove, reading a newspaper. The frying pan is attached to one foot. As he rocks back the egg flips into the air. As he rocks forward the egg falls into the pan. The fox approaches the rabbit hole, pulling a rope attached to a shiny black cannon. He places a shiny black cannonball into the shiny black cannon, tips the front of the cannon into the hole, and lights a wick at the cannon’s back. He turns around, shuts his eyes, and blocks his ears. The front of the cannon swings up, followed by a fried egg, and turns all the way around until it is pointing at the fox. The fried egg goes back into the hole. The fox turns around, sees the cannon, and looks at the audience. The cannon goes off. When the smoke clears, the fox is standing with a hole in his stomach, through which a tree is visible. He reaches down and zips up the hole. Then he collapses onto the grass. A new scene begins on the left, traveling to the right and erasing the old scene. The fox enters pulling a rope tied to the top of a bending tree. He hammers a peg into the ground , ties the rope to a trigger attached to the peg, lays the rope in a circle near the hole, and places inside the circle a bright orange carrot that rests at the end of the trigger. The fox sits down against a nearby tree, crosses his legs, crosses his hands behind his head, closes his eyes, and begins to snore. Above his head a dream appears: he is seated at a table with a napkin tied under his chin and the rabbit bound hand and foot on a plate before him. The rabbit’s head pops out of the hole. He sniffs, adjusts his eyeglasses, and sees the carrot. He climbs out of the hole, steps into the rope-circle, and removes the carrot. Reaching into a pocket in his skin, he removes a leg of roast chicken and places it on the trigger. Crunching on the carrot he steps out of the circle and sees the fox asleep against a tree with a dream over his head. He walks over to the fox, unties the dream-rabbit, who runs away, and puts in its place a huge red firecracker. Then he goes back into his hole. The dream-fox bites into the firecracker, which explodes. The real fox wakes up. He spits out a mouthful of teeth.. In the circle of rope he sees the chicken leg. He walks over to the rim of the circle and frowns down, tapping his foot. As he stares, lines of odor twist from the chicken leg to his twitching black nose. He bends over, reaches toward the chicken leg, and suddenly straightens up. He looks at the audience and shakes his head slyly. Reaching into a pocket he removes a cane. Gently he prods the chicken leg until rolls from the trigger. He flinches, but nothing happens. Shrugging, he picks up the chicken leg. Thrusts it deep into his mouth, and removes a clean white bone. He licks his chops, rubs his belly, and tosses the bone away. It lands on the trigger. The fox’s hair stands on end but nothing happens. Frowning, he pokes the trigger with his cane. Nothing happens. He takes out a sledge hammer and slams the trigger. Nothing happens. He steps inside the rope and kicks the trigger. Nothing happens. As he wipes his forehead with a red handkerchief, a small blue bird flies overhead. A tiny blue feather flutters down. The fox watches the feather as it slowly falls, rocking back and forth, descending past his eyes, his neck, his stomach, his knees. It lands gently on the trigger. The rope yanks the fox into the air and out of sight, accompanied by the sound of a whistling rocket. A distant explosion rocks the forest. The fox enters on the left, leaning on a crutch. One leg is bound in a cast and white bandages cover his head. He sits down beside the rabbit hole and thinks. A lightbulb appears above his head. He reaches up and turns it off. Tearing off his bandages and throwing away the crutch, he removes from his pocket a hammer, nails, and pieces of wood. He begins building furiously, working up a cloud of dust that conceals him completely. When the dust clears a vast blue chute is visible. Beginning in front of the rabbit hole, it rises slowly toward the right on taller and taller posts, passing through the forest where small deer gaze up in wonder, passing over the treetops as an old owl frowns and scratches his head, passing beneath a rainbow into the sky, passing clouds and jagged mountaintops until at last it reaches a tall brown cliff on which a vast boulder rests atop a tiny pebble. Beside the boulder, reclining in a yellow and red lawn chair, wearing green sunglasses and sipping lemonade, is the fox. He picks up a straw, tears one end, and blows the paper wrapper at the boulder. The boulder tips onto the blue chute and starts to roll down. It rolls past clouds and jagged peaks, it frightens a buzzard, it flattens a passing airplane, it snaps apart the rainbow, it roars over treetops past the startled owl, and terrified deer take cover as it thunders past. The rabbit’s head pops out of the hole. Grasping the end of the chute, with a quick motion he bends it upward slightly. Then he ducks out of sight. The boulder follows the curve of the chute and sails into the air, hitting a distant treetop that catches it, bends backwards, and springs forward, flinging the boulder back. The fox is standing on the cliff with his head to one side and one hand cupped over an ear. He removes a watch from his pocket and frowns. As he turns his head to look down, the boulder slams into him, rolling over him and flattening him like dough. For a few moments the fox lies like a colorful shadow. Then one end peels up and he rolls into a tube. His eyes move back and forth in the tube. One leg emerges, one arm, a bushy tail. The fox stands up. Cracks appear in his body and he falls apart with a tinkling sound. The rabbit is lying on his back on the floor, doing sit-ups. He stands up and begins to do quick knee-bends. He lifts a dumbbell over his head. As he begins to skip rope, a sudden crash shakes his house. Frowning, he looks up. The fox, eyes bulging and teeth gnashing, is trapped in the hole at his waist. His arms are pinned to his sides. The rabbit breaks into a smile. Pushing over a small yellow stool, he puts on a pair of boxing gloves and begins to punch the fox’s head as the circle slowly closes.




*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, That is so true. ** Tosh Berman, Oh, gosh, Tosh, thank you so much for saying that. You are kindness incarnate and a true gentleman. Love, me. ** Bill, Thanks a bunch, Billster. He's everywhere. ** Sypha, Coolness. ** James, Hi, James! Thank, buddy. It was a bit of a lot of work, yeah, but hey. I don't think I know the name David Macaulay, but I will as soon as possible, be assured. Thanks for the alert. ** Steevee, Hi, Cool. I envy you getting to see (some of) those FCS films. Everyone, here's Steve Erickson, better or at least equally known around these parts as Steevee, writing about the 'Film Comments Selects' series/festival in NYC. And it sucks that those of us outside NYC can't go because they're showing hardly seen films by the likes of Terrence Davies, Chantal Akerman, Andrzej Zulawski, and others. However, Steve, who has seen a slew of the festival's films, is a consummate guide, so click this words-shaped portal, and see what you're missing and why that's such a drag for you. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi, D! Aw, thanks. Today here it's ... let's see ... clear-skied (!) and about 6 degrees, I think. Not too bad. Oh, that's right, I did hear that that director had made a fiction film too. Good, I've meant to catch up on his other films for literally ages, and I will find a way to do that. I guess via DVD unless youtube is being strangely generous in their regard. I hope you have a good day. Did you get some writing done? Do you write everyday? I write something every day, but definitely not what I wish I could be writing every day. ** Liquoredgoat, Hey, buddy! Good to see you! How's SD treating you? Silence is okay, but I am pleased to know you're out there being groovy, etc. Oh, man, are you getting enough acceptances that you'll be okay irregardless? Yes, let's Skype. Did I drop the ball on that? It's been a bit hectic. But, yeah, let's sort and do that asap. I'm around. ** _Black_Acrylic, Thanks, Ben. Oh, yeah, I remember that Scott Duncan piece very well. It's great. Everyone, here's one more cutaway that you really oughta check out by the artist Scott Duncan, courtesy of _Black_Acrylic, and featuring the infamous 'House of Horrors' owned by British serial killers Fred and Rose West. ** S., Huh, you don't like complex machines or the human body's insides or the new Malick film? You are one very, very hard man to please, sir. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. I have no idea what that one was. It wasn't identified. Hence the lack of identifier. It can be whatever we want, George. Excuse me? Gotta disagree with you re: assigning the interest in taking things apart to a particular gender. There are billion Star Wars cutaways. Avoiding them, as I tried very hard to do, and was successful in doing, I think, was very much like the opposite of looking for Waldo. Huh, you're really on a 'men do this, women do that' thing today. What's up with that? Even a short dose of snow is enough to put some green in my face. ** Aaron Mirkin, Hi, Aaron! That's completely fascinating about you grandfather. Wow. Reading that made me feel all dreamy. Sure, I would really, really like to see your grandfather's drawings, if it's no trouble and if you really don't mind. Oh, how much do I wish I could be there for that event? Like an incredibly huge amount! Dang. I hope you get it videoed or something. Anyway, let me pass that along with bells on. Everyone, If you are in Toronto or even if you only sort of near Toronto, you really, really need to go to this event that the great filmmaker and generally top notch fella Aaron Mikron is hosting, and the reasons will be obvious if you read his alert/description, which I will now paste right here. Aaron: 'I'm hosting an event with Derek McCormack and Lonely Christopher on Thursday, at Videofag in Toronto. It's kind of about theatre, with LC doing a performance of one of his plays and Derek talking about the play within The Well Dressed Wound. I don't know how many people on here live in or around Toronto, but I thought if any are, they might be interested.'Here's the Facebook page with more info. Hit it. Unless my eyes deceive me, according to the schedule I just checked, 'Sleeping Giant' actually played at Luminor Hotel de Ville two days ago. Oops, and damn because I totally would have gone to see it had I known. I'll keep my eyes open for other possibilities, for sure. Thanks a lot, Aaron! ** Okay. Today I give you a relatively simple post featuring a great novel by one of my very, very favorite American writers, Mr. Steven Millhauser. See you tomorrow.

Chilly Jay Chill presents ... 21 Photographs by Zhang Kechun

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Somebody please reissue this.



Born 1980 in Sichuan, China, Zhang Kechun is an artist currently based in Chengdu.

http://zhangkechun.com




*

p.s. RIP: Andrzej Zulawski ** Today we get the pleasure and honor of viewing and absorbing some examples of the beautiful and intriguing work of photographer/artist Zhang Kechun, and we have the honorable Chilly Jay Chill aka master fiction writer Jeff Jackson to thank for it. So please spend some time today luxuriating in the show and letting CJC, yourselves, and even me, if you like, know what you think. Thanks, folks, and thank you so much, Jeff! ** James, Hi. Me too on owning the hardback and loving it so much. Oh, I think that, in this case, the novel itself will hold up incredibly well. It's a masterwork. But, yeah, emotions evolve, so who knows how it will sit with the evolved you. I don't think your hesitance to revisit books that meant a lot to you is weird in the slightest. Uh, hm, I think there must be books I wouldn't dare risk spoiling with another read. Let me think. I kind of feel that way about Andre Gide's books. 'The Counterfeiters' and 'The Immoralist' were gigantic for me when I read them ages ago, and I sometimes think about rereading them, but I have this instinct that, in those cases, I shouldn't, rightly or wrongly. ** Unknown/Pascal, Howdy, P! Millhauser is really great, I think. I'm not a huge fan of American fiction across the board the way I am about French or European fiction, but I think Millhauser is a true wonder and amazing auteur of a writer pretty much always. Dig about not wanting to read when you're writing fiction so as not to possibly derail the focus and purity. I'm like that too. It's exciting to get a little descriptive tidbit about your new novel. I really love the sound of it! I'm good, and I'm glad you are. ** Steevee, Yes, RIP indeed. What an amazing filmmaker. And such weird timing what with this burst of news and attention about his work of late. Big loss. Obviously, I would love to hear what you think of the new Terrence Davies. That's exciting. And, very obviously, it would be amazing if you can interview him. Wow, I need to a Terrence Davies post. I'll get on that. ** Sypha, Hi. Well, that's good, ha ha. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, D. Millhauser is wonderful. You can start reading him further almost anywhere. ** Aaron Mirkin, Good, great about the filming! And if it's easy to shoot me any of your grandfather's drawings, I'd be happy. You're right about 'Sleeping Giant'. I must have been looking at the 'premiere' page or something. Okay, cool, I'll do my best to go see it then. The venue is literally about a 10 minute walk from my front door. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi. I'm actually very excited because I just walked outside to smoke a cigarette, and it was snowing. Okay, the flakes were microscopic and there were hardly any of them, but ... snow! Even symbolically! Thank you a lot for the link to 'Angels But Not Angels'! That's great! I might even try to watch later today if I get some spare time. That examining and interviewing work does sound very interesting, but, yeah, a four hour daily commute isn't. Do you drive or take a train? I guess I was imagining that a train would at least give you some reading time and/or time to scribble out your imagination's bursts in a notebook or something. See, I told you I'm an optimist, ha ha. My day wasn't too bad. I managed to line up a new screening for Zac's and my film, and I got a very, very badly needed haircut. And did some work. Not too shabby. How was Thursday? ** S., Hi. Hm, yeah, if your tastes insist on actresses being hot chicks and if you only want to hear internal monologues from cute boys, I guess Malick isn't for you. Did you just refer to someone whom you know is a friend of mine as a fathead? That's obnoxious. Enjoy your Brutalism, I guess. Everyone, new writing by S. is available on his blog. ** Liquoredgoat, Hi, D. Global warming seems like it's being particularly scary towards Southern California. Arizona, okay. Is that a good school? Or, I mean, would you be happy there? Nonetheless, I'm holding out high hopes that those remaining joints are savvy enough to grab the golden ring that you, sir, in this context, constitute. I hope you like the Ducornet. I'm pretty much around/down too. As soon as your morning today your time or my evening tonight. Whatever's good. I guess shoot me an FB message or email. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Cool. Sure, timing the post with her show is no problem whatsoever, of course. I'm just very happy that she and you are into it. ** Misanthrope, You're no dolt, but I think you would be glad if your read Millhauser. Yeah, I think you must know women who are very different from the women I know 'cos that story doesn't ring a bell at all in my world. Heck, I've been known to turn to Gisele and say something like, 'Can you stop talking about that? You're freaking me out.' I do know women who love to dismantle objects and things just for the joy of it, yeah. So I do disagree with you, and, yes, it is great! Hooray for discrepancies! Like I told Dora, there were the teeny-tiniest snowflakes falling outside when I smoked my last cigarette. I'm talking miniscule. Like ... they made the flakes in snow globes seem like paper plates. And I'm sure they'll have ceased falling when I step outside for my next cigarette in a couple of minutes. But they were real! ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! I finished reading your book, and I love it! I'm gonna give it some love here soon. That is exciting about a new Penny Goring book! I really like her writing! Thanks a million. I'll score that in one sec. You know, one thing I still miss about the old days of Alt Lit Gossip, et. al is that it was so much easier to find new books that aren't published through one of the indie presses by new writers I really like, like Penny Goring. Anyway, thanks a lot, man! Everyone, Chris Dankland has alerted us to the existence of a new and totally free book/pdf/epub/mobi by the very wonderful writer Penny Goring called 'hatefuck the reader', and I highly recommend that you go score yourselves copies. Here. I think Millhauser is so great, and 'EM' is truly amazing, I think. See what you think. Cool. Best of the best of the best plus hugs! ** Okay. Go back up and look or re-look at Zhang Kechun's photographs please. Thank you. See you tomorrow.

Spotlight on ... Ann Quin Tripticks (1972)

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'For a time I was a regular presence in the slender Q-sections of my local bookstores. It was the first sentence of Ann Quin’s novel Berg that brought me there: “A man called Berg, who changed his name to Greb, came to a seaside town intending to kill his father . . .” I don’t remember where or why I read it, but I remember the ensuing search well. It lasted months. The bindings of those few Qs privileged enough to recur with any regularity—de Quincy, Queneau, Quindlen, Quinn—became familiar figures, an alliterative clique of book-backs attending to the baffling absence of any Ann Quin. I was patient, that alluring first sentence circling in my head till I knew every word, while I struggled to comprehend how a book with such a first sentence, such a seemingly iconic opening, could be so hard to find in New York City.

'When I finally got my hands on a copy of Berg, Quin’s absence became a little more comprehensible—albeit much more unjustifiable—as I read the next two sentences: "Window blurred by out of season spray. Above the sea, overlooking the town, a body rolls upon a creaking bed: fish without fins, flat-headed, white-scaled, bound by a corridor room—dimensions rarely touched by the sun—Alistair Berg, hair-restorer, curled webbed toes, strung between heart and clock, nibbles in the half light, and laughter from the dancehall opposite."

'For this clearly went beyond the iconographic. This was the unpredictable churning of water, sentences uncurling their words like the jagged and fragmenting blocks of a misaligned Jacob’s ladder. I suppose I had assumed the first sentence of Berg was so strong that it needed to linger in the rest of the work, overtly implying not only the plot—which, to be fair, it does—but the tone, the rhythm, the type of sentence that could follow, like the “Once upon a time” of a fairytale. Instead, Quin’s first sentence arises only to be swallowed up in the brevity of a sharp fragment, a blip of an image that is nevertheless stylistically weighty enough to govern anything that could follow—one might expect a montage of shards. But the third sentence doesn’t follow the second. Instead it rakes this living, graceless prose over the thorny sprockets of a human presence. To read Quin, I soon learned, is to be perpetually engaged, or to be lost, a little like reading philosophy but demanding an almost opposite faculty of intelligence—to continually let go of what has been read, to let conflicting tenses and perspectives, styles and rhythms meld into the pothole texture of a raw experience, to become one with the paper-thin partition that divides Alistair’s boarding room from the room where his father sleeps: “a boat without sails, anchored to a rock, yet revolving outside its own circumference.” It’s a bumpy ride. And it doesn’t get any smoother in the novels that follow.

'In Three, Ruth and Leon, middle-aged wife and husband, reckon with the aftermath of the recent suicide of their temporary boarder, a younger woman denoted only by the letter S. In the dialog-dense passages with which the novel opens, Quin has stripped the prose—not just of quotation marks and conventional paragraph breaks to differentiate speakers but, most unnervingly, all punctuation within each monad of speech.

'Three, like all of Quin’s works, is an insoluble situation. It doesn’t lend itself well to processes of easy digestion. Even this recurring preoccupation with the number three, interwoven into the narrative and textual construction of all four books, only superficially unites them. It is a structural model around which the author, like S, imagines and unfolds endless variations.

'Another variation, maybe the most indigestible: Passages alternates between the perspectives of two unnamed passengers, lovers as incompatible as a pair of dreams, as they sweep through desolate Mediterranean towns and arid countryside. A woman in search of her brother records her experience in a fractured diary, shifting from first- to third-person, only to disappear entirely into splintered glimpses through her senses.

'Though Passages is possessed by an impossible cohabitation, Quin’s delicate architecture does not collapse. But neither can it withstand reduction nor abbreviation. Like a house of cards, nothing can be removed, nothing excerpted. It’s not the passages that matter but the passages between them.

'An almost as inscrutable passage divides Quin’s third from her fourth book. Tripticks, published between treatments of electroshock therapy and Quin’s suicide in 1973, could hardly differ more from the spacious sparseness of Passages. A darkly comic novel with a relatively direct satirical slant, Tripticks brims with orgiastic excess.

'Our narrator is a weak-kneed sort of antichrist, a rapist and murderer if he only had the guts. Hunted by his “No. 1 X-wife” and her “schoolboy gigolo,” he pursues a reckless, seemingly drug-affected, or at least severely psychotic path across an American landscape distorted to schizophrenic proportions. In between paranoiac fantasies and freak-outs, the narrator recalls incidents from his various lives with his three successive X-wives. Eventually, the narrator’s manic ramblings are sliced through the center by a long series of hysterical and brutally castigating letters from a long cast of past phantoms.

'Amid these cavernous admonitions, one senses the author’s own exasperation, a lethal frustration with a skewed sense of authorial self. As a writer with three books behind her, Quin seems as eager as the No 1. X-wife to blot out the memory of her previous cohort. As much as literary tradition implements artistic confines, it’s Quin herself—the Quin responsible for Berg, Three, and Passages—against whom the author of Tripticks must escape in order to write freely. In order to evade imprisonment of artistic consistency, Quin not only flees stylistically, but turns to confront her first three novels with a mocking smile and menacing snarl, acknowledging, along with her narrator as he performs an abrupt U-turn to steer his car towards the incensed trio of castrating X-wives.

'And this perhaps, as frayed as it is, is the common thread that most interlaces Quin’s wandering works and embraces her erratic patterns. As serious as so many of her passages are, every book escapes, one way or another, from the existential weightiness toward which it tends. Quin seems perfectly capable of delivering the literary achievement of the century. Like Alistair Berg, she is near enough to kill the symbolic father, to assume his lofted position in literary tradition. And yet, at the precipice of implementing her authorial omnipotence, of reducing her works to a recognizable achievement, a radically experimental opus that could be then by subsumed under a larger literary history, Quin, like Alistair, falters.

'Quin isn’t after the kind of power that can be touched. She seeks something subtler, a power that can be approached but never possessed, one ultimately destined to one of two failures: either Alistair is discovered before killing his father or he succeeds. In either case he loses everything he has gained. Success and failure are irrelevant to Quin. Her power, like Alistair’s, stems not from some Oedipal act, but from the deadly serious practice of child-like play.

'Perhaps Ann Quin will never claim the presence she deserves in the Q-sections of our bookstores. Maybe she doesn’t need to. The subversive joy is there regardless, intermixed but never diluted in the monolithic violence that cannot overtake it.'-- Jesse Kohn, The Quarterly Conversation



___
Further

Ann Quin @ Wikipedia
'Who cares about Ann Quin?'
'Re: Quin: An overdue study of the "experimental" novelist Ann Quin'
'Book Of A Lifetime: Berg, By Ann Quin'
Ann Quin @ Dalkey Archive
Ann Quin @ goodreads
'Dried stains on sheets.'
'THE LOVE AFFAIR(S) OF ANN QUIN'
'Dead Animals: Uncanny and Abject Imagery in Ann Quin’s Berg'
'Ann Quin staff record'
'Passages by Ann Quin'
'Ann Quin - A member of a group of British avant-garde writers, ...'
'Researching Ann Quin at the Lilly Library'
'Nonnie Williams Korteling on Ann Quin and ‘Three’'
'Ann Quin’s Night-time Ink, A Postscript'
''Designing its own shadow' : reading Ann Quin'



____
Extras


The Speaking Machine


Joseph Darlington: The British Experimental Novelists of the 1960s



____
Berg, the installation

'To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the publication of Ann Quin’s brilliant debut novel, CINECITY and artist/production designer Anna Deamer present a film set installation for an imaginary screen version of Berg. A boarding house in out of season Brighton is the background for this strange, disturbing and darkly comic drama. Published in 1964, Berg – described by writer Lee Rourke as ‘the best novel ever set in Brighton’ – established Ann Quin’s reputation as one of the most original, contemporary British writers. She wrote three further novels but remains one of the best-kept secrets of British literature. She died in 1973, drowned in the sea off Brighton, aged 37.

'The immersive environment is complemented by music and sound design from Barry Adamson who has created soundtracks for David Lynch’s Lost Highway, Carol Morley’s Dreams of a Life and many others. He is a current member of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds having re-joined the band in 2013. The ‘Berg suite’ has been produced in collaboration with Paul Kendall who engineered Barry Adamson’s first solo album, Moss Side Story, the soundtrack to a non-existent film noir.'-- Cinecity














____
Correspondence







___________________
Every Cripple Has His Own Way of Walking
by Ann Quin




The house was old. They were older. The sisters. They celebrated Queen Victoria’s Jubilee. Cried at her funeral. At least if they hadn’t actually seen these events they witnessed it all in the newspapers. The house full of newspapers. Paper bags within paper bags. Letters. Photographs. Pieces of brocade. Satin. Ribbons. Lockets. Hair. Broken spectacles. Medicine bottles. Empty. Foreign coins. Trunks. Cases. Cake. Biscuit tins. And mice. The child never knew whether it was the mice or one of her aunts wheezing in the long nights. Or maybe just the wind from the sea. The downs. Whistling in the chimney. Other nights she knew it was Aunt Molly battling with her asthma. Or Aunt Sally sucking tea from a saucer. And the bed creaked in the room below. As grandma turned over. Back again. From the waist up. Did she have legs? The child thought of them. Thought she saw them like sticks under the sheet. About to thrust up. With barnacles and millions of half-dead fish clinging. The old woman’s flesh. Scaly. Her eyes like someone just risen from the ocean bed. But then she was grandma. And all grandmothers must look like that. Confined to an enormous bed. Yet not so enormous. For she filled all parts. At all times. As she filled the house with her demands. Commands. In her little girl’s voice. When not eating. Not sleeping. Whined for the bedpan. Another cup of tea. And if Aunt Sally stopped making kitchen noises then she whined for the bedpan again and accused her younger sister of indulging in forty winks. For the house belonged to grandma. Every item down to the shrimp pink corset and purple dress Aunt Sally wore had been billed to grandma. She after all had been married. And no one now would point out she had stolen Aunt Molly’s intended. That a long time ago. And he who had made the mistake by proposing in a letter from India to the wrong sister had long since departed. They lived as best. The three. In the worst. Through thick and thin. They lived their roles. Respected. Detested. Each other’s virtues. Little vices. Whims. And waited for the day the child’s father would pay a visit. That day would surely be tomorrow. If not tomorrow then the next day. When Nicholas Montague. Monty to them all. Would tread the path. Into the house. Receive their love. And tell them of his travels. Successes. Though Aunt Molly would look past him. As if she recognised in his shadow some remembered dream. Go on sorting out little bundles of letters. Comb her long white hair. Thin. So thin it was more of a veil covering her head. Face of crushed carnation that sprouted from the black bent root of velvet. The child would look past him too. Perhaps. At the portrait. For comparison. While Aunt Sally clucked around him. Teeth clicking. Little bird eyes upon the nephew who could do no wrong. If he did a wrong in others’ eyes then he did it because there was no alternative.

The days grew into each and out of each night. With the habits. Dreams. Tales of days gone by. The horse-drawn buses. Dinner. Tennis parties. Musical evenings. Picnic outings with cousins by the Thames. Sunday strolls in Kew Gardens. And the Crystal Palace. For the child these stories merged with those of The Goose Girl. The Snow Queen. And Cinderella. Each of these she was. Saw her aunts as grown ancient but with a wave of the magic wand they would change into beautiful queens with quick queenly steps. She felt sure her father would have this wand. Transform the old castle on the hill. The old ladies. Herself. Into a magical world where they would all live together happily ever after.

Weeks. Months. Years. Came. Went. After hours of anticipation. The child saw the calendar only in the mirror. She was still not taller than Aunt Sally. She thought the day would never come when she would be. Though she forgot this problem when she didn’t have to bend to peer through the keyhole at Aunt Molly. Whole morning spent on the landing. Watching her aunt go through the never-changing rituals. Always the child hoped that some morning. Some time the white-hair apparition would do something different. Or maybe not do anything at all. Lie motionless in her black velvet. This the child hoped for more than anything. The door then would surely magically open. The room at last hers to explore. There were the corners. Dimensions. She never saw from her one-eyed viewing. Then there were the cupboards. Drawers. These must be filled with all kinds of mysterious things. Boxes her aunt bent over. But never brought out whatever lay there. Her hands shook. Hovered over something. Then the lid closed and her aunt locked the box. Held the box. Nursed it in her lap. Her lips moved. Drawn in. The child tiptoed along the landing where the wind mocked the carpet. Played with the carpet on the stairs. Down into the kitchen the child crept to make Aunt Sally jump in the larder. Oh you wicked child you’ll be the death of me yet here take this into your grandma her tongue’s hanging out for a cup of tea quick now and I’ll give you a piece of bread and butter pudding.

The child took the tray. Tried not to spill the tea into the saucer. If she did before reaching grandma’s door then the lions would eat her up. But they were preferable to the lioness with the little lion’s growl that greeted her offering. So there you are well bring it over here that’s right now care – ach child you’re so clumsy and what’s your Aunt Sally doing taking another nap I suppose well don’t stand there child like an imbecile just like your . . .

Her mouth filled with cake. Tea. Denture coping. Body manoeuvres. Just her eyes. Waterlogged. Stared at the child. Her head moved in time to the munching. Sipping. Swallowing. Plump ringed fingers filled the space between eiderdown. The small hole that presumed to be a mouth. The child held her breath against the smells. Urine. Stale food. And medicines. She counted the flies on the limp strips of sticky yellow near the curtained windows. Listened to cupboards. Drawers being opened. Closed. In the room upstairs. Unable to hold her breath any longer she rushed out. From grandma’s munching. Grinding. Into the kitchen where Aunt Sally hardly bent over the oven. Drew the baking tin out. Blinked in the warmth. Her own warm approval. Pleasure. Ah it looks a good one this time. She tested with a knife. The two of them bent over this treasure of golden brown. With little smiles. Hands of assurance. They ate. Hardly two mouthfuls when the child begged her aunt to sing. Sing anything. But you know all I know is Little Brown Jug. Well sing that then. The child clapped her hands. Licked the sticky remains from around her mouth. And felt even the wind under the back door sounded friendly now. Plants in the outhouse nodded in their full row of participation. Clouds danced lightly on the brow of the hill. Poppies and blue flowers bowed in acknowledgement towards the house. And the child knew if the sea was nearer that too would chuckle in the warm conspiracy. Sing sing Auntie and do that little dance you do. Ah you little devil I haven’t got all day to play with you so get along with you now go and play in the garden. The child laughed. Made to hug her aunt. Made all kinds of promises. Pretended to cry. Tickled her. Until the demanded song burst out and her aunt skipped one. Two. Three oops there now you’ll be the death of me oh my oh dear little brown jug don’t I love theeeee there I’m worn out and there’s your grandma calling. Off she went muttering. Dress dusted the floor. Caught in the door as she wiped the tail ends of pudding from the corners of her moustached upper lip.

(cont.)



__
Book

Ann Quin Tripticks
Dalkey Archive Press

'As innovative and abrasive as the very best of William Burroughs, Ann Quin's Tripticks offers a scattered account of the narrator's flight across a surreal American landscape, pursued by his "No. 1 X-wife" and her new lover. This masterpiece of pre-punk aesthetics critiques the hypocrisy and consumerism of modern culture while spoofing the "typical" maladjusted family, which in this case includes a father who made his money in ballpoint pens and a mother whose life revolves around her overpampered, all-demanding poodle. Stylistically, this is Quin's most daring work, prefiguring the formal inventiveness of Kathy Acker.'-- Dalkey Archive Press

_____
Excerpt

I have many names. Many faces. At the moment my No. 1 X-wife and her schoolboy gigolo are following a particularity of flesh attired in a grey suit and button-down Brooks Brothers shirt. Time checked 14.04 hours Central Standard Time. 73 degrees outside. Area 158, 693 square miles, of which 1,890 square miles are water. Natural endowments are included in 20 million acres of public reservations.

All outdoor sports are possible. Deep sea sleeping, and angling for small game are favourite pastimes. The man who doesn't reckon his pleasures on a silver platter is a fish that walks by night. Batman's the name, reform's the game. Farm out the elite, the Ruff-puffs, stinking thinking, temper tantrums, strong winds, captivating experiences, Burn Down Peyton Place, and inhale deeply stretched time with red eyes.

Eyes that fall away to 282 feet below sea level. I am hunted by bear, mountain lion, elk and deer. Duck, pheasant, rabbit, dove and quail. He at first feels a little like George Custer at Little Big Horn. The enemy is all around and awesome. The road ahead is going to be difficult there will be some nervous Nellies and some will become frustrated and bothered and break ranks under the strain, and there will be blood, irony dwarfs and dragons, skyrockets fired to celebrate orgasm's efficiency. Suicide in a scented Sodom. Soul on acid. Hero angelic, domestic and cosmic on a journey with God on my side and the BrownieTroop.

Meanwhile I eat a toasted cheese hamburger, and dwell on five days of unconfined feasts of roasted pig. A miracle for a man who has nothing to lose. True your family adventures may not match those of ancient Greece, but you're equipped to make history and why shouldn't you be, we've worked hard to make it that way, we took no short cuts, spared no expense, watched no clock. If you come filled with dreams it may happen that your dream changes about every 15 minutes. The most is yet to come. 3,000 miles of strawberry ice cream. Lips are frenchfries teasing cole slaw fingers. My belly a Golden Poppy and the Motto is I Have Yet To Find It. Or as posted to my 3 X-wives. Ranked according to value vehicles food allied products fabricated metal machinery stone clay glass lumber and apparel.

White gold her hair one of my faces married (I displayed at that time a droopy Stephen Crane moustache and shiny eyes fixed on some wild interior vision). A bevy of stars, many now fallen. Reproductions a gristmill wine press and the reservoir with its undershot waterwheel, a restored chapel and adjoining wing of seven rooms she has taken over with the fourth husband of my No. 2 wife. Under the rough hewn redwood timbers they were lashed together with rawhide. Open during daylight hours an unusual arrangement of garden pools. Hours subject to change in summer. No dogs, with the exception of seeing-eye dogs, are allowed. Cats are permitted to stay overnight provided they are on a leash. A naturalist is on duty. As members of the 89-person party died, those remaining resorted to cannibalism. Only 47 were rescued. Picnicking. Campsites near the original area. Where I waited. Cement sand gravel and a gun. Full of booze and passion for justice he sees himself as a law and ardour candidate. His politics are symbolized by the itchy trigger finger, and his judicial philosophy is summed up in a tidy homily, `You can't serve papers on a rat'. For months he terrorized the young women, and he was quickly dubbed the `Phantom Rapist'. He left typewritten notes at the scenes of his crimes. A strategy he called `working the system'.

He is layin' low, like Br'er Rabbit in his briar patch but we know he s in there. Hovering, pale and jittery, like an image that persists for a second after the set has been turned off.

I knew they scrutinized me through a two-way mirror. A matter of impatience between us. Between the sunken gardens, colonnade and the workshop. They set up their own quarantine regulations. Frozen turkeys and yoghourt delivered from the nearest Piggly Wiggly. She played the mechanical organ, he an old horse fiddle, and other games with other interesting relics. Most of their amusements, I soon realized, could be accommodated without my presence. The inertia of distant omniscient perspective. That other side of the goddamn appletree. Intimations of immortality and a need for sincerity and violence become reflections of the reality only. I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death. The attacker may be a sadist who bites slowly and intentionally, leaving well-defined teeth marks. Mainly found on the breast, neck, cheek, top of arm etc. Their degree of viciousness can vary tremendously, from the nipples being completely bitten off to one bite only, a `love nip'.

I fired three times at their flagstone barbecue pit. And emerged from an underground channel through different rock strata. The name is not Gnome. The sensible thing is to kill them off, petrol bombs you know. Napalm your Castle awaits you.

It was when hitting Highway 101 I noticed they were following. I turned off into a winding road. Without campsites rest areas picnicking trailer hookups Naturalist programme.

Their faces, glass faces behind me, twisted into grotesque shapes by the Pacific winds. Surrounded by Himalayan cedars, illuminated with 8,000 coloured Lights. I proceeded with lights extinguished for several miles, and began a journey in an atomic submarine, scientifically authentic, to view mermaids, sea serpents, and the face of my first wife's father. Pets may be left in a kennel at the main gate, he said. This one happens to be dead, I replied. In that case we'll arrange a funeral at once. But I didn't want a burial performed just then. However I told him that eventually a statue in her honour would be appropriate for erection in the town park, where visitors may choose to arrive by helicopters. He seemed genuinely pleased at this idea and showed me around the grounds of his No. 1 home. In addition to the eight-room stone and frame house (a market value of $82,000 when it was appraised six years ago he confidentially told me) there were a grassy helicopter pad, a log-cabin guest house, two boathouses, a kidney-shaped swimming pool, a sauna, a trampoline and a profusion of trees and marigolds. `All this was pasture, plain pasture when we bought it, I planted those pines as little sprouts and look at them now, you have to keep them fertilized and use lots of mulch.' A recent hailstorm had played havoc with the trees and the roof of the house. He noted aloud `I've got to fix that'. He bent over and picked up several broken willow branches and handed them to his chauffeur (who I felt sure secretly belonged to the Panthers). While an electric player piano blared Oklahoma he led me to the garage where there were three autos: a 1926 model T Ford 1930 Model A A new red convertible. `A copy,' he said proudly, `of the '29 Ford Phieton.' He tried to start the Model T, but the motor coughed, spat and died. `Someone's been tinkering at the choke.' He hopped out, lifted the hood and tinkered for a minute, explaining that he used to run a bike repair shop and liked doing his own mechanical work. Then his ire was directed at his anti-smog gadget. `The car idles so fast that it automatically leaps to 30 miles an hour when I take my foot off the brake, I've got to be careful I don't kill somebody,' he said with a rueful smile `just coming out of my drive.'

He led me further into the grounds. Crocodiles, hippopotami, and snakes slipped through murky water. Along the shore, amid live, rare tropical trees, shrubs, and flowers, appeared elephants and other jungle animals. `Visitors you know will find it hard to believe that none of the animals are alive. `I felt convinced one or two were, possibly his wife's pets. She took her poodle Bu-Bu with her everywhere. `I wish I had been an Edwardlan, `she moaned at dinner on my first visit. `When we give a dinner party as you can see the people who serve wear green jackets and white gloves, but look at the curtains they're in shreds.' `That naughty Bu-Bu of yours,' her husband shouted.

After dinner he showed me the champagne plant, wine cellars and bottling rooms. This was just a hobby, he explained. He was in the ballpen industry, with eighteen plants selling a billion ballpoints a year in 96 countries, `enough to pen a letter stretching from here to Saturn'. I knew the familiar commercials: a ballpoint being buried by a bulldozer, rattled on a flamenco dancer's boot and shot from a rifle, only to write perfectly again. He claimed that it would soon make the pencil obsolete.

I saw myself in the near future living like a modern pasha. Indulging an insatiable yen for the luxuries a Falcon jet Convair turbo-prop Jet Commander Rolls-Royce Custom Lincoln Caddy Sting Ray a houseboat and a Riva speedboat, and perhaps a thoroughbred racing stable, and two Eliza Doolittles for maids.

A recent afternoon in his life. Man Friday helps him into his Pierre Cardin jacket. The Rolls is waiting. Three lissom girls are already in the back seat. He wanders across the lawn to pet his two tame ocelots. `Tell my wife that I'll be back tomorrow.' The Rolls is crunching along the gravel driveway when someone runs from the house and shouts, `Urgent call from New York.' Twenty minutes later he is finally airborne in his twin engine falcon jet.

I tentatively asked him about his earnings. `Now you're prying into my personal business,' was his angry retort. `Just say it's between 50 cents and 5 million dollars.' Then he went on about a fund he was creating to provide huge public cocktail parties with free food and drink for anyone who wants to attend. `This would be a real nice way to be remembered,' he said. There had to be a hitch — the parties would not start till after his death, and he wants to enjoy them too. So, for every party, he has arranged with a local funeral home to have his remains wheeled out in a big silver casket. `They will stay at the party until the last guest has gone.' As he told me all this he had the strangest gleam in his eyes, it was like he couldn't wait to die and get on with the fun.

His study was built in the shape of a wine barrel. He showed me photographs of his daughter in graduation drag. Of her as a plump baby, naked on a crocodile skin. And photos of his home town pharmacy ice cream parlour bank drugstore dentist's office general store an old oil rig early locomotive box-car handcar and caboose hotel saloon and other enterprises.

I became the caricature of the surly inarticulate `man, like I mean', as I caught sight of his daughter, my first wife to be, chewing gum in the memorial garden of camelias, roses and flowering shrubs. A maze symbolizing the various paths offered in life. At its centre a small stone summerhouse with a highly finished interior signifying the hastiness of judgment on the basis of outward appearances.

`That's the orchard over there a fine sight to see you know,' he said, `the Cherry Picking Festival is held in June and the public is invited to pick their own fruit, and over there well we have the Marine Corps Supply Depot — there we go you know my grandmother or was it my great grandfather was Celtic see that fireplace well its modelled after a Scottish war lord's and this well it's a miniature Railway an authentic replica you know of an oldtime coal-burning engine and that well that's a photo of the world's largest jet-missile rocket test centre and has a 22-mile runway — not open to visitors of course.'

I made the appropriate gestures, remarks, while thinking of his daughter's petrified face imprinted on fossilized leaves. Vital secrets of her own wondering aloud while shopping by Rolls. I was curious to know if she was a member, like her mother, of the D.R. (Daughters of the Revolution). I doubted it. Her speciality would be wooden heads, tightly leather-wrapped. At the moment, her father reported, she was preoccupied with lizards, which she says `look like man in certain stages'.

Later at a health resort under hot-water geysers we made it for the first time in the mineral springs and mineralized mud baths. My mouth searching for hers by means of siphon pipes. And later that same day I got a strange blow-job in a parking lot, it was 35 degrees outside, by a weird woman, two days later I was still weak at the knees and couldn't think about it. Now I could try and ease my way out of this by saying I didn't ask questions, just stated my personality smart, well-educated Lack of respect for authority ambitious lack of spiritual and moral deep concern for social fibre problems lack of responsibility good values, character lack of manners communicate lack of dialogue with elders independent thinker values ill-defined poised personality lack of good study habits vocal, will speak up lack of love for fellow men mature, prepared for lack of self-respect life too impetuous versatile, able too introspective intellectually curious too introspective well-groomed nothing missing care about community

read for pleasure consider myself informed sense of humour is important enjoy discussing ideas my best work is done when I'm not working I am dominant relationship with my family is fucked up I am sophisticated considered attractive interested in marriage liberal regarding sex more of a dove than a hawk my date should be psychologically weaker I am optimistic Pot and pop-pills are morally right I drink regularly

On the other hand I am interested in some of the factors which may, or may not, effect my psychological feelings. For this reason I have hand exercise springs REMEMBER Hold the hand spring in a closed position throughout the `thinking' period. Place your check mark on the line, not in between lines

THIS NOT THIS X X

_________ _________ ___________ ___________

Do Not Omit any Scales for Any Concept Yesterday Good ________ ________ ________ Bad large large unpleasant pleasant light heavy cold hot active passive rough smooth

My Mood Now

small large passive active hot cold bad good heavy light pleasant unpleasant

Fantasy Profile

Organized Dreamer Athletic Sexy Confident Aggressive Subtle Natural Practical Well-dressed Healthy Introverted Passionate Thrifty Quiet Nervous Funny Warm Paternal Extroverted Serious Impulsive Talkative Trusting Active Intelligent Kind Content Maternal Cheerful Creative Self-controlled Cautious Do-it-yourself Altruistic Emotional Reflective Jealous Obsessive Wholesome

Common Interests

Pets Jazz Psychology Parties Walking Photography Lectures Scientific E.S.P. Medicine journals Stock Market Stereo Movies Antiques equipment Yoga Astrology Acting Humanities Foreign travel Modern lit. Dancing Sugar buns Discotheques Portable lawns Ethics Pop Art and unusual work-it-yourself devices




*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, A very, very, very happy if belated birthday to you, great sir! How did you celebrate the auspicious and grateful occasion? ** James, Hi. I did. I think it's my favorite Terrence Davies film. I just put a Day together about his work so we can all hash his stuff out soon. I love everything by him until 'The Neon Bible', and then his films are spottier for me, although still amazing in places. ** S., Hi. Yeah, let's just agree to disagree and change subjects, shall we? Me, I really love concrete, and I'm hit or miss about Brutalism. Bonjour! ** Steevee, Hi. I've heard that about 'Sunset Song'. I've only watched clips. I hear the newer one is even less successful. Eek. Like I said to James, there's a shift or maybe a stoppage of shifting or something in his work starting with 'The Neon Bible' that doesn't interest me so much. I guess I wish he'd stop adapting things. Ha ha, well, if there was ever a Grandieux film that will reinforce your friend's wrong opinion of him, it's 'Malgre la Nuit'. Be prepared. I'll be curious to hear what you think. I think it might sound your p.c. alarms, but who knows? ** Dóra Grőber, Hi. Nah, as I feared, they were a fluke and a false promise, and it ended up raining all day instead. Sad. No, I didn't get the chance to watch the film yesterday. It got busy, but I will definitely have it under my belt, as they say, by Monday. Good, good, that the commute is at least a qualified chance to write and read. I do love trains. I have this weird fear of public buses, pretty much always have. I can do buses if I ride them with a friend or something, but if I'm alone, I'd rather walk even long distances if I have to. It's strange. Your day does sound like it was really interesting. Very cool. Are you interested in Outsider or Visionary Art? I kind of am. I'm kind of fascinated when an artist's imagination is bigger and stronger than his or her talent. I like seeing the art get stretched and jumbled and stuff in an attempt to communicate something too complicated and obsessive to be communicated. My day was pretty work-y and uneventful, but maybe I'll get to mix-in some going out and socializing today if I'm lucky. Did your Friday give you anything you really liked? ** Chilly Jay Chill, Thanks again so much yesterday. It was a big hit! I think I'm pretty much a fan of all of Celine's novels, the later ones included. I don't think he ever took his eye off the prize. I love 'Castle to Castle' and 'North', for instance. I don't think either of those will steer you wrong. ** Unknown/Pascal, Hi. Ha ha, not bad titles. Oh, sure, I think I always work like that. I always totally rely on my editing and revising abilities, for better or worse, so I let myself get as sketchy or overbearing or off-key while doing a first draft as circumstances require. Sometimes, as in my recent failed attempt to write that novel about the real George Miles, I end up fucking myself and wasting a lot of time, but most of time my instincts are pretty good, so I trust them. But for me editing/revising is where most of what my novels end up being happens. So, don't sweat it? I wouldn't. It sounds great! ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. You and Gisele would probably be peas in a pod. I honestly and sincerely and un-ironically hope you get some beautiful, beautiful snow. Totally agree about dialogue. Unheated, thoughtful, curious, egoless dialogue. The opposite of what happens on Facebook almost every minute of every day. ** Jeremy McFarland, Hi, Jeremy! Really, really good to see you! Oh, cool, I'm glad the Cutaway day hit home. Congrats on your newborn jawline! I had braces for a while when I was a teen due to excessively spaced teeth, but I hated them and ripped them out and took my chances. And my teeth grew closer together just fine. Well, mostly. Nobody ever says I have a weird mouth anyway. Maybe the occasional person will say that I do weird things with it, ha ha. Where are you going in China? That's very exciting! Oh, God, yeah, there are many, many, many Chinese artists who are extremely better than Ai WeiWei, ugh. Oh, 'Journey' looks cool. I'll look further. You wrote about me? Wow, gosh, thank you, man! I'm doing pretty good, yeah. This weekend ... I have to try to finish the first draft of the entire episode of the puppet TV show if I can. Zac and I have a big meeting with a possible producer for our new film on Monday, so I need to get my thoughts and social skills together for that. Hopefully see friends, art, I don't know. Should be okay. How about you? What's on your weekend's agenda? Love, me. ** Right. I wonder if you guys know the work of Ann Quin, an amazing, adventurous British writer who published a number of fantastic novels before she tragically committed suicide in her 30s? If so, or if not, I'd like to draw your attention to her work today, and particularly to the novel in the spotlight. Hope it's of interest. See you tomorrow.

Mosh pit

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p.s. RIP: Umberto Eco. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Yes, Akerman's suicide was such a blow. I didn't  know that about Jean Eustache. Ugh, very sad. Yes, the Terrence Davies post will launch a week from today. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. I'm very happy that the post caused you to be intrigued by Ann Quin. Her most famous and, many say, greatest novel is 'Berg'. But I love everything by her that I've read. 'Tripticks' is the wildest and most experimental of her novels, which is not to say all of her novels aren't experimental because they are, but it's the most so, which is why I picked it, no surprise, I guess, knowing me. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi, Dóra! Yep, really atypical. Although maybe typical of what winters have now become. Sad. I will, about the film. I hope today or tomorrow. I love the metro/subway for some reason. Well, the Paris one at least because it's so great and efficient. The NYC one kind of weirds me out. I have friends here who avoid the metro. I have one friend who doesn't mind the metro but hates having to change lines, so he won't take the metro unless he can get to where he's going without having to transfer. My only guess about my fears of buses is that it might be because this kind of awful thing that happened to me on a bus when I was about 13. I was in Peru. I wanted to be an archaeologist at that point for some reason, and my parents sent me to stay at the house of this rich Peruvian friend of theirs who financed archeological digs and who arranged that I could work as an assistant on one dig for a summer. To get to the dig site, I had to take a long bus ride through the middle of nowhere. One day I was on the bus when the driver suddenly slammed on the brakes and stopped. He got up, walked to the black of the bus. When he returned, he was carrying a man in his arms. When he was passing my seat, he tripped, and the man's body fell right on top of me. And the man was dead. So I had this dead body lying on top of me, which freaked me out. Then the bus driver picked up the body, went to the front of the bus, opened the door and threw the man's body out onto the side of the road. Then he got back in his seat, restarted the bus, and drove on. I think maybe that has something to do with my bus phobia. Would make sense, I guess. Oh, cool, you knew what I meant about Outsider Art, and you expressed its amazingness really well! And very cool about your interest in the person at the hospital! That's excitement. Nothing like that kind of feeling and focus. I hope that works out exactly as you want. Fingers crossed. And have a superb weekend! ** Tomkendall, Hi, T! There aren't so many, strangely enough, considering. Same in the US, really. Oh, I'm glad what I wrote made sense. Me too, obviously. I kind of think of myself as kind of an Outsider Artist, or maybe thats a role model idea, if that doesn't sound too strange. I never learned how to write fiction properly, so in a way it makes sense or something. ** Rewritedept, Hi, C. She is. Enjoy your dad-free dad's abode. I haven't read the Viv Albertine. Yeah, I'd like to, but I'll wait until my interest refocuses on recent music history. When one writes a book or goes back to one you never know if it's a thing work doing. At that point, that question is irrelevant. Well, we'd be into showing LCTG in Vegas, obviously. The thing is, it would need to be venue that can actually show a film, you know, with a decent screen and sound system and seats and all of that kind of stuff. It's not the kind of film you can watch while standing around in a gallery. But, yeah, if you think of something, let me know. That would be kind of you. ** Steevee, I don't know CBD is. I'm kind of out of it. I'll look it up. How did the drug work with TV watching? ** Unknown/Pascal, Hi. Oh, yeah, I'm okay with abandoning the George Miles novel. I suspect there are parts that are good that I'll maybe find a way to use elsewhere or publish on their own at some point, but I'm not ready to reread what I wrote yet. Right, I too don't worry that stuff I'm writing will likely be abandoned. And really, and you know this, things that seem like extras in the moment of writing can magically end up holding something key and important when you get the novel 'complete' and go back to it. Such a great process, writing. Thanks, P. Have a great weekend. ** Armando, Hi. Well, like I wrote the other day, the editing is kind of the whole movie, it's force, its energy. It's very much a rhythmic movie with an intense but never fully predictable forward motion. It would be really interesting (to me) if someone timed every shot. I would be really curious to see the pattern. There is no narrative, really, or not much of one. It explores the fuckedupness of a guy, the chief character. It wanders through time and locations in a way that's obviously very organized but feels intuitive. There's a lot of dialogue and voiceovers, and they're very Malick, but they're less pointedly directive and less deliberately packed with meaning. They're smearier and most casual, in effect. I don't know. That's all I can think to say about the film at the moment, I hope you get to see it. I loved it, obviously, as I said. Good weekend, pal. ** Right. I made a long, narrow, teeming mosh pit for you this weekend. I hope you enjoy being on its sidelines. See you on Monday.

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Turda, Romania: Deep in the Transylvanian countryside lies an ancient salt mine dating back over two millennia. Today Salina Turda has become an unlikely tourist attraction, with thousands of visitors descending its vertical shafts each year to ride ferris wheels, roller coasters, play mini-golf, go bowling and row around its underground lake. This submerged wonderland even has a healing center for people with lung conditions. Salina Turda filled the coffers of Hungarian kings and Habsburg emperors -- especially during the 13th century, when salt was more valuable than gold -- and sustained the local community for centuries. Since mining activity ceased in 1932, it has had many lives. It was used as a shelter in World War II and has even served time as a cheese storage center. Salina Turda reopened as a visitor attraction in 1992, bolstered by €6 million investment 16 years later, which cemented its adaptive reuse as a theme park.









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Ower, England: Let us transport you back in time, back 150 million years for a Jurassic adventure of a lifetime, when Dinosaurs ruled the Earth. Welcome to Lost Kingdom. A Jurassic world where, start May 17th, Dinosaurs of all shapes and sizes greet your every turn, an unbelievable prehistoric landscape where you will see, hear, and feel that you have been catapulted back to a long forgotten era. Lost Kingdom Dinosaur Theme Park at Paultons Park will be home to a whole host of Dinosaur attractions including two world class rollercoasters, life-like animatronic Dinosaurs, Jurassic themed family rides, a prehistoric Dinosaur adventure play park and an amazing opportunity to come face to face with our 'living' walking animatronic Dinosaurs!





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Staffordshire: Alton Towers has announced plans to open a rollercoaster ride on which passengers wear virtual-reality headsets. The Staffordshire-based adventure park said Galactica would open in April, following two years of planning. Several virtual-reality recordings simulate rollercoaster rides, but Alton Towers said Galactica would combine the two experiences for the first time. Over the course of the three-minute ride, the headsets will show passengers a journey across a series of different galaxies, timed to coincide with the ride's twists, turns and falls. Lying facedown, they will experience a maximum g-force of 3.5gs, which the park says is more than astronauts typically experience during rocket launches. Gill Riley, the park's marketing director, said it represented a "multi-million pound investment".







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Coney Island: The Waterboard Thrill Ride was constructed at Coney Island by an artist named Steve Powers to criticize the U.S. use of waterboarding by ... tricking children into watching robots do it. You walk up to the building and peer through the barred window, because why the fuck wouldn't you? The words "DONT WORRY IT'S ONLY A DREAM" are printed on the wall. Inside, you see a life-sized doll strapped to a table with another doll standing over it, holding a watering can. That's when your eyes come to rest on the dollar slot below the window with the huge "ONE DOLLAR" arrow pointing to it. You shrug and feed a dollar into the slot. Surely they wouldn't use your childhood love of SpongeBob to lead you astray. Suddenly the dolls spring to life, and the standing one upends the watering can on the other's face. You recoil in pure terror from what you now realize is a waterboarding simulator.







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Chertsey, England: Derren Brown, the illusionist, is launching the world's first psychological theme park experience with Thorpe Park. Brown - famous for his mind-bending shows and illusions - promises the skills that see him "predict and control human behaviour", will be showcased in his new experience. It is set to be the first "immersive psychological attraction" designed to "manipulate the human mind". Brown said: "First and foremost it's a theme park attraction, the psychological part of it is a layer to it but its ultimate reason for existing is to thrill. "So, it's a theme park attraction that I've come up with over the last three years, working with the Thorpe Park guys trying to push the boundaries of what's possible." The attraction named Ghost Train is set to open in March 2016. Brown admitted he is a lover of theme parks and roller coasters, but said he finds they are "over a little quickly" - so his attraction will be 13 minutes long.





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Orlando: In March 2015, Japanese video game company Nintendo announced plans to team with Universal Studios to bring their video game properties to life at Universal Parks & Resorts. Now insiders suggest that Universal is developing a third park for their Universal Studios Orlando Resort which would have a heavy video game focus, including rides based on Nintendo and Blizzard properties. Universal is looking to expand further as a multi-day vacation destination to rival Walt Disney World (which will soon be adding Avatar-Land to Animal Kingdom and supposedly has a significant retooling of Hollywood Studios in the works). As for what would populate this new Nintendo Parkwith attractions, that may be where Universal’s deal with Nintendo comes in. Word has it that they intend to split Nintendo into multiple parks, similar to their Harry Potter approach, which capitalizes on the fandom purchasing more days on their passes in order to get the full experience. A Mario Kart ride is certainly in the works, but I’m also hearing Pokemon and something THE LEGEND OF ZELDA would end up getting their own immersive worlds.










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Brühl, Germany: Germany's Phantasialand Theme Park's upcoming Klugheim coaster project is named Taron. It's an Intamin made coaster, but with a design that may be more of a mix of Cheetah Hunt at Busch Gardens Tampa and Thirteen at Alton Towers. Our source says that the layout they saw had the coaster leave the station and go through a short dark-ride style indoor section before hitting a launch track and going outside and into a figure-8 style element labeled the "Panorama Curve", which is said to look a lot like the elevated figure-8 element on Cheetah Hunt. From here the train will drop into a series of S-curves before entering a building for another dark ride section that looked to include a 10-meter free-fall drop track element, much like Thirteen. Leaving here, the train appeared to load into a tilt-track style element, much like the one on Escape from Gringotts, dropping the train down and into a second launch track, into an Immelman style inversion, a series of overbanked curves, an into either a corkscrew or zero-g-roll inversion before sliding back into the station one again. Our source also described the trains as looking quite a bit like Skyrush at Hersheypark, seating 4 across with the outer two seats hanging out over the edge of the track. The trains wont be very long however, featuring just 2 cars per train, and each car only having 2 rows, for a total of 16 riders per train.






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Anaheim: At its earliest stages, the Tower of Terror ride wasn’t themed to ‘The Twilight Zone,’ and was instead conceived as a collaboration between Disney and Mel Brooks. Eventually Brooks dropped out of the project, and ‘The Twilight Zone’ elements were introduced, but before then ideas for Hotel Mel, as it was commonly called, involved an attraction and a working hotel housed together in the same building, and a murder mystery that could be solved with clues littered around the grounds. StudioCentral.com says Brooks lost interest right around the time Imagineers stumbled on the idea of adding haunted elevators which leap out of their shafts.





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Dubai: Construction on the Motiongate Dubai, LEGOLAND Dubai and Bollywood theme parks are now over 50% complete and on track to open by October 2016. Meanwhile 71% of the project's struture work and 50% of the resort wide infrastructure is also said to be in place, which I'm assuming is the new hotel and Riverland retail and dining zone that will connect everything together like Universal's CityWalk does in Orlando. The Deluxe Group is helping make 5 different attractions for Motiongate Dubai and lists them as being involved with: Hotel Transylvania, Ghostbuster, The Green Hornet, Underworld and Zombieland.





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Switzerland: A diabolical engineering mastermind in Europe realized a few years ago that amusement park rides are not nearly horrifying enough, and thus began the development of the Tourbillon. This gigantic nightmare machine has just been unveiled by ride maker ABC Rides. It aims to offer a simulated weightlessness experienced by twisting and turning in all directions as terrified riders struggle to tell up from down. Tourbillon is basically a giant motorized gyroscope. If you’ve ever seen footage of an astronaut in one of those spinning ring rigs (called an Aerotrim), it’s similar to that. The smaller versions are used for balance training, which can be important in microgravity. Tourbillon is about 70 feet tall and spins on three axes simultaneously. It has been in development for three years at a cost of more than €2 million.





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Mussel Shoals: Plans for a multi-billion dollar SoundScape Theme Park in Mussel Shoals Alabama were unveiled at an elaborate conference in February 2015. Three months later, it no longer had a working website. Executives announced more details were to follow, such as when and where that park would be. One later, silence. That's according to city leaders in the Shoals. "I've had no contact with them," said Mayor Ian Sanford. "Whether they're working behind the scenes or not, I have no way of knowing." We did make an effort to reach out to the investing company, Provident Global Capital, to see where the project stands, but no one returned our calls. We also reached out to our sister station in Dallas, where DreamVision announced a similar investment back in February. They confirm the company has yet to break ground on that themepark there as well.









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Branson: The Ozark Wildcatcoaster, the icon of the nearby closed Celebration City park in Branson, Missouri, was pulled down on Thursday afternoon. Check out the video below to watch as they try to pull it down with a cable over and over.





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Williamstown: A controversial Noah's Ark-themed amusement park in Kentucky will open on July 7, 2016, the park's founder said on Thursday. Currently under construction in Williamstown, northern Kentucky, Ark Encounterwill include a full-sized wooden replica of the ship from the Biblical story of Noah and the great flood. Ken Ham, president and chief executive of Answers in Genesis, the Christian organisation behind the project, announced the opening date at a press conference and said the park should attract at least 1.4 million people annually. In the summer of 2014, Kentucky officials awarded the park's developers tax incentives, potentially worth more than $18 million over 10 years. However, state officials in December pulled the credits after developers said they would only hire workers who shared their fundamentalist Christian beliefs. Ark Encounter officials then sued the state in federal court in February to get the incentives reinstated. The opening date for the park was based on a verse from the book of Genesis – the seventh verse of the seventh chapter details when Noah and his family entered the ark, Ham said. Because of the perceived high interest in the park, he said attendance will be limited for the first 40 days and nights, tying the opening again to the Noah story, Ham said.









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Paris: Parc Asterix's new 2016 attraction is Discobelix, a Zamperla Disk'O Coaster crossed with a Zamperla Windshear ride (sort of like a Top Spin) with an Egyptian theme. It will open in summer 2016.






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Orlando: This summer Universal’s Islands of Adventure is debuting a much-anticipated dark ride, Skull Island: Reign of Kong. While Kong has a long history at Universal parks, the latest ride is more technologically sophisticated, immersive and advanced in its storytelling than predecessors. The features include massive animatronics, physical scenes to create settings, and projection screens. Reign of Kong has been described by people involved with the project as massive. Everything is being done on a tremendous scale, and that scale is part of the guest experience. Guests enter a themed queue and become part of a 1930s expedition searching for prehistoric creatures. In the queue, guests proceed through a jungle environment complete with hints that a monster is coming their way. Some of the hints come from the physical environment; others through a radio broadcast playing in the area. Riders are loaded into a 25 person vehicle that seats guests in a caged canopy area, to help protect them from Skull Island’s denizens. The vehicle approaches a large stone wall, and temple doors swing open as the guests enter the attraction building. During the ride, the vehicle makes its way through a series of caves and underground areas that are filled with prehistoric creatures. One aspect that’s interesting is the transition from wide open spaces, to narrower settings that play up the tension. Kong fights off enemies to let guests make their escape. One of the particularly memorable scenes is hinted to be a battle between Kong and the ride’s ultimate bad guy at the end of the ride.










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Savio, Italy: Mirabilandia theme park in Italy is adding a new Zamperla Disk'O Coaster this year that will be given a western theme and looks like it may be called Buffalo Bill according to the concept artwork. The ride will be part of a new themed area called Far West Valley which will also see new Western themeing added to the park's side-by-side tower rides.






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Copenhagen: In 2016, Tivoli Gardens will add a second generation Huss Condor ride that will be called Fatamorgana and feature some discs of outward facing individual seats, and some discs with the typical swaying Condor style seats. This installation will be the world’s first Huss Hybrid Condor ride (Huss Condor 2GH), a unique new version of the Condor that offers guests a choice of how they want to ride, either in new 2-seat Condor style swinging gondolas themed as either Flying Lions or Winged Oryx on two arms, while the other two arms will hold round outward facing 14-seat frames that will spin counter to the rotational direction of the central motion.






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Yinchuan, China: IDEATTACK, a global destination design and planning company, has unveiled plans for Eontime World Indoor Theme Park in Yinchuan City, China. The $100m family attraction is part of a larger mixed-use development and will feature three zones, each drawing inspiration from Yinchuan’s unique natural setting. Described by the designers as a fantasy/dream world, the concept for the park reflects the notion that water brought life to the desert and, as a result, a beautiful, glowing ‘Oasis – City’ appeared. The 50,000m² of indoor attraction space are spread over two levels and several mezzanines, all centred on the facility’s iconic Walk-Through Tower. The design narrative is loosely inspired by an ancient myth - a legendary Phoenix coming from the South has created the City and Palace to protect its citizens. Once visitors pass through the arches of the exterior entrance to the building, they find themselves in front of the Magic Gate, guarded by costumed guardians. The world behind the Magic Gate is a fantasy city that symbolically represents a romanticised Central Asian city themed upon the Silk Road, XiXia kingdom, local legends and myths.


















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Katoomba, Australia: Orphan Rockeris quite possibly the most notorious SBNO coaster in history. Orphan Rocker is a thirty year old mess of rumors, dodgy reports, fishy promises and skepticism. Construction began in the early to mid 1980s (though no one can seem to pin whether it was 1982 or 1983). It was the creation of Harry Hammon and his son Philip, who originally conceived of it as a monorail before developing it into a roller coaster. Its initial claim to fame was that it was the first coaster designed and built entirely by Australian companies. Now, its fame derives from a far less boastful attribute: it is, without question, Australia’s most legendary roller coaster failure. Orphan Rocker never made it past the testing stage. The word is that it outright flunked its exams, running into some major problems that precluded its opening to the public. The nature of those problems, however, has never been clear. It will open, they always say, as if the whole site redevelopment thing were only temporary. As if the coaster hasn’t been an idle, rusting, derelict elephant in the room for the past three decades. Sometimes there’s a time frame in the answer—usually an ambiguous “in a few years” though I did once hear of an employee quoting a more exact “in four years”—but each time, the allotted time frame passes with no visible change. It’s as though Orphan Rocker is a sick person whose illness is downplayed and whose relatives live in denial about the true extent of its deterioration, placating themselves with false hopes that a cure is coming and things will be better someday. What I see is moss-covered rust that hasn’t a bloody hope of ever operating.











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Vernon: The LA Times has confirmed that infamous Action Park in New Jersey has indeed purchased the first Sky Caliber vertical looping waterslide from Sky Turtle. If you don't recall, they were shown off for the first time at IAAPA last November and were one of the most new and shocking creations we've seen in a long time. I'll repost our IAAPA report on them below as well, but to be brief... riders are sent down inside a capsule that will take the brunt of the sliding and banging down a vertical 90º plunge before going up and through a vertical 360º loop inversion. It's a great nod to the Action Park of old, which was also known for having the very first vertical loop waterslide... for a short time at least before the potential lawsuits started to pile up.





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Atlanta & Macau: Roller coasters and other rides based on the “Hunger Games” movies will anchor new theme parks in the United States and China, Mr. Palen said. The two parks, built by separate companies and planned for areas near Atlanta and Macau, will join an already announced “Hunger Games” stage show in London and an elaborate Lionsgate zone at a $3 billion entertainment complex under construction between Abu Dhabi and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. Designs for rides are in the early stages, but Mr. Ram said he had no qualms about the harsher “Hunger Games” story lines. Bringing “The Hunger Games” to theme parks is unusual. The dystopian movie series, based on books by Suzanne Collins, is not exactly the whimsical world of “Harry Potter.” Mr. Palen conceded that some theme park operators initially approached by the studio were not overly encouraging.





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Buena Park: The great GhostRider Coaster at Knotts Berry Farm is under rehab and Knott's has confirmed that it will reopen with three all new mine-car themed Millennium Flyer trains (Gold, Silver and Copper) and with a complete re-tracking of the entire 4,533 foot coaster, all done by Great Coasters International. Knott's has also confirmed that the mid-course brake run will be REMOVED entirely from the ride, allowing riders to enjoy the new GhostRider at full relentless speed for the entire length of the run, until you speed into the all new magnetic brake run at the end. The experience will start with a new queue going past the Panning for Gold attraction, which will return to its original Ghost Town home.





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Nowhere: A YouTube video takes a look at what visiting a Roller Coaster Tycoonpark in real life would be like.





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Kaatsheuvel, Holland: Efteling in Holland is ready to begin work in early 2016 on a major new attraction for the park that wont open until 2017 to be called Symbolica. 2017 would also mark the park's 65th Anniversary, and the rumors report that Symbolica could be the park's most expensive expansion ever built. They mention that the new ride system is said to be a trackless dark ride system where the guests sit on a spinning and tilting motion base from ETF, that will take guests around the world of Efteling's mascot Pardoes.








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Vallejo: In Spring 2016, Six Flags Discovery Kingdom will open the most-anticipated new roller coaster in Northern California in over 10 years, The Joker. This state-of-the-art extreme coaster will be the “must ride” coaster of the season, adding to the park’s status as Northern California’s most thrilling theme park. The villainous character’s personality is evident in the coaster’s chaotic twists and turns, including a first ever “step-up under-flip inverted roll” that takes riders horizontal. The Joker ride also features the ultimate “fake-out” with a unique breaking wave turn, the only one of its kind on the West Coast. Additional highlights of The Joker ride include: 3,200 feet of dual-colored purple and green track; A wild Zero G barrel roll; 3 inversions; 15 extreme airtime moments; and Maximum speeds of 53 mph.





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Dubai: 20th Century Fox World, Dubai will boast a series of themed lands, with amusement park attractions, themed restaurants, and stores. There will also be a Fox-themed resort hotel. The partners also plan to build rides and other features based on “Ice Age,” “Rio,” “Predator,” “Night at the Museum” and “The Simpsons.” The company cannot include its most popular film franchise, “Avatar,” in the resort, since characters and material from the James Cameron epic have been licensed and will be featured in themed attractions at Walt Disney Parks and Resorts. Of all of the pictures mentioned as part of the rides and attractions at the new resort, “Titanic,” a romance that ends tragically, sounds the most unconventional. But Godsick says it’s the perfect fit. “We are working on creating an immersive experience that includes motion theater simulators and will allow you to experience what it was like to be on the Titanic in an exciting way,” he said.










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Ourimbah State Forest, Australia: Zipline-based “rollercoasters” seem to be all the rage at the moment. Here’s a new one and the longest in existence from New South Wales. Rollglider combines the excitement of hang gliding, paragliding, and proximity flying, into one safe ride. The customisable design makes it an excellent solution for both indoor and outdoor areas, where – as seen here – maximum use can be made of existing assets such as trees. Riders reach speeds of up to 44mph (77 km/h). So far, Walltopia has completed five Rollglider projects – in Ourimbah State Forest in New South Wales, at the Krushuna Falls in Bulgaria, District 21 in Malaysia, the foot of Mount Fuji in Japan and Huimala in Helsinki, Finland. In 2016, the company will makes its first installation in the US.





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Hanna, Japan: A Moomin Theme Park covering a vast lakeside area is scheduled to open in Saitama Prefecture as early as 2017. The area chosen around Lake Miyazawako in Hanno, Saitama Prefecture, is meant to resemble the popular fantasy characters’ nature-rich homeland in Finland. The theme park is expected to house facilities where visitors can interact with Moomin characters, as well as museums and restaurants offering Nordic meals, said investment company FinTech Global Inc., which is behind the project. The Tokyo-based company clinched a deal June 30 to buy a 187,000-square-meter area of land from Seibu Railway Co. for 600 million yen ($4.9 million). The land will house the theme park “Metsa,” which means “forest” in Finnish. The project will cost several billion yen, and organizers hope to attract 1 million visitors annually. Moomins are hippo-like characters created by Finnish illustrator Tove Jansson. The first Moomin book was published in 1945, and the characters are very popular in Japan.










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p.s. Hey. ** Tosh Berman, Hi. Ha ha, I hear you. Really good mosh pits aren't gender-specific. They do seem to have gotten more treacherous with time. I used to sidle into pits in the early punk days before they were even called mosh pits, and they could be kind of exhilarating. I think my being tall made a difference. But then they started getting trolled by assholes, and, yeah, I basically stay a layer or two of people back now and just gawk. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, D. Yes, I agree about Eco. And 'Travels in Hyper-Reality' is really great, for sure. Oh, what a shame that Morrissey didn't make that film. 'The Vatican Cellars', which had the title 'Lafcadio's Adventures' in the version I read way back when, seems like it could have been a terrific movie, in Morrissey's hands at least, at least in memory. ** Damien Ark, Hi, Damien! Awesome to see you! Never been in a Ty Segall pit or even at a TS gig. I'm going to try that. Well, the latter option at least. I hope you're a busy body for reasons that are a big boost. What's going on? ** Bill, Hi, B. Yeah, my pit experiences were mostly early-on (late 70s) when what you're saying rings totally true. This is probably before your time, but something happened, in LA at least, around the time that 'punk' started meaning, say, Black Flag rather than, oh, The Screamers or Germs or whoever, and this creepy macho thing started poisoning the pits. Yeah, that bus thing was a mindfuck. How was your weekend? ** Steevee, Hi. Ah, so it took a bit to settle. Kind of like mushrooms or something. Or mushrooms in my experiences. Flesheaters! Man, I haven't thought about them in ages. I knew that guy, the singer, pretty well back in the LA scene days. They're wonderful. I'm really, really happy to hear that you loved 'Malgre la Nuit! I loved it too, as you know, and I agree with what you wrote about it. I think it might even be my favorite Grandieux film. That's great! But not great at all about your leg pain. Are you feeling better today? ** Thom, Hi, Thom! Welcome! No, I don't know the name Timothée Chalamet. Hold on, let me try your link. Huh. He looks really different in each of those photos at the top. Yeah, he looks good. Is he an interesting actor to boot? Thanks, man. ** h, Hi, h! Really nice to see you! I'm glad to hear that this place still draws you in occasionally. I hope your secret projects are going really well. Secret projects = yum. ** Sypha, Hi, James. Yeah, you don't seem like a mosh pit-joining type, ha ha. Thank you immensely for putting aside your editing to do Là-Bas Day! I'm very honored. Your posts are always so incredible, I can only imagine the difficulty they involve. You're a saint for toughing that out. Thank you! Excited! 'The Counterfeiters' was a real revelation to me when I read it back in the '70s. Like I said the other day, I'm a little afraid to reread it, but I think/hope it holds up. I'll be curious to learn what you think of it, obviously. ** Chris Dankland, Hey Chris! Thanks about the gif set. That's funny you mention a Melvins pit. One really bad Melvins pit experience was what made me become kind of permanently standoffish at gigs. A couple of friends and I were suitably transported by a typically incredible Melvins performance, and we thought, 'What the hell', and we slid into the pit. Then everything became a blur, literally. The next thing I remember was security guys dragging us towards the venue's exit. I guess we got attacked, knocked to the floor, punched, kicked, etc. by some guys. Our clothes were half-ripped off, and we had bruises all over the place. After that, I went wuss when it came to pits. So, yeah, that's probably my stand-out mosh pit memory. Man, I hear and feel you about Trump anxiety, but ... Facebook has become, for me, an almost unbearable hell to visit lately, due mostly to the vicious Sanders vs. Clinton stuff that occupies most of my newsfeed these days, and I've been hugely enjoying that this place is like an oasis away from that, so I decided that I don't want to talk about the election here, at least for now. You and others can, of course. There are no rules, but I'm super wary to get that battling poison in here. But, yeah, I definitely hear you on that. Man, again, I love your book! And, yeah if the blog has been any help at all, that's so amazing to hear. You being here has really helped make the blog very amazing. Truer words hath ne'er been spoke. Love, me. ** Armando, Happy birthday a little late, whether you like it or not, ha ha. Oh, well, actually, I recommend you consider starting by self-publishing. That's what I did. I self-published my first two books, and that got me some readers and name-recognition and stuff, and then it was easier to get published after that. I think self-publishing is a totally legit way to go, and there's no stigma around it anymore. I mean, d.l. Chris Dankland just self-published his first book, 'Weed Monks', and people are reading and writing about it, and I think it was a really good thing for him to do. A lot of really interesting writers self-publish their books. I read a lot of them. Heck, Michael Salerno self-publishes most of his books through Kiddiepunk, for instance. So I think you should consider it, especially if your work is risky, abject, etc. If I hadn't started out by self-publishing my stuff, I'm not sure that I would have ever gotten wherever I am today. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Me too, duh, about LBD. So sorry to hear that you waylaid with a cold. I hope it's clear of you and on its way to hell by now. Thanks a lot for starting the Day! ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! It does, right? Yeah, the bus thing, yikes. It didn't affect the dig stuff really. The thing I learned that summer is that being an archaeologist working on digs is unbelievably tedious. Like spending three days spooning tiny bits of dirt and sand out of holes. Let's just say that my archeologist dreams died about two days into my two month-long job working on the dig, and it was not the most exciting summer I ever spent, in a word. Thank you about my tall, skinny mosh pit! I hope your weekend was a very, very good one. Was it? ** Unknown/Pascal, Hi, P. Wow, a My Bloody Valentine pit must have been pretty intense and trippy. Wow. I'm a huge Noe fan, but I really didn't like 'Love'. Great week to you! ** Misanthrope, Cool, glad Quin's stuff rang your bell. That's a George I never knew and who is hard, though not impossible, to visualize. Wowzer. Autocorrect just corrected 'wowzer' to 'woozier', which works too. I just hope against all rationale and logic and hope that FB doesn't stay like this until November. I don't think I can last it out that long. ** James, Hi. Yeah, I guess it does explain my bus weirdness. Your mention of this book 'Streetwalker' is the first I've ever heard of it. I will investigate. Thanks, bud. Lucky lucky lucky you about Tokyo! It's going to blow your mind and capture your heart. Swear to God. Ha ha, nice pit story. And a Ronnie James Dio pit, no less! ** Okay. Today I am yet again indulging my fascination with amusement parks and their rides, in this case mostly re: rides and parks that are forthcoming. See if I can persuade you into sharing my excitement. See you tomorrow.

Spotlight on ... Ronald Firbank Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli (1926)

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'English novelist Ronald Firbank, was born in 1886. Had he been younger, his wit and thirst would probably have swept him into the frantic frippery of the Bright Young Things and we may have been denied the subversive brilliance of the dozen or so books that he left. Howard himself called Firbank’s Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli“the wittiest book ever written”.

'Firbank, it seems, was born blushing; his associates never fail to mention his social awkwardness, particularly the incessant fluttering of hands (or compulsive washing of same) and the hysterical laughter which would periodically erupt, leaving him incapable of completing an anecdote. Attempting to embolden himself with drink merely exacerbated the problem.

'The key to Firbank’s life as well as his art is a sense of never quite belonging. He was born into wealth but it was only two generations old and thus socially suspect. His delicate health led him to constantly seek out more sympathetic climes, and his friends knew of his comings and goings largely from notices in The Times. He was also a Catholic convert, like Waugh in the following generation and Frederick Rolfe in the previous. In fact he was accepted into the Church by Monsignor Robert Hugh Benson, who enjoyed a short-lived friendship with Rolfe and Firbank was, like Rolfe, rejected from the priesthood and ever after maintained a strange, Oedipal love-hate relationship with Catholicism.

'All of these things, as well as his homosexuality, gave Firbank a privileged vantage point to observe the rituals of his circle as well as its hostility to outsiders, but the barbs in his writing are sometimes so subtle that they only become visible on a second reading. While his plots and dialogue can occasionally seem as precious and overstuffed as a Victorian salon, Firbank was also remarkably forward-looking, such as in the impressionistic passages in Valmouth which record fragments of conversation, out of context, or his regular deployment of characters who were gay or lesbian or otherwise alienated.

'There are numerous accounts of Firbank’s personal eccentricity, such as presenting the Marchesa Casati with a bunch of lilies and suggesting that they embark immediately for America, sending his cab driver to smooth the way before his first meeting with Augustus John, or his unlikely participation in sports. While at Cambridge, Oscar Wilde’s son Vyvyan Holland recalls seeing the effete Firbank incongruously dressed “in the costume of sport”. Confounded, Holland enquired what he had been doing, and learning that he had apparently been playing football, further enquired whether it was rugby or soccer. “Oh,” replied Firbank, “I don’t remember”.

'Firbank’s persistent ill-health and self-destructive drinking finally caught up with him in Rome where, in 1926, he died alone in a hotel room. The only person who knew him there was Lord Berners, who hastily arranged a funeral ceremony with a Reverend Ragg (who, to complete this chain of coincidence, had been an associate of Frederick Rolfe’s in Venice). Firbank was an outsider to the last; Berners, having no inkling of his conversion, had him buried in the Protestant Cemetery (he was later reinterred).'-- James J. Conway


'Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli (1926) has something of the solidity of texture which characterized Firbank's earlier novel Valmouth, and it contains some of his best writing. It is set in Spain, and the Cardinal's 'eccentricities' include the baptism of pet dogs in his cathedral and an unsuitable passion for choir-boys. Plot is reduced to a minimum, once again the book consists of a series of conversation-pieces.

'Cardinal Pirelli is, incidentally, the bawdiest of Firbank's novels: what elsewhere has been suggested by a mere lift of the eyebrow is here presented without the least equivocation. On the whole, the change is not for the better; Firbank's mingling of sanctity and smut is not the most attractive aspect of his work, and to a modern reader seems curiously dated. The Cardinal's pursuit of the choir-boy, in the last chapter, is plainly intended to produce the half funny, half moving effect of the final passages in Prancing Nigger; the intention fails, however, for in these concluding pages of his last books ( Since this was written, a fragment of 'The New Rhythum', a novel about New York which Firbank was at work on when he died, has been published, together with several pieces of juvenilia. The latter are of some interest, written as they were in the transitional phase between Odette and The Artificial Princess; the novel-fragment, though amusing enough, seems hardly up to the standard of its predecessors.). Firbank relapses once again into the sentimental and too consciously 'literary' style of Odette and Santal. It is as though the two contrasted elements in his personality, so happily blended in his best work, had here refused to mingle, and the effect is of an uneasy collaboration between two quite disparate writers.

'Firbank is not an author who lends himself to facile literary judgments: he cannot be fitted into any of the normal categories, and to dissect his novels as one might, say, those of George Eliot, is, as E. M. Forster has wisely said, equivalent to breaking a butterfly upon a wheel (Essay on Firbank in 'Abinger Harvest'). In any case, one must first catch one's butterfly, and Firbank, more than most writers, eludes pursuit, and refuses to be pinned down. Any judgement upon him is bound to be highly personal: either one enjoys his work or one does not, and it is all but impossible to explain its merits to those who dislike it.

'Firbank has been compared, in an earlier passage of this essay, with James Joyce, and though no two writers seem, on the face of it, more dissimilar, the comparison could be extended. Neither Joyce nor Firbank, in their earliest work, appeared to possess more than the slenderest of talents: Odette can be paralleled by the vapid and derivative poems in Chamber Music. Both, however, were gifted with great literary virtuosity and a talent for pastiche, and were thus enabled to produce works totally different in quality and scope from anything which could have been predicted from their juvenilia. But whereas Joyce was tempted to work on a vast scale (and thereby, as some may think, to dissipate much of his natural talent), Firbank was content to recognise his own limitations, and to write in the manner which he found easiest and most pleasing to himself.

'Firbank is without doubt a minor writer (whether Joyce, for all his present 'reclame', is a major one, is a question which can only be settled by posterity), but one who, for the most part, achieved precisely what he set out to do. Sometimes his inspiration flags, he can be irritating and downright silly; yet he is one of those artists who, as Cyril Connolly has said, 'attempt, with a purity and a kind of dewy elegance, to portray the beauty of the moment, the gaiety and sadness, the fugitive distress of hedonism (The Condemned Playground.). Such artists are not, perhaps, very fashionable today; yet among them can be numbered (as Mr. Connolly goes on to say) such names as Horace, Watteau and Mozart. Firbank, of course, is not their peer, but he is a citizen, so to speak, of the same country; though not a great artist, he is that rare phenomenon in English literature, a pure artist, and as such he deserves our respect.'-- Jocelyn Brooke



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Further

Ronald Firbank @ Wikipedia
Ronald Firbank: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center
'The Novels of Ronald Firbank', by Jocelyn Brooke
RF @ goodreads
'Vainglory: with Inclinations and Caprice by Ronald Firbank'
Ronald Firbank @ New Directions
The Lectern: 'Five Novels by Ronald Firbank'
'Method in Madness: Ronald Firbank's The Flower Beneath the Foot'
'Prancing Back into Print'
'I Often Laugh When I'm Alone: The Novels of Ronald Firbank'
'Criticism of Society in the English Novel Between the Wars: Ronald Firbank'
Ronald Firbank Fansite
'From "Odette, A Fairy Tale for Weary People" by Ronald Firbank'
'Ronald Firbank and the Powers of Frivolity'
'The Parrotic Voice of the Frivolous'
'Ronald Firbank's Radical Pastorals'
'Pilgrimage to Ronald Firbank'
'Firbank as poet', by Douglas Messerli
'ROBUST BODY AND SOCIAL SOULS: REASSESSING RONALD FIRBANK'S EFFEMINATE QUEER MEN'
Video: 'Gleefully Shameful. The Camp Fictions of Ronald Firbank'



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Extras


Ronald Firbank


Sir Monkey channels Ronald Firbank


Ronald Firbank Quotes


Jerzy CHODOR - Księżniczka Słoneczników (Ronald Firbank)



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10 uses of the term Firbankian




1.
Guide to the Richard Blake Brown Letters, 1933-1962
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION: Correspondence by Richard Blake Brown, Anglican priest and sub-Firbankian gay novelist to Marcus Oliver. Written from various places on a variety of letterheads and on a variety of subjects, including fashion and costume designer Norman Hartnell; novelist Denton Welch; Brown's meeting with Queen Mary; gay life in and out of the British Navy; and World War II in England. In addition to the letters are a photograph of Brown, a 4-page publicity leaflet regarding Brown's novels, an item regarding an Anglo Latin-American costume exhibit, a magazine clipping of two nude boys wrestling, and a card from a hairdresser.


2.
nudism or firbankian moments on the beach

summer holiday 1999, a boy perhaps a fiend: for a few years I have been going to the nudist beach whenever the Dutch climate would allow a day in the sun, at first I thought it strange but it didn't took long for me to realise that it was absolutely normal, I did not miss anything I mean.

But only last year on another nudist day at Hook of Holland I went for a walk with some friends along the coast line; I think they put something on because we did not know how far we would walk, but I was rather ignorant at the moment that something could be wrong, when suddenly out of the blue there was this little boy, almost seven or eight years old in a shiny striped speedo with the emblem of a crying octopussy loosely stitched on the front (was it still...wet?) waving with a large butterfly-net at me, while he raved violently: "All willies must go away...dirty willies go away!"

I was horrified, did i already walk too far? I could have only just crossed the border where nudist recreation was no longer alowed and I did not yet see the signboard. And then already this angry young lad attacking me with his hard wooden stick! -- erik, Tuesday, June 4, 2002, ilx.wh3rd.net


3.
From the lavender rust, to the Firbankian frisson, to the poofing incense, and baron Corvo incognito, this litany of homophobic codes has been marshaled to bear witness to what Kroll later characterizes as Rauschenberg's "Capotean" indulgence. From Kroll's perspective, we have indeed gotten "too close to the artist in the wrong sense," having uncovered his secrets: the expression of his ostensibly hidden homosexual life. What Kroll sneeringly refers to as the space "between the sanctum of private reference and the littered tundra of commemorative decay" is precisely the territory I want to navigate in my attempt to get "close to the artist." It is in this space between authoritative usage and "private reference" that the emergence of "other" meanings - seductive implications both "public" and "private" - emerge into discursive promise. -- from LOVERS AND DIVERS: INTERPICTORIAL DIALOG IN THE WORK OF JASPER JOHNS AND JASPER JOHNS by Jonathan Katz


4.
I love those European Scientology celebrities, who are unique among celebrities in that nobody has ever heard of them. For some reason most of their names also sound like they've been made up. At one point, Scientology in the Netherlands trotted out a 'celebrity' spokesperson called Kiki Oostindiën, a self-described singer and model. One wouldn't dare to make it up. "Polish cellist Baroness Soujata de Varis" is a wonderful find, it sounds so splendidly Firbankian -- are they sure she exists for real and isn't just a character from a Firbank novel? -- Piltdown Man, from a discussion on Scientology at alt.religion.scientology


5.
Authorial Adjectives: If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then to have been imitated enough to warrant having your name turned into an adjective must be an embarrassment of riches. I came across an article this evening, "Adjectives and the Work of Modernism in an Age of Celebrity" (Project Muse) by Aaron Jaffe, which contains a partial list of authors whose names have been adjectivified, and entered popular use. Goodness, Ibsenite could be some dim, carbon-like mineral, I imagine. A Firbankian is obviously a resident of Firbanks, AK. Brontëan reminds me of some extinct race of malformed giants. Lawrentian: the name of some unplumbed undersea abyss. -- from the blog Reeding Lessons


6.
... my highly evolved if not Firbankian sense of camp. Thus I eschew the ubiquitous Frida K; ditto anything with Day of the Dead skeletons on it. I avert my eyes from a stamp showing Georgia O'Keeffe in her jaunty gaucho hat. But somehow I end up with ... -- from James Wolcott's blog


7.
Jean Rouch at 86 had lost some of his youthful energy but none of his wit and enthusiasm. With another great film-maker still not subdued by the constraints of old age, the veteran Portuguese master Manoel de Oliveira (a Firbankian nonagenarian), he made a film in Oporto centred on that city's Pont Eiffel, based on a poem d'Oliveira had written as a script. -- from an obituary of director Jean Rouch by James Kirkup


8.
James Broughton's Mother's Day is a comic anti-tribute to Mother that envisions Father as mostly a face in a frame, staring dourly, and the children as childlike adults, mindlessly engaging in such rituals as playing hopscotch and shooting squirt guns. Broughton's attack on the family is wrapped in Firbankian whimsy: "Mother was the loveliest woman in the world," reads a title in the film, "And Mother wanted everything to be lovely."-- from an appreciation o James Broughton at qlbtq.com


9.
The novelty of the plays, which feature ordinary suburban couples speaking gibberish with absolute complacency, is gone, of course, and they seem more mildly charming than explosive. But they do have their moments, with epigrammatic non sequiturs of Firbankian flair and a delightfully inane religious service broadcast on the radio. -- from Ben Brantley's review of a production of N.F. Simpson's short plays in the NY Times


10.
The obituaries recently published for Anthony Powell are infused with elegy, as though marking the end of a tradition. Here was the last man left with the confidence to write as he pleased. The room he occupied in the house of English literature was distinct, somewhere on a staircase nobody else climbed. Before the last war, he had published several Firbankian novels so light and comic that they are almost disembodied. -- from a remembrance of Anthony Powell by David Pryce-Jones from The Paris Review



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Book

Ronald Firbank Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli
New Directions

'Ronald Firbank’s novels describe a world which is only adjacent to this one, having many of the features of reality, but a reality which is altogether ‘too much’. In Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli, there is a class structure, a Cardinal harassed by an overwheening aristocrat, presumptious servants, lavish banquets, and so on. But the overwheening aristocrat has recently had her latest adopted dog baptized in full ceremony in the Basilica, the Cardinal has a crush on an altogether too knowing acolyte, and Madame Poco the wardrobe mistress is a Vatican spy. A world of gossip, barely suppressed scandal, Catholicism of the Scarlet-Whore-of-Babylon variety, and a limpid prose style with roots in the Decadent movement, have ensured for Firbank a place in the pantheon of gay classics. But Firbank is not just a gay writer. He is also one of the great unsung 20th century masters of English prose, a magnificent stylist of the very first rank.'-- The Lectern

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Excerpt

I

Huddled up in a cope of gold wrought silk he peered around. Society had rallied in force. A christening—and not a child's.

Rarely had he witnessed, before the font, so many brilliant people. Were it an heir to the DunEden acres (instead of what it was) the ceremony could have hardly drawn together a more distinguished throng.

Monsignor Silex moved a finger from forehead to chin, and from ear to ear. The Duquesa DunEden's escapades, if continued, would certainly cost the Cardinal his hat.

    "And ease my heart by splashing fountains."

From the choir-loft a boy's young voice was evoking Heaven.

"His hat!" Monsignor Silex exclaimed aloud, blinking a little at the immemorial font of black Macæl marble that had provoked the screams of pale numberless babies.

Here Saints and Kings had been baptized, and royal Infantas, and sweet Poets, whose high names thrilled the heart.

Monsignor Silex crossed his breast. He must gather force to look about him. Frame a close report. The Pontiff, in far-off Italy, would expect precision.

Beneath the state baldequin, or Grand Xaymaca, his Eminence sat enthroned ogled by the wives of a dozen grandees. The Altamissals, the Villarasas (their grandee-ships' approving glances, indeed, almost eclipsed their wives'), and Catherine, Countess of Constantine, the most talked-of beauty in the realm, looking like some wild limb of Astaroth in a little crushed "toreador" hat round as an athlete's coif with hanging silken balls, while beside her a stout, dumpish dame, of enormous persuasion, was joggling, solicitously, an object that was of the liveliest interest to all.

Head archly bent, her fine arms divined through darkling laces, the Duquesa stood, clasping closely a week-old police-dog in the ripple of her gown.

"Mother's pet!" she cooed, as the imperious creature passed his tongue across the splendid uncertainty of her chin.

Monsignor Silex's large, livid face grew grim.

What,—disquieting doubt,—if it were her Grace's offspring after all? Praise heaven, he was ignorant enough regarding the schemes of nature, but in an old lutrin once he had read of a young woman engendering a missel-thrush through the channel of her nose. It had created a good deal of scandal to be sure at the time: the Holy Inquisition, indeed, had condemned the impudent baggage, in consequence, to the stake.

"That was the style to treat them," he murmured, appraising the assembly with no kindly eye. The presence of Madame San Seymour surprised him; one habitually so set apart and devout! And Madame La Urench, too, gurgling away freely to the four-legged Father: "No, my naughty Blessing; no, not now!... By and by, a bone."

Words which brought the warm saliva to the expectant parent's mouth.

Tail awag, sex apparent (to the affected slight confusion of the Infanta Eulalia-Irene), he crouched, his eyes fixed wistfully upon the nozzle of his son.

Ah, happy delirium of first parenthood! Adoring pride! Since times primæval by what masonry does it knit together those that have succeeded in establishing here, on earth, the vital bonds of a family's claim? Even the modest sacristan, at attention by the font, felt himself to be superior of parts to a certain unproductive chieftain of a princely House, who had lately undergone a course of asses' milk in the surrounding mountains—all in vain!

But, supported by the Prior of the Cartuja, the Cardinal had arisen for the act of Immersion.

Of unusual elegance, and with the remains, moreover, of perfect looks, he was as wooed and run after by the ladies as any matador.

"And thus being cleansed and purified, I do call thee 'Crack'!" he addressed the Duquesa's captive burden.

Tail sheathed with legs "in master's drawers," ears cocked, tongue pendent....

"Mother's mascot!"

"Oh, take care, dear; he's removing all your rouge!"

"What?"

"He's spoilt, I fear, your roses." The Countess of Constantine tittered.

The Duquesa's grasp relaxed. To be seen by all the world at this disadvantage.

"Both?" she asked, distressed, disregarding the culprit, who sprang from her breast with a sharp, sportive bark.

What rapture, what freedom!

"Misericordia!" Monsignor Silex exclaimed, staring aghast at a leg poised, inconsequently, against the mural-tablet of the widowed duchess of Charona—a woman who, in her lifetime, had given over thirty million pezos to the poor!

Ave Maria purissima! What challenging snarls and measured mystery marked the elaborate recognition of father and son, and would no one then forbid their incestuous frolics?

In agitation Monsignor Silex sought fortitude from the storied windows overhead, aglow in the ambered light as some radiant missal.

It was Saint Eufraxia's Eve, she of Egypt, a frail unit numbered above among the train of the Eleven Thousand Virgins: an immaturish schoolgirl of a saint, unskilled, inexperienced in handling a prayer, lacking, the vim and native astuteness of the incomparable Theresa.

Yes; divine interference, 'twixt father and son, was hardly to be looked for, and Eufraxia (she of Egypt) had failed too often before....

Monsignor Silex started slightly, as, from the estrade beneath the dome, a choir-boy let fall a little white spit.

Dear child, as though that would part them!

"Things must be allowed to take their 'natural' course," he concluded, following the esoteric antics of the reunited pair.

Out into the open, over the Lapis Lazuli of the floor, they flashed, with stifled yelps, like things possessed.

"He'll tear my husband's drawers!" the duquesa lamented.

"The duque's legs. Poor Decima." The Infanta fell quietly to her knees.

"Fortify ... asses ..." the royal lips moved.

"Brave darling," she murmured, gently rising.

But the duquesa had withdrawn, it seemed, to repair her ravaged roses, and from the obscurity of an adjacent confessional-box was calling to order Crack.

"Come, Crack!"

And to the Mauro-Hispanic rafters the echo rose.

"Crack, Crack, Crack, Crack...."



II

From the Calle de la Pasiôn, beneath the blue-tiled mirador of the garden wall, came the soft brooding sound of a seguidilla. It was a twilight planned for wooing, unbending, consent; many, before now, had come to grief on an evening such. "It was the moon."

Pacing a cloistered walk, laden with the odour of sun-tired flowers, the Cardinal could not but feel the insidious influences astir. The bells of the institutions of the Encarnacion and the Immaculate Conception, joined in confirming Angelus, had put on tones half-bridal, enough to create vague longings, of sudden tears, among the young patrician boarders.

"Their parents' daughters—convent-bred," the Cardinal sighed.

At the Immaculate Conception, dubbed by the Queen, in irony, once "The school for harlots," the little Infanta Maria-Paz must be lusting for her Mamma and the Court, and the lilac carnage of the ring, while chafing also in the same loose captivity would be the roguish niñas of the pleasure-loving duchess of Sarmento, girls whose Hellenic ethics had given the good Abbess more than one attack of fullness.

Morality. Poise! For without temperance and equilibrium—— The Cardinal halted.

But in the shifting underlight about him the flushed camellias and the sweet night-jasmines suggested none; neither did the shape of a garden-Eros pointing radiantly the dusk.

"For unless we have balance——" the Cardinal murmured, distraught, admiring against the elusive nuances of the afterglow the cupid's voluptuous hams.

It was against these, once, in a tempestuous mood that his mistress had smashed her fan-sticks.

"Would that all liaisons would break as easily!" his Eminence framed the prayer: and musing on the appalling constancy of a certain type, he sauntered leisurely on. Yes, enveloping women like Luna Sainz, with their lachrymose, tactless "mys," how shake them off? "My" Saviour, "my" lover, "my" parasol—and, even, "my" virtue....

"Poor dearie."

The Cardinal smiled.

Yet once in a way, perhaps, he was not averse to being favoured by a glimpse of her: "A little visit on a night like this." Don Alvaro Narciso Hernando Pirelli, Cardinal-Archbishop of Clemenza, smiled again.

In the gloom there, among the high thickets of bay and flowering myrtle.... For, after all, bless her, one could not well deny she possessed the chief essentials: "such, poor soul, as they are!" he reflected, turning about at the sound as of the neigh of a horse.

"Monseigneur...."

Bearing a biretta and a silver shawl, Madame Poco, the venerable Superintendent-of-the-palace, looking, in the blue moonlight, like some whiskered skull, emerged, after inconceivable peepings, from among the leafy limbo of the trees.

"Ah, Don Alvaro, sir! Come here."

"Pest!" His Eminence evinced a touch of asperity.

"Ah, Don, Don,..." and slamming forward with the grace of a Torero lassooing a bull, she slipped the scintillating fabric about the prelate's neck.

"Such nights breed fever, Don Alvaro, and there is mischief in the air."

"Mischief?"

"In certain quarters of the city you would take it almost for some sortilege."

"What next?"

"At the Encarnacion there's nothing, of late, but seediness. Sister Engracia with the chicken-pox, and Mother Claridad with the itch, while at the College of Noble Damosels, in the Calle Santa Fé, I hear a daughter of Don José Illescas, in a fit of caprice, has set a match to her coronet."

"A match to her what?"

"And how explain, Don Alvaro of my heart, these constant shots in the Cortès? Ah, sangre mio, in what times we live!"

Ambling a few steps pensively side by side, they moved through the brilliant moonlight. It was the hour when the awakening fireflies are first seen like atoms of rosy flame floating from flower to flower.

"Singular times, sure enough," the Cardinal answered, pausing to enjoy the transparent beauty of the white dripping water of a flowing fountain.

"And ease my heart by splashing—tum-tiddly-um-tum," he hummed. "I trust the choir-boys, Dame, are all in health?"

"Ah, Don Alvaro, no, sir!"

"Eh?"

"No, sir," Madame Poco murmured, taking up a thousand golden poses.

"Why, how's that?"

"But few now seem keen on Leapfrog, or Bossage, and when a boy shows no wish for a game of Leap, sir, or Bossage——"

"Exactly," his Eminence nodded.

"I'm told it's some time, young cubs, since they've played pranks on Tourists! Though only this afternoon little Ramón Ragatta came over queazy while demonstrating before foreigners the Dance of the Arc, which should teach him in future not to be so profane: and as to the acolytes, Don Alvaro, at least half of them are absent, confined to their cots, in the wards of the pistache Fathers!"

"To-morrow, all well, I'll take them some melons."

"Ah, Don, Don!!"

"And, perhaps, a cucumber," the Cardinal added, turning valedictionally away.

The tones of the seguidilla had deepened and from the remote recesses of the garden arose a bedlam of nightingales and frogs.

It was certainly incredible how he felt immured.

Yet to forsake the Palace for the Plaza he was obliged to stoop to creep.

With the Pirelli pride, with resourceful intimacy he communed with his heart: deception is a humiliation; but humiliation is a Virtue—a Cardinal, like myself, and one of the delicate violets of our Lady's crown.... Incontestably, too,—he had a flash of inconsequent insight, many a prod to a discourse, many a sapient thrust, delivered ex cathedrâ, amid the broken sobs of either sex, had been inspired, before now, by what prurient persons might term, perhaps, a "frolic." But away with all scruples! Once in the street in mufti, how foolish they became.

The dear street. The adorable Avenidas. The quickening stimulus of the crowd: truly it was exhilarating to mingle freely with the throng!

Disguised as a cabellero from the provinces or as a matron (disliking to forgo altogether the militant bravoura of a skirt), it became possible to combine philosophy, equally, with pleasure.

The promenade at the Trinidades seldom failed to be diverting, especially when the brown Bettita or the Ortiz danced! Olé, he swayed his shawl. The Argentina with Blanca Sanchez was amusing too; her ear-tickling little song "Madrid is on the Manzanares," trailing the "'ares" indefinitely, was sure, in due course, to reach the Cloisters.

Deliberating critically on the numerous actresses of his diocese, he traversed lightly a path all enclosed by pots of bergamot.

And how entrancing to perch on a bar-stool, over a glass of old golden sherry!

"Ah Jesus-Maria," he addressed the dancing lightning in the sky.

Purring to himself, and frequently pausing, he made his way, by ecstatic degrees, towards the mirador on the garden wall.

Although a mortification, it was imperative to bear in mind the consequences of cutting a too dashing figure. Beware display. Vanity once had proved all but fatal: "I remember it was the night I wore ringlets and was called 'my queen.'"

And with a fleeting smile, Don Alvaro Pirelli recalled the persistent officer who had had the effrontery to attempt to molest him: "Stalked me the whole length of the Avenue Isadora!" It had been a lesson. "Better to be on the drab side," he reflected, turning the key of the garden tower.

Dating from the period of the Reformation of the Nunneries, it commanded the privacy of many a drowsy patio.

"I see the Infanta has begun her Tuesdays!" he serenely noted, sweeping the panorama with a glance.

It was a delightful prospect.

Like some great guitar the city lay engirdled ethereally by the snowy Sierras.

"Foolish featherhead," he murmured, his glance falling upon a sunshade of sapphire chiffon, left by Luna: "'my' parasol!" he twirled the crystal hilt.

"Everything she forgets, bless her," he breathed, lifting his gaze towards the magnolia blossom cups that overtopped the tower, stained by the eternal treachery of the night to the azure of the Saint Virgin. Suspended in the miracle of the moonlight their elfin globes were at their zenith.

"Madrid is on the Manzan-ares," he intoned.

But "Clemenza," of course, is in white Andalusia.

(cont.)




*

p.s. Hey. Oh, there's a new interview with me just up on the pixarthinking site where I talk about 'Like Cattle Towards Glow', 'Zac's Haunted House', 'Zac's Control Panel', writing, and other stuff, if you're interested. ** Armando, Hi. I wish I was more versed with the details of the various possibilities for self-publishing. There are quite a number of sites. Chris Dankland used Gumroad. In that case, as far as I can tell, you would make the pdf/book and then put it on Gumroad? Chris Dankland, if you're reading this and don't mind giving Armando tips on how you self-published 'Weed Monks', he would appreciate it. But there are a number of sites/ways people are self-publishing. Online, yeah. You being Mexican and based in Mexico doesn't matter, as it's an online thing -- pdf/eBook, etc. I'll try to look further for info today if I have time, and maybe others here who know more about self-publishing will chime in. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! Ha ha, it sounds like paleontology is another one of those professions that seem really cool from afar but is more like working on an assembly line in an outdoor factory or something. You had a great weekend, yay! Awesome! Mine was good rather than great, which I'll happily take. Today will be intense. Zac and I are very shortly meeting with a producer whom we really hope will want to produce our new film. He read the script and is interested enough to meet with us, but it's possibly a long shot. It would make things so much easier and even amazing if he's willing, because the producer-search is no fun, so keep your fingers crossed for us if it's no trouble. We need all the luck we can get. I hope to see Marching Church tomorrow. It's sold out (ugh), but I sent Elias a text asking if he can get me in, so we'll see. Have a fine Tuesday! ** Thom, Hi. Non-fragile is okay, at least in some circumstances, ha ha. Oh, gosh, ... looks-wise ... I'm going to have to dwell on that for a bit. No one immediately sprang to mind, which is kind of strange actually, or maybe not since I'm doing this p.s. earlier than usual because I have an appointment, and I am definitely without sufficient waking-up caffeine. Hm. I'll think. Who are some of your others while I'm thinking? ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Oh, an email, yes. I'm extremely behind. I'll go find it and read it and write to you about whatever it involves asap. ** Damien Ark, Hi! Geez, 200 pages is really good! Granted, my whole novels don't tend to be much longer than that if they even reach that mark. So I'm glad you're getting to be creative to that degree at least. Writing can be brutal, yep, that's for sure. I just glanced that blog you linked to, and, yes, you bet, I'm very interested in it. So I'll obsess over it as soon as I can. Thanks a lot, man. Things are good here. Make today pay you back for the time you devote to it in the six-figures! ** Sypha, Hi. How convenient that you're happy to take break on the blog's behalf. I'm happy to provide you with that happiness, ha ha. That's interesting about Huysmans's antipathy towards Gide. From what I know and have read, I think Gide was supposed to have been quite the careerist. ** Bill, Dude, I intend to book my ticket to Romania asap just to descend into that park. Oh, yeah, I can see how those gigs you moshed at would have had lovely pits. Moshing to Psychic TV, wow. That's a nice mental picture. I hope your week somehow manages to be not brutal or at a less less brutal than the dictionary definition of that word implies. ** Steevee, Hi. Oh, thanks. Not everybody seems to have this on mushrooms, but I always have, like, an hour or even a bit of more, of total paranoia when I take mushrooms before the effect settles into beauty. I haven't heard the new Kanye West, and I doubt I will, frankly, but one of my big problems with his stuff is that I don't think he uses language at all interestingly, and I never think he has anything interesting or original to say. So, based on past experiences, I think I can agree with you peremptorily. Great new about you interviewing Terrence Davis! And for the L.A. Review of Books! I really like that site a lot! Awesome! And very good news that it seems you will review the Malick, and, selfishly, I just hope that you like it. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. I'd never heard of Derren Brown before, but that ride sounds like it's going to be pretty cool. ** Misanthrope, Yep. I haven't done a VR coaster yet. They're kind of the new thing. I'm very curious. And a little suspicious for some reason. But definitely curious. I can see how, if done right, that could be a seriously trippy rush. Could have knocked me over with a feather when SpellCheck didn't recognize wowzer. But Spellcheck seems like it's getting worse and more anal and fascist all the time. It's like Hitler! Ha ha. ** Liquoredgoat, Hi, D. You think it's unhealthy? Riding roller coasters is as close as I get to going to the gym. There's not enough money in the world to get me to ride Turbillon. Dude, very sweet about Notre Dame! There are some very awesome writers teaching there, as you probably know. So, very cool, and big congrats to them! ** Okay. I've focussed on the divine and one-of-kind scribe Mr. Ronald Firbank today. Have at it, if you like. See you tomorrow.

Gig #95: Tony Conrad, featuring Faust, Keiji Haino, Gastr del Sol, Angus MacLise, Michael Duch, C. Spencer Yeh, Hangedup, Edley ODowd, Genesis BREYER P-ORRIDGE, Yasunao Tone, John Cale, Jack Smith, La Monte Young

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Tony Conrad live at Cobb Hall (1/23/2011), part I
'Tony Conrad is the quintessential cult figure; resident outsider; rebel angel; Tony Conrad's got the kind of immaculate credibility that can't be bought and can't be sold -- and how else, otherwise, could he have persevered? Rumbling under the cultural radar since the Kennedy Era, Conrad is at once first cause and last laugh, a covert operative who can stand as a primary influence over succeeding generations. At the core of Conrad's legend is his work as a violinist, in which primal, enveloping drones create an oscillating ritual theater. In 1962 he co-founded the groundbreaking ensemble known as the Dream Syndicate. Wielding a drone both aggressively confrontational and subtly mesmerizing, he and his collaborators -- including La Monte Young and future Velvet Underground co-founders John Cale and Angus MacLise -- created some of the most revolutionary music of that -- or any -- decade. Utilizing long durations, precise pitch and blistering volume, Conrad and co. forged a "Dream Music" that articulated the Big Bang of "minimalism." However, the many rehearsal and performance tapes from this period were repressed by Young, becoming the stuff of legend.'-- MOCAD






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Tony Conrad & FaustFrom the Side of the Machine
'Recorded over a span of three days in 1973, Outside the Dream Syndicate was Tony Conrad's first official release; though also credited to the celebrated Krautrock band Faust, it's primarily a showcase for Conrad's minimalist drone explorations, an aesthetic fascinatingly at odds with the noisy, fragmented sound of his collaborators. Consisting of three epic tracks, each topping out in excess of 20 minutes, the album is hypnotically contemplative; the music shifts in subtle -- almost subliminal -- fashion, and the deeper one listens, the more rewarding it becomes.'-- pelodelperro







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Tony Conrad & Keiji Hainolive
'Recorded live at Super Deluxe, Roppongi on the 17th of September, 2008. This is an excerpt from the shorter first piece performed (around 47 minutes). Tony Conrad (treated and amplified violin), Keiji Haino (treated and amplified hurdy gurdy).'-- santasprees






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Tony Conrad & Gastr Del SolTen Years Alive on the Infinite Plain
'9:36pm: Conrad is joined onstage by David Grubbs and Jim O’Rourke of Gastr del Sol, as well as frequent collaborator Alex Gelencser. She’s holding an instrument that looks like a cello, but all neck, with no body and only two strings. Grubbs sits at a long, horizontal, one-stringed instrument. O’Rourke is on electric bass, and Conrad has his violin. In the back of the club, a battery of film projectors is lined up on a pool table and pointed at the white screens behind the performers. 9:45pm: The performance begins with a violin drone from Conrad, punctuated by a slight glitch whenever his bow reverses direction. O’Rourke starts to add resounding bass notes, first irregularly, later settling into a steady pulse. The piece is “Ten Years Alive on the Infinite Plain,” composed in the early seventies. 9:48pm: Two projectors are running now, projecting vertical black and white stripes on the screens behind the performers. The flashing stripes invert motionlessly, but the eye sees them moving now to the left, now to the right. 9:55pm: Four projectors are running now, all projecting the same loop of marching stripes. Grubbs strikes the lone string on his instrument with a metal rod, making a grainy twang with a distorted attack. He slides the rod along the string, making downward glissandos. The fifth projector starts. The five projected images span the width of the stage and spill out onto the adjacent walls. The stripes play across the performers’ faces and instruments. 10:02pm: Conrad is playing more freely now, adding and subtracting pitches from the drone by altering the angle of his bow. The booming bass notes and downward glissandos pull the music down while Conrad’s violin leaps upward. Gelenscer’s metronomic bowing on the cello-like instrument occupies the center, unmoving. 10:05pm: Suddenly I notice the edges of the five films have started to overlap. They must have been gradually moving closer together for some time now. 10:30pm: The overlap between the films is substantial now. Illusory interference patterns appear, tinged with faint phantom colors: green, orange, yellow. Conrad sways back and forth as he plays, sometimes grimacing with concern, sometimes positively beaming, his mouth open as if frozen in mid-laugh. O’Rourke lies on his back, bass resting on his crossed leg. The glissandos reverse direction. 11:08pm: The films finally merge into a single vibrating, flickering mass. Then, one by one, they shut off. 11:15pm: When the last film shuts off the music abruptly stops and the echoes of the last bass note fade to silence.'-- Seth Tisue






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Tony Conrad The Flicker (Excerpt)
'A 1966 film by Tony Conrad consisting of only alternating black-and-white film images. During the projection, light and dark sequences alternate to changing rhythms and produce stroboscopic and flickering effects; and while viewing these, they cause optic impressions which simulate colors and forms. In the process, the film also stimulates physiological in place of psychological impressions, by not addressing the senses as such, but rather triggering direct neural reactions. Tony Conrad, who has devoted himself to an intensive study of the physiology of the nervous system, created with The Flicker an icon of the structural film, which succeeds without a narrative or reproducible imagery. Since the seen is not captured through the eyes, but rather first produced in the brain.'-- medienkunstnetz.de






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Angus Maclise & Tony ConradDruid's Leafy Nest
'Previously-unheard recordings of Angus MacLise and Tony Conrad from the MacLise tape archives. In a silkscreened sleeve. First edition of 500 (purple cover) - ALMOST SOLD OUT. Side A: Untitled (recorded October 18 1968 at Tony Conrad's apartment) 15'27". Side B: Short Drum and Viola part 1 & 2 (ca. 1969) 4'49". Druid's Leafy Nest (undated) 7'26". Early Jams (undated) 6'46".'-- Boo-Hooray






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Tony Conrad & C. Spencer Yeh & Michael F. DuchMusculus Trapezius
'An epic performance captured pristine, unfurling its massive limbs patiently and cannily over the course of seventy-plus minutes. TONY CONRAD mingles among trusted wood-and-steel sidekicks, engaged in both age-old conversations and inspired new inquisitions; C. SPENCER YEH bookends his passive/aggressive behavior on violin with spare piano incantations; MICHAEL F. DUCHS acts as a ghostly anchor, casting formidable binding and deft velocity. Drones flow freely, but these reliable horizons fracture into surprising detours, tearing apart the instruments, the players involved, and the expectations of the music itself.'-- The Omega Order






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Tony ConradLive at Cafe OTO, Wednesday 26 October 2011
'The first law of music mythology states: every music scene throws up at least one disenchant who makes a case that their original contribution to whatever made their scene something special has been overlooked. If true, then Tony Conrad has more reason to feel aggrieved than most. But it’s worth taking a view on Conrad because the concept of allying repetitive structure to tuning was a flash of genius. Who actually brought just intonation to the Theatre of Eternal Music table first has been lost to history. Perhaps there was synchronous thinking going on between Young and Conrad, but using a tuning system richer in natural overtones, and less clean-cut in its ability to switch between keys than equal temperament, cut a round peg for a round hole. New structures opened up; tuning and structure went places Reich and Glass could only dream about. In 1997 Conrad released a box set of period recordings, Early Minimalism Volume One, in an attempt to put the record straight; his 1995 disc Slapping Pythagoras turned out to be a thinly-veiled polemic against La Monte Young. Few people who wage tuning wars emerge unscathed. At Café Oto, Conrad will generate 'incredible psychoactive tonal colours'; drones and just intonation; a direct link back to the hidden history of minimalism.'-- Philip Clark






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Hangedup & Tony ConradPrinciples
'Hangedup is the Montreal-based duo of Gen Heistek (viola) and Eric Craven (drums). The two met in 1995 while playing in Sackville and formed Hangedup in 1999. They released their eponymous debut in May 2001. Kicker in Tow followed in October 2002 and Clatter for Control in April 2005. Hangedup are unique operators of their chosen instruments, and have mastered a signature sound that is well ahead, and far behind, the times. Heistek’s vertigo-inducing viola runs through hallucinating loopers and warranty-voided amplifiers. Craven’s inimitable sound fuses auto shop discards with home-wiring experiments and fifteen-year-old drum skins. Sometimes soaring, occasionally distressing, Hangedup are the sound of tomorrow, only tomorrow was this morning, just before you left the house. And you left the stove on. Their friendship and collaboration with legendary violin minimalist Tony Conrad led to a series of recording sessions in 2004. These recordings finally saw the light of day as Transit of Venus, released in June 2012 as part of the Constellation label's Musique Fragile Volume 02 box set.'-- Constellation






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Tony Conrad & FaustThe Pyre of Angus Was in Kathmandu
'Here's what we know: in October 1972, at a hippie commune in Wümme in southwestern Hamburg, a German art-rock collective bred on the stringent drone and skag-pop of the Velvet Underground hooked up with the young composer who gave that band its name-- or rather, who handed Lou Reed the sadomasochism exposé whence the band derived its name. Tony Conrad and the members of Faust collaborated for three days on an album that would be released the following year in England and would tank immediately thereafter. The musicians did not communicate or collaborate throughout the following two decades. Minimalism is unquestionably the wrong word; I prefer asceticism. Anyone familiar with the Zappa-like hysteria of Faust's first album or the searing kosmische of IV must imagine the sheer force of self-denial at work in implementing Conrad's vision: to have a deep base note tuned to the tonic on Conrad's violin and to have the drummer "tuned" to a rhythm that corresponded to the vibrations. Minimal in design, I suppose, but catastrophically huge in execution.'-- Brent S. Sirota






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Tony Conrad, Genesis Breyer P-Orridge & Edley ODowdDemilitarized Ozone
'Recorded live February 19, 2011 at the Hebbel am Ufer 2 (HAU2) in Berlin, Germany. The concert was in conjunction with Arsenal's premiere of Marie Losier's film "The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye" for the 2011 Berlinale. The sound in this recording is owned and published by Tony Conrad, Genesis P-Orridge and Edward O'Dowd. Limited to 230 copies (in recycled vinyl and in several different colors). Cover has a patch attached to plain brown jacket. Included an 8” x 8” black and white booklet and 2 postcard sized replicas of the original concert poster.'-- discogs






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Tony Conradlive at Tate Modern
'Tony Conrad is a pivotal figure in contemporary culture. His multi-faceted contributions since the 1960s have influenced and redefined music, filmmaking, minimalism, performance, video and conceptual art. Known for his groundbreaking film The Flicker, his involvement in the Theatre of Eternal Music and the evolution of the Velvet Underground, and collaborations with a host of luminaries including Jack Smith, John Cale, Mike Kelley and Henry Flynt, Conrad remains a radical figure who challenges our understanding of art history. This special weekend at Tate Modern will feature a major new performance for the Turbine Hall and screenings of Conrad’s extraordinary film and video work.'-- Tate Modern






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Tony Conrad & Yasunao Tonelive at ISSUE Project Room
'Polymath Tony Conrad is known by many names: composer, filmmaker, video artist, media activist, writer, and educator. Associated with the founding of minimal music and underground film, he is well known for his pivotal role in the formation of the Velvet Underground and The Dream Syndicate, as well as his 1966 film masterwork The Flicker. He performs and exhibits widely internationally, the present decade has seen a series of releases and exhibitions confirming his indefatigable creative legacy. Conrad is a founding member of the ISSUE Project Room Board. Yasunao Tone was one of the first Japanese artists active in composing “events” and improvisational music. Active in the Fluxus movement since 1962, he has been an organizer and participant in many important performance groups including Group Ongaku, Hi-Red Center, and Team Random. Tone has worked in many media, creating pieces for electronics, computer systems, film, radio and television, and environmental art.'-- ISSUE Project


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Tony ConradSlapping Pythagoras
'Violinist and theoretician Tony Conrad was one of the leading lights of the minimalist school revolving around LaMonte Young in the early '60s, but had not released a studio album for 23 years prior to Slapping Pythagoras, the odd title apparently deriving from the multitude of issues Conrad has with the Pythagorean method, detailed in painstaking fashion in his liner notes. True to his career-long approach, the two lengthy pieces herein are centered on the drone and the sonic richness to be found there. His microtonal approach will be perceived as abrasive (even aggressively so) by many listeners, but those who allow themselves to succumb will discover a fascinating, multi-layered sound world in which can be heard many of the ideas underlying the work of bands from the Velvet Underground to Sonic Youth. Indeed, occasional Sonic Youth producer/collaborator Jim O'Rourke is on hand for this session, as is a roster made up of the cream of the late-'90s Chicago experimental music scene. This is deep minimalism with a sharp and acidic bite, and will provide many rewards for the intrepid listener.'-- allmusic






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John Cale, Jack Smith, & Tony ConradSilent Shadows On Cinematic Island
'Stainless Gamelan is an album by John Cale, better known for his work as the violist and founding member of the Velvet Underground. It is the fourth and final album in a loose anthology released by the independent label Table of the Elements. It follows Sun Blindness Music, Day Of Niagara and Dream Interpretation. Stainless Gamelan, along with the other albums in the trilogy, involves Cale during his tenure with the minimalist group Theatre of Eternal Music. His collaborators on the album include fellow VU member Sterling Morrison, filmmaker Jack Smith, and composer/filmmaker Tony Conrad who is credited as playing 'thunder machine'.'-- collaged






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Angus Maclise & Tony ConradTrance 2
'A second LP of previously-unheard recordings of Angus MacLise and Tony Conrad from the MacLise tape archives. In a silkscreened sleeve. Released in an edition of 500, to accompany the DREAMWEAPON, The Art and Life of Angus MacLise 1938-1979 exhibition, May 2011. SMRGS-2 appears on the LP jacket. BH-002 is the matrix etching on the vinyl itself.'-- discogs






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The Theatre of Eternal MusicB flat dorian blues 19 x 63
'The Theatre of Eternal Music, sometimes later known as The Dream Syndicate, was a mid-1960s musical group formed by La Monte Young, that focused on experimental drone music. It featured the performances of La Monte Young, John Cale, Angus MacLise, Terry Jennings, Marian Zazeela, Tony Conrad, Billy Name, Jon Hassell, Alex Dea and others. The group is stylistically tied to the Neo-Dada aesthetics of Fluxus and the post-John Cage noise music continuum. The Theatre of Eternal Music gave performances on the East Coast of the United States as well as in Western Europe that consisted of long periods of sensory inundation with combinations of harmonic relationships, which moved slowly from one to the next by means of "laws" laid out by La Monte Young regarding "allowable" sequences and simultaneities.'-- collaged






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Tony Conradlive @ Supersonic 2011
'TONY CONRAD is a giant in the American soundscape. Since the early 1960s, he has utilized intense amplification, long duration and precise pitch to forge an aggressively mesmerizing “Dream Music. “Conrad articulated the Big Bang of “minimalism” and played a pivotal role in the formation of the Velvet Underground. Conrad continues to exert a primal influence over succeeding generations with his ecstatic oscillations and hypnotic drones. “Tony Conrad is a pioneer, as seminal in his way to American music as Johnny Cash or Captain Beefheart or Ornette Coleman, one of those really savvy old guys whom all the kids want to emulate because their ideas, their style are electric and new and somehow indivisible.” -- Atlanta Journal-Constitution.'-- Supersonic







*

p.s. Hey. Warning: I somehow fucked up my back yesterday, and I'm on pain killers and anti-inflammatories, and I'm typing this -- or trying to -- while lying on my stomach, so I'm a bit fogged, distracted, and hampered today. Nothing serious, I'm just in pain and debilitated for the moment. I'll do my best. ** Armando, Hi. I hope you saw Chris Dankland's comment to you yesterday. It should be really helpful. ** Thom, Hi. Yeah, it's weird, but I can't think of anybody. I think my imagination is into doing acrobatics inspired either by 3-dimensional real world people or super flat people like the escorts and slaves I cull here every month. Very strange. Just to show you my out-of-it-ness, the only guy in your list whose name rings a bell is Logan Lerman. But I will go cruise what I can find of them as soon as I'm not forced to push laptop buttons while prone on my stomach, which is weirdly more difficult to do than it probably sounds. It's made me realize that there's a dark side to having elbows. Thank you! ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, David. Agree with you about Firbank, obviously. I'll have to get in a little less pain before I get to your email, but I'm hoping to be far more normalized by tomorrow. ** Steevee, Hi. Wow, I'm not even sure how you could have a bad trip like that on mushrooms. Weird. That seems like a Guinness World Record Book thing. I haven't seen the American 'KoC' trailer, but I can only imagine. Representing that film appropriately in one minute or whatever would definitely not fill seats. I'm guessing it must distort the film by emphasizing Christian Bale and the celebrity cameos and maybe the earthquake moment and how pretty LA looks. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi, Dóra! I'm very happy to say that we now have a producer for our new film! There's a ways to go to raise the money needed -- we've already raised maybe a little less than half of the budget -- but now the biggest step has been taken, and we're very relieved! Yay! Awesome about your pamphlet project! I think that's a really great idea! Will it be printed or online or both? I'll totally do a post here for the pamphlet to christen it and let people know that it exists and is a must-get. Great! Well, my back getting fucked up has pretty much killed my chance to see Marching Church tonight, sadly. Ugh. I hope your day is going to be a ton more wonderful than mine will be, ha ha. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! Thank you so, so incredibly much for so generously helping Armando out with that great information! You've also alerted me to some books I don't know and will definitely get asap! Thanks about the interview. The DVD release will be in early summer. The exact date isn't set yet. We're trying to set up as many showings first as we can. I really want to see 'The Witch'. I think it's the new movie I most want to see. It sounds really interesting, thank you. I really, really love what you said about 'Knight of Cups'. I totally agree. That was beautiful, man. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. I know, right? I watched that clip about fifteen times. ** Misanthrope, I really don't get these extreme mushroom trips. They must have been very weird shrooms. The VR that I've tried so far, some of it supposedly top level tech, left a huge amount to be desired. But, yeah, the promise is really there. I'll look for what you sent me. I'm zonked, so it might take me a bit to respond. ** Bill, Hi, B. Oh, thanks. Um, I can't say very much about this right now, but let's just say you'll get an opportunity to see the film in your hood before too, too long. ** Sypha, That makes sense. Yes, I just saw yesterday about the new Philip Best book! Due to the impairment caused by my current condition, imbedding links here is too difficult, or else I would. ** Okay. Whew. Please cast your ears, and, in many cases, eyes into the work of the great, great Tony Conrad. Thank you. I will go try to turn my back into a saint now. See you tomorrow.

164 car pile-up

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p.s. Hey. Same deal as yesterday but maybe slightly improved, i.e. pain, pain killers/anti-inflammatories, and some consequent impairment upstairs and downstairs. ** Armando, Hi. I trust you saw Chris's new comment to you. Hope it helps. Thanks a lot about the post. ** David Ehrenstein, Thanks, I'm trying. Don't know why it took me so long re: Tony Conrad. Strange. They just showed his films here, which is why it has happened when it has. Good old Gerry Howard! ** Damien Ark, Hi, Damien. Awesome, good that you liked it and that it was even helpful! I like LaMonte Young, sure. How can one not? Well, ha ha. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, T. Thanks a bunch for talking to Armando. Totally, yep, about Conrad. ** Steevee, Hi. 'Flicker' is just completely monumental. Thanks for the wishes re: my back. Me too. That's obviously an extremely interesting and important topic you're writing on there. Can't wait for it. Oh, yes, I think I have ... four FB friends who have been having a very protracted public nervous breakdown via their status updates for the last two or three years. ** S., Hi. Thanks, me too. Ha ha, kind of amazing that no one's called me the mosher of gay lit before. I like that. I need chiropracting bad, and I'm tracking one down today, I hope. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T! Lucky lucky you to have seen Conrad live. I never have for reasons I can not figure out. Thanks, man, about the gig. At your service, sir. Look forward to hearing about London. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi, D! Yeah, we're really, really happy and relieved to be officially on the way to making the film. Thank you! Oh, definitely, I would love to do the post. It would be both fun and an honor, a nice combination. Yeah, fucked-up backs take their sweet time repairing. I've had this back thing since I was a kid, and it goes nuts usually a couple of times a year. Did you get to work on the pamphlet? ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Thanks a lot for those vibes. I need them. ** h, Hi. Secret projects should probably always be overwhelming, otherwise why bother. Hm, that made sense in my head, ha ha. Yeah, my back's fucked up. Nothing I can do except treat it as gently as possible and wait. ** Schlix, Hi, Uli! Thanks, man. Yeah, yeah, Conrad, seriously! Yours is fucked up too? We're both tall guys. This makes no sense but because we have more back due to our height, I feel like we get to be the martyrs of back pain. That made no sense. A painkiller thought. I hope your back gets better and even perfect lickety-split! ** MANCY, Hi, S! Great to see you! Yeah, I'm there re: Conrad. Absolutely. Cool. You good? I'm not, but I'm working towards good. Thanks! ** Chris Dankland, Thanks so much for talking further to Armando. I'm very sure he's not the only person reading the p.s. who's benefiting greatly from your wisdom. Lucifer's vibes should do the trick, right? And Lucifer must dig my books, right? So he'll be generous with His vibes, right? Makes sense, right? Thanks a zillion, Chris. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. I will asap. Okay, that explains it. About the shrooms. Dude was fucking nuts to eat those. Hm, VR novel ... I wonder if that's been thought up before? I'll check. Huh. ** Postitbreakup, Hi, Josh! Back pain is up there, that's for sure. Okay, I'm unfortunately in no shape to analyze, but, nonetheless, it's obvious that whoever said that intended to hurt you. That was the only goal. Assuming this person knows you a little, he calculated what he thought would hurt you, and said that. In other words, it was not a successful or real world opinion, but merely a coarse representation of some terrible impulse in him to cause hurt. It wasn't about you. It was only about him. ** Okay. Today's post, albeit launched on this occasion by pure coincidence, is kind of a perfect post-shaped representation of my current physical condition, albeit more than a little more serious and hysterical than my actual state, duh. See you tomorrow.

4 books I read recently & loved: Penny Goring hatefuck the reader, Jarett Kobek I Hate the Internet, Chris Dankland Weed Monks, Angel Dominguez Black Lavender Milk

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rauan klassnik: as far as writing goes where, if at all, do you draw the line?

penny goring: words or pics, it’s all the same to me, i don’t draw lines. my exes mum, after reading a poem of mine, he told me she sed to him: ‘someone needs to get her to stop. will she ever draw the line?’ but i won’t. because i don’t want to. if something happened to me it is mine. i can do what i like with it.

rk: some people think that all Art comes from the way Male and Female bodies talk to each other, violent, gentle, in shadows, and in light. whatcha think? (and please elaborate)

pg: i’m always deeply cringing at any sweeping statements about what art is or isn’t etc. ugh. i’m not comfortable with the capital A either. being an artist feels more like a curse to me. i ran from it for what felt like a long time. but i got into lots of trouble, nearly died, ended up in rehab. so now i make stuff but i’m doing it compulsively. its like i’m a donkey chasing a carrot. and i put out too much work. i treat tumblr, facebook, twit, like a wall in a studio, not a show. if i’m working on it i’ll post it. that applies to my macros, vids, and written work. but then i’ll go back, within minutes, days, or weeks, and delete most of it.

rk: the movie Ted and Sylvia is, undoubtedly, one of the great movies of our time. but which of the two, if you had to choose, would you take with you on a weekend full of rain? (and please elaborate)

pg: i haven’t seen this movie. i’d have to leave sylvia out. feel like she’d be pretentious as fuk. ted must have been at least charming though, judging by the trouble he caused. i bet he was a sociopath – that could be fun.

rk: do you go for midnight strolls on the moors? and even if you don’t could you please describe what that’s like?

pg: me alone lolloping, cuz i like that word, on spongy shagpile/bare feet, n i’m takin giant strides under a low sky of children’s b&w handprints, forming the face of mata hari, no, myra hindley, starin me out with her one good eye. soundtrack of my moors is the smiths wailing on the wrong speed and i’m carryin a cold baby, we’re running towards a bus stop. where i sit in the shelter with a stranger. he passes me a cigarette. when i say thanks, he sez: ‘go home, you fuckin londoner.’ it’s raining cheap cider. cathy is dead. she didn’t even leave a ghost. on the top deck of the night bus i sit behind kate bush – she’s snogging heathcliffe until he turns to dust in her arms, and by the time we reach clapham she’s wailing that song out the window.

rk: what do your parents think of your writing?

pg: if my dad reads my stuff it makes him cry. my mum is a big janey smith fan, she can’t stand my stuff, finds it ‘weird and depressing’. sed she’d like to gun down every art tutor that helped lead me to this tragic end. if i’m making pics they think i should write. if i’m writing they think i should paint. every time i see my dad he begs me to get real and write a best seller. and i say, but dad, if i stop making the stuff i wanna make, i’d likely end up back in the gutter. and he sez, well, marry a rich man then. so yeah. i’m their costly heartbreaking disappointment.








Penny Goring hatefuck the reader
5everdankly

"i have less desire to change things than to change the way they are destroyed."

sik nu epic & relentless txt from penny goring. long stewing latest book buy irl.

Édition: 666. Éditeur: 5everdankly. Publié: 28.janvier2016. Langue: Anglais. Pages: 98. Reliure: Couverture souple en dos carré collé. Impressionintérieure: Noir & blanc. Poids: 0,2 kg. Dimensions: (centimètres) 15,24 (largeur) x 22,86 (hauteur)

____
Excerpts

















v fast blu x 6


melty doors of yes/no


faster fear




______________




Chelsea Hodson: A few months ago, I saw a description for your book, and I tweeted, “Do I really have to wait until 2016 to read Jarett Kobek’s I Hate the Internet? Looks so good.” I think it was within a few hours after that you emailed me a PDF of the book. This indicates to me that you possibly have a love/hate relationship with the Internet yourself—perhaps you despise it but perhaps you also see it as a crucial tool. What is your personal relationship to the Internet, and how did that inform the writing of the novel? How do you navigate your life as a writer in a world where most information about literary events arrive in the form of Facebook invitations?

Jarett Kobek: Someone told me about your tweet! I avoid Twitter like a plague pit!

When I was writing the book, the relationship was pure hate. I’d just escaped San Francisco, where I’d watched long-standing communities of people be destroyed, basically, by the people who own the Internet. The city gave me a nervous breakdown. An actual, genuine 20th-century nervous breakdown like a rummy drunkard from a shitty Scott Fitzgerald novel. Nothing separates compos from mentis like rumors of a Twitter IPO. Anyway, I Hate the Internet exploded in about two months of pure bile/recovery from the experience of living at the highwater mark of American hypergentrification. So, yeah, absolutely, I fucking hate the Internet.

And yet. I’m a recovered tech person and much of my life has revolved around this shit. For what seems like a thousand years. And I still like the early ethos of tech, back in the hobbyist days, when computers were not interchangeable and no one had realized that this thing the Internet could be used to trample the gullible with advertisements for car insurance. Or before an even more unsavory lot realized that they could make beaucoup bucks setting up unprofitable companies as money laundering events for war criminals and investment bankers. That’s why I did a prequel of I Hate the Internet for the Sinclair ZX Spectrum, an old British microcomputer. It felt like there was some virtue counterbalancing all of that disgust with an acknowledgment of a time you using computers did not require you to participate in several overlapping systems of global evil.

How does one navigate being a writer? I whine like a big fucking bald baby and pretend, like everyone else, that I’m not typing morality lectures into devices built by slaves in China. But of course I am.

CH: I’m curious about your subtitle: “A useful novel against men, money, and the filth of Instagram.” I suppose I’m especially curious about the phrase “against men” as well as the phrase “276 pages of mansplaining” which you use in the first page’s hilarious list of “trigger warnings.” In your novel, BTW, the narrator says, “I’m just killing time until the inevitable shift of power away from the patriarchy. The only thing I want is for women to assume their natural and obvious prominence.” What does it mean to be a male writer against men?

JK: There’s no way you can look at the Internet, in terms of the people who built it and in terms of the people who dramatically profit from other people’s intellectual capital via social networks, and argue that anyone but men are pulling the strings. The only major tech CEO who’s not a man is Marissa Mayer and she got stuck with the worst company of them all.

Historically, men have been the shit of the world. Every terrible thing under which we suffer was built by men. Most people receive technology as if it’s sprung from the head of Zeus. Normal people don’t have the time or the inclination to think about all of the engineering choices that went into something like tweeting, and how all of these choices are the prima materia of their suffering and manipulated behaviors. But like every system of government, the Internet should be seen as a thing constructed by men to which women are, alas, very subject.

So that’s what I’m against. Not so much men in general as the terrible choices of the men who have bequeathed us a grotesque world. Which may be the same thing.

As for the 276 pages of mansplaining. It’s difficult to look at the technical device in the novel of defining everything and not feeling like, well, isn’t this just a dude telling everyone what everything else is? How is this any different? So why be bashful? Why not embrace the mansplain? Lean in. Someday all of this will be yours.

(cont.)









Jarett Kobek I Hate the Internet
We Heard You Like Books

'What if you told the truth and the whole world heard you? What if you lived in a country swamped with Internet outrage? What if you were a woman in a society that hated women?

'Set in the San Francisco of 2013, I Hate the Internet offers a hilarious and obscene portrayal of life amongst the victims of the digital boom. As billions of tweets fuel the city’s gentrification and the human wreckage piles up, a group of friends suffers the consequences of being useless in a new world that despises the pointless and unprofitable.

'In this, his first full-length novel, Jarett Kobek tackles the pressing questions of our moment. Why do we applaud the enrichment of CEOs at the expense of the weak and the powerless? Why are we giving away our intellectual property? Why is activism in the 21st Century nothing more than a series of morality lectures typed into devices built by slaves?

'Here, at last, comes an explanation of the Internet in the crudest possible terms.'-- We Heard You Like Books

_____________
Partial synopsis w/ quotes
from Vol. 1 Brooklyn

I Hate the Internet asks, “Why is activism in the 21st century nothing more than morality lectures typed into devices built by slaves?” A book about gentrification, it’s also about the often overlooked hypocrisy of calling out bad guys using products and platforms made by criminals.

But I Hate the Internet is about a lot of other things, too. Remember, Kobek is the master of the tangent. I think the evocative opening of the book may give you a better understanding of its full scope.

It reads:

trigger warning:
Capitalism, the awful stench of men, historical anachronisms,
death threats, violence, human bondage, faddish
popular culture, despair, unrestrained mockery of the rich,
threats of sexual violation, weak iterations of Epicurean
thought, the comic book industry, the death of intellectualism,
being a woman in a society that hates women, populism,
an appalling double entendre, the sex life of Thomas Jefferson,
genocide, celebrity, the Objectivist philosophy of Ayn
Rand, discussions of race, Science Fiction, anarchism with
a weakness for democracy, the people who go to California
to die, millennial posturing, 276 pages of mansplaining,
Neo-Hellenic Paganism, interracial marriage, elaborately
named hippies practicing animal cruelty on goats, unjust
wars in the Middle East, 9/11, seeing the Facebook profile
of someone you knew when you were young and believed
that everyone would lead rewarding lives.

I told you, Kobek covers a lot of ground.

***

One of the primary plotlines of I Hate the Internet involves a successful comic book illustrator, a woman in her 40s, named Adeline. Adeline finds herself in the middle of an online controversy after giving a talk to the students of poet Kevin Killian (Kobek often weaves real people into his storylines, and real storylines onto his people). During the talk, Adeline is asked by a student if she thinks Facebook and Twitter can serve a role in the pursuit of social progress. It’s her response that causes her so much trouble:

“Social progress might have had meaning twenty years ago when I was but a young thing, but these days it’s become the product of corporations. But what do you people know anyway? You’re a lost generation. Even your drugs are corporate. You spend your lives pretending as if Beyoncé and Rihanna possess some inherent meaning and act as if their every professional success which only occur because of your money and your attention is a strike forward for women everywhere.”

What she says is videotaped by a student, and uploaded to the internet. The internet, in turn, responds in a way that is both ridiculous and realistic.

As Kobek writes:

A wide range of humanity believed that Beyoncé and Rihanna were inspirations rather than vultures. Adeline had spit on their gods.

This wide range of humanity responded by teaching Adeline about one of America’s favored pastimes, a tradition as time-honored as police brutality, baseball, race riots and genocide.

They were teaching Adeline about how powerless people demonstrated their supplication before their masters.

They were tweeting about Adeline.

***

As Adeline tries to adjust to her new role as an online villain and punching bag, her good friend J. Karacehennem (“the author of the recent novel, ZIAD, about 9/11 hijacker Ziad Jarrah,” who readers of Kobek’s other works will recognize as a fictionalized stand-in for the author himself) finds that he and his neighbors being pushed from their homes when an upscale restaurant catering to the clientele of San Francisco’s tech industry makes plans to move in down the street. Once the restaurant (the ironically named “Local’s Corner”) opens, it alienates the community further. As Kobek writes:

Latino people were feeling squeezed by the forces of gentrification. Their neighborhood was being pulled apart by the whims of mega-capitalists, low interest rates, investors from out of town, and corporations located in Silicon Valley. And there was Local’s Corner, the most obvious and tone deaf symbol of the changes wrought on the neighborhood. It had denied a Latino family service. On Cesar Chavez Day.



Book Trailer for Jarett Kobek's I HATE THE INTERNET


FUNKYSPECTRUM PLAYS - I HATE THE INTERNET (EXCLUSIVE !)


Upset White People at City Lights Bookstore - 2/16/16 - I HATE THE INTERNET



_______________




'Weed Monks reveals Chris Dankland to be the red-eyed man of the dank lands. Chris Dankland is the one that Madvillain referred to their award-winning hit “America’s Most Blunted”. Throughout the collection Weed Monks reveals itself to be quite compassionate for its lowly individuals seeking salvation. Many of these monks opt for the silent “All Quiet On the Western Blunt” sort of life, refusing to speak yet possessing a great many followers.

'Humor ties the stories together. A very loose narrative holds the pieces together as these are individuals who have checked out of reality going for the absurd the margins of society freely embracing it. Chris Dankland gives these outcasts religious attributes as they devote themselves to a lifestyle most assume is exclusively for leisure. Nothing in the many stories reveals a sense of leisure. These weed monks ponder the giant questions in life while removing temptation from their lives. As a result they live relatively sparse lives, living on the beach, driving golf carts, forgetting how to go to the bathroom.

'Various insight is given into the mysterious tradition of the weed monks. Chris Dankland does not speak of the original weed monk, the one who began it all. Such a focus would make the collection lose its sort of weird charm. A righteous sense leads these individuals as they sing to themselves and others. Plenty more completely disappear never to come out again. Some try for deep enlightened thought only to come up completely short. Sober people have the same outcome so ultimately it is about perspective more than anything.

'The history of the weed monk comes into view. Lost traditions come into play of people devoting themselves to it. A few try to come up with ways to avoid speaking with simple hand gestures, losing them in the passage of time and forgetfulness. Others still wonder what loneliness means, and whether or not it is a more honest way of living. Belief systems are worked upon to try and figure out what purpose the afterlife might have, all of which are the questions that involve one hand clapping.

'Even Chris Dankland makes a cameo. Adhering to the role of scribe he tries to write down the wisdom that he witnesses across the many weed monks of his world. Not all of the ideas are fully elaborated upon but rather serve as example of how many tangents can grow without flowering.

'Really funny, really bizarre, and strangely sweet Weed Monks is devoted to the weird ones in the world, the ones who fell through the cracks and choose to live there.'-- Beach Sloth








Chris Dankland Weed Monks
Gumroad

now that i've got yr attention can i interest u in a free ebook called Weed Monks.

LEGALIZE MY EBOOK CALLED WEED MONKS !!

2 MANY AMERICANS HAVE GONE TO JAIL FOR READING MY EBOOK CALLED WEED MONKS.


Excerpts

1.
There was an old weed monk named Tasty Cakes who had lived alone in a bare apartment for thirty years. One day Tasty Cakes left his apartment to get some Doritos at the gas station. When the people saw this legendary and mysterious weed monk walking around outdoors they immediately flocked to his side and surrounded him, saying: Tasty Cakes, tell us some of the wisdom you have learned, that we might improve our lives. At first Tasty Cakes refused to speak, but they persisted in their begging until he eventually relented.

He said: Before weed! My life was full of troubles and desires. After weed! My life is full of funny YouTube videos of llamas attacking people and cats that wear sunglasses. Before weed! I was consumed with fear of death and decay, and all night and all day my heart wept with loneliness. After weed! I watch free movies online!

After he was finished speaking, Tasty Cakes returned to his apartment, which he never left again until the day he died. The people were amazed and awed by Tasty Cake, and they remarked that surely no one else in all of Houston had smoked more weed than he.


2.
Potsy the Great was once asked: What is the reason for why we always pass to the left? He replied: One need not always pass to the left. Marijuana does not care in which direction it is being passed, so why should we? Horizontal direction is meaningless.

The wanderer stands up and walks a great distance. Then she turns around and walks back. Those who remained behind eagerly ask the wanderer: What lies in that direction? But the wanderer can only reply: More and more distance.

If a person walked the entire length of the Earth, they would only end up at the same spot where they began, except older now and more weary. The question we must ask ourselves is not left or right, but low or high? Verily, I say unto you: It matters not which direction you pass the weed, as long as you pass it promptly. Brothers and sisters, do not park on the grass.


3.
Highly Green Sarah Jean used to recite poems aloud while cleaning her weed pipes. This is one of her poems:

OG Kush! The easiest way to do nothing!

OG Kush! The least material plane of being!

OG Kush! It’s like your favorite soft rock band that follows you around and plays you soothing music anytime you want!

OG Kush! It makes the world interesting again!



MCALLEN READING from Chris Dankland


A Half Made Cloud from Chris Dankland


Please Don't Get Your Goddamn Heart Broken from Chris Dankland




________________




'Angel Dominguez's BLACK LAVENDER MILK is a poignant debut that brilliantly tethers between alchemist's notebook and somnambulist's reflection, where 'water thickens with memory, and begin[s] to pour…' In what Dominguez subtitles 'a failed novel,' are powerful reclamations of family histories, and self evolutions fused through carefully attuned modes of seeing, dreaming and feeling: 'I ran downtown and up a mountain, found him sleeping in my bloodstream still smiling as the sun beamed beyond the reach of the pack of clouds bringing down a soft rain…' Perhaps this fluid notion of failure is bound up in the author's rendering of memory as what must be held onto, even if it cannot be fully grasped. If this novel is 'failed,' then it is necessarily so, delicately captured as '—the trace trapped in a molecule,' Dominguez's 'liquid-watch,' a site of richly widening realization and recognition, where 'colloidal materials…form a constellation.''-- Ronaldo Wilson

'To read Angel Dominguez's debut novel BLACK LAVENDER MILK is to slowdive into a deep cenote of the psyche, where murmuring dreams and vivid memories slide up against the silky, aqueous skin of ancestral unknowns. Each section rises in soft permutations, emerging as a book in perpetual arrival—with suspension, like a series of perfectly timeless clouds. I'm stunned at his intuitive intellect, touched by the quiet reverence expressed in his endless search for Xix—a body, a history, what remains yet always eludes.'-- Sueyeun Juliette Lee

Angel Dominguez is a Los Angeles born writer and performance artist forming Dzonots with notebooks along the California coast. His work can be found in The Berkeley Poetry Review, The Bombay Gin, and online at Open House Poetry and spiralorb(dot)com, with work forthcoming in FENCE. He was the co- founding editor of Tract/Trace: an investigative journal, and presently curates the ongoing series: Bodies/Pages. Along with Hannah Kezema, he co-founded the performance art collaborative: Dream Tigers. BLACK LAVENDER MILK is his first book.








Angel Dominguez Black Lavender Milk
Timeless, Infinite Light


'Black Lavender Milk is an experimental lyric that dreamt of becoming a novel only to wake up as notebook. Employing and smudging elements of poetry, prose and memoir, Black Lavender Milk offers the space of a “novel” as a site of mourning, inquiry and recuperation. Through a complex, hypnotic blur of language, the lyric-as-novel functions as an extended meditation on Writing in relation to the Body; Time, Loss, Ancestry and Dreaming.'-- T,IL

'Paranormal poetics never sounded more redundant, more welcome and welcoming. Angel Dominguez writes, “I occupy a continent within my body. / I am going there today to bury my grandfather.” He has a continent in his body of the most extraordinary poetry turning the dream over to the soil and water of the dreamer. From orchard to ocean his omnipresent tenderness maps our way to the poet as shaman. I shudder with disbelief at his words and want them to knock on all our closed doors. There’s a home in this book like strategy where we meet to stop the hemorrhaging loss. Please read it NOW!'-- CA Conrad

_____
Excerpts

Xix: you were a watchmaker with a jewelry store in downtown L.A.; a dealer in time, you tuned quartzite: 32,768 Hz and whistled for me to follow through the subway. A bag of avocados and lemons, 3 oranges kept us quiet while waiting to arrive. I’ve kept every departure: they occupy a small wooden box below blue jars. I want(ed) you to know how I’ve roamed in search of stones, in search of other portals, in hopes of finding you somewhere with(in) a dream; I’m always trying to blur reality, nodding off into the person next to me, running into me running into me running into 4am instability. Breaking into an airport; running for the orchard. I remember things that are (not) happening, say, continuing from where we left off: soft syllables made of mud; water witching up a spell for something like transport, something like continent, something like crystal-memory; I press a tip of quartz to my tongue and run west up mountain, far from the ocean; I still smell salt when there’s a hint of blood—I bit my tongue—caught managing a mongrel timeframe not fit for linearity: somnambulism(s) last(ing) a flock of years; here I find myself failing to write an “orchard,” attempting instead: a continent within a dim body, not yet formed and tired from running:

I only want(ed) to arrive.

*


Some notes on forming dzonots:

Step 1: locate the event boundary; rub the soil into your
skin. Begin digging.

Step 2: ________________________________

Step 2a: make black water: the water my grandfather described to me the morning after he had a vision: milky black midnight, thick; something that smells of salt and blood. His vision was standing on a narrow alabaster bridge in a dark space—no moon—bodies everywhere in the
water. I wonder if I too was a body in the void of dream. He didn’t know how to help them; the next day there were reports of a tsunami somewhere on the other side of the pacific. We watered the avocados and lemons. We buried salt beneath the orange tree.

Step 3: stop when you reach your elbow, or shoulder; you’ll know when to stop.

Step 4: equip the hole with a plastic bag membrane: this is not biodegradable and perhaps reminds you of an ocean or airport.

Step 4a: continue to make black water: crush charcoal
from burnt palm trees, add cold coffee and day old wine. Stir. Continue, adding salt to the liquid—watch for colloidal materials to form a constellation. Add lemon juice for avor. When the water thickens with memory, begin to pour.

Step 5: deposit what you remember losing; lower your fingers into the water and retain: rough, yet soft. Hands.

Step 6: go for a run. Continue until you reach a body of water, or become a body of water.
Step 7: return home via aeroplane. Take notes:

A room full of atoms beckons a body across the void; voice a portal with an outline—find the route that requires the least oxygen—language cryogen: Xix, I brought you a pint of old blood under the orange tree, drunk off whiskey and trying to bury notebooks behind me in a time that precedes and haunts me; I want memories to bring (me) back

Language cryogen: find an earth scab; catch a bit a glass from the nearest car crash, press the substance to skin; hints of then, buried in our blood.

Buried in our blood: a body of night, curved across a planet.

Our molecules call across the void and bury sunlight in our sleep; how will I know to meet you when I arrive?



Black Lavender Milk by Angel Dominguez Media Statement 1


Other Dzonots / Other Orchards


Mirror Stage - Angel Dominguez + Joel Gregory




*

p.s. Hey. Still screwed up, back-wise. Apologies re: what effects. ** Armando, Hi. I think that between Chris Dankland and Tosh Berman, you hopefully have good answers? I would lobby for publishing the book online --pdf or eBook or something like that. Self-publishing an actual physical book when it's your first, and getting a book distributed, etc. would be a lot of work, I think. Two of the books in the post today are self-published pdfs. A lot of the books I read these days are in that format. It's just so much easier if you can give interested readers a link and a download option. But it's up to you. I hope you do it, one way or another. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Had there been a 'Weekend'-related gif, I'm sure it would have been in there. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, T. Giant thanks for giving Armando that excellent advice. Oh, gosh, thanks about the post. That's wonderful to hear! I know a number of people who studied with Tony Conrad when he was teaching at Buffalo, and none of them ever had anything but the most positive things to say about him. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! Yay about how close you are to finishing the pamphlet! Just let me know when it's ready, and we'll set something up. Fantastic! Yeah, my back is being very stubborn with me. Big ugh. My day was pretty good. I forced myself to go out and do some things, albeit as gently as I could. We had a meeting about the new film that was very positive and helpful. Then, in the evening, I kind of pushed it and went to see Oneohtrix Point Never play at a club here. I'm paying for it today, but it was a really incredible show, so I'm not sorry. My today will likely suck for the most part, but hopefully that frees up some of the fun and productivity in the world to attach itself to you. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, C. So very happy to do my little part in pushing the mighty 'Weed Monks' today! And tremendous thanks to you for being so generous with Armando. ** Steevee, Hi. Thanks for that link. I'll will assuredly and quickly read the piece. I can't remember off the top of my head which 'Elm Street' movie is the second one, but I really like those films. ** S., Hey. Don't know the type. I've been 'practed a few times here, and it's always seemed to work better than the US version. It wasn't rough, really, just very precise. It had a much less New Age-y overlay than the dudes I've been handled by in LA. Thanks for the car classics. My internet is barely functioning this morning -- I really need a new carrier; SFR sucks -- but, when it pops back in, I'll go steer my eyes into those accidents. ** Schlix, Hi, Uli. Oh, so it does make sense. Huh. Interesting. I think I do the same thing you do when I sit. I have this feeling. Also, my back has been a misbehaving back since I was about, I don't know, 12 years old or so. I grew really tall really suddenly, and my back didn't grow perfectly along with me. I'll look at the Fennesz track/vid in a bit. Thanks! Like I told S., my internet signal is like a dying breath this morning for some reason. Oh, I saw Oneohtrix Point Never last night. Amazing show. If he tours your locale, I highly recommend going. ** Postitbreakup, Hi, Josh. Thanks about the post. Nah, 164 was just the number of cars that ended up getting wrecked in the gifs by pure coincidence. It just sounds like that guy who said that is in a bad mood on his own, and bad probably due to something that has nothing to do with you, and he just leaked it on you. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Oh, man, I hope the Assessment goes really well today, and I hope they recommended an awesome car. What happened? ** Marcus Pyotr Mamourian, Hi Marcus! A warm and hearty welcome back! Mm, I believe I've only read one Sarah Kane play. And it was '4.48 Psychosis', which, like you, I thought was really incredible. I should just get that book of her collected plays. I will. Oh, I really like Andrew Durbin's work, yes, but I haven't read 'Mature Themes'. I get that straight away. And I really love Wonder a lot. I think I've read almost every book they've published. I hope to get to NYC maybe even before the summer. We're trying to set up a screening of LIKE CATTLE TOWARDS GLOW there, which would get me over. Is there a particular reason why this summer would be a good time to get there? I'm always looking for a good excuse. It's very nice to see you! ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. T'would, right? Thanks, bud. ** Okay. Sorry again for any inadvertent fall-out from my back's pain. Those are four truly excellent books up there. And two of them are free downloads, so you've got not a cent or pound or Euro or whatever else to lose. I will see you tomorrow.

Terence Davies Day

$
0
0




'Terence Davies specializes in outsiders; his characters are often solitary, melancholy figures contemplat­ing a world of both immense sadness and intense pleasure. It’s a perspective this autobiographical filmmaker clearly shares, and one that extends to his place in British cinema. Thanks to a low profile that’s at once scrupulously self-maintained and a product of his industry’s never having known quite what to do with him, Davies has not achieved the household-name status he so richly deserves, despite widespread admiration from peers and critics (he’s “regarded by many as Britain’s greatest living film director,” wrote Nick Roddick in the London Evening Standard in 2008). Still, this modest Liverpudlian has, with only six features and three shorts over a thirty-seven-year career, staked out a unique spot in his national cinema, creating films that defy easy categorization. Do his wrenchingly personal works fit within the long tradition of British realism or stand in contrast to it? Are they of a radical or conservative temperament? Do they convey despair or elation? The answer—all of the above—speaks to the films’ rich, strange, and emotionally complex beauty.

'Though Davies earned his reputation mainly for the poetically rendered autobiographical films he made in the first sixteen years of his career (from 1976 to 1992), his cinema has since come to encompass many forms, including adaptations of American literature (John Kennedy Toole’s The Neon Bible, Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth) and classic British theater (Terence Rattigan’s The Deep Blue Sea) and documentary (his idiosyncratic, mostly found-footage Of Time and the City). In addition, he’s written a novel and produced radio plays, including one based on Virginia Woolf’s The Waves. The unapologetic classicism of much of this later work sits surprisingly comfortably alongside his more experimentally minded personal films—all center on social outcasts, and all use their narratives as a way of playing with the nature of time on-screen. Nevertheless, it’s Davies’s early work that bears the true mark of his singular vision. During those years when he was unwaveringly focused on the particulars of his own experience—his difficult family history, his tortured relationship with his sexuality, his fears and hopes and dreams—he burrowed to places in himself that most artists wouldn’t dare go.

'The last of ten children, only seven of whom survived infancy, Davies grew up in working-class Liverpool, the introverted son of a kind mother, to whom he was deeply devoted, and a tyran­nical father, who died when he was seven. Davies has said that much of the abuse his father unleashed on his family was so unimaginable as to be untranslatable to the screen (“I couldn’t put in many things that happened, because nobody would have believed it. He was so violent,” he told me in a 2012 interview). This cruel man is a central figure, if at times as a specter, in Davies’s first five films: the shorts Children (1976), Madonna and Child (1980), and Death and Transfiguration (1983), which constitute what is now titled The Terence Davies Trilogy; Distant Voices, Still Lives (1988); and The Long Day Closes (1992). In the hauntingly austere, black-and-white trilogy, the first part of which Davies made when he was thirty and studying acting at Coventry Drama School, he reimagines himself as the closeted Robert Tucker, whose life he chronicles from abject childhood to miserable adulthood to lonely death. (In 1983, Davies con­tinued to dramatize the life of this surrogate character in his novel, Hallelujah Now, a devastatingly candid study of a frag­mented mind.) In Distant Voices, Still Lives, Davies removes himself from the picture, focusing on the lingering effects of his father’s violence on his mother and three of his siblings. But he returns as protagonist in The Long Day Closes, the culmination of this period of unbroken cinematic introspection, a mesmerizing memory piece on Liverpool in the 1950s that presents a subjec­tive, impressionistic experience of childhood.

'Concentrated as it is on a fleeting era in his life—the years that Davies has called his happiest, after the death of his father and before the acute terrors of puberty set in—The Long Day Closes is all about the moment as it’s experienced. It offers a cinematic lushness—of cinematography, set and sound design, music—that constitutes a sort of constant ecstasy. Davies’s personal obsessions, forged during childhood, are on majestic display here: the songs of Doris Day and Nat King Cole, the escape of the movies, the enveloping comfort of friendly neighbors, the camaraderie of holiday celebrations. “Everything seemed fixed, and it was such a feeling of security that this is how it will be forever, and I really believed that,” Davies said of this period. Yet there’s an underlying sadness encroaching on those joys, an awareness that it all must end. In The Long Day Closes, we’re essentially seeing the world through the eyes of a child alive to its sensations, yet whose astonishment is bridled by the wisdom of a middle-aged man aware of its disappointments. The effect is an almost unbearable poignancy.

'Davies may seem to be entering well-trodden generic territory in relating the experiences of young Bud (played by onetime actor Leigh McCormack, who has the mournful stillness of a Renaissance angel), living in harmonious grace with his beatific mother (Marjorie Yates) and jocose older siblings (Ayse Owens, Nicholas Lamont, and Anthony Watson). In outline, it could sound much like such other coming-of-age tales as Lasse Hallström’s My Life as a Dog (1985) and John Boorman’s Hope and Glory (1987). But unlike those more straightforward films, Davies’s unfolds in a highly unconventional narrative that collapses past and present; rather than a story, the film offers impressions and traces of childhood. Davies similarly forsook strict linearity for the trilogy and Distant Voices, Still Lives, but The Long Day Closes is his least orthodox, most visually and aurally layered work, a reminiscence with no discernible beginning or end, as given to flights of fancy as doses of reality. This, like his earlier work, is hardly the stuff of bleak kitchen-sink realism, despite the authentic working-class milieu; in fact, Davies has said that he finds the famed British New Wave films of the late fifties and early sixties, such as Look Back in Anger (1959) and This Sporting Life (1963), “dreary” and “drawn from the middle-class point of view.” Davies’s films seem made to attest to his belief that “working-class life was difficult, but it had great beauty and depth and warmth.”

'With its purposeful lack of breadth, The Long Day Closes is all depth. Focused on a short period in a boy’s life, the film is less about events than the profundity of a child’s inchoate feelings. One is likely to take away from the film not a crucial narrative “moment” but an image or a sound—the fragment of a song, the odd audio clip from a movie wafting across the soundtrack like a radio transmission from some deep psychological recess. Still, this is not an anything-goes work that’s been assembled in the editing room; Davies always meticulously plans every camera angle and movement, cut, musical cue, lighting effect, and sound bridge as early as the first draft of the screenplay, and rarely deviates from this blueprint. To date, Davies has made only two films that move in strictly chronological fashion—The Neon Bible (1995) and The House of Mirth (2000)—although even these play with duration and temporal ellipses. He told me, “It’s not interesting to say this happened, then this happened, then that happened. When people remember, they remember the inten­sity of the moment and nothing else.” The intensity of the moment is what defines The Long Day Closes, which is as engrossed in the nature of time itself as in its maker’s own past.

'Davies announces that preoccupation with time, in charac­ter­is­tically subtle fashion, in the film’s opening credits. The Long Day Closes commences with a beautifully composed still life of a bowl of roses, illuminated against a shadowy nothingness by a shaft of dusty sunlight. Though unrelated to the rest of the film in any literal way, the image is a natural one if we know of Davies’s devotion to T. S. Eliot’s Four Quartets, a group of poems concerned with the mysteries of time and memory, first published together in 1943. The first, “Burnt Norton,” opens with an evocation of mortality and decay, symbolized by “a bowl of rose-leaves.” For three and a half minutes, Davies allows the entire credit list to play out over what seems like a static image. But if we look closely, we notice that the roses are slowly wilting, an effect achieved through a series of nearly imperceptible dissolves. Finally, dead petals are scattered across the table. The film has scarcely begun, but already Davies has made us aware of our experience of time. There is a quiet message here: Look closely and patiently. This beauty will surely, sadly pass.'-- Michael Koresky



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Stills































































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Further

Terence Davies Official Website
Terence Davies @ IMDb
'The Inner Light of Terence Davies', by J. Hoberman
'Terence Davies on religion, being gay and his life in film'
TD @ TSPDT
'A SINGLE CONSCIOUSNESS: THE CINEMA OF TERENCE DAVIES'
Terence Davies Filmography
'Five sublime sequences in Terence Davies films'
'Life And Truth: Director Terence Davies Interviewed' @ The Quietus
'Terence Davies: How This Gay Filmmaker Channels His Feelings of Ostracism'
'Criterion Corner: Discussing Terence Davies with Michael Koresky
'Terence Davies: Slow dissolve'
'The Liverpool I knew has all gone now, says Terence Davies'
'TERENCE DAVIES VISITS THE U.S. – AND US'
'Sing, Memory: The Postwar England of Terence Davies'
'QUEERNESS AND MELANCHOLIA: An Excerpt from Terence Davies'
'A Lover’s Discourse: Terence Davies’s Films'
'Exploring the melancholy early work of Terence Davies'
'TERENCE DAVIES DIVES IN'



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Extras


Terence Davis - In Conversation


Terence Davies on Ealing


'2001- A Space Odyssey (Film Club intro by Terence Davies)' 1989


Terence Davies: Reverse Shot Direct Address #13


It's Personal: Memories of Terence Davies



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Interview (1988)




Are you still Catholic?

Terence Davies: God, no! I gave that up at 22. I suddenly realized then that it was a con. I was a very devout Catholic, I really did believe. But it gave me no succor. And when I realized I was gay, and was getting absolutely guilt-ridden about it and not doing anything, I knew something was deeply wrong. I prayed until my knees were raw and finally went to Mass one Sunday evening, and just before the offertory I thought: It's a lie, it's actually a lie; they're just men in frocks. And I got up and walked out. And I never went back – it was that sudden. It was like the Emperor's New Clothes. And I was so angry. I'm still very angry about it, because it wasted a lot of my emotional time.

Was this just an emotional rejection? Or do you think Catholicism is logically and intellectually flawed as well?

TD: Well, for me it's flawed because it starts from the premise that we're all sinners. I don't accept that. I think original sin is a monstrous idea. I don't believe most people are evil, though some undoubtedly are. The majority of people are basically good, they don't go around killing six million people. But it's all a question of belief or disbelief. If you look at it quite dispassionately, it's as remote, as unmeaning, as the Egyptian Book of the Dead. It's that remote to me now, and it's as exotic, as theatrical. The Catholic Church, if nothing else, has a great sense of thea­ter. In a sense it's like watching a film. After two minutes – if you believe, then that's fine. If you don't believe, forget it. No matter how good it might be.

Your Catholic background seems to have left one mark on your movies: they're structured like altarpieces. Why is the new movie in two separate parts?

TD: Well, I feel they complement one another. All the terrible family history is packed into Distant Voices, which is about the nature of time and memory. But in Part 2 – Still Lives– life has reached an even keel. I wanted to make something interesting out of our lives as stasis. The first part throws the second part into relief. And in Part 2 we see the chains that bind this family to­gether beginning to loosen and the family drifting apart. Imperceptibly: they don't realize it. And that's why at the end, one by one, they go into the dark. "Dark, dark, dark, they all go into the dark." A kind of metaphorical death.

How much of the movie is direct au­tobiography?

TD: Well, all the things that happen ac­tually happened. If not to me, to my family. They told these stories when I was very young, so they became part of my memory, almost as though they happened to me because they were so vivid. But some things I remember being part of. The Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing sequence was based on a visit to the cinema one hot Satur­day; my two sisters took me, and every­one was weeping away in the audience. And I wanted to have the irony of the two men falling through the glass roof in the scene we cut to. The idea is that life is much harsher than what you've seen on the screen. And it disorients you, which I think is interesting. You don't know quite where you are. There are other things in the sequence. The umbrellas are a direct homage to Singin' in the Rain. I was determined to have umbrellas with rain on them! And then you go inside and everyone's weeping. And then – suddenly – their brother and Eileen's husband have this huge accident. Out of the blue, you re­alize your hold on life is tenuous.

How closely do you structure the movie when you write the script?

TD: I write down everything as I hear and see it in my mind – every track, pan, dissolve, crane, piece of music. So the script becomes an aide-memoire, which is why I never do a storyboard. But con­tent dictates form, so I'm not conscious of how or why I structure certain things in a certain way. Mahler said, "One does not compose, one is composed." And that's what happens with a film: it will tell its story in the way it wants to be told. And, you know, you want to tell it in the most succinct way, because that's always much more powerful. You learn how long to hold a shot, for in­stance – and how long not to hold one. There's a two-minute take with a static camera in Trilogy, the boy's bus jour­ney with his mother, which I always call my Angora sweater shot; because by the time it's over you could have knitted one. There's a point where a shot dies.

Did you decide ahead of shooting on a specific style for the film, an aesthetic?

TD: If there was an aesthetic, it was that I wanted to show life the way it was back then. It was much more gentle and polite; there was much more of a sense of community. England is very philistine today. Also, I wanted to show real people. The working classes of that time have always been used as comic turns, on the stage or in films like Brief Encounter. Noel Coward couldn't tell the difference between compas­sion and condescension. It's the same in This Happy Breed– chirpy cockneys, you know, chirpy cockney voice: "We've survived the war!" It's about as relevant and as real as the Man in the Moon.

And so I had a specific idea of how I wanted the cast to act. I didn't want them to act, I wanted them to be. And I said to all of them, you must see the Trilogy first and you must not act. You'll get the script a week before shooting. Just read it twice, once for sense and once for character, and then don't read it again. Learn the scenes we're going to shoot only the night be­fore. We'll rehearse for ten minutes be­fore we start, and then we'll do it in under ten takes. Because after ten they get repetitive. And very often we got it in three.

What about the colors in the film? You use a very rich range of browns and earth colors.

TD: I knew I wanted a certain type of color, so we did a test with Kay Laboratories. I wanted tones of red and brown, but not sepia, because you can't watch sepia, it's impossible. So we used a coral filter and took out all the primary colors from the decor and costumes, except the red in the lip­stick. Then we used a bleach bypass process that leaves the silver nitrate in the print and desaturates the color.

Do you look at paintings for inspira­tion?

TD: I know nothing about art. I've never gone and looked at pictures, I have no vocabulary to discuss them. Obviously there are painters I like. I like the Im­pressionists, I like Modigliani, Seurat. I think Turner's paintings of Venice are stunning. But I don't like, for in­stance, Picasso. I can't respond to some triangular woman with her tits on the side of her body. It may be great art, but it doesn't mean anything to me.

Did you shape the visual sequences to the music, or vice versa?

TD: You never cut the picture to the mu­sic. That's the mistake I made with the two-minute shot in Trilogy. If a scene is visually right, then you can use just a snatch of a song and it's enough. For instance with Love Is a Many-Splen-dored Thing we did it without the end­ing chord. That was the editor's idea. And because the phrase is not finished, your inner ear is waiting for the reso­lution. And what I've found – and it's what I did here – is that you can resolve it visually with another shot, and then you resolve it aurally in the shot follow­ing that.

Are you part of the British cinema tradition?

TD: Well, I don't feel part of a British tra­dition, because I don't think there is one. I think every once in a while we produce films in spite of our lack of film tradition, like Powell and Pressburger or the Ealing comedies or Nic Roeg's Bad Timing. But one problem is, we share a common language with the Americans, and they've always made films better than we have. They see film as film, they see the way it works. Our culture is centered on the spoken word, and the theater has always had more prestige. We've produced great theater actors, but we cannot produce good cinema actors. The same with writers. What you get, when your writers come from theater and televi­sion, is a record of the spoken event. And that's not cinema.

Were you influenced by Dennis Potter – by Pennies from Heaven or The Singing Detective– in your use of pop­ular song as a substitute for dialogue?

TD: [Aghast] No. I saw one episode of The Singing Detective and I found it unwatchable. They're records of people talking, and I just get bored with that. The music is not integrated into the plot. The best example of how to use music in a film is Meet Me in St. Louis, because everything arises from that plot. It is so perfect. You have to use that as a touchstone.

I heard you quoted as saying you wanted to be reborn as Doris Day.

TD: Well, I think she's wonderful. Particularly in The Pajama Game. My great passion is Hollywood musicals. That and the symphonic tradition. I can't sing or play an instrument, but I can recognize a symphonic argument, par­ticularly in Mahler, Bruckner, or Shostakovich. And so that really strong idea of how something should be organic, coupled with popular American music, which I was brought up with – that cu­rious combination has been very, very helpful to me. Because the thing one has to steer clear of is sentimentality. You can get away with it in America, for the simple reason that Americans aren't the least bit embarrassed by sen­timentality. The English are terribly embarrassed by it. They think it's vul­gar. Like passion, they think it's vul­gar. What you do is find ways to use a song that negates the sentimentality. There's something wonderful about songs as over-the-top as "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing," but you must use them with images that are not over the top: like Mum being beaten up to "Taking a Chance on Love." I knew the scene would work as soon as I wrote it.

Why is passion vulgar in England?

TD: Because we're a very odd nation. There is that innate reserve. I was talk­ing about this to a friend, and she said something I think is true: that the idea of English exoticism has turned in on itself. The reason we're such a philis­tine country now, and a lot of the peo­ple are so horrible and the place is so dirty, is that we're no longer a colonial power and we've turned our colonial­ism in on ourselves.

We befoul our own nest because we've got nowhere else to do it. I think, too, that the British think passion is a badge of insincerity, that it's some­thing only "they" do, the dagos abroad. It's the same as the 18th cen­tury ideal of the "gifted amateur." To be professional is really rather vulgar. And it is exacerbated by our caste sys­tem, which is as rigid as anything in India or Japan.

It sounds as if America is the place for you.

TD: Well, you get welcomed in America, whatever class you come from. I re­member when Trilogy was going to be shown at the New York Film Festival, a girl asked me when I was coming over. I told her, and she said, "Come and stay in my flat, I'll be away then." And it was No. 1, Fifth Avenue, and there were real Matisses on the wall. Extraordinary hospitality.

But the thing I don't like about America is that in Britain you can fail, and fail honorably, but you can't over there. There's a cruel competitive edge. I remember the first time I went to Chicago, I was in a restaurant sitting in one of those half-moon open booths. And I overheard the people in the next booth, who were talking loudly, and I thought they were planning a murder. I was literally on the verge of saying to the waiter, "Look, I think you'd better call the police." By the time my food came, it transpired that they were opening a graphics office in the next state. I find the cutthroat attitude quite awful.

What films have influenced you?

TD: I can't say that particular films have influenced me. There are films that I've been absolutely knocked out by. When I was 18, I saw Bicycle Thief. And then there was Rocco and His Brothers. Of course they were revelatory at 18, one had never seen anything like them. And then one discovered Berg­man and Kurosawa and Ozu, Les Quatre Cent Coups and things like that. But I can't really say, "Oh, well I saw Donald O'Connor in Francis the Talk­ing Mule and it changed my life." [laughter]

The reason I love American musi­cals, though I don't know how much they influence me, is, one, that I thought America was like that. I thought, when I go I know I'm going to find a place where they all burst into song and dance! Just like that. And I know if I go there often enough, I'll find it.

The other thing is, they gave me the most enormous pleasure I've ever had. When I play the soundtracks now, I can remember where I saw them. It re-creates my childhood. Every time I watch Singin' in the Rain I cry. Because I re­member being taken to see it as a child and seeing this perfect world. Because that's what the Hollywood musical cre­ated. When you grew up in a Liverpool slum and you saw these films, that's what you thought America was like. Everyone was rich, everyone was beau­tiful. There was no want, no poverty; it was always summer. That's very po­tent. It's as potent as religion. In fact, for me it's very much become a reli­gion.

Is Distant Voices, Still Lives the last autobiographical film?

TD: I want to make one more piece of au­tobiography. It'll be a 90-minute film, in one part, and it'll be about the three years that precede the Trilogy. So the story will come full circle. It'll be about the children who've not been ex­plored, my younger brothers and sis­ters. It's the three years between the time my father died and when I left pri­mary school, Those three years were just ecstatically happy.

Since you're gay and you're not going to have a family of your own, are these films, in a way, your children?

TD: Yes, I think these are my children. I've got nothing else.

Do you think that's sad?

TD: Yes, I do, I think it's pathetic. It's far better to actually have a family of your own. Because at the end of the day most people don't give a toss whether it's a beautifully made piece of cinema. They don't care. So you can pour your soul into something, and yes, some people care, but most people don't. It'd be very nice just to be doing Rambo 27, because you'd make a lot of money and materially you'd have a very nice life. But (a), I haven't got the talent and (b), I haven't got the inclination. I'm very puritanical; I want the films to be good films, cinematically. But at the end of the day does anyone care? I re­member reading an article about the scherzo in Mahler's Sixth Symphony, which is a miracle of the sonata form. But think of all the people in the world who've never heard of Mahler and don't even want to.

When people see Distant Voices, Still Lives, what sort of feeling do you want them to leave with?

TD: I've no idea. I was constantly asked at film school, "What is your audi­ence?" I say, "I don't know." I make the films because I need to make them. I know that what I want from film is what I want from music: to be emo­tionally moved and intellectually stim­ulated. And I think all great art does that. Which is why one constantly re­turns to the late string quartets of Shostakovich, the symphonies of Bruckner and Mahler, to Citizen Kane. You go back and you rediscover something every time. And that's a joy.



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11 of Terence Davies's 12 films

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Children (1976)
'Davies wrote the script for Children (1976) while at drama school, and made the film with funding from the British Film Institute; Madonna and Child (1980) was produced at the National Film School as his graduation film; Death and Transfiguration (1983) was made three years later with the backing of the BFI and the Greater London Arts Association. Already in this early work, Davies shows adeptness and precision in his handling of sounds and images and in bringing an extraordinary intensity of emotion to the screen. While bearing the hallmarks of the personal, the evocations of the past - or of different pasts - throughout Children develop a cinematic language which expresses the universality of the experience of remembering.'-- screenonline



the entire film


A discussion between Terence Davies and Mamoun Hassan on his film, Children



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Madonna and Child (1980)
'Between 1976 and 1983, before Terence Davies became the most heralded British filmmaker of his time with his films Distant Voices, Still Lives and The Long Day Closes, he made this Trilogy of short films. The first, Children, was made during his second year at art school on a minuscule budget and chronicles the life of Davies’ alter-ego, Robert Tucker, from a young adolescent at primary school where he suffers both unprovoked bullying at school and his father’s abusiveness at home, up to his young adulthood. The second, Madonna and Child, finds a middle-aged Tucker stuck in a wearisome, life-sucking office job, suffering guilt over his closeted homosexuality because of his Catholic upbringing. The third, Death & Transfiguration, finds Davies imagining himself as an elderly stroke victim, reminiscing over his life, especially the death of his mother, while preparing for death himself. Of all the films in the Trilogy, Madonna and Child finds Davies most distinctly exploring his central themes, especially those of Catholic guilt, his homosexual fantasies, his relationship with his mother, and his oppressive isolation and devastating depression. But Davies is also displaying a remarkable growth as a directorial technician, and Madonna and Child is full of mature, cinematic devices. One of the most notable is his pervasive use of high contrast black & white, which moves the film into a darker world than the more gradated grays of Children. The high-contrast galvanizes scenes such as when Tucker knocks on the door to an exclusive gay club, whose framing and look is echoed later during Tucker’s confession scene at Church.'-- Forced Perspective



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Death and Transfiguration (1983)
'The anguished finale of the Terence Davies Trilogy opens with the death of Robert Tucker’s beloved mother, jumping forward in time to show an elderly Robert bedridden in hospital (an astonishing appearance by Steptoe and Son’s Wilfrid Brambell). Fragments of his past - a school nativity play, male physique magazines, a tender moment with mum - build to an unforgettable closing scene.'-- bfi



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Distant Voices, Still Lives (1988)
'The relative scarcity of films by writer-director Davies - whether owing to lack of funding or the obstinacy of a vision that brooks no compromise - is one of the great tragedies of British cinema. His first feature, which traces the life of a Catholic family in 1940s and 1950s Liverpool, is widely regarded as being among the finest depictions of British working-class life on film. It is divided into two chapters: the first reflects the trauma of war and growing up under an abusive father, the second, the struggle of his children to achieve happier lives as they build their own marriages and families following his death. The film is bleached of primary colours so that the action unfolds largely in drab greys and browns, but is enriched by a backdrop of radio, film and musical samples that reflect the wider narrative of a city re-establishing itself after the war.'-- The Guardian



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Excerpt


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The Long Day Closes (1992)
'The Long Day Closes is the most gloriously cinematic expression of the unique sensibility of Terence Davies, widely celebrated as Britain’s greatest living filmmaker. Suffused with both enchantment and melancholy, this autobiographical film takes on the perspective of a quiet, lonely boy growing up in Liverpool in the 1950s. But rather than employ a straightforward narrative, Davies jumps in and out of time, swoops into fantasies and fears, summons memories and dreams. A singular filmic tapestry, The Long Day Closes is an evocative, movie- and music-besotted portrait of the artist as a young man.'-- The Criterion Collection



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The Neon Bible (1995)
'The evolution of Davies’s career up to this point would make one wonder whether fragmented memories were all he was capable of summoning. His next film, though a wild departure in many ways, did not provide easy answers. The Neon Bible (1995), adapted from John Kennedy Toole’s slim bildungsroman about a sensitive boy’s coming-of-age in the deep American South, represented a striking change of milieu for Davies, yet many of the director’s already established hallmarks were in full view: taciturn young male protagonist, colorful and more outspoken older relative, the tyrannies of bullies and teachers, the comfort of movies, the birth of religious skepticism. If this alien landscape introduced a new (and probably healthy) awkwardness in Davies’s filmmaking, it also resulted in a singular hybrid of Davies’s poetic British lyricism and stoic American gothic. Davies’s long, steady tracking shots and unbroken single takes register as dissociated and surreal when reconfigured into a Georgia-shot tale that features one character’s dramatic descent into madness and another’s violent, climactic killing.'-- Roger Ebert



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The House of Mirth (2000)
'There are some films that are such pure, unpretentious exemplars of the medium—that are slavish only to their own being and rationale—that of course they were destined to be either forgotten or gently patted on the head before being sent away. Terence Davies’s The House of Mirth is such a film, one so exquisitely wrought and seamlessly shaped that it almost needs to be scrutinized with a magnifying glass as though a diamond. The problem with such subtle artistry is that you actually need to be looking at it to notice its flawlessness; that might have been too tall an order in 2000, when Davies’s film was released up against such flashier gems as Requiem for a Dream, Dancer in the Dark, and Bamboozled, all of which, for better or worse, were embracing and foregrounding new forms of moviemaking. The House of Mirth was hardly such a headline-maker: its greatest claim to fame outside of rarefied, art-house circles seemed to be its dramatic star turn from The X-Files’ Gillian Anderson. Otherwise this was merely the latest offering from a critically acclaimed British filmmaker whose difficulty in financing his few-and-far-between projects had hardly made him a household name with audiences, and for some the film’s origins as an Edith Wharton novel gave it the whiff of a high-school requisite.'-- Reverse Shot



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Of Time and the City (2008)
'Of Time and the City is Terence Davies’ first documentary — although “documentary” is hardly an adequate description of this fierce and loving film-essay on his native Liverpool — and, more significantly, his first film in eight years. Any new film from Davies is an event in its own right given his status as arguably Britain’s greatest living filmmaker. Yet he’s someone who has been almost unable to work in a film culture that’s essentially inimical to the kind of filmmaking he represents. Of course, he’s not the only British filmmaker to suffer from this — whatever happened to Carine Adler (Under the Skin, 1997), or Lynne Ramsay (Ratcatcher, 1999; Morvern Callar, 2001)? — but the situation with Davies is a particularly bitter one simply because of the stature of his work. There is plenty for unsympathetic viewers to resist in Davies’ idealisation of the past. For one thing, he doesn’t hide his distaste if not disdain for subsequent decades. Near the end of the film he offers us some scenes of inner-city night life, of the nightclubbing, pub-crawling, binge-drinking contemporary leisure culture, scenes that are a clear rebuke to the world of the present. Even the footage he chooses from the seventies serves to emphasise the decline in civic life, with the demolition of the tenements of Davies’ youth and the move — keyed ironically to Peggy Lee singing “The Folks Who Live on the Hill” — of the working-class into high-rise tower blocks. Gone are the children at play in street or playground, the crowds enjoying themselves at the New Brighton seaside. Instead, lonely figures wander down empty streets, and the camera picks out the ugliness of the graffiti-strewn buildings and mourns the demolished old residences.'-- Bright Lights Film Journal



Trailer


Excerpt


Terence Davies talks about his film, Of Time and the City



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The Deep Blue Sea (2011)
'The agony and perverse ecstasy of unrequited love permeate Terence Davies’ The Deep Blue Sea. Adapted by the director from Terence Rattigan’s 1952 play and set in a dank, depressed London still recovering from the Blitz, it tells the story of Hester Collyer (Rachel Weisz), a 40ish beauty dashed on the rocks of masochistic passion. She has left her older husband, Sir William (Simon Russell Beale), a judge still under the thumb of his ironhearted mother (Barbara Jefford), and their life of stifling middle-class conformity to move into a dingy rented flat with the young lover, Freddie (Tom Hiddleston), a former fighter pilot, charming and exciting in bed, with whom she has become obsessed. Though not without glimmerings of conscience, Freddie is feckless and inconstant. He cannot reciprocate Hester’s romantic intensity, and when he spends her birthday weekend on a “golfing trip” she methodically tries to gas herself. That’s where Davies’ sublime evocation of amour fou, the hallmarks of which are self-confinement and humiliation, begins.'-- Film Comment



Excerpt


Excerpt


The Deep Blue Sea: Behind the scenes, on-set footage



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Sunset Song (2015)
'What is most surprising about Terence Davies' film adaptation of Lewis Grassic Gibbon's Sunset Song is how close the director seems to his material. The novel, published in 1932, is the story of a sensitive young woman growing up in a rugged, rural community in the north-east of Scotland just before the First World War. It is a world away from the working-class Liverpool of the director's own childhood in the late 1940s, so movingly depicted in his autobiographical Distant Voices, Still Lives (1988), and yet the two films sit together as companion pieces. They are both deeply felt family dramas with the same mix of lyricism and extreme brutality. They both feature abusive father-figures who terrorise their wives and children. There is plenty of music and communal singing in each of the films. The interior of the little farmhouse in which the family lives in Sunset Song isn't so different from that of the home depicted in Distant Voices. Sunset Song may be uneven but it's a film no other British director would have made in the same way as Davies. One of the reasons Davies has struggled to get his work financed is that he resists the pressure from interfering front-office executives to tailor his movies in the way that they demand. His films, whether they're autobiographical or adapted from Edith Wharton (The House of Mirth) or Grassic Gibbon novels, or even if they're nostalgic, newsreel-based documentaries such as Of Time and the City, always feel utterly personal. His new feature is entirely consistent with its predecessors both in its intimacy and in its ability to be lyrical and harrowing at the very same time.'-- The Independent



Trailer


Excerpt


Agyness Deyn and Terence Davies talk Sunset Song



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A Quiet Passion (2016)
'Just a few months after Terence Davies’ last drama, Sunset Song, premiered at the Toronto Film Festival, his new one, A Quiet Passion, made its debut at Berlin. How did he complete it so quickly? Maybe the trick was that he shot almost all of it in one location with just a handful of actors. The film is a biopic of Emily Dickinson (Sex and the City’s Cynthia Nixon), the great American poet who spent much of her adult life as a recluse in her parents’ house in Amherst, Massachusetts, so there is some logic to the action being confined to a couple of adjoining rooms and a sunny front garden. But Davies breaks several other rules of the literary biopic in ways that are harder to justify. The acting and camerawork can be stilted, the actors are decades older than the people they are playing, the dialogue is crammed so tightly with polished witticisms and epigrams that it sounds like Noël Coward arm-wrestling Oscar Wilde, and the choice of scenes seems so random that Davies could have picked them out of a hat: some of the most important people in Dickinson’s life, including her sister-in-law and a supportive editor, are reduced to blink-and-you’ll-miss-it cameos. But while there is plenty about A Quiet Passion that doesn’t work, Davies’ willfully demanding curio is so unconventional and sincere that it’s easy to admire, and it has a few moments of magic which make it all worthwhile.'-- BBC



Excerpt


Terence Davies. At work. On 'A Quiet Passion'




*

p.s. Hey. Still fucked up, pained, messy, but I hope to find a chiropractor or someone such today so I'll be less problematic by Monday. For now, please excuse my lack of expansiveness. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. I sort of remember all of them as being the gay one. I checked my email, but there's no 'Mac-Mahon' there? ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. Sure, physical books rule, but there's something special about pdf books to me. They're like zines or something. Most pdf books I read, like the ones in the post yesterday, are quite short, really no longer than one of my average blog posts, ha ha. But it's true. ** Bill, Hi, Bill. The Kobek is good. Thanks, yeah, my back is being especially obnoxious this time. Ugh. Have a twice-the-fun/productive weekend on my behalf. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi, Dóra. Cool! Xavier Dolan: I saw and liked a couple of his early films. But then I saw one more recent film whose title is escaping me that I didn't like at all. Are you fan of his? Particular faves, if so? Yeah, listening to OPN, you can probably imagine how good he is live. Great visual presentation too. Yay about the productive day of writing! I'm dying to get through this pain/pain killer mess so I can actually write again. My yesterday was pretty fucked, but I'm determined to force myself upwards this weekend. Thoroughly enjoy yours! ** Brendan, Hi, B! Cool! I should be here. There's one thing where I'll have to go the States sometime this spring to co-host a screening of Zac's and my film, and we don't when that will happen yet, but what are the odds that your visit and that will conflict? Very low odds. So that should be good. I'll know soon. I live on the edge of the Marais near Bastille. Right near Place du Vosges. I'm going to have to think re: hotels after I'm feeling better, which hopefully be in a day or two. What's 'inexpensive'? It's Paris, so ... Great weekend! ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. The Goring is wonderful. Get it. It's free! I've driven only automatic cars since I got my license. They're good. You're probably further on than you feel like you are. ** Schlix, Hi, Uli. Yeah, it was great. He had a bass player with him. And he sang a lot, albeit heavily filtered, which I totally didn't expect. I saw the Michael Gira/Larkin Grimm thing. And the knee-jerk pontificating. Social media at its worst. As for the thing, we'll wait and see, right?  ** Chilly Jay Chill, Thanks about the round-up. Getting the producer for the new film is great, yeah! I don't know about fast-track, ha ha. What it means is the film has an official boss and overseer and that it will get made more than likely. Especially since we've already raised maybe almost half of the budget. And we can start working on it, scouting locations, thinking about casting, writing the proposals and stuff needed to raise the rest of the money. With luck, we might just get to shoot it late this year or at the beginning of next year. I don't think we will be able to shoot any sooner, although we're really jonesing to. I should do a post on Stephanie Barber, yes. Good idea. I'll get on seeing if there's enough out there do it. Butoh, interesting. By whom? Great Butoh is incredibly great. Thanks, good weekend! ** Steevee, Hi. Yeah, loud mouthed idiots rule the world. Or at least the US. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! My severe honor, my friend! I'm glad you thought it was okay. And, yeah, the Penny Goring is super wonderful. Have a fine weekend. ** Whew. Okay, there's Terrence Davies Day. Have fun. While I try to fix myself, you all have a great weekends. See you on Monday.

Meet calamitous_intent, IxSodomlYxSweaR, IaminAustralia, soggymushrooms, and DC's other select international male slaves for the month of February 2016

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Kelsey, 18
I am here because you are a natural full dom top and humiliating boys is something you desire and there will be nothing you can say that could convince me otherwise AND NO I DO NOT WANT TO LIVE WITH YOU.







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Wonk, 20
Boy with nice feet (eur 43) is looking to be a worshipper and slave to someone's foot, especially someone who has uglier feet than mine.







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Carepackage, 19
I like much older guys than me as I am conservative in that way, more comfortable with the premise of taking cock and punishment from an older guy than younger than me. I would prefer to give cock and pain to a younger guy than take from them... yes old-fashioned but that's me... someone living in the wrong era... Also because I am on the swim team at my school I cannot have any marks or even get my arse cheeks too red for the next day.

I read non-fiction and watch porn a lot, observe the world of sex, know some perverted things in life imaginatively although I don't unfortunately lay claim to any. I appreciate masters and slaves, and the lessons I see they give to each other. I am a sensitive soul that intuitively feels and gets at their balance and the imbalances, their pulse and beats, their spoken and the unspoken.

I am very attractive, but so are many of us, and what good does that single virtue have for you, who are much more than just a top, some masters may ask. Well, my ass is not just cute, smooth, muscular and tight, it has also some temperamental characteristics. Nice and kind, yes, but intense and mettlesome, too, and also complicated and devious with a mind of its own. In point of fact, I don't understand my ass at all.





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Nolimitspozteenpig, 19
Turn my little junk into actual junk. They are useless so doesn't matter what you do to it. Not a slave. Just want to be destroyed by a sadist.

Look what the homosexuals have done to me.





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BURNED, 18
PIGHOLE INSANE LOOKING FOR DELIVERY IN PARIS 24/24 TINA LADY WHITE







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clipmypignuts, 22
scumfuck twinkpig hole on legs and pretty cool guy, very opinionated with a bit of a Colombian accent, for HEAVY ABUSE 24.7 Master

bareback faggot fuckpig tweenlook chemmed braincell shedding raging bitch boy needs physical trashing and mentally retarding by whatever means necessary. Neg but bb from poz Masters only.

my ass is my weak spot. seek horrifying boyass fanatic sadist into tackling my ass from sweet tonguefilled mouth-to-hole vacuuming reversetornado action to mass invasions and assaults from all directions to make me crazed and beyond. I produce non-stop pre-cum for you to use as lube or feed you.

Got some scars and damage and want a ton more. Educated/smart/but total garbage and cum dump. I fantasize so much.





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PupHiccup, 18
WRUFF, my name is hiccup!
I'm looking for a sir :D someone to own and dominate me and give me food! (More so the food part)
Impress me. *goes to basket and watched the funny hoomans*
100% certain I was meant to be the dog of a zoophilic nympho.
(I've hiccuped everyday for 2 years)
I love porn.






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howsitgoin, 24
I am very caring and loving. I am respectful and have good hope in life..I want a happy life and want to have a happy relationship which will end up in marriage..I am taking care of an orphan who happened to be a boy and he is 4 years old, but also will be greatfull if I have some someday... I know its God that gives Children...I want to have lifetime devotion and commitment to only one man. I really understand what love is.Love is not about finding the right person, but creating a right relationship. It's not about how much love you have in the beginning but how much love you build till the end.Love is blind but after experiencing it for a long time you should become familiar with some particular spots.





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soggymushrooms, 18
Hi all! My name is F. Zoltán Laszló, but call me Zolcsi. I living in Hungary. I tired of being fucked. I looking for a guy to fist me and wreck my hole. I also like cooking and poetic writing.

Note I am not 18 till July 15 2016. Due to the law I will not be posting or sharing Pornographic pictures of myself until after I turn 18.

Please note that I was raised with the concept that everything having to do with sex outside traditional marriage is wrong. When I cum, that conditioning kicks in, so I do not like to cum EVER!






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Slobberingfempup, 20
I like too be lay back while my legs are out wide exposing my hole. my cock and balls are restrained tight with rope or a ring. then I rub slippery lube all over and around my hole ready for pummelling. Ive just bought a 12" long 2.5" diameter vibrating dong that i wasn't sure if it might of been to big. But last night with my legs spread wide and my hole covered in lube i slowly slide it inside me stretching my boy pussy little by little until it slid all the way in and it was ecstasy. Not even 2 minutes had past of thrusting it in and out did i begin to drip cum all over myself.

So, that is what i like.






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Obeyer, 23
I've been getting screwed since I was a very young teenager, and I've found that being treated like a feminine little sissy helps me get much deeper into subspace.

Looking for queer/bi tough guys, open-minded horny hung folk who understand that gender is a spectrum. I find the sexist thing about a man is between his ears.

If total mutual respect is established between my sissy side and you I have no limits and my brain are a black hole, like my pussy.






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Salope75, 23
Sorry for my english.
I'm the master of this slut. I want to transform its head and body to a sexual art work. It's totaly submissive. It's deaf-mute. It's a body with zero inside. No come back possible. Possibility to share this lope with the most extreme masters. It has no home and I can not host it. It can be modified and operated upon until it is not human. It can be transported around the world.






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Babyface, 24
I LOVE to lift really heavy and chasing the pump i love all the blood flow i get when working out and walking around knowing I'm HUGE and i will make everyone who fist fucks me HAPPY.







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IaminAustralia, 21
I'm student. I just had my first intense experience in a dungeon in America. I just realize I like cruel mens. I realize I like to get thrown around. I realize I like you. Write me. :)






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IxSodomlYxSweaR, 18
Hey I'm an 15 (!!) year old slave, and am looking for a new master, my master has moved away and I miss the things he made me do.

This may seem fake but it isn't, if you have any ideas on how I can prove I'm real then please let me know, just don't ask for a million pictures.

I am looking for a new master who can treat me like he did.
Firstly I locked in chastity with a long urethral tube. (For periods of up to 3 months.)
He would meet me after work about 8:00 pm or later and make sure I was still locked in chastity. And he would make me wear knickers or a thong to school, he would make me send a picture on my lunch with the time in the picture and meet me after school if I wasn't in them or failed to send a picture he would make me go to work with a but plug in my ass.
Or if I upset him or if he felt like it he'd embarrass me by locking a metal collar around my neck and keep the key and send me home I would have to wear a scarf to hide it!

And at the weekends and sometimes during the week he'd chain me in his garage or bedroom and have lots of violent sex with me etc and/or leave me there for a couple of hours.
And other times I would be bound with chains etc naked in the woods (Epsom downs or nonsuch park) and leave me.

(Extra he would sometimes shit on my lock before locking me in and send me home with his shit or my own in my knickers,thong,boxers. I don't take shit in my mouth but you can smear on my face body etc, you can also piss on me or in my but not my mouth)

If you are genuine and interested please send a picture of the chastity and other toys/devices and a brief description of what you would like to do among those things listed.

I live near Croydon, Sutton, Epsom, Wandsworth, Wimbledon, carshalton, waddon, Wellington, ewell.

I am able to meet tonight to be locked up, I drive but can't drive to far.

Comments

Anonymous - 30.Jan.2016
This boy is a girl...be careful guys!!






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I--WANT--YOU, 22
Hey how are you?
I WANT YOU

Comments

I--WANT--YOU - 29.Jan.2016
There is no word to explain how I am in the bed.

Anonymous - 28.Jan.2016
want me for what?







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heyitsmichael, 24
I am a very private person but when it comes to the world of sex I am ALL IN. Nothing is too niche.
been itching to be get so fucked up that you have to put your hands over my mouth to stop be screaming...its been a while
I have a five inch dick, I can't help it, and maybe that's why I can't disobey guys packing pythons. All they have to do is flash their massive dicks and I drop to my knees and my saliva pours down my chin (not a metaphor).
I work with children, young people and families and Its my job to worry about their safety and support them...I think that is why I want someone to use me without caring in the sex world...
particular fetish for getting fucked up by aging (35+) skater boys.
I hope this didn't sound like some sort of thesis statement.








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R8pdsfagwbbc, 24
Ppl trek me I look like Jesus and I've got a straightforward proposition for you: I want to be your urinal. To clarify, a urinal is a receptacle for urine--something you piss into or on. My purpose is not really to be your "slave," although there are obviously some power dynamics going on, nor am I interested in serving you sexually. I'm simply looking for someone who would be interested in having me over, preferably for a period of time, and using me as they would any other urinal/toilet. If you would like to tie, restrain, or blindfold me in preparation for using me as a urinal that would be lovely. I can be as unobtrusive as you would like, and there is no need to keep me entertained.

Wow, site sucks. Good luck trying to find the "delete account" option.







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Doanything, 21
A listen I will do wat I told when told like to punishedfor stuff I don't do right and Thts all

Comments

danlio20 - 12.Feb.2016
pretty, beautiful, disposable boy I'd like to torture and rape you, despite all my disappointments with Romanian shit.






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EasterBunny, 24
lick my armpit and fuck it
thats it and nothing else
if you are the one don't shy





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GoldenAngel, 19
I greet you. My name is Golden Angel, and I'm 19 years old from Spain, and, boy, am I cute.

Looking for a man who Takes what he wants and Never bothers asking.

Bondage, Blindfolds, Gags, and Hand/Ankle Cuffs are my best friends. I like a master who doesn't trust me.

Being Beaten Bloody, Strangled, Having my Teeth Kicked In, Stomped, Etc and Raped are my dream best friends.

I need to be punished for any reason, maybe just for being cute (???), but I'd REALLY prefer that my master leave nothing to chance and refuse to give me the free will to do anything in the first place.

Looking for a real relationship like this or just sex.







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calamitous_intent, 22
Plz hlp me pray away the gay





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fagg0t, 23
First, a little bit about me. Busy graduate student and cultural nonprofit employee with eclectic tastes ranging from the classy to the trashy to the raunchy. "Stupid bitch" are my two favorite words in the entire world and they will make me do anything. I can be used by anyone but you must be cute. I am 23 and your age does not matter but I am mostly interested in 12 or 13 year olds. Nothing demands my obedience like a boy with a high pitched voice and a small dick who looks like a watercolour paiting.





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PairForYou, 19
Hello! We are from Russia. We use the names X and Y to differentiate ourselves. We are less than 19 years (18, too). We were created to fuck and destruct, so here we are.

We are owned by Master Fatality666. If you know our Master or know Him by the reputation, you will understand the extreme path we are on.

We always meet together but feel free to separate us at the meet.

We are only looking for very older masters and a tough extreme amoral sadistic character.

Both submissive and weak willed and slightly insane. Both male (despite Y's long hair)

Our meets usually involve "no limits", so you can do almost whatever you want in an agreed time frame. If a generous payment to Master Fatality666 has been arranged in advance, those quotations can be removed.

Although you can do what you want with us, the following are what we have perfected and have been popular with past masters:

-Golden Kisses
-Eating each other's scat
-Fighting with each other/Master restraining one while the other beats the shit out of him
-Humiliating or betraying or denouncing each other

With prior substantial payment arrangement to our Master, we have been trained and mentally prepared to do the following (only inside Russia at a designated location):

-Murder Suicide#1/One of us executes the other one with bullet then shoots himself in the head
-Murder Suicide#2 (for X only)/X kills anyone you ask then kills himself
-To the death fighting each other naked with knives or razors until one or both of us collapses/Master must prove he is prepared to cover up the deaths and disappear our bodies

Comments

Anonymous - 13.Feb.2016
He's serious.

Djazil - 10.Feb.2016
is he serious?

MasterFatality666 - 08.Feb.2016
R.I.P. "Y"






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iamanarabfaggotcashslave, 20
I'm looking for a cash master who can use manipulation to take away all of my hard earned cash. I have a PayPal account, Google Wallet account and Venom account. I will give up credits cards, ATM cards, all bank account information, and access to the trust fund set up for me by my grandfather.

I will only give cash if I'm turned on. I'm not going to tell you what turns me on. If you're such a big masterful guy, you can figure it out.

I've been with cash masters who are so bad at manipulation that I didn't get turned on. Too bad for them, they got no cash.

Comments

AmericanExec - 12.Feb.2016
FYI, he likes to chew on Pokemon stuffed animals while getting spanked.





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DickyWicky, 19
I'm incontinent, little, kitty, bite-y, bratty, love to read, paint, play piano, smoke weed, clean your toilet, solve puzzles, pee outside, blow your mind, always want something in my arse, and I want a master who is my boyfriend who owns me. Your search is over.





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Imthirsty, 22
Had funny Feeling....that Hopefully u was looking for a Piss Drinking Slave to Train, Torture the way u want it to be.... If ya Didn't think you had it in ya.... Don't want ya going all sloppy soft.... Or I will never learn.... This is proper brutal stuff.... Serious stuff.... Urine is my jaam! (and also the jam is my jam.... looove the jam.... how awesome the jam is? Now I'm rambling.... FOCUS!





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MatthewFullerton, 19
I have given up, I now realize. Without a Master my life will just keep repeating itself, disappointment after disappointment, failure after failure.

I came to this realization after trying to live a normal life. Ive been expelled from school, fired by three jobs, no close friends, tried love but I don't feel it or want it.

Personally wise I am just a lazy, unexcited hippie type of pot head who gets a thrill out of seeing some one else explode with passion about me.

I have never had sex before with anyone, therefore my skills are not going to be on par with an experienced individual, but on the other hand I'm a pacifist.






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rubberpuppet, 23
Tall, slim, Crispin Glover type.






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Allaboutme, 19
Knock me out. Fuck me while I'm knocked out. Pretty straightforward.






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TheRaven, 23
I get this ache, And I thought it was for sex, But it's to get torn into fucking pieces.








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UltimateShittyGift, 24
God, I've looked for His help,
And I have seen no help.
I've seen no thoughts, no looks, no praise.
He doesn't care, He doesn't love me!
I only love myself.
No one will love me like I love me.
Life's been a pointless search, now I want to die
I call it torture, you call it life
A slave to money and everything I despise
Fuck, eat, sleep, destroy,
Just about the only thing you fucking enjoy
I am a disposable being
Who will fuck all life if I live any longer
I multiply and the air gets thinner and dirty
I take up space that could be empty and pure
I fill the air with stupid noise
I consume but I produce nothing
I abuse the gift of being white and straight
I have no reason to exist
Someone please end this in whatever way you want
I know some of you want to kill a boy
I'm in Akron Ohio, and no one knows I'm here
I'm alone, and no one will know.

Comments

Anonymous - 06.Feb.2016
I want this guy!!! Write me pls.
I can't!







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p.s. Hey. (1) My back is no better, so, again, apologies for any pain fallout, but I'm seeing some supposedly great back-fixing guy today, so hopefully by tomorrow I'll be doing this while unencumbered again. (2) I have a favor to ask of you. If you want to see Zac's and my film 'Like Cattle Towards Glow', please wait until it either shows in your area or is officially released. If you intend to watch it via an illegal torrent, please at least wait a few months until after the official release date when the torrent is at least more likely to contain the final, finished version of the film. Thank you very much! ** Armando, Hi. I'm glad you liked 'LCTG', and what's done is done, and I know that's how things work, but I'm not happy that there's an illegal download of it out there months before the release date, much less one that quite possibly isn't the final finished version of the film. But thanks for the kind words about whatever draft you saw! ** Dóra Grőber, Hi, D. I haven't seen 'Mommy', but I will. I think the one I didn't like was 'Tom à la ferme'. I can't remember exactly why -- my memory isn't at its best at the moment -- but it irritated me for some reason. I get you about the boy muse aspect, though.Yep. Maybe I'll try it again. Thanks, yeah, five days straight of constant pain has gotten very old, let me tell you, but I should -- knock on wood -- be much better by tomorrow. ** David Ehrenstein, I'm so glad you thought the Day was good. 'The Long Day Closes' is my favorite of his. Oh, I would love to meet him, so, if he's ever proximite, I'll take the opportunity. And thank you very much for the PM-M! It's really great, and it'll launch here on this coming Friday. Everyone, before we leave the subject of Terrence Davies, if we do, go read David Ehrenstein's piece on him and his work. It's undoubtedly crucial. ** Brendan, Hi, B. There a lot of hotels, that's for sure. I can confer with you and check them out on my end, if you like. Just let me what you're considering. Ugh, bronchitis so sucks. Been there few times. Awful. I hope you're closer to being righter than rain today. ** Steevee, I do love them, and I have heard a little about 'The Wave', yes. And I'm jonesing for it in that special, smallish way in which one awaits a fetish object. We have thought of Metrograph, which looks like a really terrific place and good add to NYC. Right now a couple of connected people in NYC are acting as missionaries on the film's behalf and seeing what they can find. If nothing pans out there, we'll try Metrograph, although I fear they're probably scheduled-up until the DVD release, which might dash that potential chance, I don't know. Thanks a lot for that suggestion, Steve! ** James, Hi, James. Thanks, me too. New post? Awesome. And sorely needed given the recent interruption to my blog work schedule. Thank you! ** Cameron Barrows, Hi, Cameron. Welcome to here, and thanks for the link/alert. I'm following the general UK flood of like-crimes, but I hadn't known of that particular case until you pointed it out. Yeah, thanks, man. ** Marcus Pyotr Mamourian, Howdy, Marcus. That would be cool. I'll try to ace a summer visit if I can. Seems totally plausible. I'm still on the masthead of Artforum and I'm still officially a Contributing Editor, but I haven't written for them in, like, ten years maybe? It's really largely to do with the fact that I'm so swamped with projects between writing fiction, the theater pieces, the films with Zac, and of course the blog, etc., that I had to cut something out, and writing non-fiction/articles for magazines in general was the thing that ended up being sidelined. I miss writing for Artforum. That was always my favorite place to write stuff. I could very well do that again, but not for the next while, I think. How was your weekend? ** Sypha, Hi, James. Got it. It's astounding. I did bisect it into two posts at the point you suggested, and they will launch here on Friday and Saturday of next week, i.e. the 11th and 12th. Thanks so much, J. It's monumental and definitive! Very, very honored! ** Bill, Hi, Bill. I'm not (feeling better) sadly, but I should be at least notably less in pain tomorrow. Allergies, work, not the world's greatest combo. Feel better! ** _Black_Acrylic, Awesome, thank you a ton, Ben! That's exciting! ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. I'm definitely sharing your 'Where am I these days' sentiment, although my memory seems to be working to the extent that I can remember where I've been, I think. Thanks re: my back, and commiserations re: your right latissimus dorsi. May the gods share their wealth equally between us today. ** Did it. Right. It's your monthly slaves post as well as your (and my) reminder to pay our rent tomorrow. See you on the 1st.

Back from the dead: "Why in heaven's name have I been forgotten? Harrumph!" (orig. 05/18/07)

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Oswell Blakeston (1907 - 1985)

Oswell Blakeston ran away from his bourgeois home as a schoolboy, becoming a conjuror's assistant, cinema organist and clapper boy with David Lean at Gaumont film studios. In the large close-ups used to convey information in silent films - "hands holding letters, visiting cards and so on" - Blakeston played the hands of many stars. He began writing film criticism, later becoming assistant editor of the influential magazine Close Up. "Oswell Blakeston" was adopted instead of his real name, Henry Hasslacher. (Oswell was derived from that of the writer Osbert Sitwell. His mother's family name was Blakiston, which he modified.)

With Francis Bruguiere, Blakeston pioneered abstract films in Britain. He was also a writer of filmscripts, plays, novels, cookery and travel books, prolific artist, poet and lecturer. Among his enormous literary output were his 1932 book Magic Aftermath, "the first fiction to be published in spiral binding"; the 1935 crime story The Cat with the Moustache (a collaboration with Roger Burford), "one of the first descriptions of trips with mescal"; and the 1938 anthology Proems, in which Blakeston "published the first poems by Lawrence Durrell".

Dylan Thomas called Blakeston "a friend of all boozy poets and me too". Oswell wrote regular articles on London's pubs for What's On for some 25 years. A bar-room acquaintance was the writer M.P. Shiel, who in strange circumstances became king of the Leeward Island of Redonda, of which Blakeston was made a duke.

As a writer of stories, John Betjeman reckoned that Blakeston was a neglected genius of the macabre. His 1947 collection Priests, Peters and Pussens had idiosyncratic illustrations by Max Chapman, a young avant-garde painter who would become Blakeston's lover until the older man's death. Blakeston and Chapman co-wrote stories, among them Jim's Gun (1939) and Danger in Provence (1946). While writing the latter in Venice, the authors were arrested as Russian spies. On hot evenings they had been using a typewriter on the roof - they were thought to be transmitting Morse messages.
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What remains of Oswell Blakeston's fiction


Adventure Without Asking: David Smith accidentally gets into a first class compartment when he boards a train at Waterloo. He finds himself alone with "a small, obese creature with a face so flabby that it looked like the disintegrated face of a medium in a spiritualist photograph after he has been deserted by one ghost and before he is possessed by another."

This man is a doctor, hypnotist and mind reader, and he's also extremely bitter and twisted about both his unfortunate appearance and his wife's infidelity. Having caused David to faint at the station, he has him removed to his quarters where he can torment him with a scene from his worst nightmares. Weird and extremely horrible.

- from Charles Birkin, ed. Not at Night (Phillip Allan, 1935)
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The Hut: "The first lad who slept there hacked off his hand with a penknife. He confessed, afterwards, that he had stolen with that hand ... The last ...er ... victim, was a tramp who had stolen a bag of gardening tools from the village ... he blinded himself on a rake ..."

It served as home to a religious fanatic, a fervent believer in "if thy right hand causes thee to sin .." self-mutilation for even the slightest transgressions. Peter and Daisy, lost in the countryside, hole up there for the night but she is unable to sleep and, fatally, says as much to the sinister stranger who greets them in the morning. The hut is on his land and, back at his farmhouse, he relates to them the macabre history of the hut with obscene relish ...

- from Charles Birkin, ed. Gruesome Cargoes #13 (Phillip Allen, 1936)
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Snow Time: Switzerland. A young English boy, bullied by his nurse, scoops his sago pudding into a cigarette box and hides it in a cupboard only to be tormented by it in a nightmare: "The eggs, the nasty horrid eggs had hatched! Long white things were crawling towards the bed, waving their sightless heads to get the direction where they sensed the small boy was lying, then worming their way forward ..."

- from Hugh Lamb, ed. Return from the Grave (W.H. Allen, 1976)

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For Crying Out Shroud : Chapter XIV

The telephone rings, and the doctor puts out a large hairy hand to stifle the patient’s screams. Two masked male nurses move forward to help the doctor with the man who writhes in agony; and a hydrocephalic female nurse answers the phone.

‘Oh yes,’ she says in a mellifluous voice, ‘the patient is . . . quite comfortable.’

Jim half wakes with the nightmare.

Then he turns on the other side and falls back into un-easy sleep.

In the second nightmare he is in a hot country, in some tourists’ shop where they sell, as souvenirs, the shrunken heads the Indians make; and Jim recognises, in one of the tiny grinning faces, his own features.

- from For Crying Out Shroud, a novel (Hutchinson, 1969)
- (read the rest)
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What else remains of Oswell Blakeston



His Wikipedia entry
A biography and inventory of his papers
Info on his film Light Rhythms (1930) at silentera.com
His books available at alibris
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p.s. Hey. My back thing seems to be beginning to improve post-doctor, and I'm slightly more myself, but we will see. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Didn't watch. Not even clips, actually. ** Damien Ark, Hi, Damien. Yes, LCTG will be released on DVD and made available for streaming in the early summer. The exact date isn't set yet. Late June - early July is a guess. Thanks for asking, man. ** Armando, Hi. Oh, man, I'm sorry to have jumped to that wrong conclusion. The same day you commented, someone wrote to tell me they'd downloaded an illegal torrent of it, and I mistakenly assumed that had been your source. I'm very sorry about that. I'm feeling better. It's a slow process, and I have to be super careful for the next couple of days, but, yeah, I hope my back is gradually correcting itself as I type. Thanks for caring. Hm, interesting questions. Five favorite Viscontis: 'Death in Venice', 'The Damned', 'Ludwig, 'Rocco and his Brothers', 'White Nights'. Least favorite: 'Conversation Piece'. Three favorite Antonionis in order: 'Red Desert', 'Blow Up', 'L'Eclisse'. What are your fave and least Viscontis and your three fave Antonioni's in order, please? ** James, Hi, James. I don't think I do. Well, okay, I've never tried it, so ... hm, actually ... ha ha. Thanks for your thoughts. I think/hope I'm upswinging. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T! Ah, gorgeous with a sublime edge, even so through a non-related chorus of ouches on my end. Or maybe not completely unrelated, if you catch my drift ;) . They even drove me to use an emoticon, for goodness sake.Thank you, maestro. If a blog could bow physically, it would be. Love, me. ** Steevee, Hi. Thanks, man. I hope he did. Well, he did, but 'how much' is the question that the next couple of days will answer. Man, hopes right back at you about the kidney stone. Ugh. Hm, I don't think I know Tomeka Reid Quartet. I will for sure go listen. If Reid played with Braxton, that extremely good enough for me. Sounds fascinating. Great, thank you a lot, Steve! ** Dóra Grőber, Hi, Dora. I will absolutely for sure watch 'Mommy'. Maybe it's on French Netflix. That seems highly possible. Thanks about the slave post. Well, yeah, it's kind of this ongoing labor-intensive thing. I basically spend the month before the escort and slave posts doing almost daily explorations of various sites where escorts/clients and slaves/masters do their soliciting and flirting. It takes a lot of work and patience to find interesting ones. 90% of the escorts/slaves say basically the same, basic things in their profiles, and the curious, eccentric ones, especially by guys that have a general qualification as 'attractive', are rare. Then I gather the profiles I like until I have enough for a post. In a nutshell. I'm still in pain, but it's notably less. Supposedly, according to the doc, the pain should gradually disappear over the next couple of days. Boy, I hope so. How was your Tuesday? ** Sypha, Excited, amazed! ** _Black_Acrylic. Thanks, Ben. Yes, fingers very, very, very crossed that his treatment worked. ** Misanthrope, Hi. Mine is supposedly a combo of having a lifelong imperfect spine and surrounding tissue stuff. That's what he said. They torrent everything these days. I dig, but it sucks for a little film like ours and re: that happening so far in advance of the release plus god knows if its the final cut. I'm afraid to check. ** Okay. Today you get a little fallout from the impairment caused to the blog by my current physical fucked-up-ness. I hope to keep the past to a minimum. Oh, for those who aren't conversant with the blog terminology, 'back from the dead' means it's a post that, for reasons too complicated to explain here, has not been online or available for viewing since the day it originally launched. So, unless you're a long-termer who happened to check the blog that long ago day, it's a new post, I guess. Blah blah. See you tomorrow.

The last 80 frames of an inflexible disaster film

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p.s. Hey. Gradually improving, still not there yet, but better. ** David Ehrenstein, Ah, very interesting. Thank you. ** James, Hi. He was. I can't remember if I mentioned it in the post or not, but I published a book of poems by him while he was still alive with Little Caesar Press. Me too, thanks, it's lessening. Never have seen 'It Follows', not yet. Weird, inexplicable, but still not. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! No, the escorts and slaves are real. Or, well, the profiles are real even if the guys who made them are faking it, which they sometimes are, leading to them sometimes stupidly representing themselves visually with photos of recognizable guys like that model you like. The texts are all their words. I just occasionally edit them for length. My back is bettering. I wish it would magically correct itself in a flash, but I'll take the progress. That name M. E. Thomas is familiar, or maybe it's one of those names that seems familiar. I'll investigate that book you're reading. My day was better than the days before, but I'm having to take it easy. I worked some, did some phoning, it was okay. I plan to get out and about again starting today. Have a superb Wednesday at the very least. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Oh, man, yeah. Sometimes the internet in my pad will go out for a few hours, and I feel completely lost. You back yet? ** Schlix, Hi, Uli. Yeah, it helped. I just hope what he did will take me all the way to normalcy. Well, in fairness, I haven't watched 'Conversation Piece' in a long time, but, no, I didn't like it. Why? Hm, I think I remember thinking it was stiff and overly stagey and just kind of dull? But, honestly, I would need to watch it again to really have a cogent reason. ** Kyler, Hi, Kyler! Good to see you! Oh, so are you up early reading this? I hope not. Not that I don't like the idea of you reading this early in the morning, mind you. Agents do tend to take their very sweet time a lot of the time. Sorry. Hope that means absolutely nothing. The delays, I mean. Uh, I'm not good at keeping track of my royalties. My agent gets the dough and the reports and just wires the dough into my account, and usually she tells me they did that. I'm terrible with money. The whole idea of money makes me anxious. Thanks for the wishes on my back, pal. Good luck with sleeping and with everything else. ** Jonathan Bryant, Hello to you, Mr. Bryant! Oh, that's very interesting, thank you. I'm grateful that you're drawn to my work, and I certainly understand why 'enjoy' is not the right word. I was going to say that I don't enjoy writing them, but I do really enjoy the writing part itself. It's just that ... well, letting my imagination create and explore what I'm compelled to write about isn't enjoyable, although the counterbalance of loving to write makes up for that in some strange way. I'm glad you enjoy reading my blog, thank you. Needless to say, I would be happy to talk with you here whenever you feel like stopping in. Maybe I'll give you a reason by asking what you do and how you are, only if you feel like answering? Take care. ** Steevee, Hi. I'm, of course, very happy that you 'KoC' to the degree that you do. It sure is getting polarized reactions in the States, from what I've read so far. My only counter to your criticism would be that I don't think it's about the emptiness of Hollywood, no more than, say, 'The New World' is about the emptiness of early America. I think it's about what Malick's work is always about, and the context -- which I would say is So. Cal. more than it is Hollywood -- tunes the film's construction and adjusts Malick's emotional focus from the outside inward. Anyway, obviously, I'll be very, very interested to read your review! ** Misanthrope, No, I agree. It brings this refreshing vintage thing to the blog's rampaging currency. It's like turning off the mp3 for a day and slapping on some vinyl. Well, yeah, about why musical acts release early. The problem with film is that, because films generally spend a year or so doing the festival circuit, and because versions of the film end up in the festivals' curators hands, and because curators aren't saints per say, versions of a film can start floating around on the torrent sites even a year or more before the film is released. Sucks for us. ** Rewritedept, Oh, have fun in Denver! Have a super great birthday! ** Armando, Hi. Oh, ouch, about your back thing. I can seriously commiserate with you about that, for sure. Thanks a lot for your lists. Very interesting, and I totally get your choices. Thank you. 'Das Boot'? Gosh, I haven't thought about that film since I saw it when it came out. I remember thinking it was pretty good, but I hardly remember it. Why, are you particularly into it? Michael? I haven't seen him in a bit. I know he was away from Paris working on an opera commission. I'm sure I'll see him soon. I think he's fine, just super busy. Later, bud. ** Okay. Uh, what's up there today ... Oh, right. That. See you tomorrow.

Galerie Dennis Cooper presents ... Machinery: Martin Kersels, Stéphane Thidet, Mark Pauline, Liudvikas Buklys, Johannes Vogl, Thomas Baarle, Roman Signer, Willem van Weeghel, Liz Larner, Janet Cardiff & George Bures Miller, Jon Sasaki, Arcangelo Sassolino, Szymon Kobylarz, Roger Hiorns, Jonathan Monk, Peter William Holden, Chris Burden, Ingrid Bachmann, Abel Barroso, Wade Marynowsky, Maurizio Catalan, Paul McCarthy

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Martin KerselsTumble Room (2001)
First presented at Deitch Projects in New York in 2001, Tumble Room is a newar lifesize recreation of a little girl's bedroom. Turning on an axis centered on its back wall the room slowly spins, tumbling its contents from floor to ceiling. The spinning room grinds its furniture much like a rock tumbler grinds its stones.





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Stéphane ThidetLe refuge (2007)
Le refuge is a piece wrapped up with absurdity: a wood cabin, supposed to protect from the weather’s mood, wherein rain is coming down in buckets. A scale 1 model, basically equipped, the shed’s door wide-open. The rain prevents anybody from going in. Outside, everything is dry.





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Mark PaulineMeat Toys (1981)





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Liudvikas BuklysMachine to Elaborate Wheat Flour Tortilla (2015)
Machine to Elaborate Wheat Flour Tortilla was and crafted in Guadalajara, Mexico. It was supposed to be workng in the restaurant Yucatan, but it was too heavy and big to fit in there. So, it has been interned in a storage local facility, unable to accomplish its main mission. Using the museum's elevator and floors as optimizers for the machine, Buklys also allows for it to carry out its capacity of catalyzing a curious choreography of cooking on a conveyer belt.





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Johannes VoglOhne Titel (2014)





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Johannes VoglMachine to produce jam breads (2007)





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Thomas BayrleUntitled (2012)
One of the largest rooms of dOCUMENTA (13) is dedicated exclusively to the work of German artist Thomas Bayrle. Bayrle, born in 1937 in Berlin, has already participated in Documenta 3 in 1964 and in Documenta 6 in 1977 in Kassel (Germany). Nearly 50 years after his first participation Thomas Bayrle is now celebrating his impressive comeback to one of the most important art events of the world. The sounds and movements of 8 kinetic works, draw the visitors into their spell. These sculptures are engines that are cut open. If you ever wanted to know how the motor of a Porsche 911, Moto Guzzi bike or the radial engine of an airplane works: It can be seen here.





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Roman SignerRampe (2008)







(Watch the video)



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Willem van WeeghelKinetic Megalith (2010)





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Liz LarnerCorner Basher (1988)
This piece consists of a drive shaft mechanism, the activation and speed of which is controlled by the viewer, that swings a chain into and destroys the nearby corner wall.






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Janet Cardiff & George Bures MillerThe Killing Machine (2007)
The Killing Machine is based on the device in Kafka's 1919 short story In the Penal Colony. The machinery busies itself around the chair, which looks as though it has been reclaimed from the surgery of a dead dentist. Vicious probes articulated on necks that look suspiciously like the arms of old Anglepoise lamps lunge forward and go to work about an invisible body. There's no one strapped into the chair, but you get the idea. The devices go in, stabbing and swiping. Lights go on and off. As the machine gets into the swing of things, an automated drum beats, and more drumsticks have their way on an electric guitar that has been plumbed into the superstructure of this grisly yet risible tableau. A disco ball starts spinning overhead, filling the room with movement and light. This, I suppose, is to illustrate the ecstasies and agonies of the prisoner, who by now will have been partially shredded by the enthusiastic and tireless operations of the pneumatically powered machinery.





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John SasakiA Machine To Release One Burst Of Confetti Gradually Over The Duration Of An Exhibition (2011)
A conveyer belt topped with confetti is programmed to run imperceptibly slowly. At a rate of roughly one flake every five minutes or so, the confetti trickles to the ground, with the entire 'burst' piling up on the floor two months later. An exuberant moment is drawn out to absurd lengths.







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Arcangelo Sassolino Figurante (2010)
The powerful jaw crushes a femur bone over 3 hours. Sassolino explains that what he likes is to take a material ‘by the neck’ and torture it in order to make it scream and admit the truth.





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Szymon KobylarzHommage a Roland Topor (2007)
Polish artist Szymon Kobylarz admits he has been interested for quite some time now in scientific matters and their processing, testing, and reading by people who have little to do with actual science. He considers himself such a person and in the wake of his fascination with maths, or, to be more precise, with the Fibonacci sequence, fractals, and the golden mean, Szymon Kobylarz constructs his wooden pieces in an attempt to translate the language of science into the language of art.





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Roger HiornsA retrospective view of the pathway (2008 - 2015)
In Roger Hiorns’s A retrospective view of the pathway, huge vats billow clouds of white foam onto the ground in a clearing on the wooded campus. The setup is simple, but the approach – the walk out to the farthest point of the campus, passing newly installed sculptures, and emerging from the live oaks and poison ivy – gives this piece some weight. You can interact with it or not. You don’t even have to look at it; you can hear and feel it instead.





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Roger HiornsUntitled (Youth) (1999 - 2015)
Hiorns has filled the Hepworth Wakefield's Calder exhibition space with his entire Youth series, a branch of his work spanning 15 years in which he has a young naked man approach and sit on some kind of found object. These range from a defunct jet engine to a coffee table embedded with plasma screens showing TV rolling news. There's a plastic bench lightly smeared with brain matter from a cow. The beginnings of these works – this "really awkward fleshy intervention between a machine or manmade object and a person"– came from a fascination with a photograph by Man Ray of his wife leaning against a printing press, "an act of merging" between the mechanical and the human. All the found objects have a kind of inherent power, either through their sheer bulk and heft, or, as in the case of the jet engine, a purposeful, potent former life. Hiorns has wrenched that power away and turned it to his own ends. The naked young men were cast through an open call.






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Jonathan MonkVarious (2010)
Jonathan Monk is showing fourteen different electronic devices from the area of home entertainment. Powered speakers, a flat-screen monitor, an iPod, a radio alarm clock or an interactive video game console – the new and functional brand name devices selected by Monk form a cross-section of the range of products to be found in an electronics retail store. However, the artist undermines their usability by presenting the individual devices in custom-fitted plexiglass showcases, therefore conserving them as objects. While Jeff Koons keeps his focus on the visuality of the specific object and its symbolic formal language, for Jonathan Monk the seminal point is more the renunciation of a perspective that is bound to an object. By enclosing, almost nostalgically archiving a current object of utility the artist undermines its topicality. In the process of repositioning these products Monk demonstrates their transient, finite, even replaceable substance, which defines the image of such appliances in a world where consumer attitudes and product development are always characterized by novelty.










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Peter William HoldenArabesque (2008)
With its roots in Mary Shelly's "Frankenstein" (1818) and the alchemist's laboratory, the installation presents itself as a mechanical flower: a simulacrum of nature. Life sized human body parts, impaled upon steel, move and sway and dance. The limbs, translucent and livid, bare their internal robotic mechanisms to the gaze of the viewer. The wiring itself is an aesthetic expression deliberately integrated into the installation to bring chaotic lines of abstract form to contrast with the organized symmetry of the body parts.





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Chris BurdenOde to Santos Dumont (2015)
Los Angeles artist Chris Burden, who died unexpectedly on May 10, 2015, has one last exhibition: A miniature zeppelin that flies around the gallery at LACMA.





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Ingrid BachmannPelt (2013)
The artist wanted to give technology back its pelt, to reintroduce the animal, the bestial, back into technology and to continue her work in grounding the digital experience in the material realm.





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Abel BarrosoThe Emigrant’s Pinball Machine (2012)
Cuban artist Abel Barroso creates wooden sculptures in the shape of games such as pinball machines, fooseball tables, and monopoly boards. Barroso’s biggest project is The Emigrant’s Pinball Machine (Pinball del Emigrante), composed of seven interactive games, each offering the hope of entry into a glamorous capitalist city, symbolized by a row of skyscrapers. These wooden creations—eschewing the colors, lights and sounds of traditional pinball machines—depict various methods of getting there, but the illusory nature of the quest is evident.








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Wade MarynowskyThe Acconci Robot (2012)
The Acconci Robot is an interactive robot that follows people unawares. Appearing as a shipping crate of minimal design, the robot is mute and motionless as a viewer approaches. But when the audience member turns away and starts to leave, the robot begins to follow. If the audience member turns to look back at the robot, it stops in its tracks. The work draws inspiration from a 1969 performance work, Following Piece by Vito Acconci, in which the artist followed unsuspecting individuals in an urban setting as far as he could.





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Maurizio CattelanCharlie (2003)
Tricycle, steel, varnished, natural gum, resin, silicone, hair, fabrics






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Paul McCarthyMechanical Pig (2003-2005)
Mechanical Pig was the great disappointment of the auction. She is life-sized, breathes rhythmically, and has pulleys to move her feet, tongue, and eyeballs. Mechanical Pig was estimated at $2.5 to $3.5 million but achieved a high bid of only $1.9 million, one bid short of the reserve price. Mechanical Pig went unsold.






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p.s. Hey. Continuing gradual improvement. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. My best guess is that you're surely right about 'CP' and that 'filmed theater' is most likely just not something that talks with me in a general way. Now I'm eager to watch the film again. ** Steevee, Hi. Mm, yeah, that 'banal' accusation seems to be the go-to stance among people who don't like recent Malick. I have to say, whenever I hear or read that, it boggles my mind. I don't mean any offense by this, and understand that I'm a passionate, emotionally and aesthetically enriched devotee of Malick's work past and present, but when people say they think the content of Malick's newer work is banal, to me it's kind of like watching clips of people saying they like Donald Trump because he tells it like it is. I look forward to your new review. Everyone. here's Steevee's take on SONGS MY BROTHER TAUGHT ME, 'an interesting indie film set on a South Dakota Native American reservation'. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! No, no, they're real. Yeah, it's a real job to make those posts, but obviously I enjoy it. I read an interview with M.E. Thomas on The Rumpus site yesterday. Very interesting. The construct of 'sociopathy' is very intriguing to me. I think studying that idea and premise is helpful to writing, or to my writing anyway, as a way to think about portraying characters' interactions and also about fiction's relationship to the reader as well. I really might just spring for that book. It is very nice to be in lessening pain for sure, obviously. It's getting so I can actually use most of my brain to work again without my thoughts getting stabbed occasionally. Happy Thursday! ** _Black_Acrylic, Welcome back! To online-less. I almost wrote 'welcome home' but I then realized how spooky or something that sounded and stopped myself. Yeah, I pay zip attention to English soccer/football, but for some weird reason I did see somewhere yesterday about Leicester City's preeminence and how surprised everyone is. Yay for surprises. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Thanks a bunch about the gif construction. I couldn't agree more with what you said about the bizarre fashionable consensus re: recent Malick. On the one hand, it's depressing, but, on the other, how rare and exciting is it for a serious filmmaker these days to find a cinematic language so singular that a lot of people appear to be unequipped to read it. I have read a couple of great pieces about 'KoC' and about recent Malick in general, but I don't remember where I did or who wrote them. I can try to track them down, if you're interested. Oh, wow, 'The Golden Fruits'! That is not an easy book to get one's hands on these days. Great! When you read it, I'll be very curious to hear what you think. Thanks, man. ** Misanthrope, Hi. Thanks! With the digital world, you have no control. I guess with a blockbuster that doesn't need to build up interest on the festival circuit, holding a film in private until just before the release works, but if your film is a nobody to begin with like our film, you don't have that luxury. Sucks, but that's the way of the new world. Yikes, weird, about that teacher. Also weird that her phone didn't have a password. I thought all phones had those now. But maybe just the Apple ones? ** Right. There's a lot of very interesting, cool, and even fun machine-related art in my gallery today. Why not wander through the goods with your fingers on the clickers and see what happens? Seriously, why not? See you tomorrow.

Le Petit MacMahon de David Ehrenstein presents ... Eyes Wide Schnitzler

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First A Few basic facts:

"Schnitzler, son of a prominent Hungarian laryngologist Johann Schnitzler (1835–1893) and Luise Markbreiter (1838–1911) a daughter of the Viennese doctor Philipp Markbreiter, was born at Praterstrasse 16, Leopoldstadt, Vienna, capital of the Austrian Empire (as of 1867, part of the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary). His parents were both from Jewish families. In 1879 Schnitzler began studying medicine at the University of Vienna and in 1885 he received his doctorate of medicine. He began work at Vienna's General Hospital (German: Allgemeines Krankenhaus der Stadt Wien), but ultimately abandoned the practice of medicine in favour of writing.

On 26 August 1903, Schnitzler married Olga Gussmann (1882–1970), a 21-year-old aspiring actress and singer who came from a Jewish middle-class family. They had a son, Heinrich (1902–1982), born on 9 August 1902. In 1909 they had a daughter, Lili, who committed suicide in 1928. The Schnitzlers separated in 1921. Schnitzler died on 21 October 1931, in Vienna, of a brain hemorrhage. In 1938, following the Anschluss, Heinrich went to the United States and did not return to Austria until 1959. He became the father of the Austrian musician and conservationist Michael Schnitzler, born in 1944 in Berkeley, California, who moved to Vienna with his parents in 1959.

Schnitzler's works were often controversial, both for their frank description of sexuality (in a letter to Schnitzler Sigmund Freud confessed "I have gained the impression that you have learned through intuition – although actually as a result of sensitive introspection – everything that I have had to unearth by laborious work on other persons") and for their strong stand against anti-Semitism, represented by works such as his play Professor Bernhardi and his novel Der Weg ins Freie. However, although Schnitzler was himself Jewish, Professor Bernhardi and Fräulein Else are among the few clearly identified Jewish protagonists in his work.

Schnitzler was branded as a pornographer after the release of his play Reigen, in which ten pairs of characters are shown before and after the sexual act, leading and ending with a prostitute. The furore after this play was couched in the strongest anti-semitic terms. Reigen was made into a French language film in 1950 by the German-born director Max Ophüls as La Ronde."





"The film achieved considerable success in the English-speaking world, with the result that Schnitzler's play is better known there under its French title. Roger Vadim's film Circle of Love (1964) and Otto Schenk's Der Reigen (1973) are also based on the play. More recently, in Fernando Meirelles' film 360, Schnitzler's play was provided with a new version, as has been the case with many other TV and film productions.

In the novella Fräulein Else (1924) Schnitzler may be rebutting a contentious critique of the Jewish character by Otto Weininger (1903) by positioning the sexuality of the young female Jewish protagonist. The story, a first-person stream of consciousness narrative by a young aristocratic woman, reveals a moral dilemma that ends in tragedy.

In response to an interviewer who asked Schnitzler what he thought about the critical view that his works all seemed to treat the same subjects, he replied, "I write of love and death. What other subjects are there?" Despite his seriousness of purpose, Schnitzler frequently approaches the bedroom farce in his plays (and had an affair with one of his actresses, Adele Sandrock). Professor Bernhardi, a play about a Jewish doctor who turns away a Catholic priest in order to spare a patient the realization that she is on the point of death, is his only major dramatic work without a sexual theme.

A member of the avant-garde group Young Vienna (Jung Wien), Schnitzler toyed with formal as well as social conventions. With his 1900 short story Lieutenant Gustl, he was the first to write German fiction in stream-of-consciousness narration. The story is an unflattering portrait of its protagonist and of the army's obsessive code of formal honour. It caused Schnitzler to be stripped of his commission as a reserve officer in the medical corps – something that should be seen against the rising tide of anti-semitism of the time.

He specialized in shorter works like novellas and one-act plays. And in his short stories like "The Green Tie" ("Die grüne Krawatte") he showed himself to be one of the early masters of microfiction. However he also wrote two full-length novels: Der Weg ins Freie about a talented but not very motivated young composer, a brilliant description of a segment of pre-World War I Viennese society; and the artistically less satisfactory Therese.

In addition to his plays and fiction, Schnitzler meticulously kept a diary from the age of 17 until two days before his death. The manuscript, which runs to almost 8,000 pages, is most notable for Schnitzler's casual descriptions of sexual conquests – he was often in relationships with several women at once, and for a period of some years he kept a record of every orgasm. Collections of Schnitzler's letters have also been published.

Schnitzler's works were called "Jewish filth" by Adolf Hitler and were banned by the Nazis in Austria and Germany. In 1933, when Joseph Goebbels organized book burnings in Berlin and other cities, Schnitzler's works were thrown into flames along with those of other Jews, including Einstein, Marx, Kafka, Freud and Stefan Zweig.

His novella Fräulein Else has been adapted a number of times including the German silent film Fräulein Else (1929), starring Elisabeth Bergner, and a 1946 Argentine film, The Naked Angel, starring Olga Zubarry."


And then there's Traumnovelle:

"Rhapsody: A Dream Novel, also known as Dream Story (German: Traumnovelle), is a 1926 novella by the Austrian writer Arthur Schnitzler. The book deals with the thoughts and psychological transformations of Doctor Fridolin over a two-day period after his wife confesses having had sexual fantasies involving another man. In this short time, he meets many people who give clues to the world Schnitzler creates. This culminates in the masquerade ball, a wondrous event of masked individualism, sex, and danger for Fridolin as the outsider.

It was first published in installments in the magazine Die Dame between December 1925 and March 1926. The first book edition appeared in 1926 in S. Fischer Verlag and was adapted in 1999 into the film Eyes Wide Shut by director-screenwriter Stanley Kubrick and co-screenwriter Frederic Raphael.

The book belongs to the period of Viennese decadence after the turn of the 19th century.

To read Traumnovellehere' s PDF link.

As is well-known Stanley Kubrick adapted Traumnovelle as Eyes Wide Shut -- his very last film:





Less well-known is the fact that it was a "passion project" Kubrick had thought about making for the better part of his life. Had he made it earlier in his career, Kubrick would very likely had done it to "period" both in homage to Ophuls and in relation to his own fascination with the turn of the century.





Done as a "contemporary" story Eyes Wide Shut is "period" nonetheless thansk to Kubrick's massive reproduction of 8th street in the Village on an enormous British sound stage.



8th Street


This is how the street looked to him the last time he saw it in 1962 when Lolita premiered in New York. But such details were of little concern to most critics and audiences who were greatly divided on just how effective this off, distant, chilly film was and what it had to say about marriage, relationships and orgies.



(EWS)


Here's a discussion of the film on The Charlie Rose Show:





And here's a rendering of Traumnovelle that might be offered as a "corrective" to Kubrick:



(Traumnovelle)


And now, Dmitri Shostakovich:





(“My October Symphony” Pet Shop Boys)


(Shostakovich Waltz #2)




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p.s. Hey. Today Mr. Ehrenstein is back to transform this blog into the cabinet of wonders that he calls Le Petit MacMahon, and the program he has chosen for you is super fascinating. Give it a chance, and it will avail your best senses and build mental muscles to boot. Please sit back, pore and click, and give yourselves the pleasure. And recount something or other from your experiences to David, if you wish, please. Thanks, and mega-thanks to you, maestro E. ** Armando, Hi. Oh, yeah, it must have arrived while I was the copyedit phase of the posting process. I didn't know there was a 5-hour version of 'Das Boot'. Okay, that's very interesting. I'll look for an opportunity, thanks. Hm, I saw Led Zep ... four times. Once on their tour for the first album, twice on their tour for the second album, both in 1969 (?), and once more I think on the tour for 'III', and then I lost interest. Gosh, I don't remember the sound being atrocious at all, but, you know, it was a zillion years ago. I just remember the sound being crushing in a good way. I will, re: Michael. I hope to see him this weekend. ** David Ehrenstein, Again, major thanks to you for today! Fantastic post, opportunity, etc.! That clip that the post reminded you of was fun, but I wasn't sure I understood the connection? Which I liked, of course. ** Steevee, Hi. I was happy to read that Voice review, yes. I don't really have any experience with online dating in that sense. Let forefront/italicize your question for everyone here and see what happens. Everyone, Steevee has a question. Can those of you with relative experience or knowledge help him out with an answer of some sort? Thanks a lot. Here he is: 'Does Anyone here have positive experience with on-line dating? I tried it about a decade ago, with the now-defunct Spring Street Personals, and only had one good experience, but I'm feeling lonely and ready to try it again. Are there any sites people would recommend? I just took a look at some ads on OK Cupid, although I haven't signed up for that site. It's really hard to figure out how to make yourself sound interesting or figure out how to approach someone else on the site, since you've never going to share 100% of the same interests.' ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Ah, cool. Yeah, Signer can be a lot of fun. I didn't see a clip of that work you described in my searching. Shame. I did read that piece about life on the 'Knight of Cups' set, and, yeah, it was really fascinating. Thanks for thinking of me. Oh, no, fight that cold with everything you've got, which means ... sleep? Vitamin C? Colds are unfortunately and strangely hard things to fight. ** Bill, Hi, B. Yeah, I wish I could say that my back is perfecto now. It's not, but I'm able to gingerly pretend it is for longer stretches. Hiorns is uneven, I think. He's a very cool guy, I know him a little. I think his work is getting stronger and more interesting. Casting calls? That's intriguing. What if anything can you say about the project? ** Dóra Grőber, Hi Dóra! Our luck indeed. Yeah, what you said totally makes sense, and, probably unsurprisingly, I can relate. Oh, what's up with pamphlet project? Thank you for the link to her blog. I'll go look at it today. My day wasn't bad. My dear friend the artist Scott Treleaven is newly here in Paris doing a residency, and I saw him, which was really nice. My French publisher POL told me the French edition of 'The Marbled Swarm', which comes out here in May, went to the printer's yesterday, so that was exciting! And Zac and I put our heads together to strategize re: some texts we have to write as part of the package our producer will use to fund-raise for our new film, and today we have to start drafting them up. And two new future showings of 'Like Cattle Towards Glow' were confirmed. So, it was a pretty productive day. What did Friday present to you? ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Thanks about the galerie show! That's a very interesting question. I think the younger and/or newer people making films that are as essentially experimental as 'KoC' are almost without exception showing their work in the visual art context, in galleries and art museums. That seems to be the only context in which that kind of work is deemed appropriate and acceptable these days. And visual art critics tend to be far more open to investigating and exploring the various levels at which experimental video/film works because, obviously, visual art is seen as a medium that is forever unfinished and frontier-like. I think there used to be a fair number of critics who viewed film that way, but they seem few and far between now. There are a number of very interesting and quite experimental artists making video and film work. They're just rigidly contextualized as visual artists who happen to be working with video and film, and critics who cover film don't tend to see their work and, when they do, don't see their work as falling into the area they cover. So, the venerable tradition of experimental filmmaking in America has mostly subdivided off, with the exception of older, long established figures who are still making films like, oh, Benning or Mekas and etc. Malick is, for better or worse, making experimental films in a mainstream film context. And he has the clout to get the budgets to make his work look visually beautiful and to work with well known actors, and I think that confuses people and critics too. It didn't used to re: his work before the shift in his filmmaking technique with 'ToL'. When his films were working with calmness and lingering, people seemed to be able to accept his decision to use stars to create a certain kind of textured, expectation-saddled figure in his films' fabric. Zac and I had an interesting talk yesterday about the disconnect in the response to 'KoC'. He was saying that he thinks it has partly to do with this strange thing that has happened in recent years where people tend to immediately see a film's technique/style/ look /cinematography and its 'content', meaning its characters, story, dialogue and so on, as being separable. In the case of most films appearing in the mainstream, that may well be an understandable approach. But when a film like 'KoC' comes along where those things are not divisible, where the film's meaning resides equally in what the technique is 'saying' and in the material presented by the characters and representable ideas and language that it is working with, it's like people don't even know how to read the film, or they have this intense resistance to the idea of seeing every respect of a film as a whole and organic thing. I don't know. I think there are probably many reasons why the disconnect its happening. It's funny you mention Korine because we were trying to think of newer experimental American filmmakers who have successfully, to one degree or another, achieved recognition in the conventional film realm, and, off the top of our heads, we could only think of Korine's work from 'Gummo' through 'Trash Humpers'. Anyway, sorry for the long answer. This is something I've been thinking a lot about, obviously. No, I haven't heard the new M83. That's interesting and potentially too bad. I can imagine that, after the last album, it's possible his work could go a 'wrong' way. ** Jonathan Bryant, Hi, Jonathan. I'm very glad to hear you're good. Get sun? What kind of doctor is she/he, ha ha? (Not a big sun fan here.) Getting to write every day and money being tight, yep, I hear you. That's my lifelong life too in a nutshell, but, man, I'm grateful. Thank you a lot for characterizing your work. Nothing wrong with niche. Niche can be nuclear. And 'under-explored horror sub-genre' sounds nothing but intriguing. I hope I'll get to read your work sometime, if you feel like it. The thing with the worlds in my work is that, well, I intend them to resemble the real to a degree that one can, at times, on some level, believe in them in the way one believes in non-fiction, but they're really about the imagination and about an attempt to share mine, I guess. The thing with the escort posts, and especially with the slave ones, is that, based on my now-long experience of regularly haunting the sites where those profiles are lodged, they are people trying engage with the fantasies of potential clients/masters and, in the case of the escorts, get a job, or with the slaves, in most cases, I think, instigate a perverse, exciting flirtation. With exceptions, obviously. Well, I'm very happy if my work and the blog are helping cause some kind maturation that sits well with how you like to think and adventure and imagine. I'm very grateful to hear that. Thank you, Jonathan. ** Right. You are safely and, if you so choose, gloriously in the 'hands' of Mr. Ehrenstein from here on in, 'in' being tomorrow at the earliest. See you then.
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