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Tuesday, December 31, 2019

The Japanese Sandman by William Burroughs


Both wry travelogue and heartbreaking tale of love lost, The Japanese Sandman adapts a letter William S. Burroughs wrote to Allen Ginsberg in 1953. Told in Burroughs' caustically funny voice, cocaine snorting in Panama and post-prom handjobs in 1931 St. Louis dissolve into a meditation on memory and loss. Actor/performance artist John Fleck leads a stand-out cast through Burroughs' recounting of scoring opiates, whores and boys in Panama and, in the letter's P.S., a love affair with Billy Brandshinkel in the St Louis of his youth. Imperial Teen's Roddy Bottum provides the lively and compelling score.

Edward Buhr 2007 12 min. USA

Founded in 1977, Frameline is the USA's only nonprofit organization solely dedicated to the funding, exhibition, distribution and promotion of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender media arts. Frameline Voices is a new digital initiative that showcases diverse LGBT stories and expands access to films by and about people of color, transgender people, youth, and elders.

Monday, December 23, 2019

David Bowie - Sound and Vision (Full documentary)



"There's an awful lot of spiritual and emotional mutilation that goes on in my family" - David Bowie (reflecting on his background and childhood)


A documentary, which takes you on a journey of Bowie's revolutionary career, struggle with his personal life and his achievements and successes. Features interviews with Bowie, Iman his wife, his musical contemporaries including Iggy Pop, Moby and Trent Reznor. Exclusive footage of live performances of the showman's best and music and film to showcase 30 years of his career. Highlights Bowie's interests, passions and involvement with the arts. One not to be missed!

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Kingdom of Heaven (Directors Cut)


Kingdom of Heaven is a 2005 epic historical drama film directed and produced by Ridley Scott and written by William Monahan. It stars Orlando Bloom, Eva Green, Ghassan Massoud, Jeremy Irons, David Thewlis, Brendan Gleeson, Iain Glen, Marton Csokas, Liam Neeson, Edward Norton, Michael Sheen, Velibor Topic and Alexander Siddig.

The story is set during the Crusades of the 12th century. A French village blacksmith goes to the aid of the Kingdom of Jerusalem in its defence against the Ayyubid Muslim Sultan, Saladin, who is fighting to claim the city from the Christians; this leads to the Battle of Hattin. The screenplay is a heavily fictionalised portrayal of the life of Balian of Ibelin (ca. 1143–93).

Filming took place in Ouarzazate, Morocco, where Scott had previously filmed Gladiator and Black Hawk Down, and in Spain, at the Loarre Castle (Huesca), Segovia, Ávila, Palma del Río, and Seville's Casa de Pilatos and Alcázar. The film received mixed reviews upon theatrical release. On 23 December 2005, Scott released this director's cut, which received critical acclaim, with many reviewers calling it the definitive version of the film. 

Sunday, December 08, 2019

Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death


Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death is a 1989 American comedy film directed by J. F. Lawton and starring Shannon Tweed and Bill Maher. The film sends up many pop culture motifs and societal trends, including feminism (and feminist movements' fragmentation around various issues), B movies (particularly Cannibal Holocaust), celebrities, major writers and political figures, centred around a spoof of Heart of Darkness. It was the first feature directed (under the pseudonym J. D. Athens) by screenwriter J. F. Lawton, who also authored Pretty Woman, Under Siege and its sequel, and television show V.I.P.

The U.S. government grows worried for the nation's avocado supply after some confrontations with the "Piranha" tribe of cannibal women, who live in the mysterious "Avocado Jungle" (westernmost outpost: San Bernardino) and ritually sacrifice and eat men. The government recruits Margo Hunt (Tweed), a professor of feminist studies at a local university ("Spritzer College"), to travel into the Avocado Jungle and make contact with the women to attempt to convince them to move to a reservation/condo in Malibu. Along the way, she and her travelling companions — male chauvinist guide Jim (Maher) and ditzy undergraduate Bunny (Karen Mistal) — meet a tribe of subservient men called the "Donnahew" (a reference to talk-show host Phil Donahue) and face dangers in their path.

Eventually, the trio (Margo, Bunny and Jim) meets the Piranha women, who have recently taken Dr. Kurtz (played by Adrienne Barbeau) as their "empress." Kurtz is Dr. Hunt's former colleague in feminist studies (the internationally famous author of Smart Women, Stupid Insensitive Men) and now her nemesis; she has joined the tribe of Piranha women with her own exploitative agenda. The two argue about the morality of sacrificing men and the exploitation of the Piranha women, and Bunny decides to join the tribe, her first sacrifice being Jim. Bunny cannot go through with the kill, however, and Dr. Hunt escapes, aided by the handsome, intelligent, and sensitive Jean-Pierre (Brett Stimely), who also was to be sacrificed.

Monday, November 18, 2019

Rogue Male (1976)


Peter O'Toole, John Standing, Alastair Sim and Harold Pinter in the 1976 political thriller set in Germany and England on the eve of World War II. Based on Geoffrey Household's novel.

Sunday, November 03, 2019

Faces of Africa - Fela Kuti: The Father of Afrobeat





Fela Kuti, born as Olufela Ransome Kuti was a Nigerian music maestro and the pioneer of Afrobeat. "Faces of Africa" brings you the story of one of Africa's music legends and his influence through music.

Friday, November 01, 2019

A Bucket of Blood (1959)


A Bucket of Blood is a 1959 American black comedy horror film directed by Roger Corman. It stars Dick Miller and was set in beatnik culture. The film, produced on a $50,000 budget, was shot in five days and shares many of the low-budget filmmaking aesthetics commonly associated with Corman's work. Written by Charles B. Griffith, the film is a dark comic satire about a dimwitted, impressionable young busboy at a Bohemian café who is acclaimed as a brilliant sculptor when he accidentally kills his landlady's cat and covers its body in clay to hide the evidence. When he is pressured to create similar work, he becomes murderous.

Saturday, October 26, 2019

The Tulsa Lynching of 1921 (2000) | Black Wall Street | Definitive Documentary


“The Tulsa Lynching of 1921” documents what is probably the worst race riot in American history. Director Michael Wilkerson tells the harrowing story cleanly and very effectively, using a combination of recollections by now-elderly witnesses, commentary from historians, celebrity voice-over readings of contemporary accounts, and an impressive collection of black-and-white photographs and some film depicting the destruction of an entire black community." Variety Magazine

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Immortal Egypt: The Road To The Pyramids


The Road to the Pyramids. Immortal Egypt with Joann Fletcher. Episode 1 of 4. Joann Fletcher explains how ancient Egypt's story fits together. In the first episode, she goes in search of the building blocks of Egyptian civilisation.

Synthetic Pleasures (1995)


Synthetic Pleasures (1995) is an exhilarating and disturbing exploration into the ways that human beings are using technology, from body piercing to bionics, to transform our environments, bodies and minds in search of pleasure that raises issues nobody today can afford to abort / retry / ignore.

Sunday, October 06, 2019

Cream Farewell Concert as transmitted on BBC TV January 5th 1969 - RIP Ginger Baker


The drummer with Cream Ginger Baker died today, aged 80. This is the end to a remarkable life of creativity and adventure. This film is a documentary style presentation of the last gig Cream did from their original 2 1/2 year existence. The band would later reform in 2005 for a series of very well paid performances.

An eye opening docu-concert of the legendary band Cream, that I just had to share. Insights on the nuances of their musical process and ofcourse the elabourateness of their skill and their free flowing improvised form of Rock n Roll in their gig at Royal Albert Hall in 1969.

Pretty eye-opening if you want to dig deeper into one of the most influential trios in Rock n Roll music history especially if you're an aspiring musician. You'll see and understand the legendary band better. It's a brilliantly shot and executed docu-concert. Here's Cream and their awe inspiring, magnificent process! Enjoy! :)

This was one of those occasions which it can truly be said: those who were there, will never forget it. November 26th, 1968, at the Royal Albert Hall - it only seems like yesterday. And having looked at the film again, the concert really does seem as fresh and pulsating as it was then.

First, the musicians themselves. They above all others blew apart the myth that rock’n’roll was music for the simple-minded, by the simple-minded. Maybe Dylan and Lennon had showed that lyrics could encompass subtle philosophical and poetic ideas. But it was Baker, Bruce and Clapton demonstrated that harmonically and structurally what was dismissed as rock’n’roll could be every bit as complex as any contemporary, so-called classical, music. Each musicians had a deep respect for the other two, although on the surface envy, even hatred, drove them on. None was prepared to be outshone by the other two, and this intense rivalry gave their music-making a thrilling edge. It was dangerous and explosive and it jangled the nerves.

Second, I believe that what still gives the film its power is partly a result of the circumstances in which it was made. It’s easy to forget how primitive recording equipment was in 1968. It had only been a year I had seen the very first colour video recorder at the BBC, and editing videotape was at best hazardous. So what you see in the film, apart from the interview, was all ‘live’. There is not a single edit anywhere. You could have seen what you see immediately after the concert itself, sound and picture. Of course it’s rough; raw would be a better word. It’s often clumsy and just plain wrong. But I think is still has the extraordinary energy of the occasion. Although you would expect me to say this, I don’t think I’ve seen another recording of a concert in which the atmosphere is so exactly as it was on the night.

Two footnotes. Eric Clapton later told me that the main reason the group split up was because “the music was not honest”. I’ve always thought it was through sheer exhaustion. In their belief two-and-a-half year existence, Cream played over 300 gigs, travelling night after night here, Europe and in the States. No wonder there was a friction. And yes, Ginger Baker often thought Jack deliberately played played too loud so that Ginger could not hear himself. During the filming of Beware Mr Baker, Ginger admitted that he had quite frequently wanted to throttle Jack. “But hey,” he told me, “I loved the bastard.” And that was the due. Jack was held in awe, especially by Ginger and Eric. More importantly, he was also held in enormous affection by those knew him, including me, but especially Ginger and Eric.

Second, the film was originally commissioned by the BBC for its ‘Omnibus’ arts slot. In other words, Cream were then thought worthy of consideration alongside Debussy and Picasso. Today the BBC has more-or-less abandoned its archival responsibilities to the arts and mistaken laddism and silly women in fancy dress for culture. More fool them. And as for ‘Sky Arts’; Remembrance Sunday on the Anniversary of World War One in 2014, for instance, was ‘remembered’ by ‘An Evening with the Bee Gees’. - Tony Palmer

TRACKLIST:
1:55 Sunshine Of Your Love
6:53 Jack Bruce interview
11:44  Politician
17:20 Eric Clapton interview
21:48 White Room
25:44 Jam intro Spoonful
31:25 Spoonful (cover Willie Dixon)
34:44 Ginger Baker interview
39:40 Ginger Baker drums solo
46:20 Jack Bruce interview
48:36 I'm So Glad (cover  Skip James)
53:30 Anthony Burgess interview
53:00 Frank Zappa interview
53:33 We're Going Wrong

Saturday, October 05, 2019

Menschen am Sonntag


This magical blend of documentary and fiction takes us back to a glorious summer Sunday in late-1920s Berlin where five young workers take a day off. While they enjoy freedoms undreamt of by their parents, sexual rivalry soon lends an edge to their flirtations. The backdrop to the film is the Weimar Republic, founded in 1919, and the urban cosmopolitanism of Berlin at the time, which would come to end in just a few years with the rise of the Nazis and the end of democracy.

The people portraying the characters were all amateurs belonging to a Berlin collective who, the opening credits inform us, had returned to their normal jobs by the time of the film’s release. They included a taxi driver, a record seller and a wine merchant. This revolutionary experiment in realism was the collective effort of several future Hollywood directors, including Billy Wilder and Fred Zinnemann.

The film "Menschen am Sonntag" portrays in a half-documentary style the life of young people in the metropolis of Berlin at the end of the 1920s. Four of the five leading actors stood in front of the camera for the first time. The young Christl Ehlers had played a major role in the fairy tale film Ms. Holle a year earlier. The film is worth seeing because of the authentic pictures from that time, from the station Zoo, the station Nikolassee, the Havel at the "large window" and Wannsee.The later Oscar winner Billy Wilder wrote the screenplay with Robert Siodmak after an idea of ​​Robert's brother Curt Siodmak: The Siodmak brothers also made a career in both German and American films, with Edgar G. Ulmer mainly shooting Hollywood films, whose history makes the film one of the first independent films and a forerunner of post-war neo-realism.

Menschen am Sonntag is a film by Robert Siodmak, Edgar G. Ulmer and Billy Wilder. It was produced by Moriz Seeler's production company "Filmstudio 1929" and was made in and around Berlin in 1929 and 1930. The premiere was on February 4, 1930. He is one of the late representatives of New Objectivity in film.

Wednesday, October 02, 2019

“40 Years on the Farm” documentary

"40 Years on the Farm" documentary from Randy Rudder on Vimeo.

This documentary chronicles the history of The Farm, America's oldest hippie commune, located in Summertown,Tennessee

Wednesday, September 04, 2019

Guilty of Romance (恋の罪 Koi no Tsumi) - Japanese Cut


From 2011, directed by Sion Sono. An astonishing film that explores the limits of human understanding through the multifaceted lens of desire, meaning, sex and death. It pivots on the the poem On My Way Home by Ryūichi Tamura. 

On My Way Home by Ryūichi Tamura

I should never have learned words
how much better off I’d be
if I lived in a world
where meanings didn’t matter,
the world with no words

If beautiful words take revenge against you
it’s none of my concern
If quiet meanings make you bleed
it also is none of my concern

The tears in your gentle eyes
the pain that drips from your silent tongue –
I’d simply gaze at them and walk away
if our world had no words

In your tears
is there meaning like the core of a fruit?
In a drop of your blood
is there a shimmering resonance of the evening glow
of this world’s sunset?

I should never have learned words
Simply because I know Japanese and bits of a foreign tongue
I stand still inside your tears
I come back alone into your blood



Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Flashing on the Sixties: A Tribal Document


A look at the cultural and social upheaval of the 1960s featuring interviews with performers, footage of Woodstock, and interviews with students born during those years who are perpetuating '60s values today.

Sunday, August 18, 2019

Fly Jefferson Airplane

"Fly Jefferson Airplane." Click on the image and it will take you there. Band member interviews and fascinating rare footage combine to tell the story of the Jefferson Airplane and the 1960s San Francisco psychedelic ballroom scene. Not to be missed is the color footage of the original band lineup (with Signe Andersen—not Grace Slick) performing at the Fillmore with lots of shots of hippie trippers and the wild liquid light show.

The group reveals the inspiration of several of their songs. Footage from Bell Telephone Hour, Smothers Brothers Show, Perry Como Special, promo films and more. Complete songs include "It's No Secret," "Somebody To Love," "White Rabbit," "Crown Of Creation," "Lather," "We Can Be Together," "Plastic Fantastic Lover," "Volunteers," and others. Grace Slick, Marty Balin, Paul Kantner, Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady, Spencer Dryden, Bill Thompson. 

Saturday, August 17, 2019

Samadhi Part 1 - "Maya, the Illusion of the Self" (2017)




"The Ego Construct is nothing more than the impulse to repeat."

Thursday, August 15, 2019

AYAHUASCA documentary ! full movie ! HEAVEN EARTH I 2008


HEAVEN EARTH explores the practice and commercialization of amazonian ayahuasca-shamanism in Iquitos. A critical look on ayahuasca-shamanism-culture in Iquitos.

SYNOPSIS
The film displays all day activities of Percy, a peruvian healer and another western ayahuasquero, named Ron. Both live near Iquitos and work with ayahuasca.

Participants of ayahuasca ceremonies, touroperators and --guides, as well as western visionquesters recount episodes of their journeys and internal imagery. A growing global pop cultural phenomenon, swinging between psychotherapeutic healing procedure and spiritual sell-out.

Mestizo- and gringo herbalists recount episodes of daily life and their career histories. Amazonian tourists and western visionseekers report about interior spaces, motifs and passages of their journeys.

Representatives of the local tourism industry talk about guided tours, the psychoactive drink ayahuasca, vanishing indigenous cultures, spiritual sellout triggered by "experience consumerism" and also discuss excursions into the surrounding rainforest of a jungle metropole.

Iquitos - a city affected by the change of time, fluctuating between tradition and modernity - a locus of cultural transition facing the impact of globalization and its sequences.

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

8 x 8: A Chess Sonata in 8 Movements (1957)


8 x 8: A Chess Sonata in 8 Movements (1957) is an American experimental film directed by Hans Richter, Marcel Duchamp, and Jean Cocteau released on March 15, 1957 in New York City. It features original music by Robert Abramson, John Gruen and Douglas Townsend.

Described by Richter as "part Freud, part Lewis Carroll," it is a fairy tale for the subconscious based on the game of chess. While living in New York, Hans Richter directed two feature films, Dreams That Money Can Buy and 8x8: A Chess Sonata in collaboration with Max Ernst, Cocteau, Paul Bowles, Fernand Leger, Alexander Calder, Duchamp, and others, which was partially filmed on the lawn of his summer house in Southbury, Connecticut.

Friday, August 09, 2019

EVERYBODY IN THE PLACE An Incomplete History of Britain 1984-1992


Acid house is often portrayed as a movement that came out of the blue, inspired by little more than a handful of London-based DJs discovering ecstasy on a 1987 holiday to Ibiza. In truth, the explosion of acid house and rave in the UK was a reaction to a much wider and deeper set of fault lines in British culture, stretching from the heart of the city to the furthest reaches of the countryside, cutting across previously impregnable boundaries of class, identity and geography.

With Everybody in the Place, the Turner Prize-winning artist Jeremy Deller upturns popular notions of rave and acid house, situating them at the very centre of the seismic social changes that reshaped 1980s Britain. Rare and unseen archive materials map the journey from protest movements to abandoned warehouse raves, the white heat of industry bleeding into the chaotic release of the dancefloor.

We join an A-level politics class as they discover these stories for the first time, viewing the story of acid house from the perspective of a generation for whom it is already ancient history. We see how rave culture owes as much to the Battle of Orgreave and the underground gay clubs of Chicago as it does to shifts in musical style: not merely a cultural gesture, but the fulcrum for a generational shift in British identity, linking industrial histories and radical action to the wider expanses of a post-industrial future. 

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Derek Jarman - TG - Psychic Rally in Heaven (1981)


From the Super 8 film work of Derek Jarman, T. G. Psychic Rally in Heaven marries abstract images of a performance by Throbbing Gristle with the ferocity and intensity of their music to brilliant effect on both eyes and ears.

Monday, July 08, 2019

Magic Trip (2011)

Magic Trip is a 2011 documentary made from the over 100 hours of 16 mm color film that was shot by Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters as they drove a bespoke 1939 Harvester school bus across the United States in 1964. Aboard the bus was a collection of bohemians, drop outs, poets, musicians, a dancer, a philosopher and the famous Neil Cassady, inspiration for Jack Kerouac's 1950s beatnik novel On the Road. Kesey also took a generous supply of the then-legal psychedelic drug LSD, and they reportedly also took 500 Benzedrine pills (speed), and a shoebox full of already-rolled marijuana joints. The bus was wired up with audio recording and broadcasting equipment, and was capable of recording surrounding sounds as well as broadcasting loud music to passersby.

This is the story of this journey, aboard a bus called Futher, and into the collective cultural consciousness of a generation and the world.

Ken Kesey was an early subject for US government sponsored LSD testing. He was actually given it by the US government, and paid to do it. Here are some of the recordings he made while at Palo Alto Veteran's Hospital under the influence of LSD:

Thursday, July 04, 2019

The Battle of the Somme (1916 film)


The Battle of the Somme was a documentary film released on August 10th 1916. Until the release of Star Wars, it held the British audience record - 20 million tickets were sold in the first six weeks, from a population at the time of 46 million.

The Battle of the Somme (US title, Kitchener's Great Army in the Battle of the Somme), is a 1916 British documentary and propaganda war film, shot by two official cinematographers, Geoffrey Malins and John McDowell. The film depicts the British Army in the preliminaries and early days of the Battle of the Somme (1 July – 18 November 1916). The film premièred in London on 10 August 1916 and was released generally on 21 August. The film depicts trench warfare, marching infantry, artillery firing on German positions, British troops waiting to attack on 1 July, treatment of wounded British and German soldiers, British and German dead and captured German equipment and positions. A scene during which British troops crouch in a ditch then "go over the top" was staged for the camera behind the lines.

The Battle of the Somme (French: Bataille de la Somme; German: Schlacht an der Somme), also known as the Somme Offensive, was a battle of the First World War fought by the armies of the British Empire and French Third Republic against the German Empire. It took place between 1 July and 18 November 1916 on both sides of the upper reaches of the River Somme in France. The battle was intended to hasten a victory for the Allies and was the largest battle of the First World War on the Western Front. More than three million men fought in the battle and one million men were wounded or killed, making it one of the bloodiest battles in human history. The Battle of the Somme was fought in the traditional style of World War I battles on the Western Front: trench warfare. The trench warfare gave the Germans an advantage because they dug their trenches deeper than the allied forces which gave them a better line of sight for warfare. The Battle of the Somme also has the distinction of being the first battle fought with tanks. However, the tanks were still in the early stages of development, and as a result, many broke down after maxing out at their top speed of 4 miles per hour (6.4 km/h).

This Mark I 'Male' Tank broke down crossing a British trench on its way to attack Thiepval on 25 September 1916.

The French and British had committed themselves to an offensive on the Somme during Allied discussions at Chantilly, Oise, in December 1915. The Allies agreed upon a strategy of combined offensives against the Central Powers in 1916, by the French, Russian, British and Italian armies, with the Somme offensive as the Franco-British contribution. Initial plans called for the French army to undertake the main part of the Somme offensive, supported on the northern flank by the Fourth Army of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF). When the Imperial German Army began the Battle of Verdun on the Meuse on 21 February 1916, French commanders diverted many of the divisions intended for the Somme and the "supporting" attack by the British became the principal effort.

The first day on the Somme (1 July) saw a serious defeat for the German Second Army, which was forced out of its first position by the French Sixth Army, from Foucaucourt-en-Santerre south of the Somme to Maricourt on the north bank, and by the Fourth Army from Maricourt to the vicinity of the Albert–Bapaume road. The first day on the Somme was, in terms of casualties, also the worst day in the history of the British army, which suffered 57,470 casualties. These occurred mainly on the front between the Albert–Bapaume road and Gommecourt, where the attack was defeated and few British troops reached the German front line. The British troops on the Somme comprised a mixture of the remains of the pre-war regular army; the Territorial Force; and Kitchener's Army, a force of volunteer recruits including many Pals' Battalions, recruited from the same places and occupations.

The battle is notable for the importance of air power and the first use of the tank. At the end of the battle, British and French forces had penetrated 10 km (6 mi) into German-occupied territory, taking more ground than in any of their offensives since the Battle of the Marne in 1914. The Anglo-French armies failed to capture Péronne and halted 5 km (3 mi) from Bapaume, where the German armies maintained their positions over the winter. British attacks in the Ancre valley resumed in January 1917 and forced the Germans into local withdrawals to reserve lines in February, before the scheduled retirement to the Siegfriedstellung (Hindenburg Line) began in March. Debate continues over the necessity, significance and effect of the battle.

Tuesday, July 02, 2019

END:CIV


This film examines our culture’s addiction to systematic violence and environmental exploitation, and probes the resulting epidemic of poisoned landscapes and shell-shocked nations. Based in part on Endgame, the best-selling book by Derrick Jensen, END:CIV asks: “If your homeland was invaded by aliens who cut down the forests, poisoned the water and air, and contaminated the food supply, would you resist?” // Franklin López, Canada, 2011, 115' // 

Friday, June 28, 2019

Brian Jones (1942-1969)


Next Tuesday, 3 July it will be 50 years since Brian Jones, dandy, guitarist, sitar player, and much more, died in his swimming pool in Sussex.

In this video The Vinyl Geek dives into the subject of Brian Jones, the enigmatic founder and original leader of The Rolling Stones. His passing at 27 sent shock waves through the world of rock but who really was Brian Jones?

Brian was central to the sound of the early Rolling Stones, with Ruby Tuesday featuring him with recorder, piano and vocal harmony:


Brian only played, recorded and produced his own music once. A Degree of Murder (German: Mord und Totschlag, French: Vivre à tout prix) is a 1967 West German film, starring Anita Pallenberg and directed by Volker Schlöndorff. Brian Jones created the soundtrack to it:

 

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

The Beatles Let It Be (Original 35mm Widescreen Theatre Print - Stereo Audio)


The filmed account of the Beatles's attempt to recapture their old group spirit by making a back to basics album, which instead drove them further apart.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0065976/

Director: Michael Lindsay-Hogg
Stars: John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, Billy Preston

The Beatles' final movie, Let It Be, received its U.S. premiere on May 13th, 1970 in New York City theaters. The film, which was shot in January 1969, was originally intended to be a TV special called Get Back featuring the group rehearsing for their first live show in over two years. The early rehearsals captured the group, along with John Lennon's soon-to-be wife Yoko Ono, clearly bored, with only Paul McCartney showing any real enthusiasm for the new material. The first part of the film shows the strain of the early morning sessions held in a cavernous soundstage at London's Twickenham film studios.

Producer George Martin recalled in The Beatles Anthology that the Let It Be project held great promise in the beginning: "They were going through a very, very revolutionary period at that time. And they were trying to think of something new. They did actually come up with a very good idea, which I thought was well worth working on; The wanted to write an album completely and rehearse it and then perform it in front of a large audience -- and for that to be a live album of new material. And we started rehearsing down at Twickenham film studios, and I went along with them."

George Harrison, who was the least invested member of the band in regards to returning to the stage, recalled the band's initial plan: "I think the original idea was to rehearse some new songs, and then we were going to pick a location and record the album of the songs in a concert. I suppose kinda like they do these days on Unplugged, except, y'know, it wasn't to be unplugged. It was to do a live album."

Among the songs featured in the film are "Let It Be," "Get Back," "Don't Let Me Down," "Maxwell's Silver Hammer," "For You Blue," "Octopus' Garden," "I Me Mine," "Across The Universe," and "The Long And Winding Road," and covers of "Besame Mucho," "Shake, Rattle And Roll," and "Kansas City," among many others.

In 1970 John Lennon recalled the nearly month-long film shoot saying: "It was just a dreadful, dreadful feeling being filmed all the time. I just wanted them to go away. And we'd be there at eight in the morning and you couldn't make music at eight in the morning, or 10, or whatever it was . . . in a strange place with people filming you and colored lights."

The tension between the group is palpable, especially during the sequence where Harrison and McCartney argue over Harrison's playing on the song "Two Of Us."

McCartney explained that unconsciously, the Beatles were actually telling the world that they were breaking up: "In fact what happened was when we got in there we showed how the breakup of a group works because we didn't realize that we were actually breaking up, y'know as it was happening."

The movie lightens up considerably during the second half, when the filming moved to the group's new Apple basement studios, with the addition of keyboardist Billy Preston. A major highlight of the film is the final sequence, when the Beatles play in impromptu set on the Apple headquarters rooftop, featuring "Get Back," "Dig A Pony," "I've Got A Feeling," "Don't Let Me Down," and "One After 909." Filmed on January 30th, 1969, it would be the band's final public performance.

Reviews for the film, which was released a month after the group's breakup, were mixed, citing the sluggish and depressing nature of the film, as well as director Michael Lindsay-Hogg's sloppy editorial choices. But across the board, both critics and fans agreed on the power of the group's triumphant rooftop set.

Author Ritchie Unterberger chronicled the prolonged Get Back/Let It Be sessions in his book, titled The Unreleased Beatles: "They had bitten off more than they could chew. Y'know, even before they assembled in January, the idea was, 'Let's get back to playing as a live band' -- pretty good idea. But then it was, 'Let's make it an album and a film, and we're going to make the album a film of us doing a concert of songs we've never recorded before.' It's kind of like trying to do too much at once. And then you're recording it -- the comparison I made in the book is kind of Nixon's 'The Watergate Tapes,' you have no idea that this stuff is going to comeback to haunt you forever."]

Beatlefan magazine's executive editor Al Sussman saw the film within days of its premiere and was left speechless by the group's live swan song: "It was really depressing. But, what made it worthwhile was the rooftop, y'know? Because when I left that theater, I was this far off the ground. Despite the fact that we knew everything that happened afterward. Yeah, that saves the film."

Ken Mansfield, the former U.S. manager of Apple Records was among the handful of insiders present at the rooftop concert that day. He recalled prior to the lunchtime gig walking in on the four Beatles who were using one of the Apple offices as a makeshift dressing room: "It was like walking in on a band, a nervous bunch of guys getting ready to do an audition. I don't know if it's because they hadn't played together, or whether they were trying to put the set together, but it was one of those kind of tense things where they were nervous. When we locked the doors upstairs, and the minute they started playing -- and y'know all the. . . everything that was going down, all the stuff. It's like it all went away and I really believe in my mind that they forgot everything and they were what they were. They were the Beatles."

Let It Be earned the Beatles their only Academy Award, when they won the 1970 Oscar for Best Original Song Score.


Information on this particular release: 
Let It Be is a filmed documentary of the Beatles rehearsing and recording their new album in 1969.  The film culminated with a concert by the group set on the rooftop on their own Apple office building in London's west end.  Paul McCartney's concept for the album and film was that it wasn't going to have studio trickery like overdubs and effects.  It was "back to the roots" with the Beatles performing the songs in a natural way.  The film and it's accompanying soundtrack was delayed while the Beatles recorded and released their final album "Abbey Road".
It was eventually released in 1970 and received an Academy Award for it's title song.

For the Beatles completist and serious fans, the biggest frustration has been in not finding the "Beatles - Let It Be" in a complete, uncropped, great quality version. The reason for this is quite interesting. The original film was shot in 16mm (standard TV 4x3 format).  However, when the film was released, they cropped the 16mm print by chopping off parts of the top and bottom and blew it up to 35mm widescreen. I myself wondered in the 70's why the picture quality was so mediocre right in the movie theatre!  Now we all know why.  So even in the theatre, one did NOT get to see the full picture that was filmed.

Then to add insult to injury, when Let It Be was released in the 1980's on Beta and VHS videotape and on Laserdisc (all in standard TV 4x3 format), the manufacturers did NOT go back to the original 16mm film that was shot in the same format. INSTEAD, they sourced it from the 35mm widescreen theatre print and CHOPPED it AGAIN!, this time from the sides. So anyone purchasing previous Beta, VHS and Laserdisc versions of Let It Be, now got to see even LESS!, since it has now been chopped on all 4 sides.

This recent WIDESCREEN, STEREO import Blu-Ray release rectifies a lot of the problems.  For anyone that saw the film in the theatres in the 70's, it is great now to be able to see the original theatrical release, in stereo AND in much improved quality, including clearer picture and more natural colours, the absolute best version you can find of this release.

Running Length: 80 minutes

Liner Notes for this copy: "This new transfer has been made from an original, undamaged, vhs (or videotape) recording of the BBC2 repeat from May 1982. Unusually, the Beeb screened the widescreen 35mm theatrical print with black bars at the top and bottom. When released on vhs and laserdics, this widescreen version was cropped severely at the sides to produce the full frame image. Here it is presented unaltered.

Although the film was shot at 24 frames per second, BBC2 aired it in PAL format at 25fps. For this disc it has been slowed down to 23.976 fps (my ripped copy says 29.97) and presented in a compatible NTSC format, this preserving the correct speed and pitch of the original. The actual picture has been scaled up to 480 pixels and encoded in anamorphic format so as not to lose any resolution"

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Sun Ra: A Joyful Noise (1980)


Sun Ra: A Joyful Noise is a 1980 jazz film by Robert Mugge documenting performances by Sun Ra and his Arkestra in Philadelphia, Washington D.C., and Baltimore, and also including interviews and rehearsal footage. The Philadelphia performances captured by the film took place at Danny's Hollywood Palace and on the rooftop of the Philadelphia International Center. The Baltimore performance took place in the Famous Ballroom, hosted by the Left Bank Jazz Society.

Sun Ra compositions featured in the film include "Astro Black," "Along Came Ra," "We Travel the Spaceways," and "Requiem for Trevor Johnson."

In 2001, the film was screened as part of Maryland Film Festival in the former Famous Ballroom, now part of the expanded Charles Theatre, where the film's Baltimore performances were shot 

Sunday, June 09, 2019

The Falklands War - The Untold Story (Full Documentary) | Timeline


This film really shows the "folly of war" - when fought with universal principles the men fighting it are most often decent, honourable, intelligent, courageous, even compassionate people. The politicians planning it and making it happen are cynical, cunning and mostly cowardly. An example of this is the sinking of General Belgrano (with the lost of 323 lives), which was outside the British-declared total exclusion zone of 370 km (200 nautical miles) radius from the islands. The British Cabinet, and in particular Margaret Thatcher agreed to a request from Admiral Terence Lewin, the Chief of the Defence Staff, to alter without notice the rules of engagement that had already been delivered to the Argentine government. War itself is vicious and terrifying and without victors.

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Dreamtime (2003)


Travelling through the Australian continent, one is often appalled by the living conditions of the Aborigine people. Having lost touch with their culture and traditions, many of them have become outcasts or alcoholics who aimlessly wander the streets of the Australian cities. From the early 1800s to the late 1960s, Aborigines were gradually deprived of their land by the white man who used it for herding, cropping, and mineral extraction. Forced to leave their homelands, Aborigines were often separated from their children, who were sent to live with white families or to boarding schools, in an attempt to teach them the white man’s values. Today 390,000 Aborigines account for less than 3% of the current Australian population. Learn how they are beginning to find their place in a society which has excluded them for so long. Meet and share the life of Aborigines who through art, dancing, hunting, work, or spirituality, are finding ways to better their future.

 Director: Eric Elléna
Producers: French Connection Films, Voyage, Boomerang Productions

Tuesday, May 21, 2019

The Multiverse, New Animism, Wonder and Sacred Matter

A conversation between Erik Davis and the philosopher of religion Mary-Jane Rubenstein about wonder, horror, animism, the multiverse, Heidegger, Einstein, Hawaiian telescopes, and her book Pantheologies: Gods, Worlds, Monsters (Columbia).


Mary-Jane Rubenstein is Professor of Religion at Wesleyan University; core faculty in the in the Science and Society Program; and affiliated faculty in the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program. She holds a B.A. in Religion and English from Williams College, an M.Phil. in Philosophical Theology from Cambridge University, and a Ph.D. in Philosophy of Religion from Columbia University. Her areas of research include continental philosophy, gender and sexuality studies, science and religion, and the history and philosophy of physics, ecology, and cosmology. She is the author of Strange Wonder: The Closure of Metaphysics and the Opening of Awe (2009) Worlds without End: The Many Lives of the Multiverse (2014), and Pantheologies: Gods, Worlds, Monsters (2018). She is also co-editor with Catherine Keller of Entangled Worlds: Religion, Science, and New Materialisms (2017)


Monday, May 20, 2019

The films of Ira Cohen




Ira Cohen (February 3, 1935 – April 25, 2011) was an American poet, publisher, photographer and filmmaker. Cohen lived in Morocco and in New York City in the 1960s, he was in Kathmandu in the 1970s and traveled the world in the 1980s, before returning to New York, where he spent the rest of his life. Cohen died of renal failure on April 25, 2011.

As a film maker, Cohen developed a style distinctly his own by photographing images reflected in Mylar plastic. The Invasion Of Thunderbolt Pagoda and Brain Damage were directed by Cohen in the late 1960s using this mirror effect. The Invasion Of Thunderbolt Pagoda was released in 2006 on DVD by the folks at the late lamented Arthur Magazine. Cohen conjured some of the same cinematic spirits as his peers Jack Smith and Kenneth Anger.

In certain artistic and literary circles, Mr. Cohen was a touchstone. “Ira was a major figure in the international underground and avant-garde,” Michael Rothenberg, the editor of Big Bridge magazine, an Internet publication, said in an interview. “In order to understand American art and poetry post-World War II, you have to understand Ira Cohen.”

Tuesday, May 07, 2019

America's Great Indian Nations - Full Length Documentary


This is the first comprehensive history of six great Indian nations, dramatically filmed on location at their native tribal lands across America, using reenactments, archival footage, maps and original music. The story of the Iroquois, Seminole, Shawnee, Navajo, Cheyenne, and Lakota Sioux nations unfolds in their struggle to protect their lands, cultures, and freedoms. "Stirring reenactments." - Booklist Magazine.

Sunday, May 05, 2019

Tones Drones And Arpeggios: The Magic Of Minimalism (BBC)


In this episode Charles Hazlewood tracks down the pioneers of minimalism, which began on America's west coast in the 1950s. Describing them as 'prophets without honour', Charles explores La Monte Young's groundbreaking experiments with musical form that included notes held for exceptionally long periods of time, and drones inspired by Eastern classical music and Hindustani singer Pandit Pran Nath.

He drives out into the Californian countryside to the ranch of Terry Riley and discusses the musician's revolutionary experiments with tape recording looping and phasing, along with early synthesizer sound. The episode includes excerpts from key early minimalist pieces, including Riley's now famous In C, performed by Charles Hazlewood's All Stars Collective and detailed workshopping by Hazlewood where pieces are deconstructed musically.

The key attributes of minimalism, its reliance on repetition, its mesmerizing transcendent qualities and innovative use of technology are also discussed with broadcaster and writer Tom Service; Gillian Moore, Director of Music at the Southbank Centre; composers Morton Subotnick, Max Richter and Bryce Dessner, and musicians Jarvis Cocker and Adrian Utley.

La Monte Young

Most People Don't Even Realize What's Coming


Will you get lost in the Fourth Industrial Revolution? Most people I asked don't even know what that is, but it's happening all around us right now. This system is about technological evolution... evolving us. Please help support us on Patreon, read our goals here:

https://www.patreon.com/truthstreammedia

We plan to make many more films, and that is a large part of what this Patreon helps create, in addition to our smaller reports on YouTube (for as long as they allow it).

We've got a whole research series in the can as well, it's just a matter of having the ability to get to it all.

Thank you all so much from the bottom of our hearts to everyone who has already offered us support – no matter what kind. Your generosity allows us to pay bills, secure proper equipment, up our content production, and attempt to change the world for the better through truly independent media.

Much love,
Aaron and Melissa Dykes

Films
The Minds of Men
Obsolete
Shorts
The Cold Noir (Web Series)

Alan Watts: Mahayana Buddhism (1960)


Here is an episode from the 1960 season of Alan Watts' KQED television series, Eastern Wisdom and Modern Life, entitled "Mahayana Buddhism".

The seminar or teaching as it is really, is very good - clear, concise and using diagrams/art as examples with terms explained and parallels drawn from science and philosophy. His references to physiology are very informative, and his explanations regarding patterns and memory are very clarifying. "Feedback is the system whereby any system of energy is able to record its own action, make plans for the future, and thereby correct itself". - Alan Watts

A native of England, Alan Watts attended the King's School near Canterbury Cathedral, and at the age of fourteen he became fascinated with the philosophies of the Far East. By sixteen he regularly attended the Buddhist Lodge in London, where he met Zen scholars Christmas Humphries and D. T. Suzuki. As a speaker and contributor to the Lodge's journal, The Middle Way, he wrote a series of philosophical commentaries and published his first book on Eastern thought, The Spirit of Zen, at age twenty-one.

In the late thirties he moved to New York, and a few years later he became an Episcopalian priest. In 1942 he moved to Illinois and spent the wartime years as chaplain at Northwestern University.

Then, in 1950, he left the Church, and his life took a turn away from organized religion back toward Eastern ways and expanding horizons. After meeting author and mythologist Joseph Campbell and composer John Cage in New York he headed to California and began teaching at the American Academy of Asian Studies in San Francisco. There his popular lectures spilled over into coffeehouse talks and appearances with the well-known beat writers Gary Snyder, Jack Kerouac, and Allen Ginsberg. In late 1953 he began what would become the longest running series of Sunday morning public radio talks, which continue to this day with programs from the Alan Watts tape archives. In 1957 he published the bestselling The Way of Zen, beginning a prolific ten-year period in which he wrote Nature, Man and Woman; Beat Zen, Square Zen and Zen; This Is It; Psychotherapy East and West; The Two Hands of God; The Joyous Cosmology; and The Book: On the Taboo against Knowing Who You Are.

By 1960 Watts's radio series Way Beyond the West on Berkeley's KPFA had an avid following on the West Coast, and NET television began national broadcasts of the series Eastern Wisdom in Modern Life. The first season, recorded in the studios of KQED, a San Francisco television station, focused on the relevance of Buddhism, and the second, on Zen and the arts.

The full series from the NET broadcast can be found here.

Happy Together (1997, Wong Kar-Wai) - Full movie with subtitles [ENG, PL]



Happy Together (春光乍洩 click on the image to go to the full film) is a 1997 Hong Kong romance film directed by Wong Kar-wai, starring Leslie Cheung and Tony Leung Chiu-wai, that depicts a turbulent romance. The English title is inspired by The Turtles' 1967 song, which is covered by Danny Chung on the film's soundtrack; the Chinese title (previously used for Michelangelo Antonioni's Blowup) is an idiomatic expression suggesting "the exposure of something intimate"


Title: Happy Together (1997)
Original title: Chun gwong cha sit, Chūnguāng zhàxiè
Subtitles: English, Polish
Director/Writer: Wong Kar-Wai
Cinematography by: Christopher Doyle
Music by: Danny Chung
Cast: Leslie Cheung, Tony Leung, Chen Chang

The Occupation of the American Mind: Israel's Public Relations War in The United States


The Occupation of the American Mind documentary

Over the past few years, Israel's ongoing military occupation of Palestinian territory and repeated invasions of the Gaza strip have triggered a fierce backlash against Israeli policies virtually everywhere in the world -- except the United States. The Occupation of the American Mind takes an eye-opening look at this critical exception, zeroing in on pro-Israel public relations efforts within the U.S.

Narrated by Roger Waters and featuring leading observers of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and U.S. media culture, the film explores how the Israeli government, the U.S. government, and the pro-Israel lobby have joined forces, often with very different motives, to shape American media coverage of the conflict in Israel's favor. From the U.S.-based public relations campaigns that emerged in the 1980s to today, the film provides a sweeping analysis of Israel's decades-long battle for the hearts, minds, and tax dollars of the American people in the face of widening international condemnation of its increasingly right-wing policies.

Original version Narrated by Roger Waters / Featuring Amira Hass, M.J. Rosenberg, Stephen M. Walt, Noam Chomsky, Rula Jebreal, Henry Siegman, Rashid Khalidi, Rami Khouri, Yousef Munayyer, Norman Finkelstein, Max Blumenthal, Phyllis Bennis, Norman Solomon, Mark Crispin Miller, Peter Hart, and Sut Jhally.

Thursday, May 02, 2019

In Our Eyes - The European Deadhead Odyssey 1990


Grateful Dead 1990 European tour that focuses on the Deadhead phenomenon. Deadhead or Dead Head is a name given to fans of the American rock band the Grateful Dead. In the 1970s, a number of fans began travelling to see the band in as many shows or festival venues as they could. With large numbers of people thus attending strings of shows, a community developed.

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

A Sunday in Hell (1976)


The agony of Paris-Roubaix spring classic

The film follows the French Paris-Roubaix spring classic, notorious for the hellish paves or cobbled roads of the north "which are no longer used for traffic but only for transporting cattle - and for cycle races". We are there from the dawn preparations and rituals on the outskirts of Paris and through the rigours of the race with special focus on a number of prominent cyclists to the final outcome on the Roubaix cycle track - followed by the filthy riders taking their showers. There is also an eye for life among the spectators and the media event as such. The film alternates among different kinds of shot with a view to establishing the most suitable view of the narrative: shots from motorcycles, which are able to convey the motion of the race and provide close ups of the riders in the style of television cycle race reporting; fixed cameras stationed at strategically important points along the route, where viewers can watch riders passing in real time and thus gain a clear overview of the distance between the leaders and the main field: and the Olympian eye of the helicopter shots.


Sunday, April 28, 2019

Money, luxury and fame - the new super-rich of India | DW Documentary


The mega-rich of India are only getting richer in the strange mix of Nationalism, Religion and Neo-liberalism that has dominated the enormous nation since the election of the Narendra Modi government in 2014. Only the US and China currently have more billionaires than India. Some of them are as famous as pop stars and enjoy similar adulation.

Their social media accounts have millions of followers - in a country where more than half the population lives below the poverty line and has no electricity or fresh water. India’s super-rich have been dubbed the "new maharajas." The sources of their seemingly unlimited wealth are almost as varied as their values and lifestyles. 23-old Evan Luthra uses his father's seed capital to invest in new ideas in the software industry. He loves luxury, meets the young moneyed elite in fashionable destinations around the world, and is active on all the social networks. Abhimanyu Alsisar, nephew of the Maharajah of Jaipur, runs a chain of luxury hotels in the ancient palaces of India and invests in music events. Kalpana Saroj comes from the lowest caste in India and has worked her way up from destitution to become a multimillionaire - but she never forgets her background, and helps impoverished farmers in her homeland with medical care and gifts of money. Vijay Mallya even bought his own Formula 1 racing team, but faces a long prison sentence for fraudulent bankruptcy and tax evasion should he return to India. The documentary is the result of six months of investigative research and offers a deep insight into the everyday and professional lives of India’s super-rich.



                                                 

Friday, April 26, 2019

Moor Mother on Sampling, Afrofuturism and Collaboration


Moor Mother is a Philadelphia-based artist, musician and activist who utilizes her multi-genre practice to speak to consciousness, identity, blackness and the sociopolitical global landscape. She started to record and release music in 2012 as a solo project under the porous, playful rubric of self-defined sounds like “project-housing bop,” “slaveship punk” and “blk girl blues,” and her output is a patchwork quilt of spoken word, poetry and fractured lyricism alongside guttural electronics, dissonant textures and fragments of instrumentation. Her discography is vast and expanding, with albums like 2016’s Fetish Bones and 2017’s The Motionless Present critically acclaimed exercises in power electronics and intense vocalizations.

Moor Mother discussed her upbringing in Maryland, Black Quantum Futurism, being addicted to collaboration and the writing process in her lecture at RBMA Berlin 2018. #RBMA20 #afrofuturism #sampling

TOPICS:
6:15 – Growing up in Aberdeen, Maryland
14:46 – Stumbling into Afrofuturism
20:45 – Moving to Philadelphia and finding new scenes
33:26 – Writing and sampling approaches
39:55 – The Black Quantum Futurism collective and project
51:44 – The need for collaboration

MUSIC:
30:34 – Moor Mother – “Programma”
35:47 – Moor Mother – “Creation Myth” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fm93dYZIVIo
47:06 – Moor Mother – “The Autonomy of Shori”
1:00:20 – Irreversible Entanglements – “Fireworks” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J4joenjtD6w

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Fushitsusha 不失者 @ St John-at-Hackney 2012 Full Set


I could write pages about Fushitsusha and the incredible Keiji Haino....but let us instead turn to the music....and let that teach us....

Saturday, April 20, 2019

Zizek vs Peterson Debate


Bestselling author and psychologist Jordan Peterson debates “Happiness: Capitalism vs. Marxism” with Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek, in an event that was more than a year in the making.

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Hokusai Old Man Crazy to Paint (BBC 2017)


"Until the age of 70 nothing I drew was worthy of notice. When I reach 80 years I hope to have made progress with the line" - Hokusai

Sunday, March 24, 2019

Punking Out (1978)


Documents the beginning of the punk rock movement in New York City at CBGB's, a punk night club, and the lifestyle that revolves around this scene. Presents a sometimes shocking look at the attitudes and motivations behind the movement through interviews with outspoken club-goers and band members of the Ramones, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, and the Dead Boys. Incl Lydia Lunch interview

Monday, March 18, 2019

Deep Adaptation - Jem Bendell & Toni Spencer


A climate induced collapse for our way of life is inevitable. The presentation, to 300 people in Bristol, UK, was his first recorded lecture on the Deep Adaptation. Using a more informal format than a University lecture, the Professor of Sustainability Leadership at the University of Cumbria, invites the audience to explore forms of action additional to cutting and drawing down carbon from the atmosphere - actions associated with personal and collective preparedness for coming disruption. Accompanying him was Toni Spencer, a facilitator who works on Deep Adaptation and Transition.

After Jem's talk, Toni led the audience in a reflective process to explore feelings and ideas emerging. She also offered some poems and reflections during the process. Members of the Climate Psychology Alliance spoke from the floor, explaining their new initiative to provide therapeutic support to people working on or affected by this agenda. The event was organized by the local Constituency Labour Party and Momentum group, but made open to anyone with any political interest or none.

To engage on this topic see http://www.deepadaptation.info 

Thursday, March 07, 2019

The Life of Poet William Blake (1995)


Ignored during his lifetime, the artist and poet William Blake is now a literary institution. How did this reversal come about? How did a republican, dissident printer, who was considered insane by his contemporaries, become transformed into an icon?

The author Peter Ackroyd, Blake’s latest biographer, is the guide as this program explores late-Georgian London: a world of political ferment and religious dispute, where the winds of revolution were blowing across the sea from America and France and a mad king sat on the English throne. The program examines Blake’s artistic achievement and assesses his continuing appeal.

Monday, March 04, 2019

No Direction Home - On the trail of Rimbaud, the man who inspired Bob Dylan


The historian and travel writer Charles Nicholl pursues the trail of the enigmatic French poet Arthur Rimbaud into the Horn of Africa.

Sunday, March 03, 2019

Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf (1965 Full Film)


Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, a black and white drama movie released in 1965, directed by Mike Nichols, Ernest Lehman, writer, from Edward Albee's play. the film features four main actors, including two great actors who deliver a magnificent performance: Richard Burton (George, Professor of History) and Elizabeth Taylor (Martha, daughter of the university's dean). The other two actors were: George Segal (Nick, professor of biology) and his wife Sandy Dennis (Honey).

Martha and her husband George turn slightly drunk from a reception at the university where George is a Professor humming the rhyme "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" At the request of her father, Martha was forced to invite a young couple, recently moved, to join them for a drink. Just arrived, Nick and his wife, Honey, attend a memorable household scene of their hosts. Since they were drunk, the tone does not take long to rise. Martha et George, a couple in their fifties, come to unpack their grudges, without the least modesty, in front of their uncomfortable guests. As the evening progress, Nick and Honey become more drunk and embark on the games of George and Martha on the need to hurt themselves and hurt everyone, each couple has a secret. Nick and Honey end up gradually revealing the dark, pathetic and even shameful dimension of their own relationship. The ultimate abuse takes the form of a conversation with the invisible son of George and Martha, sixteen, whose birthday is the next day. After the departure of their guests, the film ends with the couple, Martha seated holding George’s hand who stands behind her, both look tired from this long evening.

The movie’s title does not say anything about what the audience should expect as a movie. The first scene, when George and Martha were walking coming from the reception, gives me the impression of a couple that was slightly drunk from a reception that they had fun. When Martha was insisting asking about who said that is a dump, I figured there was an issue in the couple, she was talking more than George and they were drinking none stop. She looks like she always has to have the last word. I was surprised to see how a married couple was hurting each other in front of strangers. In the beginning, the movie was not easy to follow, a woman who controls her husband, it was difficult to understand what is the real issue. The moral violence exerted between spouses, a heavy and suffocating atmosphere, pettiness and the cruelty of relations between the generations reach here their culminating point. The scenes leave the impression that the life of a couple comes down to permanent war. The talented actors, Martha and Georges, could sow doubt on the reality of their story. The audience believes in the scenes to realize at the end of the film that Marta’s and George's stories were fiction.

To conclude, this is a well-written film by Mike Nichols. Aside from the constant insults of the alcoholic couple, Martha and George who thirsts at the audience to ask what is next, I think that summarizes the story, a couple that has a lot of hates between them. In my opinion, the film a bit too long despite the ingenious performance of the actors.

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

The Battle for Brixton


April 1981: unprecedented violence erupts on south London streets, as thousands of local residents fight a pitched battle with the capital's police in a racially motivated conflict that would shock Thatcher's Britain to the core. Compelling first-hand accounts from rioters, looters, police officers and bystanders caught in the mêlée piece together 48 extraordinary hours that pushed tension in Brixton beyond bursting point. Director/Producer Helen Littleboy

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

The True Cost (2015)


This is a story about clothing. It’s about the clothes we wear, the people who make them, and the impact the industry is having on our world. The price of clothing has been decreasing for decades, while the human and environmental costs have grown dramatically. The True Cost is a groundbreaking documentary film that pulls back the curtain on the untold story and asks us to consider, who really pays the price for our clothing?

Filmed in countries all over the world, from the brightest runways to the darkest slums, and featuring interviews with the world’s leading influencers including Stella McCartney, Livia Firth and Vandana Shiva, The True Cost is an unprecedented project that invites us on an eye opening journey around the world and into the lives of the many people and places behind our clothes.

Friday, January 25, 2019

Head (1968)

Head is a 1968 American satirical musical adventure film written by Jack Nicholson and Bob Rafelson, directed by Rafelson, starring television rock group The Monkees (Davy Jones, Micky Dolenz, Peter Tork and Michael Nesmith), and distributed by Columbia Pictures.

During production, one of the working titles for the film was Changes, which was later the name of an unrelated album by The Monkees. Another working title was Untitled. A rough cut of the film was previewed for audiences in Los Angeles in the summer of 1968 under the name Movee Untitled.

In her scathing review, Renata Adler of The New York Times commented: Head "might be a film to see if you have been smoking grass, or if you like to scream at The Monkees, or if you are interested in what interests drifting heads and hysterical high-school girls."

Sunday, January 20, 2019

Brideshead Revisited - Et in Arcadia Ego


Episode One of the 1981 Granada Television series Brideshead Revisited. Evelyn Waugh said his novel was written at a time of great stress and deprivation, so it was a lot about longing and times of plenty, of baroque styles and rarified emotions. The TV series is a triumph of the medium. It is a sensual, passionate and sorrowful account of youth, emotions and the class world that was destroyed by the Second World War.

Brideshead Revisited is a 1981 British television serial starring Jeremy Irons and Anthony Andrews. It was produced by Granada Television for broadcast by the ITV network. Most of the serial was directed by Charles Sturridge; a few sequences were directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg.

The serial is an adaptation of the novel Brideshead Revisited (1945) by Evelyn Waugh. It follows, from the 1920s to the early 1940s, the life and romances of the protagonist Charles Ryder—including his friendship with the Flytes, a family of wealthy English Catholics who live in a palatial mansion called Brideshead Castle.

The screenplay was written by Derek Granger (the film's producer) and others. Although the film credits attribute the screenplay to John Mortimer, Mortimer's script was not used.

The 11-episode serial premiered on ITV in the UK on 12 October 1981; on CBC Television in Canada on 19 October 1981; and as part of the Great Performances series on PBS in the United States on 18 January 1982.

In 2000, the serial was tenth on the list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes compiled by the British Film Institute, based on a poll of industry professionals.

Monday, January 07, 2019

Ten Canoes (2006)


Rolf de Heer’s curious mixture of entertainment and anthropology represented the first full-length Australian feature spoken entirely in Indigenous language. This version has English narration set over the Yolngu dialogue. A fusion of Yolngu and Western mythologies, set in Arnhem Land 120 years ago, the story tells a Yolngu tale before the first white contact.

Presenting a tale within a tale, this Australian film follows Dayindi (Jamie Gulpilil), a young Aboriginal warrior, as he wanders the wilderness hunting for eggs. Dayindi hears a story told by his brother Minygululu (Peter Minygululu), which echoes his own situation. A man who lusts after his brother's wife, the character in the tale kills a member of another tribe and faces dire consequences, with the story's ending reverberating in Dayindi's own life.

Friday, January 04, 2019

Burroughs: The Movie by Howard Brookner (1983)




Made up of intimate, revelatory footage of the singular author and poet filmed over the course of five years, Howard Brookner’s 1983 documentary about William S. Burroughs was for decades mainly the stuff of legend; that changed when Aaron Brookner, the late director’s nephew, discovered a print of it in 2011 and spearheaded a restoration. Now viewers can enjoy the invigorating candidness of Burroughs: The Movie, a one-of-a-kind nonfiction portrait that was brought to life with the help of a remarkable crew of friends, including Jim Jarmusch and Tom DiCillo, and that features on-screen appearances by fellow artists of Burroughs’s including Allen Ginsberg, Herbert Huncke, Patti Smith, and Terry Southern.

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