I’ve noticed for quite some time that most media web sites and newspapers do not have an Arts section. The closest you find is Entertainment. The meaning of these two is of course very different, not because art can’t be entertaining, it can be. But art often has more purpose to it […]
Entries Tagged as 'Cinema'
No Art, only Entertainment
December 10th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments
Tags: Art Life · Artforms · Big Business · Cinema · Dance · Drawing and Illustration · Painting · Photography · Sculpture · Television · The Press · Theatre
The rare director’s cut, Alan Smithee, Across the Universe, Blade Runner
October 14th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments
The other day, though not in the rest of the post, I linked to the New York Times story discussing that the studio had tested their own cut of Across the Universe without Julie Taymor’s knowledge. I don’t know how that turned out, but it must be mostly ok because her name is still […]
Tags: Big Business · Censorship · Cinema · Controversy
Across the Universe, the Power of Myth, 1967
October 9th, 2007 by Trout · 2 Comments
I was born after the 1960s. What I know is only from stories and grainy video, comprised of many heroic and striking moments, modern stories not unlike King Arthur’s Court or Hamlet. The difference is, these are modern stories from not that long ago, and you can see their effects clearly all around […]
Tags: Cinema · Music & Sounds · United Kingdom · United States
Endurance art - six hours is too long
September 20th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments
Over the past few weeks, Elevator Repair Service has been in Portland and Seattle performing Gatz, their performance which involves the complete six hour reading of The Great Gatsby. I intended to go. But I just can’t bring myself to do it.
I’m up for any strange art thing, I mean I’m one of […]
Tags: Cinema · Germany · Multidiscipline · Performance · Romania · Theatre · United Kingdom · United States
Getting the right tools vs. actually doing something
September 18th, 2007 by Trout · 1 Comment
I read a New Yorker story recently about the cult of Leica cameras. Some of the most famous photographs in history have been taken with Leica’s, and photographers love them. But at $4,000+ a pop, you’d better really love it, and you’d hope it takes a great photo.
…as the camera has […]
Tags: Art Life · Cinema · Philosophy · Photography
The Czech Dream, The hoax superstore of the Czech Republic
September 9th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments
In the late ’80s, Czechoslovakia became a democratic state, and in 1993 peacefully separated into two countries - the Czech Republic and Slovakia. With democracy came capitalism and advertising, and with capitalism and advertising came The Hypermarket. Hypermarkets are the world’s superstores, selling shoes and spinach, pipe wrenches and pumpkins, all you would […]
Tags: Big Business · Cinema · Czech Republic · Documentary · Installation Art · Marketing · Performance Art
If you get points, is it art?
September 3rd, 2007 by Trout · 2 Comments
I went to an afternoon of flat track roller derby, and even though it’s a sport, I could care less who won or lost. A lot of us were there to be entertained. Roller derby is dramatic and theatrical. Lots of players and whole teams have strong characters (whether real or mythical), […]
Tags: Cinema · Dance · Music & Sounds · Painting · Performance · Philosophy · Photography · Sculpture · Sports · Television · Theatre
Iraq in Fragments
August 27th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments
Each scene rolls on quietly with poetic light and ambient sounds, with the few words spoken coming from the Iraqi people themselves. Each of the three parts of the film focus on one person, and simply shows what they see and hear, as their voices sparsely speak about their lives. The first person […]
Tags: Cinema · Documentary · Iraq
Tears of the Black Tiger - Thai cowboys and Monet on Film
August 27th, 2007 by Trout · No Comments
Tears of the Black Tiger combines the early Clint Eastwood Western with Hong Kong and Thai films of the 1950’s and 60’s. Though it sticks to plot and acting that retain high melodrama and graphic violence, it has fun with all of the genres that inspired it, with many hysterical scenes that border on […]
Plastic Records, Italy
August 22nd, 2007 by Trout · No Comments
Some of the best funk and psychedelic music ever written was created for Italian B-movies in the 1960s and 70s. This music was compiled and released by Plastic Records in Italy. I discovered them through Tower Records (of all places) who carried a single album from their catalogue - Vroommm: Funk Cinematique. […]
Tags: Cinema · Italy · Music & Sounds