Tag Archives: Film

Immigrant Song

Okay, hyped or not, everybody cares about this movie.

I think the original film is better, but it doesn’t come with this incredible title sequence. And oh, OH, NO BIG DEAL, JUST TRENT REZNOR AND KAREN O FINALLY WORKED TOGETHER ON A SONG. It’s forgivable that it’s a Led Zeppelin song too (just go with it).

Blur did the effects for this sequence, led by creative director Tim Miller.

Here’s a sweet article and interview with Tim Miller on io9

The books seem like a waste of time, but the Swedish films are pretty damn entertaining. David Fincher’s films are always pretty, so those are worth a look.

However You Want Me, However You Need Me

BELLY, Dir. Hype Williams, 1998

I was on turntable.fm today and dropped one of my favorite 90s songs, Soul II Soul’s “Back To Life” and immediately remembered this film.

BELLY has one of the best introduction sequences ever. Elements at hand include: an incredible, minimal remix of the aforementioned song, black lights, Nas, DMX, strippers, a strip club, money, strobe lights, armed robbery, NEON EYEBALLS, Malik Hassan Sayeed’s cinematography, and Hype Williams’ styling at its zenith. It seems like every hip hop music video tried to copy this sequence afterward.

I wish there was a better-quality video of this segment out there.

The rest of the film is pretty good.

(Big ups to an old friend who showed me this clip once upon a time, back in the day, however that goes)

Oh, ooh, and there’s T-Boz on that TLC tip. Miss you girl.

Rome

Danger Mouse x Daniele Luppi x Norah Jones x Jack White

ROME

Album

romealbum.com

I’ve been consuming this album all night.

It’s amazing.

I can’t say it any better than NPR, so here’s their article, review and streaming album info:

NPR First Listen: Danger Mouse’s ROME

May 9, 2011

The long-anticipated brainchild of producer-composer Danger Mouse and Italian composer Daniele Luppi, Rome benefits from a bit of context. More than five years in the making, the project assembles many of the surviving performers of classic ’60s and ’70s Ennio Morricone scores — and, in half a dozen memorable cases, pairs them up with the vocals of Norah Jones or The White Stripes‘ Jack White.

Naturally, Rome can’t possibly exceed the sum of its parts, with its successful composer and arranger in Luppi, its groundbreaking producer and composer in Danger Mouse, countless combined years of orchestra experience, a painstaking recording process with vintage equipment, and the juxtaposition of White’s fatalistic moan with Jones’ coolly detached croon. It almost has to sound better on paper than in practice, but it’s terrific in practice, too, as it alternates appropriately cinematic instrumentals with a handful of nifty showcases for its headliners.

Jones is long overdue for an image makeover: All those tens of millions of records sold and armloads of Grammys have made it easy to forget that she’s still a remarkably cool singer. Here, Jones at times channels the wounded iciness of Metric‘s great Emily Haines, while still lending her own brooding gravitas to “Season’s Trees,” “Black” and “Problem Queen.” Of course, White makes the most of his own three appearances, from the tone-setting portent of “The Rose With the Broken Neck” to the album-closing “The World,” which helps conjure mental images of rolling credits. But Jones and White aren’t the only scene-stealers in Rome: Edda Dell’Orso pops up in the album-opening “Theme of Rome,” picking up where she left off in the soundtrack to 1966′sThe Good, The Bad And The Ugly.

If it weren’t for the unmistakably contemporary voices among its ranks — White’s in particular —Rome could just as easily have emerged from a vault, sealed 40 or even 50 years ago. That’s clearly the point: From start to finish, the album provides a timeless, arduously arranged backdrop to past generations’ visions of panoramic vistas and blood-stained betrayals.

Color Me Once – Inspirations 3.21.2011

“Abashed the devil stood, and felt how awful goodness is…”

The most unlikely people blush.


GREAT EXPECTATIONS, Dir. Alfonso Cuarón, 1998

This film is overlooked a lot. It shouldn’t be.

GREAT EXPECTATIONS, released in 1998 and directed by Alfonso Cuarón, is a film that sometimes comes up in a drunken conversation among film school colleagues. Sure enough, a few weeks ago over libations, my friends and I agreed: “GREAT EXPECTATIONS is a fucking great movie. Nobody ever talks about that movie anymore!” And I was all like, “I’ll blog about it!”

So, I’ll blog about it.

GREAT EXPECTATIONS is a minor work by Cuarón by now. At its release, it generally carried a teeny-bopper-magnet reputation, with Paltrow and dreamboat Ethan Hawke driving the star vehicle.

The film is gorgeous, and notably well-designed.

Here’s a short list of the great things in GREAT EXPECTATIONS, subjects in no quality order:

1. The Green. It’s So Literally Green.

Did you need an example of color as motif? Did you need to get your geek on, with color-theory-as-seen-in-film? Then you need to watch GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Cuarón is/was known for using green a lot, as a personal visual preference – the color also has a strong presence in THE LITTLE PRINCESS (1995). It seems to be used simply as a style device.

Since the color green is omnipresent, it has no emotional or narrative significance within the film. The enforced color palette does lend a dream-like quality to the mise-en-scene.

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MMXI, With You and I – Inspirations 1.24.2011

I do adore thy eyes,

And the hands those eyes do move.

 



Boom For Real

THE RADIANT CHILD, Dir. Tamra Davis, 2010

I just finished watching this great documentary on Jean-Michel Basquiat.

I grabbed some stills from my favorite parts:

The documentary is currently available on Instant Netflix. Don’t sleep!

Herzog’s Shoe

This makes me giggle.

Noted director Werner Herzog pledged that he would eat the shoe he was wearing if Errol Morris’ film on this improbable subject was completed and shown in a public theater. When the film was released Herzog lived up to his wager and the consumption of his footwear was made into the short film Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe.Gates of Heaven launched Morris’ career and is now viewed as a classic.

Clips from the documentary:

Part I:

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A Violent Formation

Spotlight:

E. Elias Merhige, Director.

I was shown this incredible video:

DIN OF CELESTIAL BIRDS, 2006

Which led me to BEGOTTEN, 1991

And digging up clips from the famous SHADOW OF A VAMPIRE, 2000

But I haven’t yet seen SUSPECT ZERO, 2004

But I do remember this pretty cool music video for Marilyn Manson’s “Cryptochid” from 1999:

It’s always interesting to see a filmmaker’s thumbprint style over the course of time.

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