Film

SECOND RUN DVD

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Issuing their first releases little more than a year ago, the U.K.-based Second Run DVD has rapidly become the most exciting label around. Eschewing the canonical focus of industry giants like Criterion, in just fifteen months this upstart company has managed to release a slew of esoteric but essential works from the around the world. They’re shepherds of the under-represented, releasing films not based on their sales potential, but because they love them.

via Coolhunting

ART BASEL MIAMI: JONAS MEKAS

Jonas looks like he’s having a great time! Wish we could be there…

http://www.mayastendhalgallery.com/ http://www.jonasmekas.com/miami.html

BIRDY THINGS; A STADIUM, A PERVERT, AN ARTIST, A CRIMINAL AND MORE!

There is something happening in the blogosphere today; BIRDS!

Flippin’ the Berd:

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Eagle-eyed fans of street and guerilla art have no doubt noticed a proliferation of these yellow birds dangling over major intersections throughout the city over the last few years. The person behind them has been quite a mystery, but bLA’s intrepid Will Campbell used some good ol’ fashioned investigatifying and managed to track the artist down. Don’t miss Will’s revealing Q&A with the bird-flipper.   

via abLA

The Mockingbird Project:

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Once programming was finished — completed entirely by Mutlu and Isaac as the first official project of the Allentium Lab — Isaac set to work on developing the visual animation for each of the layers. Mutlu integrated that into the design of the home page. Mike and Gunny finally settled on a name for the project — Mike’s idea had been to call it the Mockingbird Project.

And thus the Mockingbird was born.

via rhizome.org

2008 Olympic birdsnest :

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These construction photos of Herzog & de Meuron’s new Beijing National Stadiumaka the 2008 Olympic birdsnest – were pointed out to me the other day; they combine the skewed angles and weird lighting of German Expressionist films with the stitched-together, black voided frame that I’ve commented on before.
So I decided to post them.

via BLDGBLOG

Hyungkoo Lee _ ANIMATUS

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ARARIO gallery will show a new series of works by Hyungkoo Lee, September 1 through October 7, 2006.

via Wooster Collective

The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema:

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The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema takes the viewer on an exhilarating ride through some of the greatest movies ever made. Serving as presenter and guide is the charismatic Slavoj Zizek, the Slovenian philosopher and psychoanalyst. With his engaging and passionate approach to thinking, Zizek delves into the hidden language of cinema, uncovering what movies can tell us about ourselves.

via The Pervert’s Guide

The Birdman of Alcatraz:

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Robert Stroud, who was better known to the public as the "Birdman of Alcatraz," was probably the most famous inmate ever to reside on Alcatraz. In 1909 he brutally murdered a bartender who had allegedly failed to pay a prostitute for whom Stroud was pimping in Alaska. After shooting the bartender to death, Stroud took the man’s wallet to ensure that he and the prostitute would receive compensation for her services.

via Alcatraz History

Charlie "Bird" Parker:

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During the late 1940s Parker toured in Europe, and by 1951, he rose to the status of the most influential jazz musician in the world. His notoriety as a heroin addict had also become legendary, and the New York police eventually withdrew his cabaret card (a requisite to working in New York nightclubs). Thereafter, he adopted a more itinerant lifestyle, playing with pick-up groups in Boston, Newark, Philadelphia, Chicago, and in California. His cabaret card was reinstated in 1953, but by then he was beset by sporadic employment, debt, and failing physical and mental health. He twice attempted suicide in 1954 and voluntarily committed himself to New York’s Bellevue Hospital. His last public appearance was on March 5, 1955, at Birdland, the club named in his honor in 1949.

via Sinewaves.it

AVIAN FLU:

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The World Bank is calling for an additional $1.5 billion to fight avian flu. One-third of the funds are to be directed to sub-Saharan Africa during the next few years.

This year $96 million has been spent on bird flu prevention in Africa.

The H5N1 virus has been detected in eight countries on the continent since February and African Union officials announced during the conference that new outbreaks are still occurring in Nigeria, Egypt and Sudan.

via Favbuzz

Operation Mockingbird :

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Operation Mockingbird is a Central Intelligence Agency operation to influence domestic and foreign media, whose activities were made public during the Church Committee investigation in 1975 (published 1976).

The word Mockingbird was first used by Deborah Davis in Katharine the Great (1979). There is no evidence that the CIA called it this. Cord Meyer said that when he joined the operation in 1951 it was so secret that it did not have a name.

via Wikipedia

ART BASEL MIAMI; DIANA THATER & MORE

Some highlights from our favorite man on the street, Critical Miami

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Diana Thater’s video installation

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Jacob Hashimoto; cocktail umbrellas, string, 4 layers deep.

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Richard Jackson (my 4-year-old son’s favorite)

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Bethan Huws (my favorite-the text reads, “WHAT’S THE POINT OF GIVING YOU ANY MORE ARTWORKS WHEN YOU DON’T UNDERSTAND THE ONES YOU’VE GOT?”)

stay tuned for more…

ROBERT ALTMAN PASSES

Altman From DJL: "On a sad note, I just learned of the passing of legendary film and television director Robert Altman here in Los Angeles late Monday night, November 20. Throughout his cinematic career, he featured music and musicians quite prominently. The theme song to the film "MASH" (and later used as the theme to the TV show as well), titled "Suicide Is Painless," was a number one hit in the UK, has been covered by jazz pianist Bill Evans, rockers Manic Street Preachers, and most recently, by the indie pop duo Lady and Bird, and was co-written by Altman’s 14-year old son, Mike. His 1975 film "Nashville" featured the kaleidoscopic world of country music, spawning a hit single and an Academy Award-winning song in "I’m Easy," as performed by actor Keith Carradine. His films "Kansas City" and "A Prairie Home Companion" also feature music prominently in their stories. He directed musicians such as Lyle Lovett, Tom Waits and Huey Lewis in dramatic roles for the films "The Player" and "Short Cuts," as well as Ute Lemper in "Pret-a-Porter." One of my favorite films as a kid, 1980′s "Popeye," starring Robin Williams, featured songs written by the late Harry Nilsson in one of his final projects. For these and many other cinematic works, Robert Altman will be fondly remembered, and our thoughts go out to the Altman family."

THE DOUBLE LIFE OF VERONIQUE

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Another stunning set from The Criterion Collection, this 2-disc release of The Double Life of Véronique marks the DVD debut of one of the seminal arthouse works of the 1990s, and the last of the major films by director Krzysztof Kieslowski (The Decalogue, Three Colors Trilogy) to make it to DVD. Per Criterion’s impeccable standards of quality, a new high-def transfer was created from the original negative, doing justice to film’s striking visuals, shot through a yellow filter and drained of the color blue, resulting in an otherworldly, sepia-toned tableau. An essential purchase for fans and collectors as well as a great introduction to Kieslowski’s work for neophytes, this set includes three of his early documentary shorts, two documentaries on his career, an insightful and eminently listenable commentary by film scholar Annette Insdorf and a new essay by the "Elvis of cultural theory,” Slavoj ?i?ek. Also available from Amazon.

by Michael Talbott

NEW GREENAWAY COLLECTION

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"Peter Greenaway has the most inscrutable, brilliant and possibly deranged mind in modern cinema. Once you develop an interest in Greenaway it cannot stop." The Washington Post. We couldn’t agree more! A perfect gift for the movie buff in your life, a 2 DVD set featuring Greenaway’s early films inlcuding the full-length The Falls. "A true original with an eccentric and bizzare sense of humor." The Guardian (UK)

$34.98, Buy it at BASE

NEW FILMS FROM JONAS MEKAS

Jonas Mekas’ site has a new look, and a few new movies, some of which are available to download for as little as 3.99 [low-rez of course, designed to be used on your iPod] http://www.jonasmekas.com/

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He is also getting ready to launch his 365 Films project; 365 Films in 365 Days. Very similar to Suzan-Lori Parks 365 Plays project she just completed [see: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6480604 ]

I’m thinking it’s time to "up the ante." One film a day? Why not two? Or three, four, five? More?

TEN FILMS by Oskar Fischinger

Gotta get this:

 Fischinger OfcovereOskar Fischinger (1900-1967) was an animation pioneer best known for his work on the "Toccata and Fugue" segment in Disney’s Fantasia. In my opinion though, his other avant-garde "optical poems" were far more beautiful and captivating. Finally, Fischinger’s films are being released on DVD. The first in a series of collections is Oskar Fischinger: Ten Films. Over at Daddy Types, Greg points out that this seems like just the thing to mesmerize young minds. I can’t wait to watch it with my little boy! From The Fischinger Archive description of the DVD:

Contains ten of Fischinger’s classic Visual Music films – Allegretto, Motion Painting No. 1, Radio Dynamics, Spiritual Constructions, Study nr. 6, Study nr. 7, Kreise, Spirals, Wax Experiments, Walking from Munich to Berlin, plus many Special Features: home movies from Fischinger’s Berlin Studio c. 1931, never-released early animation tests and fragments, a selection of paintings by Fischinger, a selection of biographical photos, film notes by Fischinger and others, and a biography.

Link to buy Ten Films, Link to the Fischinger Archive

via Boing Boing

M/M, Chip Kidd, Peter Miles

Marieantoinette A refreshing, new film graphic sensibility is  taking over. The much needed shake-up of the established motion graphics studios is under way and we are all better off. Fewer layers of approvals means less opportunity to hit it with the ugly stick in an effort to save their middle-management jobs.

Not that I’ve ever experienced that…

Click here for a great slide show of the up and comers: http://www.iht.com/slideshows/2006/10/27/style/web.1030design30.php?index=0