Herzog Shot!!!

Image of Herzog and BearHerzog Shot!!! WFMU does it again: Herzog Article

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It Came From Celluloid: So Where Were the Spiders?

Hello. Guest poster Mikhail here with what could be a new column on Bava Tuesdays, “It Came From Celluloid,” where I’ll bring to your attention a connection between a movie or two and some manner of pop cultural artifact. For example, I might say a few words about Jim’s Sunday best, which consists entirely of the leather costumes seen in Bava’s Planet of the Vampires that Jim purchased at a Cinecitta tag sale. Ok, enough. Here goes number one.

British Director Michael Powell isn’t Mario Bava. And that’s ok. Let this be a Powell Tuesday for a change. This struck me as curious when I noticed it the other night: here’s a frame from the opening scene of Peeping Tom, Powell’s 1960 Freudian meditation on sadistic voyeurism (a la everybody’s favorite Brit psychobabbler, Laura Mulvey):

In a few moments, the prostitute on the right will fall victim to a camera bug serial killer with a tricked out Super 8. That’s him moving towards the center of the frame.

Ziggy album cover. Now here’s the cover image of David Bowie’s 1972 glam rock masterpiece, “The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.” In a few moments, the androgynous rocker in the lower center will begin making love with his ego.

I am by no means the first to notice the resemblance between the two images nor, for that matter, to read it as intertextual. In his book on David Bowie and the Ziggy album, prodigious music critic Mark Paytress comments on the experience of noting the similarity while watching Peeping Tom for the first time:

The credits roll. An eye blinks on the screen and the first scene is unveiled. It is … the cover of The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars. The film’s protagonist, Mark Lewis, approaches a prostitute, who is standing by a wall in a dimly lit street. Boxed debris fills the foreground, right-side. Up ahead, sandwiched between and above the darkened buildings, is the night sky. So the film has another fan, albeit one who, to my knowledge, has never declared his interest. . .

Ok, so what? Maybe David Bowie intentionally quoted Powell, maybe he didn’t. Let’s say he did. Does this further suggest that David Bowie is the coolest vertebrate on the planet or does it lend a bit more cool to a somewhat obscure film? Both?

Thanks, Jim, for inviting me to guest post.

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Hong Kong meets?

I just saw this video on WFMU: Beware the Blog (a new haunt for me with many a treasure) and I am not sure what to say about it. But this is a “b” blog, so I felt compelled to put it up … click on the image below to be taken directly to the video. (Note: Its a wmv file, so be sure you have a player.)

Download Title

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CGI Sharks

I just saw this cgi video on boingboing and I am pretty much blown away, the detail for a web transmission is amazing. Scanline Flowline (the German CGI artists) recreates water so convincingly that all I can say is, WOW! Have they figured out hair yet?
Image of Shark Mouth

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Movie List #1

Living in a small city with little, if nothing, happening has some untold benefits. Especially when you have access to an eclectic film library at your workplace. So, in an attempt to start chronicling one of my passions, I offer up the following list of films I have seen over the past week:
Planet of the Vampires Movie BoxPlanet of the Vampires, or Terrore nello spazio (1965), has been part of my return to Mario Bava as of late. This film is remarkable to me because it proves that vision and imagination is far more important than finances. Bava turns simple models into a psychedelic trip through outer space. The plot has two spaceships filled with the best-dressed astronauts ever (it is an Italian film, mind you) that land on a deserted planet to investigate the SOS transmission they have been monitoring. Turns out the planet is inhabited by formless beings that need to be hosted by foreign bodies in order to escape the limited resources that plague their planet (sounds remarkably similar to the plot of Ridley Scott’s Alien , no?). Moreover, the mist-filled planet seems to inform the aesthetic of Alien, creating a specular experience – perhaps born from limited resources – that realizes an abstract vision of space that opens up an imaginative element of cross-fertilizing scifi and horror (another benchmark used to celebrate Alien). I have more to say about this film, but for now let it suffice that the first 10 minutes alone are truly an experience to behold.

The Set-up Movie boxThe Set-Up (1949): Now this is a masterpiece! I watched the film and then the commentary by the director, Robert Wise, and Martin Scorsese. As Scorsese says,” the film is tough and lean like the boxers it portrays.” The film is 72 minutes long and takes place in real time (pre-dating the oft quoted example of High Noon) and the pacing is a remarkable feat of editing. Moreover, Robert Ryan, who I first experienced later on in his career in the The Wild Bunch, delivers a “knockout” performance (perhaps his own experience as a boxer is a plus in this regard). Nonetheless, the film is as efficient and effective a movie as I have ever seen, and it needs to be experienced … one remark – the plot leads up to the climactic fight within a run-down locker room which gives the audience a privileged perspective, allowing an in-depth look at the fighters as they mentally prepare themselves to box. Additionally, the violence that overcomes the crowd during the boxing scenes is directly quoted by Scorsese in Raging Bull – it is the art of film at its best!

Bay of Angels Movie PosterBay of Angels (Le baie des anges, 1963): Ever wanted to know why everyone thinks Jeanne Moreau is so brilliant? Me too, until I watched this film by Jacques Demy. Her performance is by far the highlight of this movie … her dialogue at times moves the immediate plot into a larger rumination of the position and possibility of humanity, and particularly women, within a world of practicality and convention. I wish I could quote her right now, but I can’t, so watch the film – and then report back to bavatuesdays about one of the most bizarre endings in French cinema. How do you interpret the way this film cuts and runs away from the unbelievable complexity it has traced throughout the picture? Does it end? Can it be chalked up to a modernist experiment in film a la Jean-Luc Godard? An arbitrary out? A sentimental release from the pain? What? See it!!!

Gun Crazy Movie posterGun Crazy (1948) originally titled Deadly is the Female, is an interesting film to write about after just having discussed Bay of Angels. The overt distrust and vilification of women in the 40s Noir is reassembled in many ways by Demy and re-focused on the mundane life of the average work-a-day citizen. Moreau’s character offers an escape from this logic.

In the Noir, and particularly Gun Crazy, the moral universe revolves around a return to normalcy and a re-enforcing of the man’s position of power. Yet, as with most overt attempts at restoring order, intentionality is never fully controllable making the power of women in the noir an irresistible force. For example, French films during the 50s and 60s continually quote, reference and re-frame the American films of the 40s for their raw examination of the underbelly of post-war America. Gun Crazy is just such a movie, for its relentless attempt to frame the leading man’s (played by John Dall) demise through his relationship with the “wrong woman” is continually undermined by the fact the Annie’s (played remarkably by Peggy Cummins) “immoral” desires are wrapped up as deeply with the historical factors shaping the moment as the film’s attempt to erase them! Additionally, the final scene in the swamp brings back memories of Planet of the Vampires– its amazing how concealing the image in film is so often much more visceral than revealing it. James Naremore has a 1001 interesting things to say about this film in his solid study of noir More than Night, not the least of which is that Gun Crazy was written by Dalton Trumbo under a pseudonym (perhaps the most famous of the Hollywood 10). You must see it!!!

Well, that’s all I have time for now, but that should give you some good things to ‘look at’ for a while …

P.S. – As you may or may not have noticed, three of the four films have not been discussed in Wikipedia just yet, so it looks like “me/we” have even more work to do- anyone want to join me in some dynamic encyclopedia writing?

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Blogs: the look of the future?

Figurine of GallahadMatthew Levine’s article “In Search of the Holy Grail” on A List Apart offers a straight-forward way to incorporate a three column layout for web designers with lean code, minimal CSS, and a consistent code order, heretofore a sloppy and difficult task. Levine makes a very interesting point in his article that is excerpted below:

Three columns. One fixed-width sidebar for your navigation, another for, say, your Google Ads or your Flickr photos and, as in a fancy truffle, a liquid center for the real substance. Its wide applicability in this golden age of blogging, along with its considerable difficulty, is what has earned the layout the title of Holy Grail.

His linking the importance of the three column layout with the blog suggests the immediate impact of this web-based publishing software’s digital format. The above lines may be read as an acknowledgment that the aesthetic of virtual space is, in many ways, adopting the blog as a prototype for the look, feel, and logic driving the web of tomorrow.

It is fascinating to witness blogs shape the virtual aesthetic in much the same ways that monolithic films like Metropolis, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Blade Runner formed our understanding of what the the future might look like at different moments throughout the last century. Are blogs, and other digital media like them, beginning to replace the importance of film in shaping our ability to imagine a futuristic aesthetic? – a reality further compounded by the fact that Hollywood’s production quality this year may be the worst ever? Well, there is always Hong Kong … and media blogs!!!

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Irfanview – who knew?

I discovered a program today that fits many of the class needs for HISP 463, and it begins with my favorite four letters: FREE!!! While setting up a scanner in the Simpson Library at UMW (which will be used to digitize the pictorial archives), Tim Newman, from Simpson Library, suggested I look into having the students use Irfanview. Picture of infranview icon Now, I have seen the little icon that looks like roadkill, but I never really associated it with the program irfanview. But I am sure that’s just me because according to Cnet– it is one of the most popular programs out there (over 10 million downloads recorded on their site).

That being the case, this program is a solid that the students can then download on their own (did I mention for free!) and use it on their own computers. And while acknowledging that this program cannot replace many of the more complex functions of Photoshop, it does have all the basic options of standard imaging software such as Photoshop Elements. For me, however, the real selling point is what Tim Newman explained to me at length: this program has the ability to write exif and IPTC file information directly to the image making it ideal for cataloging these files for the centennial. And, finally, guess what? – it is a PC program which means I do have to “eat crow” after today’s Windows bashing during the staff meeting and admit that perhaps the Windows is good for one thing, well two if you count Picasa2.

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Uncontrollable Urge to Sell-out!

Devo 2.0 bannerI was already deeply disappointed when I first heard that Devo was selling off song rights for two-bit commercials – something just seems lost when music you believed was critiquing mindless consumerism is being employed to hock a Twix! Below is a list excerpted from about.com regarding 80s music used in commercials (presented in About.com’s predictably insipid, “isn’t that great” logic):

Band
Song
Company
Devo Beautiful World Target
Devo Freedom of Choice Miller Domino
Devo Uncontrollable Urge Mitsubishi Galant Accident Avoidance Test 2004
Devo Whip It Gateway
Devo Whip It Twix
Devo Whip It Pringles
Devo It’s A Beautiful World Target CorporatioAA

According to about.com, even the Dead Kennedys’ “A Holiday in Cambodia” was the theme song for a Levi’s Dockers commercial (Jello Biafra and corporate America – strange bedfellows to say the least) -so, “hey kid, that’s life,” right?

Wrong- because this is what happens when bands shamelessly sell their work to the highest bidder …DEV2.0!

Warning: if you have even a modicum of respect for Devo and intend on preserving it, please don’t follow this link!

Thanks Mikhail (a precocious websurfer of thisevilempire.com fame!) who, after I complained how absurd this album was and how Mark Mothersbaugh is redefining the term sellout, said, “what if he knows it’s absurd and is having a good laugh about it?” I hate people who are circumspect!

Enjoy?

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James Harvey Dodd – a movie star?

Check this out, while searching Mary Washington on the internet archives I came up with a couple of gems, one from the 1940s and one from the 21st century:

Still from capitalism short film A group of teenagers on a high-school radio program discuss just what capitalism is, seizing onto the example of the butcher who supplies the weenies for their picnic. With Mickey Hugh (Ray Bennett); Franklyn Ferguson (John Howell). Educational Collaborator: James Harvey Dodd, Ph.D., Head, Department of Economics and Business Administration, Mary Washington College, University of Virginia.

Image of man with microphone from short film Capitalism

Additionally, to bring us up to date, check out the following podcasts from UMW @ CGPS (way to go, Lisa!):

This is an introduction to our podcast group. Our group consists of Instructional Technology students at the College of Graduate and Professional Studies at University of Mary Washington

And, as an added bonus, check out the wayback machine, allowing you to see how the web used to look, truly entertaining … check out the screenshot from MWC back in the day:

Image of MWC Website from 1997

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Look what the mouse dragged in …

The Library of Virginia’s Digital Image Archives have some really interesting photos online, check this one out of the student group called the MWC Calvary – and this one as well (there are many, many more like it). These may prove extremely useful for the students in the Historic Preservation Museum Lab class that are in the midst of researching and collecting archival documents for an online museum about the landscape and building history of the UMW/MWC (one tributary that has been generated from this already is student activities – and viola look what’s online). Moreover, additional information is available about the picture through the catalog, for example the second image has the following summary description in the record:

Subject: Photograph documents some of the various activities of the cavalry at Mary Washington College which at this time, was exclusively a women’s college. Pictured is Sergeant Nancy Mosher of Mendham, New Jersey getting a kiss from her horse “Susan Flagg.

Additionally, here is another image of the Mendel Museum that used to be in Trinkle Hall of MWC during the 1940s, and this image has 4 additional images that were all connected to the following article:

Subject: The September 1942 edition of the “The Commonwealth,” (Published by the Virginia State Chamber of Commerce), used this series of photograph to illustrate the essay “A Museum to Gregor Mendel” by Eileen Kramer Dodd, Professor of Psychology at Mary Washington College, (see: volume 9, number 9, pages 9- 12)

Needless, to say the images in the digital library may prove an extremely rich avenue for the online portion of the exhibit. Now we have to look into permissions, specifically what is the Library of Virginia’s licensing policy for an online exhibit. It’s extremely helpful how images and texts are directly linked in this archive giving the researcher a specific context to frame their information – now that is something UMW should consider when digitizing the library’s archival holdings

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