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June 04, 2008

Paint Your FACE with Nature

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This past week the silent movie theatre hosted a sneak peak viewing of the new  Lavender Diamond film "IMAGINE OUR LOVE".  The event was also a fundraiser to help bring the rest of the film to life.  Echo Park pal and creative visionary Becky Stark has been talking about this fantastic film idea for ages.  She asked me to take part countless times, but as soon as I hear the word "choreography" I slink away swiftly.  For those who may or may not already know, dancing is not my specialty.  Actually "rhythm" is not my pal either.  


According to the article posted below (Pitchfork):

"When we made the record [Imagine Our Love], I just wasn't satisfied with makingone video," Stark confides over the phone. "I wanted to make lots of videos of us dancing in costumes, and there's so many incredible people in my neighborhood, there's so many ladies, I just really wanted to make a video with lots of ladies dancing, with, you know, costumes. I also so much wanted to tell a story, create a mythology for younger people. We have a lot of kids who are like three and four who love our record. They've listened to it a million times. But it's not just a movie for three and four year olds!"

Instead, what began its life as a "gangster earth liberation fantasy with [songwriter and friend] Ariel Pink as the kidnapper" has evolved into a truly magisterial story involving "an interplanetary journey to visit the cosmic mother's council to get the wisdom for how to liberate the Earth." There's a real lavender diamond, a stint in jail, a rescue from a bail bond-settling "secretary angel bird," and a climactic trip to a Chinese gem factory. Scenes routinely explode into Busby Berkeley-esque musical extravaganzas.

Stark explains, "We just decided to stage these really incredible celebrations, you know, fantasies. I feel like there really needs to be more dancing, and full celebration. Especially with women. Because in order for the Earth to come back into balance, I think that there really needs to be a strengthening for all people, but really for the feminine element. For women to really become equal in the world and our society is really how the Earth is going to come back into balance."


51081.lavdiamond2 IMG_0506 IMG_0527 IMG_0545 IMG_0550 IMG_0571 IMG_0611 IMG_0633 IMG_0620 BID ON THE ART AUCTIONS to help them get fund their VISION: http://ImagineOurLove.uber.com/artauction 

February 24, 2008

pretty in punk

I've always loved the incredible work of fashion designer ZANDRA RHODES. She is a textile & construction genius. Her 60's debut rocked the runways while her 70's cut out feather dresses float and form works of art of your bedroom floor. Known as much for wild pink hair and color explosion ensembles, she has an adventurous fashion spirit that has always echoed true Punk. I just caught word that she also recently hosted some dinner parties at her penthouse, and there is a surreal film that captures the scene.
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"On Friday the 30th of November, the first of a series of online dinner party art films took place in Zandra Rhodes’ penthouse. Featuring Zandra herself, the dinner party discussion was led by Natt Weller, son of Paul Weller and included guests such as Marios Schwab, artist Andrew Logan, Bishi and Piers Atkinson (Daily Rubbish) amongst others.

Produced by Glass Loves, ‘Chapter 7: Eat Your Chiffon’ was shot by up and coming Photographer & Film Maker Ben Charles Edwards who ‘knows how to turn everyday scenarios into warped cartoon fantasy-lands on film.’ - Jodie Harsh.

Inspired by ‘Eat Your Make Up’ and Chapter 7 of ‘Alice in Wonderland’, the film has managed to capture raw discussion amongst the iconic guests whilst visually acting as an online art installation. The film is being released online in 3 parts in January 2008. Details are at www.glassloves.com

Stay tuned for the next chapter of iconic dinner parties featuring ‘very special’ surprise guests. To be announced shortly....

Make-up for ‘Chapter 7: Eat Your Chiffon’ was provided by James Molloy for M.A.C
Filmmaker www.bencharlesedwards.com

START watching go here:EAT Your Chiffon


For further information, please contact Michelle Arnusch – michelle@glassloves.com"
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November 09, 2007

Positive VIBES

The Dublab CREW arranged for the Benefit to be filmed back in OCT by Mike Benson.- so for those of you who may or may not have had a chance to venture out...here's the link on youtube (followed by a higher res link if needed)

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high res link: Hi-RESversion

For the record- here's a spoiler-----I look awful on film. ha ha. I also like when Frosty states that I am "completely out of my mind"

Lavender Diamond was featured this week on WEEDS- as Celia was bashing in her lover's office with a baseball bat, they played "YOU BROKE MY HEART" in the background.

*Don't forget tonight is the PAPER mag 24 HOUR dept store event- come out and see what the ladies are selling over at the SHOW PONY booth.

August 23, 2007

supergood


I went to see SUPER BAD last night at the VISTA theatre in Los Feliz and ran into just about everyone I know. I was surprised that the entire theatre was packed for a Tues.
I laughed out loud during most of the movie. Could've been because Mr. P. was practically squealing and choking on his own laughter. It reminded me of all those awkward moments growing up where you are trying to score some drinks via an older person at the 7-11. It also had sort of a WEIRD SCIENCE vibe between the friends. My opinion was defintely swayed by the cuteness of Michael Cera- the kid who played George Michael on Arrested Developement. He is truly hilarious in every uncomfortable moment. It's probably more of a "guy" movie as far as the sexual innuendo and such...but I'm silly so I give it a thumbs up

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August 21, 2007

What happened?

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I think a reviewer of the film SWEET MOVIE said it best..."what was director Dusan Makavejev smoking and where can I get some?"

Yesterday at the video store, a captivating DVD cover caught my eye. A doily headdress veil cascading over a naked woman in a ribbon chastity belt. Hmmm. What could this film be about?
My mind may never be the same.

I watched this, last night and again today. Yet still the phrase that rings in my head is "what's happening?"
I'm not sure if what I've witnessed is legal. What happened to the director, the writer to make this movie? How do you get to this place?

This movie makes Holy Mountain look like a Disney flick, seriously. Dusan Makavejev's SWEET MOVIE will stamp your brain with visuals from a cracked kaleidescope spinning feces, urine, candy, gynecological beauty pageants, food orgies, to a naked bodybuilder jumping rope. There are men drinking eachother's urine, an affair where the couple are locked in an orgasmic spasm and a girl zipped up into a suitcase heading for Paris. What!?

This surreal and bizarre film was created in 1974 and was meant to show the future 1984. It's been described as a "revolutionary Marxist sex comedy". Sweet Movie is still banned in many countries and actress Anna Prucnal was exiled from her native country Poland for seven years as a result of her role in the movie. She was denied a Visa to enter Poland to see her dying mother during that time. Whoa?


As for the plot (descibed like a collage) the film alternates between the sexual adventures of two women. The first is Miss Canada 1984 (Carole Laure), who, in addition to the her beauty crown, wins the right to marry Mr. Dollars, the richest man in the world. On the night of their honeymoon, Miss Canada is frightened by Dollars' golden penis, and flees his estate. But not before her new mother-in-law pushes her in a pool and attempts to keep her under. Miss Canada—begins the film as an innocent sweetheart and is slowly corrupted by a series of lecherous men, eventually folding herself into a sad fetal position.

The other lady is Anna Planeta (Anna Prucnal), who captains a steamboat with a large papier-mache head of Karl Marx on the front. She picks up a young sailor, and the two engage in a series of erotic adventures that involve beds of sugar and violent mishaps. Anna is later shown in one of the most alluring doily delights, a flimsy bow and magical veil, as well as tiny knit dainty gloves. She lures young boys aboard and seduces them with sugar and sex. These pedophilia moments depict her dancing around them and placing her lace undergarments across their faces. Eventually unzipping their pants in front of a large Karl Marx mural. The dirty ol man is always watching. Odd and surreal is an understatement here.

Yugoslav art-house provocateur Dusan Makavejev created this film about bourgeois complacency INSTEAD of taking Francis Ford Coppolla up on his offer to direct " Apocalypse Now ". Which I thought was pretty cool. Because as messed up as war movies are, nothing can prepare you for the shellshock "Sweet Movie" with deliver.

I think there is something to be said about the "overindulgance" of all of these pleasures. The movie ending with Miss Canada writhing in a massive bowl of chocolate-practically choking in it. Too much of anything is perhaps not always so sweet?

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Here's a cool pic of actress Carole Laure from the 70's
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and here she is today- STILL super sexy
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here's the cover for Dusan Makavejev's film WR:Mysteries of the Organism- created before Sweet Movie (this was the film that made Coppolla want him for Apocalypse Now
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July 25, 2007

Worth Spying on

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I have always had a fascination with Jane Birkin. Her stunning looks and incredible pout could stop traffic. Yesterday, after a good long period of crying, Miss Viv told me to turn the channel and watch WONDERWALL. The psychedelic SWINGING London film from 1968 was just what the Dr. ordered. I got lost in a blur of fab colors, fashion frenzy and soft soundtrack by George Harrison (my favorite Beatle).

I couldn't take my eyes of the screen. The quirky plot involves an eccentric but lovable scientist who forms an obsession with the girl next door. He creates a wonder wall full of peep holes in order to spy on the object of his affection. Set in 1960's London, Jane Birkin plays a fashion model named Penny Lane. A psychedelic fantasy that takes voyeurism to a new level. The treehouse like loft space is adorned with painted stars and silent movie posters. Wild wallpapers and magic stained glass panels drag the viewer into the absurd abyss. I was hoping to transport myself into that room somehow.
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June 26, 2007

FREAK-out dance Sequence

While laying around my place contemplating action, I noticed a 60's movie playing on my t.v.- without sound. When I finally put the volume up, it was this scene :
a rad 60's style girl is getting dosed with LSD - begins to seizure/ acid trip dance across the room while a bunch of men stare on. This dance sequence will go down in my history book as the BEST freakout EVER! I mean- she is wide eyed and wild and interepretative dancing to the max. Not since "And God Created Woman" with Bardot or Ally sheedy in Breakfast club has a dance convulsion looked so appealing. Her outfit is electric and the tension is thick. She later falls victim to a horrible gang rape. Which is not very good. Bad things happen when you hang with the wrong crowd. There are some eerie tripped out scenes where a random hippie girl just laughs and laughs while everything goes bad around her.

There's loads of great background details and drugged-out strangeness throughout this film. It sort of has a pulp bummer 50's morality schtick. The scene takes place on the infamous Sunset Strip. The Chocolate Watchband plays in concert in the film. "As for the title "Riot", it only lasts about four minutes - so it's a bit on the weak side.

The Chocolate Watchband (seriously one of the best names ever) play in this scene from the movie

it' s been playing on Showtime lately

June 14, 2007

strange magic- black moon

Talk about trippy...
at this moment I am hypnotized by the strange plot of BLACK MOON- a surreal film circa 1975. Based on the book, this bizarre film depicts an Alice in Wonderland like girl amidst a fantasy war between the men and the women. The young girl tries to escape this reality and comes to a hidden place where there is a talking unicorn in the yard, that scolds the girl- and screaming naked children that swarm at any moment. The unicorn has some witty dialogue. I should also mention there is an old woman that never leaves her bed but stays in contact with the world through her radio. Her classic line : [talking to someone over the radio] The girl? She just lost her bloomers and now she's eating the cheese. (she also talks with a rat)
The brother character is played by Joe Dallesandro- known for his role in Warhol's flick Flesh and as the model for (my favorite cover) The Smiths' debut album, The Smiths. A bit of trivia- he also was
immortalized in Lou Reed's song "Walk on the Wild Side". He's "Little Joe", the hustler referred to in the third verse.

Louis Malle has created an apocalyptic fantasy in Black Moon, Lily (Cathryn Harrison) soon finds herself in a alternate world full of non sequiturs and bizarre characters. Malle reportedly culled inspiration for the narrative of this film from his own dreams. This is one of those interesting films that fuels the imagination and makes even david Lynch blush. The cinematography is stunning!
Unsurprisingly, Black Moon was considered a failure upon its release. “Not enough Miles Davis!” bawled the mob still stuck on the elevator to the gallows.
But it's been said..." how can one not love the playful madness displayed on screen? "

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The film is better than acid.
try to check it out later this month: BLACK MOON will be showing a few more times on Flix this month (on June 25 at 3:45 am eastern, and on June 25 at 11:35 pm eastern), and on Showtime Beyond next month, so mark your calendar

May 24, 2007

Butterfly Girl: Susan Cianciolo

Thanks to my friend Liz (nogoodforme.com) for letting me know about the newly released film of Susan Cianciolo. As you all know, I adore all of Susan's projects. She is a true visionary.
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"1960s Butterfly Girl is a dreamlike meditation on the visionary fashion of designer Susan Cianciolo.
With its ethereal backdrop of the Malibu shore, 1960s Butterfly Girl examines the lines, forms, and colors not only in Cianciolo’s creations—but in nature itself. A mesmeric score by L.A. art-punk duo No Age propels the film, resulting in a spellbinding, occasionally voyeuristic ballet of art, sound, and natural beauty."

Conceived as a cinematic fashion show, “1960s Butterfly Girl” stars supermodel
Frankie Rayder and showcases Cianciolo’s latest couture collection, Queen of Hearts. In a
series of dreamlike sequences shot on the Malibu shore, Rayder reveals the extravagantly
hand-embroidered creations that Cianciolo says are inspired by the queens, kings, and
knights of the 1700s (including a piece constructed from textiles designed by Mike Mills). No
Age’s guitar-drenched yet ethereal score propels the film, resulting in a hypnotic ballet of art
and sound.

Produced by No Age guitarist Randy Randall and directed by Alisa Lipsitt, “1960s
Butterfly Girl” is the debut project from Randall and Lipsitt’s boutique production company,
Stacks and Layers (www.stacksandlayers.com). They are now working on a documentary
titled “A New York Thing,” featuring indie bands such as
First Nation and Soiled Mattress and the Springs.

Location (www.21mercerstreet.com) takes place June 4-11 at
21 Mercer Street in New York City. Future screenings of
“1960s Butterfly Girl,” which premiered in L.A. in March,
will be held internationally later this year.

If you are able to go and see it- in the Big Apple, PLEASE do so...for me.


April 04, 2007

Red State Banjo


I get really excited when I see young people doing creative things that my adult friends could never execute. There is something genius about a pre-adolescent deciding to start a band, or be a clothing designer etc...in this particular case I'm talking about a talented animator named Asher. He has created an entire website (since 2004!) which hosts short films- animated cartoons and videos utilizing his pals as character voices. There are sound effects and music which suit the work and an impressive amount of choices listed for viewing. You can find his site here:
http://peanutfoot.net
and then when you get to the page click on peanut foot ENTER HERE...and then click on FILMS. I started watching RED STATE Banjo.
When I was in middle school- I was playing with puppets. The closest thing I had to a computer was intellevision.
I imagine Mr. P would have a similar "RANTINGS" website when he was younger, check out Asher's rant journal here:
http://www.freewebs.com/ashersrants/rantings.htm
I don't think any of the participants are in H.S. yet...although they keep their actual ages a mystery and simply say they are between 0-100. I love a good mystery.

March 19, 2007

What's Hot?

if you love Mr. Ruffalo, and I know you must...
Don't forget to watch Bravo Monday night- because “Inside The Actors Studio” sits down with actor Mark Ruffalo Monday, March 19, 2007 @ 8 PM ET/PT. James Lipton follows Ruffalo's childhood and career discussing his career and craft, which has lead him to memorable roles on the screen and off. Lipton examines roles Ruffalo has taken on in films such as, “You Can Count On Me,” “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” and “13 Going on 30.” Ruffalo shares with the actors studio how his career-breaking success has made him remain true to his stage roots and how his life changed after he faced a serious health crisis. You can see sneak peek video of him on the Bravo.com site- and witness Mark saying the word "tongue" and "clitoris" in the same sentence. Wow. 262397markruffaloposters


March 08, 2007

Muppet Power

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Can't wait to see this new W magazine with Kirsten Dunst. She bought one of my paintings from a show I did at the Lather gallery. I remember I saw her at Swingers after that and introduced myself (after I had a few drinks-) and told her " You bought one of my paintings once" and she said "I did, and you look like one of the girls in your paintings." She was very sweet.

The new W features her on the cover and photos inside by Craig McDean. In her interview she uses her muppet voice and laugh on more than one occasion. She also admits to signing herself up for an art class. The class, which she describes as an intense, nine-to-six daily mixture of painting and drawing, is not for a role, just for her personal gratification.

"It's really about finding your style, rather than 'Hold the pencil like this,' " she adds. "I just need to learn the tools so that I can do the things that I want to do." She likes painting women, she says—mostly faces—and she explains she's inspired by portrait artists Karen Kilimnik and Elizabeth Peyton. "I wish my style was like theirs," she says, sighing.

I love their style too-

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February 17, 2007

BLUME in LOVE

Last night I had the pleasure of watching a Paul Mazursky movie I had never seen before. As most of you film buffs know- he is the legend behind one of my favorite films I LOVE YOU ALICE B. TOKLAS. IF you have never seen that one-by all means rush out and watch it. Anyway the film we watched last night was made in 1973 and titled BLUME in LOVE. It sort of continues with the themes in his movie BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE --and the idea of how to survive marriage in the heyday of hippies & the "me first" era. BLUME IN LOVE offers up the director's vision of divorce, love, and life in Los Angeles in the 1970s. The movie has that perfect dated 70's quality-( that I always love-) while still managing to be funny. I decided to write about it- mostly because I've seen this "man cheats on woman" plot in a bunch of films made today that fail. I had a recent rant session about why some of these relationship movies even get made. I mean did anyone leave the theatre after "The Last Kiss" or "Trust the Man" and feel like having a relationship? I felt like someone punched me in the stomach and left me lost on day three of a horrible breakup. WOW and what about "We Don't Live Here Anymore" that one hurts bad. Not even Mark Ruffalo's exposed behind made that one feel good. These movies offer something I don't even want to feel in real life-let alone while escaping to a film. Mazursky however is sort of a pro at this subject. In BLUME IN LOVE, Stephen Blume (George Segal) has fallen deeply in love with his ex-wife, Nina (Susan Anspach), but she has moved on and become involved with Elmo (singer-songwriter Kris Kristofferson), a groovy out-of-work musician. May I add here that I had never really understood the power of KRIS- until now. Whoa. The second Kris, circa 1973, enters the frame- I blushed. He has so much folky hippie sex appeal in this film with shirt unbuttoned to his navel. Ok, so of course Blume is jealous, begins obsessing about his ex and longs to have her back. He does everything from bring over breakfast bagels to pal around with Elmo and participate in sing-alongs.
The tagline on the poster is something like "A LOVE STORY FOR GUYS WHO CHEAT ON THEIR WIVES".
I'd like to think that this movie and Fatal Attraction put some fear out there.
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Kris from that same era- singing a duet with Rita Coolidge (on Youtube)
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The hippies and freaks waiting in the welfare room scene look like all the guys here in L.A. you may run into at a show at the ECHO...or riding around in Cindy's car.


January 06, 2007

something in the way he moves...

One of my oldest friends-is a film fanatic. She obsesses over film footage and often takes poloroids of her t.v. set in order to freeze interesting moments and use them in her artwork. I 'll never forget when she formed her fascination with the acting of Jennifer Connolly & Mark Ruffalo. I had seen him a few times in films, and she insisted I see "You can Count on Me". After watching it- I was hooked as well.

There is something so honest about his roles- so credible. In almost every movie you can believe he exists somewhere in the world as that character. You want him to be your neighbor, your brother, perhaps best pal.

The other night I watched "My Life Without Me"- featuring Mark as the lover of a woman who has recently discovered she has only two months left to live. He has a lonely sadness that compells viewers to watch the screen to see what he will say next. It doesn't hurt that he pretty handsome. The film is a real tear jerker, but worth crying through.
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(photos from movieweb.com)


He is also going to be starring in the new film ZODIAC-

Here is the latest trailer:
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Don't worry- this is merely an appreciation of work well done-
(Although my boyfriend is highly jealous of my starry eyes for mark)
He has a lovely model wife to match him.

December 30, 2006

after the holiday

Today was the best after holiday day ever. First pals Nina and David gave me the cool electric tea kettle I wanted. So now I can make tea in 35 seconds flat without forgetting the water is boiling. Then the mailman delivers a box from AMY Lou and Finn- with the best BOX set of DVD's from the Tennessee Williams collection. (Including my favorite movie BABYDOLL!)- which if you google my name you will find my name signed on a petition to make it a DVD . Then tonight Viv came by and gave me my Xmas gift- the Marie Antoinette Sofia Coppola book. What a day.

If you haven't seen BABYDOLL- Directed by Elia Kazan- you should rent it-- prepare yourself for the best sexual tension in a black and white film- you can almost feel the Mississippi heat and uncomfortable closeness. The film holds up in humor too. Very funny moments scattered about. Although the film was banned by the legion of decency-in 1956 for being to sexually suggestive- it is quite tame by todays standards.
Carol Baker was nominated for the best actress award that year. She was also the largest painted mural on Broadway- in an ad for the film she stared out sucking her thumb while laying in a baby crib.

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(images found at hollywoodpinup.com)

my favorite line: when asked how she knows a big word like arson... babydoll says

"I went to school in my day, and I'm a magazine reader."


November 21, 2006

Mr Altman Get's his Wings

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Oh, Mr Robert Altman- why did you have to go so soon?

R.I.P.

Amazing Director- film genius Robert Altman passed away Monday at age 81.
I credit this man with introducing me to the brilliant Bud Cort (M.A.S.H. and Brewster McCloud)
and for creating mylifelong crush on Elliot Gould-- and inviting me into dreamy ghost like scenarios --like those of Three Women and IMAGES. Susannah York in Images evokes all the creepy strangeness - that would make David Lynch envious.

The following is from writer Rick Lyman for NEW YORK TIMES:
"A risk-taker with a tendency toward mischief, Mr. Altman is perhaps best remembered for a run of masterly films — six in five years — that propelled him to the forefront of American directors and culminated in 1975 with what many regard as his greatest film, “Nashville,” a complex, character-filled drama told against the backdrop of a presidential primary.

They were free-wheeling, genre-bending films that captured the jaded disillusionment of the 70s. The best known was “MASH,” the 1970 comedy set in a field hospital during the Korean war but clearly aimed at antiwar sentiments engendered by Vietnam. Its success, both critically and at the box office, opened the way for Mr. Altman to pursue his ambitions.

In 1971 he took on the Western, making “McCabe and Mrs. Miller” with Warren Beatty and Julie Christie. In 1972, he dramatized a woman’s psychological disintegration in “Images,” starring Susannah York. In 1973, he tackled the private-eye genre with a somewhat loopy adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s “The Long Goodbye,” with the laid-back Elliott Gould playing Philip Marlowe as a 70s retro-hipster. And in 1974 he released two films, exploring gambling addiction in “California Split” and riffing on the Dust Bowl gangster saga with “Thieves Like Us.”

Unlike most directors whose flames burned brightest in the early 1970s — and frequently flickered out — Mr. Altman did not come to Hollywood from critical journals and newfangled film schools. He had had a long career in industrial films and television. In an era that celebrated fresh voices steeped in film history — young directors like Francis Ford Coppola, Peter Bogdanovich and Martin Scorsese — Mr. Altman was like their bohemian uncle, matching the young rebels in their skeptical disdain for the staid conventions of mainstream filmmaking and the establishment that supported it.

Many younger filmmakers continued to admire him as an uncompromising artist who held to his vision in the face of business pressures and who was unjustly overlooked by a film establishment grown fat on special effects and feel-good movies.

In his prime, Mr. Altman was celebrated for his ground-breaking use of multilayer soundtracks. An Altman film might offer a babble of voices competing for attention in crowded, smoky scenes. It was a kind of improvisation that offered a fresh verisimilitude to tired, stagey Hollywood genres.

He was often referred to as a cult director, and it rankled him. “What is a cult?” Mr. Altman said. “It just means not enough people to make a minority.”

The Breakthrough

The storyline had to do with a group of oversexed, booze-soaked Army doctors in a front-line hospital, specifically a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital. Fifteen directors had already turned the job down. But at 45, Mr. Altman signed on, and the movie, “MASH,” became his breakthrough.

Audiences particularly connected with the authority-bashing attitude of the film’s irreverent doctors, Hawkeye (Donald Sutherland) and Trapper John (Mr. Gould).

“The heroes are always on the side of decency and sanity; that’s why they’re contemptuous of the bureaucracy,” the critic Pauline Kael wrote in The New Yorker. “They are heroes because they are competent and sane and gallant, and in this insane situation their gallantry takes the form of scabrous comedy.”

The villains were not the Communist enemy but the marble-hearted military bureaucrats, personified by the pious Frank Burns (Robert Duvall) and the hypocritical Hot Lips Houlihan (Sally Kellerman).

The film was nominated for five Academy Awards, including one for best picture and one for Mr. Altman’s direction, and it won the Golden Palm, or Palme d’Or, the top award at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival, and the best picture of the year award of the National Society of Film Critics.

But it was denied the best-picture Oscar; that award went to “Patton.” Mr. Altman went on to receive four more Academy Award nominations for best director, and two more of producing two best picture nominees, “Nashville” and “Gosford Park.” The only Oscar he received, however, was an honorary one, in 2006.

Mr. Altman was angry that the lone Oscar given to “MASH” went to Ring Lardner Jr., who got sole screen credit for the script. Mr. Altman openly disparaged Mr. Lardner’s work, touching off one of his many feuds. Later, when Mr. Altman seemed unable to duplicate the mix of critical and box-office success that “MASH” had achieved, he grew almost disdainful of the film.

“ ‘MASH’ was a pretty good movie,” Mr. Altman said in an interview. “It wasn’t what 20th Century- Fox thought it was going to be. They almost, when they saw it, cut all the blood out. I fought with my life for that. The picture speaks for itself. It became popular because of the timing. Consequently, it’s considered important, but it’s no better or more important than any of the other films I’ve made.”

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October 25, 2006

Buttercup Blur and Dainty Desserts

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Pardon me, but I loved "Marie Antoinette". I know that I'm supposed to say it lacked real historical content, and that it depicted a superficial setting void of substance...but alas I was smitten. Of course I could dismiss Sofia as rich kid utilizing Daddy's money and prestige to make things happen- but hey- who am I to begrudge someone their inheritance? I know that people are going to say they loathed the soundtrack- the acting, the lack of a guillotine, and Kirsten's tell-tale smirk.
Maybe my love of confectionary tales makes me a valley girl easily amused-...so be it. I go to the movies to be transported someplace else. I want to disappear for a few hours and fall victim to magnificant colors and sounds. I want to run through fields of buttercup bliss in white sheer cotton gowns dripping in ribbons. Every tiny waist poured into an elaborate poof dress took my breath away. One after another each costume change more luscious than the last.
I felt myself get nauseous- as each new scene unfolded...from floral curtains to gilded harpsicords, striped satin chairs and crown molding gallore. I always wondered about that term "french blue" and after seeing room after room of crisp icing blue walls and gowns it became clear.
I suppose because I am an artist, I treasure things that make me want to paint. I could care less about any word muttered in a scene. Bring me instead rows of dainty desserts and shoes coated in bows and beads. Those details obliterate any flaws for me. It was as if Sofia dangled every delight in my face. This movie isn't going to entertain the masses, in fact it may bore them silly. I don't mind, I'll just rosy up my cheeks and try to make myself look like cake, maybe make a nest in my hair or don a sailing ship on my head for folly. Seems like she has made a diary entry "My sweet summer at Versailles"- I wasn't expecting her to lecture me on the french revolution. I know how the famous tale really ends- and am glad that Sofia spared me, and left me with a bittersweet ending instead.

p.s. Did I mention the lovely crush Marie Antoinette has for Swedish Count Alex von Fersen (Jamie Dornan-- and the sexy scene where they play hide and seek and end up making out dandy style in the grass--with the sweet sounds of Adam Ant in the background?


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things I may need to complete my fantasy folly:

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October 10, 2006

Running With Scissors

Seems like Oct 20th is the opening day for films drenched in fashion flair, like Marie Antoinette and Running With Scissors. I saw the trailor for Running With Scissors at the movie theatre a month ago and nearly fainted when they showed Evan Rachel Wood in her foot high platforms. She was the perfect LOLITA- made-up like a dolly part TAXI-Driver Jodie Foster- and part BIBA-. I can't wait to see the movie, just to see Miss Wood in her 70's get-ups and Gwynyth Paltrow in her even stranger costumes.
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According to the Yahoo plot synopsis:

Growing up in the 1970s, young Augusten (Joseph Cross) lives a middle-class existence with an alcoholic father (Alec Baldwin) and a bipolar mother (Annette Bening), an unpublished poet with delusions of becoming famous. When his parents divorce, Augusten's mother sends him to live with her wildly unorthodox psychiatrist, Dr. Finch (Brian Cox) and his eccentric extended family.

As Augusten unwittingly becomes part of the family, he descends into a kind of surreal childhood hell. Yet, he will also find optimism among the horror, hilarity in the insanity and even love amid the dilapidated ruins as he never loses his spirit or his resilience. Ultimately, Agusten will survive through the most extraordinary of circumstances.

Based on the personal memoirs of Augusten Burroughs.
remember this lovely ensemble?
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April 24, 2006

Score A direct hit...

Last night, we had the pleasure of meeting one of Greg's superstar actor friends. It's not often we get to watch the movie with the celebrity in the same room. That's right--the ROSS Berkson was in the Cantor theatre. You may remember him best for his debut role in John Hughes --Sixteen Candles. He was the "RAYGUN NERD #1" in the credits. Scene on the schoolbus when she is sitting with her girlfriend and two nerds with jockstraps shoot ray guns at them saying..."Score a direct hit". Classic 80's my friends.
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It terrified Ross and Greg that Cynthia and I knew every single line in the movie. It was cool to hear some of the trivia from the set- from our very own family room commentator.
Earlier in the evening we went out with best intentions to dine at our place in Monterey Park. Unfortunately we were too late and had to eat at some creepy Chinese substitute. I was a vegetarian for 14 years- who sometimes ate fish- but now perhaps I will have to wander into Vegan territory.

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I mean have you ever seen such sad faces? These guys look straight out of Finding Nemo trailor. I never knew my rock cod with black bean mung sauce looked so damn cute. I saw these two buddies huddled together right before our meal was served. Bummer

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Overall meal--poor. Cynthia was too ashamed to be photographed after eating all those salted shrimp faces

April 11, 2006

I love Leigh-Taylor Young

One of my all time favorite movies is "I LOVE YOU ALICE B. Toklas- made in 1968--starring Peter Sellers and screen debut of a young Leigh-Taylor Young. This comedy really stands up to the test of time and still packs a lot of laughs. Unfortunately they still haven't made it on DVD- (like all my other favorite films- Babydoll, Parenthood etc..)Album_04


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"Peter Sellers stars as Harold Fine, a self-described square--a 35-year-old Los Angeles Lawyer who is not looking forward to middle age and his upcoming wedding. His life changes, however, when he falls in love with Nancy, a free-spirited, innocent, and beautiful young hippie. After Harold and his family enjoy some of her "groovy" brownies, he decides to "drop out" with her and become a hippie too."
This film was the first for Leigh Taylor Young -who started out on the 1964 t.v. series Peyton Place. It's not hard to see why she was cast--
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here she is wearing the same jeans that James Dean wore in REbel Without a CAUSE.

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The original title for the movie was supposed to be Kiss the Butterfly- reference to her hippie tattoo. The tattoo for the movie was supposedly painted on by Andy Warhol

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She was also married to Ryan O'Neill at one point

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I met her once at a boutique opening --I approached her and told her how I loved her role in I Love You Alice B. Toklas and that the store she worked at in the movie was my dream boutique. I loved that they served groovy cookies and had a spiral stair case. I really did base the Show Pony on three places-- Paraphenalia in NYC- her shop in the movie--and BIBA . She looks amazing and still has the best smile and sweet demeanor

March 28, 2006

thanks for the tears

Well, on the advice of a a friend I rented The Squid and the Whale. To most movie watchers this may be easy to watch- However coming from the War of the Roses- Kramer vs. Kramer house in the 80's- this film broke my heart. I was practically crying from the minute the film started- before anything happened. Something about the year 1986- and the sibling dynamic- The two actors who play the sons are amazing. I was surprised to discover that Kevin Kline and Phoebe Cates are the parents of the youngest. He was perfect- as the torn up child of two divorcing parents. I just wanted to mention this movie for a moment-and try to wipe away my own memories before taking this decade long sorrow to the bed.
Oh - finally a movie to take the place of "Men Don't Leave" These things don't seem to get easier as you age. I still feel a bit cheated.Squidandthewhale


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March 24, 2006

DARLING

With a movie tagline that states..."Shame Shame, everybody knows your name." Darling delivers the shallow goods. Last night after happy hour with the girls, I watched the longest movie ever made. Maybe it isn't the longest but boy it sure felt like I lived through the entire 60's. Julie Christie is great as the amoral social climber who sleeps her way to the top. She is the superficial fashion model who is bored with everything and everyone- creating a nice "cold little film". There is the best classic line in the first half hour when Julie Christie (plays Diane) says:
"It should be so easy to be happy, shouldn't it? Should be the easiest thing in the world- I wonder why it isn't? Maybe it is"

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Although it has all the components of a great movie of the week- this movie has no real revelation. It did get Christie the oscar that year. She even beat out Julie Andrews for the Sound of Music! Christie does have a pretty brilliant performance as the tragic heroine. She is so selfish and dense that no life lessons are drawn. It's nice to see a movie portraying a woman with such a strong desire to get ahead that she abandons men with the blink of an eye. This carefree hedonism is shown in various scenes involving sexuality, homosexuality, age difference, infidelity, betrayal, pregnancy and abortion. To my surprise at one point, the pouty beauty rips off her clothes while walking from room to room eventually ending up naked in her Italian palace.

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Dirk Bogarde (from the Servant-) plays her second lover- with the best scene where he shouts at her about her infidelities. As they are walking down the street- (she thinking she has pulled one over on him) she wonders why he won't just get a taxi...he says "I don't get into taxi cabs with whores." Their argument is very modern- and emotional. Laurence Harvery (Domino was his daughter) plays the emotionally impotent lover who collects women like trophies for his shelf. He takes her to a great swinging 60's party scene that makes the movie if you ask me. - The party is sexy and creepy and spinning the audience around and around on an ectasy high.
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I found it interesting that near the end of the film she has moved up the shallow ladder so high that she becomes the English Princess married to an Italian Prince...making her name "Princess Di" with the unhappy younger woman married to an older man reference. Odd & tragic
I guess in real life Julie Christie dated my man Terrence STamp from the Collector. They dated in the mid 60's and their romance inspired the KINKS song...'Waterloo Sunset'.
I liked the film- it was slow moving- but had some memorable 60's scenes- definitely worth watching again for the hot Italian waiter she and her gay male friend seduce together. Seeing him in a.) his sailor top and white pants on the scooter B.) in his speedo trunks at the beach---
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March 20, 2006

Bittersweet Sunday

Perhaps it had something to do with sleeping in my clothes and then wearing them out again that made things start off on a sunday sad note.... I'm not quite certainLeogallery
The entire day carried a note of nostalgic sorrow. Even though I'm old enough to be over crushes I can't help staring at Mr Dicaprio in films, especially Romeo and Juliet. This marked his all time prime if you ask me. He is wearing open hawaiian tops and mesh metal bell sleeved tops through the most the film and a sardonic smile that suggests he has been some places. Hey I've admired him since his Growing Pains days. The kid is a good actor plain and simple. When he freaks out in This Boys Life on Deniro, kills the cricket in Gilbert Grape--etc... This movie captures that dreamy feeling of love when you're convinced no one else understands it- willing to fight for it-defend it and rightfully die for it. I watched this today and still hoped somehow it would end differently, like Shakespeare could be altered this once. Leo1
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The entire day seemed to be long and slow.
I wasn't sure where the day would take me-
I just wanted to be where these characters were, on a beach with carnival rides lit up by psychedelic firecrackers and making out. But something about the sadness of the story tainted my SundayLeo5
Later I decided to go to the Wiltern where David was working -- I felt like a heavy haze had been lifted.
The band Belle and Sebastian are a sweet band of 7- that embody all good things about music. They are part pop 60's band- Don Mclean "American Pie" 80's Devo dance movements- and cinematic symphony. Even if you didn't own any of their albums-you would love the sound and energy...
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Did I mention all the reasons they are to be fancied?
1. They are predominantly Scottish- English. Like my mother and her family from Glasgow
sexy accents
2. Have great seizure spaz dance moves on stage
3. According to Cynthia it's a good sign if there are more than two people in the audience you
would be willing to sleep with
(or two people in the band good enough to sleep with)
4. They love a good Wallmart adventure
5. They are good to the merch guy
6. Huge musical variety Xtravaganza on stage-

That last one especially good- ie...We saw numerous "indie" couples arm and arm during most of their songs sharing special moments. The closeness made me sort of sad- I kept envisioning how this music would be the perfect soundtrack to a new love embarking on a roadtrip or the backdrop for a dreamy daydream. Imagining this music as songs that will later force you into desperation and sorrow when the love dissolves. I'm not saying love is not permanent-just that sometimes the film starring you- has this type of music that breaks your heart anyways.
But the Wiltern is beyond amazing -gilded walls and starry painted art deco ceilings-
The place where the walls are practically whispering

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Check out the young fans as they gather up the bands set list from the stage...they are ecstatic and jealous of the one friend who snagged it first.
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Afterwards we wandered down to the basement where we saw some friends-and ate fruit and drank beer
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I ran into old friends Nelly and Christopher who tried to teach me how to take a "great" picture. I have not included the one we took together because I still was unable to master this method. Christopher (who dates the male model equivalent of a Kate Moss-) told me he takes Mick JAggers advice "Never look directly into the camera unless someone is paying you" Genius huh?
Anyway the best comment of the evening was Nelly telling me that she thinks I never age. She said "I've known this girl for like 8 years and she always looks the same age-she is like the Dorian Gray of Echo Park...let's hope she's not referring to me somehow selling my soul to stay youthful. I swear it's all that water I drink.
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Nelly and Christopher pretending to be a couple
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I like to call this one "DAVIDs on ghostfire" or check out da