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~ the esoteric side of music, film & media

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Category Archives: Film

Aesthetics after 9/11

17 Monday Sep 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Film, Media, Politics

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9/11, Aesthetics, Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu

This essay by Mark Dery over at The Savage Eye is an excellent treatise on how the nature of aesthetics has changed in media post-9/11.

The reflexive habit — reflexive, at least, in these United States — of falling back on the mythic languages of Hollywood and Madison Avenue when we’re narrating our lives is a fact of life in the Society of the Spectacle. In his essay “This is Not a Movie,” the New Yorker critic Anthony Lane noted TV commentators’ tendency, on 9/11, to resort “to a phrase book culled from cinema: ‘It was like a movie.’ ‘It was like Independence Day.’‘It was like Die Hard.’ ‘No, Die Hard 2.’ ‘Armageddon.’”

Apparently, even the severe-clear horrors of 9/11 weren’t immune to the Stepfordization all around us — the replacement of the immediate by the mediated, the physical thing by its filmic image. Reversing the polarities of the real and the fake gives Americans a big, fat, Baudrillardian migraine because, while European philosophers seem to think of the United States as Disneyland with the death penalty, we pay lip service, at least, to the primacy of hard fact and harbor a romantic attachment to authenticity. (Umberto Eco maintains that our longstanding love affair with the simulacrum — Disneyland, Forest Lawn, Las Vegas — is borne, paradoxically, of the fact that “the American imagination demands the real thing and, to attain it, must fabricate the absolute fake.”

Read more at The Savage Eye. [via Boing Boing]

The essay immediately brought my thoughts to Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu’s Mexico portion of the 2002 international response film 11’09″01, which is a very powerful and disturbing short. I’m going to embed it here, but be forewarned that it’s not exactly entertainment viewing. (It’s also mostly sound, so if the screen is black, that’s on purpose.)

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Geoff Dyer’s Zona, 20 Jazz Funk Greats & pneumonia

02 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Film, Music

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Drew Daniel, Geoff Dyer, Stalker, Tarkovsky, Throbbing Gristle

So, I had pneumonia last week. I thought that I’d get all sorts of work done while I was stuck at home, but basically had zero energy for anything aside from reading and TV. Even videogames were too much. :(

For some reason, this lack of hand-eye motor skills meant that I ended up reading criticism for a bit, specifically Geoff Dyer’s new book Zona exploring Tarkovsky’s Stalker, and Drew Daniel’s 33 1/2 entry on Throbbing Gristle’s classic record 20 Jazz Funk Greats. Both Stalker and Throbbing Gristle were pretty important to me growing up, and I’d been really looking forward both of these books.

I first encountered Stalker at a friend’s house when I was a teen. He was a trash horror filmmaker and musician, and one day when I dropped by his place there was this amazing film playing on his TV, full of Russian angst, beautiful industrial landscapes and mystery. I’ve long since forgotten why I was there that day, but I’ve never lost the 20 minutes or so of Stalker that I saw there.

Since then, the film has become one of my favorites, a true desert island pick, and Dyer’s Zona (full, incredibly appropriate title – Zona: A Book About A Film About A Journey To A Room) is the book that Stalker has always deserved. Geoff Dyer is a great writer, and not only is his discussion of Stalker both informative and personal, it is also extremely entertaining and often very funny; something that’s not the easiest thing to do when discussing Tarkovsky and a film like Stalker, which isn’t exactly a laugh fest.

Similarly, Drew Daniel’s 33 1/2 entry on 20 Jazz Funk Greats was equally entertaining and informative, diving into the minutiae and cultural impact of an album that I’ve always enjoyed. Drew is one half of Matmos and has both the musical knowledge and cultural background to really dig into his subject, which, when combined with extensive first person recollections from the band, allows him to document and make vital a record that generally wouldn’t be considered TG’s most important.

I was exposed to Throbbing Gristle and the rest of the early industrial scene at a very young age, and bands like TG and Einstürzende Neubauten have been (and are!) extremely influential to me. I’ve always had a soft spot for 20 Jazz Funk Greats, and I really enjoyed this. Plus, listening to the record at full volume while zoned out on medication was somewhat appropriate, especially Walkabout.

Both of these books are superlative and entertaining bits of criticism, and like pretty much most else I mention here, I highly recommend them. They are available via fine booksellers everywhere.

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R.I.P. Moebius (a bit late)

15 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Film, Media, SF

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Comics, Heavy Metal, Jean Giraud, Moebius, Science Fiction

 Earlier this week, incredible comic artist and creator Jean Giraud (more commonly known as Moebius to us SF people) passed away. Moebius was extremely influential to the visual aesthetics of science fiction throughout the 70′s and 80′s, and was a founding member of Métal Hurlant (Heavy Metal to us Westerners.)

For me, Moebius and Heavy Metal were an oasis of transgression and innovative art in the wasteland that was most of the 80′s comics scene. The Heavy Metal film played every Saturday night at the Dream Theater in Monterey when I was a teen, and cheesy as the content was, I always loved the art style of the penultimate Taarna sequence which was based on Moebius’ Arzach stories.

The Sony Metreon in San Francisco featured a lovely video game arcade designed by Moebius and based on his Airtight Garage comic. L and I used to always try to make time to play a few games there when we would go there to see films and while the Metreon is kind of dilapidated and Target-infested now, definitely stop by if you happen to be in downtown SF sometime, if only to check out the design.

Tor.com’s Tim Maughan has a much more extensive and thoughtful overview of Moebius and his influence on SF culture over the last 40 years here. I highly recommend reading it.

#Moebius #nmfs_s12 #JeanGiraud #HeavyMetal

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TEDxBerkeley 2012 – filmmaking, robotics & new media

05 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Education, Film, Media, Science, TEDx

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Ken Goldberg, nmfs_s12, TED, TEDxBerkeley, Tiffany Shlain

I occasionally act as the live video producer for various local TEDx* events. A few weeks ago, I worked on the TEDxBerkeley 2012 show and the organizers just posted the videos (which I edited as well). While the whole show is worth watching, here are a couple of my favorites – Tiffany Shlain, filmmaker and founder of the Webby Awards, and Ken Goldberg, a Cal professor working with Robotics & New Media.

Tiffany Shlain has had a pretty fascinating and inspiring career path, and as a filmmaker, her work with found footage cleaves close to my aesthetic heart. She’s currently doing some very documentary work leveraging new media and communications, and her talk is super interesting!

 

Ken Goldberg is a great speaker, and his research is totally nifty and cutting edge. His work is extensive and explores everything from medical robotics, augmented reality and the nature of the intersection between the virtual and the real. I thought about tagging his talk as SF, but that would almost diminish it. Watch it!

 

* TEDx events are independently organized conferences that mirror the format and style of the main TED event under license, and they are generally a ton of fun. This was my third year working with TEDxBerkeley, and I’ve also produced video for TEDxYouth-Castilleja, TEDxSiliconValley and TEDxSanJoseCA, all on a volunteer basis.

#nmfs_s12 #TEDxBerkeley #TED #Tiffany Shlain #Ken Goldberg

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Die Antwoord. SF. Tomorrow.

21 Tuesday Feb 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Film, Music

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South African hip-hop/rave artists Die Antwoord is playing in SF tomorrow night at the Regency. L and I are pretty big fans, and we’ll be there. These links are somewhat NSFW unless you work someplace that tolerates weird performance art.

Die Antwoord (Ninja, Yolandi & DJ Hi-Tek) refer to themselves as zef rap-rave. Zef is a term derived from the Afrikaans word for “common” and is a South African counter-culture that’s a melange of modern and trashy elements with a lot of references to out-dated style and pop culture (according to DA, who are the main disseminators of Zef culture outside of South Africa.)

Aside from their style, I really dig the musical references to classic rave culture. I’ve always been a sucker for some techno. Le boom boom muziq.

Their first record, $O$, was self released via the interwebs and got a lot of exposure via the Enter The Ninja video (linked at top) and others. Initially, there was quite a bit of speculation as to whether or not they were just a performance art joke or a real band, but at this point I think we can say definitively that if it is just a prank, they’re at least very serious about their art since they’ve been doing it for a few years now.

Interscope picked them up and released a remastered version of $O$, but when it came time for their second record, Ten$ion, Interscope wanted them to tone the material down. Instead of backing down, DA reportedly returned a large cash advance they’d been given and have released the record on their own label (which is probably a good move financially), and is available at dieantwoord.com.

They also did a film with Harmony Korine last year, which is somewhat appropriate.

The show is sold out (sorry!) and I can’t wait.

#nmfs_s12 #dieantwoord #harmonykorine

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Werner Herzog on Chickens

15 Wednesday Feb 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Film, Media

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L linked me this video the other day. I love me some Werner.

I’ve always been a big fan of Herzog’s work, and as a filmmaker was especially affected by his documentary Lessons of Darkness, which abstracts and decontextualizes the aftermath of the first Gulf conflict and the resulting Kuwaiti oil field fires from an alien perspective. Much like Edward Burtynsky’s photography, by the process of creating abstract beauty from environmental catastrophe Herzog is able to bring the reality of the situation to the viewer without the disassociation that the Western news media is often guilty of. Link below, but ignore the music.

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