HEADLINE: At Ubu, Watch Michael Snow’s fantastic 2005 experimental film, Sshtoorrty.
(via experimentalcinema)
HEADLINE: At Ubu, Watch Michael Snow’s fantastic 2005 experimental film, Sshtoorrty.
(via experimentalcinema)
(via Video: Why Jurassic Park 3D Is Still a Must-Watch 20 Years Later | Motherboard)
I am so excited about this.
H/T to cameronr:
24 Hour Party People (Full Movie)
Just had the urge to watch this. Join me, won’t you.
(Source: youtube.com)
“Cinema is under assault,” Steven Soderbergh told an audience in San Francisco over the weekend. He said that the Hollywood studios are to blame and that moviegoers are their accomplices. “Fewer and fewer executives in the industry love movies,” Soderbergh continued, “There’s a total lack of leadership in my opinion, that’s what’s killing cinema.” The director’s remarks came at the San Francisco International Film Festival’s annual State of Cinema Address. It was a sort of Jerry Maguire memo, “Cinema is a specificity of vision. It’s as unique as a fingerprint. If it’s done well, you know exactly who made it,” Steven Soderbergh defined on Saturday, “Is there a difference between cinema and movies? If I ran team America, I’d say fuck ya. Cinema is something that is made, movies are seen.”
Soderbergh said that he needed $5 million to make his upcoming Liberace movie, Behind the Candelabra, which stars Michael Douglas as the famous piano player and Matt Damon as the musician’s lover. Yet he said that the studios needed the movie to gross $70 million to make it work financially. “No one has figured out how to lower the costs of marketing movies…no one,” Soderbergh said. “The thing that mystifies me is in terms of spending, is there anyone in the galaxy that doesn’t know Iron Man 2 is opening that weekend!?” He continued, ”Studios only gamble on openings instead of supporting filmmakers over the long haul. In my opinion, it’s about horses - not races.”
“Executives don’t get punished for making bombs the way filmmakers do,” Soderbergh charged, “So there’s no turnover with people who don’t know their own business.” “I’m spending so much time talking business and sexy math because this is what’s driving everything right now,” Soderbergh said. Yet he also sounded a few optimistic notes. So what would he do differently? “If I were running a studio, I’d get a Shane Carruth, a Barry Jenkins and an Amy Seimetz and ask ‘What do you wanna make?’” Soderbergh said, “I don’t think it’s unreasonable to expect someone running a multi-billion dollar business to be able to identify talent.” —The World According to Steven: Insights from Soderbergh
With thanks to Jacob Rosenberg
(via midmarauder)
Bob Dylan Subterranean Homesick Blues - A HAND LETTERING EXPERIENCE (by Leandro Senna)
Procrastination: Admitting You Have a Problem, and What to Do About It
In a quick, informative video, ASAP Science explains the complex balance of expectations and rewards that makes slacking off so addictive. The sooner we expect a reward, the more we value it — making an immediate payoff (surfing Facebook!) more exciting than a future payoff (acing a test!). Luckily, the video has some practical tips for avoiding this trap.
(via theatlantic)
Choir
2’ 40” - VHS - 2013 - courtesy Aaron Club (Matteo Cremonesi, Matteo Gatti)
(via bandeodorant)
Video: ‘Bound Unbound’ Traces Chinese Artist Lin Tianmiao’s 20-Year Progression
Contemporary Chinese artist Lin Tianmiao draws on personal experience and materials like thread and fabric to create dynamic, large-scale installations.
Read full story here.
The Science of Orgasms
The guys at AsapSCIENCE bring you some toe-curling, Meg Ryan-in-a-diner-esque, deity-invoking science. Here’s what’s going on behind the screams.
Because it’s the weekend!
(via brooklynmutt)
Then-CNN (now ABC News) correspondent Christiane Amanpour correctly predicted that Osama bin Laden was hiding in a villa inside Pakistan in an October 2008 taping of the HBO show “Real Time with Bill Maher.” [HBO]
(Source: matthewkeys, via brooklynmutt)
This is a video from 1982 about the ‘home video’ industry.
There is a big question about what effect all this home video stuff will have on movie-going in the future. Certainly there are movies like “Star Wars” that watching on your home television would be nothing like they will be if you see them in a nice theatre with a big screen and great sound system. But there are plenty of movies, like “Airplane” for instance, that are just as nice at home and when you consider taking the entire family, they can be a whole lot cheaper.
Joseph Beuys Filz TV (von WholeWorldIsWatching)