from Le fond de l’air est rouge (1977) by Chris Marker
RIP Chris Marker
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Not saying, just saying.
omg, it’s uncanny…
Movie - Maximum Overdrive (Stephen King, 1986)
Stephen King stated that he was “coked out of [his] mind all through its production, and [he] really didn’t know what [he] was doing.”
Amedeo Modigliani (July 12, 1884 – January 24, 1920) was an Italian artist and hottie. In a tragedy, died at 35 from multiple causes and one day later his common-law wife Jeanne Hebuterne (then eight months pregnant) commited suicide from her despair.
lolololol
dead
ahahaha this might have made my morning.
*Dying*
After watching this movie, all I could think about was how I wanted some fried chicken.
This stupid fucking movie got a Best Picture nomination.
A Banned Hungarian Poster for SHAME
yeeeaahh… i’m just gonna go ahead and say that this may have crossed a line or two. not lines that go anywhere by me, for the record but… ya know. putting this next to the ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS: CHIPWRECKED stand-in might cause some trouble.
but yes, i’d tend to agree that by the time you’re ejaculating fully formed words that articulate your precise brand of inner pain… it’s probably time to seek help.
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Unknown Pleasures
Joy Division (Factory, 1979)
This was the first and only time that the band gave me something that they’d like for a cover. I went to see Rob Gretton, who managed them, and he gave me a folder of material, which contained the wave image from the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Astronomy. They gave me the title too but I didn’t hear the album. The wave pattern was so appropriate. It was from CP 1919, the first pulsar, so it’s likely that the graph emanated from Jodrell Bank, which is local to Manchester and Joy Division. And it’s both technical and sensual. It’s tight, like Stephen Morris’ drumming, but it’s also fluid: lots of people think it’s a heart beat. Having the title on the front just didn’t seem necessary. I asked Rob about it and, between us, we felt it wasn’t a cool thing to do. It was the post-punk moment and we were against overblown stardom. The band didn’t want to be pop stars
Closer
Joy Division (Factory, 1980)
Peter Saville: “This cover for the band’s second album was like a work of antiquity, but inside is a vinyl album, so it’s a postmodern juxtaposition of a contemporary work housed in the antique. At first, I didn’t believe the photo was an actual tomb but it’s really in a cemetery in Genoa. When Tony Wilson (Factory co-founder) told me Ian Curtis had died I said, ‘Tony, we have a tomb on the cover.’ There was great deliberation as to whether to continue with it. But the band, Ian included, had chosen the photograph. We did it in good faith and not in any post-tragedy way”
Blue Monday
New Order (Factory, 1983)
“I’d been to see the band in the studio and Stephen gave me a floppy disk to take home. I thought it was a beautiful object. At the time, computers were in offices, not art studios. The floppy disc informs the design and the colour coding was from my interest in aesthetics determined by machines. It reflected the hieroglyphic visual language of the machine world. For example, the numbers in your cheque book aren’t really for you, they’re for a machine to read. I don’t know if the story about the label losing money on the cost of the sleeve is true. I sent the cover straight to the printers because everyone was in a hurry. I doubt the printers even gave a quote for Factory to respond to. The band had handicapped themselves as no one was likely to play it on the radio because it was seven minutes long. Ironically it sold a lot, and with an expensive sleeve”
Power, Corruption & Lies
New Order (Factory, 1983)“The title seemed Machiavellian. So I went to the National Gallery looking for a Renaissance portrait of a dark prince. In the end, it was too obvious and I gave up for the day and bought some postcards from the shop. I was with my girlfriend at the time, who saw me holding a postcard of the Fantin-Latour painting of flowers and said, ‘You are not thinking of that for the cover?’ It was a wonderful idea. Flowers suggested the means by which power, corruption and lies infiltrate our lives. They’re seductive. Tony Wilson had to phone the gallery director for permission to use the image. In the course of the conversation, he said, ‘Sir, whose painting is it?’ To which the answer was, ‘It belongs to the people of Britain.’ Tony’s response was, ‘I believe the people want it.’ And the director said, ‘If you put it like that, Mr Wilson, I’m sure we can make an exception in this case’”
Some Criterion Collection infographic porn to start off the week from TDYLF.com
I
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Andrew Bacevich on American Power and Military Policy.