The Sum Of All Fears March 31, 2008
Posted by fmk in Film Diary.Tags: Ben Affleck, Bridget Moynahan, Bruce McGill, Ciarán Hinds, James Cromwell, John Beasley, Ken Jenkins, Liev Schreiber, Mace Neufeld, Morgan Freeman, Philip Akin, Philip Baker Hall, Ron Rifkin, Tom Clancy
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Pathetic attempt to reboot the Jack Ryan franchise.
Sky Captain And The World Of Tomorrow March 30, 2008
Posted by fmk in Film Diary.Tags: Angelina Jolie, Giovanni Ribisi, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jude Law, Laurence Olivier, Michael Gambon, Omid Djalili
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On the one hand, you have to admire the effort. On the other hand, it’s a heap of shit.
Covers Story 3.2 – Torn March 30, 2008
Posted by fmk in Covers Story.Tags: Ednaswap, Lise Sørensen
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Denmark’s Lise Sørensen covers the Ednaswap song, here retitled Brændt.
Covers Story 3.1 – Torn March 30, 2008
Posted by fmk in Covers Story.Tags: David Armand, Ednaswap, Natalie Imbruglia
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Two covers for the price of one.
Something silly I love about this is how a simple four-minute pop song is played out as a three-act play. You’ve got the first minute-and-a-half of Armand on his own, playing to a soundtrack. Then you see it’s Imbruglia singing live. After another minute-and-a-quarter, you get the final punch, with her joining in the mime.
OK, so it’s not Chekhov, but it works. For me anyway.
Covers Story 2.4 – Across The Universe March 29, 2008
Posted by fmk in Covers Story.Tags: Roger Waters, The Beatles
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Covers Story 2.3 – Across The Universe March 29, 2008
Posted by fmk in Covers Story.Tags: Rufus Wainright, The Beatles
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Rufus … I just don’t get your popularity.
Covers Story 2.2 – Across The Universe March 29, 2008
Posted by fmk in Covers Story.Tags: Fiona Apple, The Beatles
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Ah, Fiona Apple. Such a frugivorous singer. We’ll have to have more of her around here.
Covers Story 2.1 – Across The Universe March 29, 2008
Posted by fmk in Covers Story.Tags: Laibach, The Beatles
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Formed in the former Yugoslavia in the year that Tito died, Laibach took their name from the German version of Slovenia’s capital, Ljubljana, last used during the German occupation in WWII. In 1983 they were banned from using the name but rather than changing it they simply dropped it, temporarily, replacing it with a black cross and continued on. It was not until 1987 that they could perform officially under their own name in Ljubljana.
After the ban was imposed, they formed the Neue Slowenische Kunst (New Slovene Art) collective, incorporating New Collectivism Design Studio and a Department of Pure and Applied Philosophy. NSK ultimately became a virtual State in Time, without borders, issuing its own passports and opening embassies and consulates around the world, from Bejing to Berlin and Moscow to Sarajevo.
Pop-psycholgist Slavoj Žižek leapt to the band’s defence with a Lacanian analyses of the true subversive value of their artistic statements. He offered a view that Laibach’s dalliance with the trappings of totalitarian ritual frustrated the system through over-identification with it. He also argued that Laibach were acting in a psychoanalytical fashion, not providing the listener(/patient) with easy answers, but forcing them to be found within. Žižek, whose writings encompass the critiques of the movies of Alfred Hitchcock and David Lynch as well advertising copy for homoerotic haberdasherers Abercrombie and Fitch, became heavily involved with Laibach, appearing on stage with them and participating in a number of other projects.
This track is taken from their Let It Be album, which is what you’d guess it to be – a cover of The Beatles Let It Be album, minus the title track. In recording the album, Laibach turned songs forever associated with the disintegration of pop’s first supergroup into a statement about the disintegration of Yugoslavia. In not recording the title track, the band were making their clearest political statement. Don’t let it be.
Apollo 13 March 29, 2008
Posted by fmk in Film Diary.Tags: Ed Harris, Gary Sinise, Joe Spano, John Sayles, Kevin Bacon, Loren Dean, Ron Haward, Tom Hanks
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NASA propaganda.
Covers Story 1.2 – Oops! … I Did It Again March 28, 2008
Posted by fmk in Covers Story.Tags: Britney Spears, Richard Thompson
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Taken from the former Fairport Conventioner’s 1,000 Years of Popular Music album.
Thompson says that the idea for the project came in 1999 when Playboy Magazine asked him to submit a list of the ten greatest songs of the Millenium: “Hah! I thought, hypocrites – they don’t mean millennium, they mean twenty years – I’ll call their bluff and do a real thousand-year selection.” Which he did, starting in about 1068 and running right up to 2001. Playboy, alas, didn’t run anything from his submission. So Thompson turned the idea into a series of shows and a CD.
The idea that music as popular as Britney Spear’s Oops! … I Did It Again can be classed as classic is probably anathema to many people. I mean, it’s Britney Spears, she’s just soooo yeugh, and this is just plastic pop for a disposable generation, right? Wrong. Listen to what Thompson does to the song after he takes it from pop’s dustbin and … well, decide for yourself. But if you still think this is a disposable pop ditty then I think you’re missing something. Something big. And you’re banned from reading this blog.