1: When I was in middle school, I went through this feminist streak where I refused to cook. But after I saw everyone praising my younger brother for the food he made, I got jealous and have loved cooking ever since.
2: I've never read the Harry Potter books. Too busy with Lord of the Rings and The Prydain Chronicles.
3:I would love to have a big, old house from the 1800's with a library with one of those ladders on wheels that rolls around the book shelves.
4: I have a very strong affection for rassberries.
5: When I was little, I believed that Darth Vader lived in my closet.
6: i also believed that the Vietnam War was fought by Vietnamese elephants on Lake Minnetonka in Minnesota. I can thank my uncle for that one...
7: I've always wanted ruby slippers.
8: I always carry a notebook and pen.
Thursday, May 31, 2007
Casino Royale
Normally I'm not an advocate of James Bond. As alluring as he can be, every single one of his films loses me once he starts rolling into bed with women named such things as Pussy Galore or Honey Ryder. But Casino Royale, despite it's flaws, is a stunning film. The cinematography is incredible....it's stark, yet rich, incorporating lots of high-exposure, light drenched shots in with the more moody settings you'd expect. When Bond is whiping the blood off of his face after killing a man, the frantic, shaking camera angles do as much to propel the story along as the acting. The movie opens in harsh black and white, more like moving, artistic mug shots than traditional black-and-white-films. But the scene that will stick with me the most was, in my opinion, sheer brilliance. Bond comes to check on his partner, Vesper Lynd, after they've just killed a man. He finds her sitting in the shower, still in her evening gown, silently crying over the thing she has just done. Bond simply sits in the shower with her and holds her. It was such a wonderful moment. It's moments like that that make great movies.
Labels:
classic film,
film review,
photography,
pop culture
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
POTC: At World's End Soundtrack
Illustration
Photography
Normally, I'm not into Vogue. Too stuffy. But the photographs of Keira Knightley in this issue are stunning. Even though the thought of wearing couture on safari is absurd.
Labels:
actresses,
photography,
pictures,
poetry,
world
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Coming Soon...
"It's scary to put yourself in a situation where you feel like you should feel something, because you feel that if you don't feel that something that you really should have felt it and something just went terribly, horribly, unbeleivably wrong."
-Line From An Upcoming Screenplay
-Line From An Upcoming Screenplay
Friday, May 11, 2007
Matisse
Monday, May 07, 2007
Faerie Tale Theatre
This show was one of the defining elements of my childhood and inspires me to this day in my work. Faerie Tale Theatre was a television program that would take a different fairy-tale each week and let a different director and celebrity cast transform it into a play-like story. Sometimes the stories were comedic (like in "The Frog Prince" or "The Princess and the Pea",) sometimes they were lyrical and poetic ("The Nightingale" "The Snow Queen"), or frightening ("The Boy Who Left Home To Find Out About the Shivers" "Beauty and the Beast"), or just plain corny ("Thumbelina".) These one-hour shows intruduced me to the work of artists I wouldn't have otherwise been exposed to at such a young age, like Francis Ford Coppola, Tim Burton, Helen Mirren, David Bowie, James Earle Jones, Matthew Broderick, Angelica Huston, Billy Crystal, and Christopher Lee. These directors, actors and writers didn't treat fairy tales as something just for children (a la Disney,) but rather as wonderful adventures in their own right that the whole family could enjoy. Their enthusiasm inspired me even at the age of five to put my own spin on the stories that I heard, and so I started to create stories of my own (which I would act out with the neighborhood kids on my back porch.) Even to this day, my work is influenced greatly by folk tales and legends. The stories that we tell as a culture defines who we are. But the way each of us individually interprets these stories defones who we will become.
Some favorite Faerie Tales Theatre Quotes:
Cinderella: Do you know anything about kissing?
Prince Charming: I'm almost certain it has something to do with the lips.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Prince: I need something warm and soft and gentle...like a hamster!
Fool: I think what you mean is a wife.
Prince: A wife? Is that better than a hamster?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Narrator: ...the prince was thrown into the dungeon and the princess was sent to a very strict boarding school, where she was forced to learn latin and play hockey.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Friday, May 04, 2007
Mythbusters
This show is completely fascinating. The cast takes "urban legends" and conducts experiments to determine their plausibility. Some of the myths they've tackled? "Is driving with a cell phone the same as driving drunk?" "Is the brace position really designed to kill you?" "Can you wipe a credit card with an electric eel?" The show is hilarious and creative. I would totally love to intern with the Discovery Channel.
Wednesday, May 02, 2007
Impact
It's funny how sometimes things that we think don't impact us really do. This past summer one of my film teachers at Interlochen told me to see the movie "A Room With a View", because she thought I'd really like it. However,a certain scene in the movie involving very much NOT dressed guys frolicing in the woods wiped from my mind any good associations I had with the film (and caused my brother to laugh uncontrollably.) But as I was working on my current film project, I remembered some of the other witty (non-nude) moments in the film and they inspired aspects of my own project. It's funny how stuff like that happens. And here I thought that "A Room With A View" was just a movie with a bit too much of a "view."
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
Good Taste/Bad Taste
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