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The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Seijun Suzuki Day *

* (restored)

 

“To experience a film by Japanese B-movie visionary Seijun Suzuki is to experience Japanese cinema in all its frenzied, voluptuous excess.” — Manohla Dargis

‘In a career spanning nearly five decades, Seijun Suzuki amassed a body of work ranging from B-movie potboilers to beguiling metaphysical mysteries. On the occasion of the publication of Tom Vick’s new book Time and Place are Nonsense: The Films of Seijun Suzuki, the Film Society presents a retrospective of Suzuki’s films, ranging from his greatest hits to a selection of seldom-seen rarities.

‘Suzuki first became famous when he was fired by Nikkatsu Studios for making films that, as he put it, “made no sense and made no money.” But it was his freewheeling approach and audacious experimentation that gained Suzuki a cult following in Japan and abroad. Suzuki’s job at Nikkatsu was to make B movies out of scripts that were assigned to him. In the mid-1960s, with dozens such films under his belt, Suzuki’s restlessness began to come through as he and his collaborators, art director Takeo Kimura and cinematographers Shigeyoshi Mine and Kazue Nagatsuka, began experimenting with the assigned material. These films established Suzuki as a stylistic innovator working within—and rebelling against—the commercial constraints of B-movie studio work.

‘In the 1980s, Suzuki reinvented himself as an independent filmmaker. Freed from the commercial obligations of studio work, he elected to indulge his passion for the Taisho era (1912–26), a brief period of Japanese history that has been likened to Europe’s Belle Époque and America’s Roaring Twenties. Though not linked by plot, these three films—Zigeunerweisen, Kagero-za, and Yumeji—embody the hedonistic cultural atmosphere, blend of Eastern and Western art and fashion, and political extremes of the 1920s, infused with Suzuki’s own eccentric vision of the time

‘In the 1990s, a traveling retrospective brought long-overdue attention to Suzuki’s films in the United States and Europe. A new generation of devotees, most notably Jim Jarmusch and Quentin Tarantino, praised Suzuki in the press and referenced his work in their films. Perhaps inspired by this newfound attention, Suzuki returned to filmmaking after another decade-long absence, making two films—Pistol Opera and Princess Raccoon—that look back on his career while advancing it with new technology.’ — Film Inc.

 

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Stills










































































 

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Further

Seijun Suzuki @ IMDb
SS @ The Criterion Collection
Action and Anarchy: The Films of Seijun Suzuki
SS @ MUBI
SS @ Letterboxd
SS @ Senses of Cinema
Seijun Suzuki obituary
From Genre Flick to Art Film: Seijun Suzuki’s Branded to Kill and Pistol Opera
Time and Place Are Nonsense: The Films of Seijun Suzuki
Goodbye, Seijun Suzuki
SEIJUN SUZUKI (1923–2017)
Seijun Suzuki, Director Of Delirious Thrillers, Dies At Age 93
The Anarchic Japanese Auteur Who Inspired Quentin Tarantino and Jim Jarmusch
An introductory guide into the world of Seijun Suzuki films
BRANDED TO KILL: JAPANESE CULT DIRECTOR SEIJUN SUZUKI’S DEEPEST CUTS
Seijun Suzuki, an Absurdist Auteur in Hired-Gun Clothing
THE ANTI-COMMERCIAL ODYSSEY OF SEIJUN SUZUKI’S TAISHO TRILOGY
An Ecstatic Legacy: The Psychedelic Noir of Seijun Suzuki
Losing the Plot in the Films of Seijun Suzuki
Rep Diary: Seijun Suzuki
The Visionary Nonsense (and Sneaky Emotion) of Seijun Suzuki
The Silencing of Seijun Suzuki

 

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Extra


An interview with Suzuki Seijun

 

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Interview

 

What kind of attraction does the action genre, or more specifically the yakuza genre, hold for you?

It’s not really the genre I’m interested in, but the character of the yakuza or a killer. They wander between life and death. As a character they are more interesting than normal people. They live very near death, so we can describe how they die, where they die, and when they die. You have a wider range of possibilities than you otherwise would if you were depicting a normal person.

That reminds of what one director once told me about his reason for making gangster films. He said that gangsters’ lives are more intense, because their lives are so short. You’re able to show the whole range of human emotion in a shorter period of time and in a more extreme way than with regular people.

I think more simple than that. (laughs)

The visuals in your films are often described as, or compared to, pop art. Do you feel any kind of connection with pop art or any other artistic or aesthetic movement?

When I shoot a film, I often look at pictures, drawings and paintings. Not just pop art, but Japanese pictures as well. The reason is because I want to see the form of these pictures, especially in their depiction of women. I don’t really understand why it’s called pop art in my case. Maybe the result of this way of working turns out to be pop art, but I don’t intend to make it that. It just turns out to be like pop art.

To be honest, the choice of colours and such, there isn’t much significance to them. Generally, a movie is composed of many elements that make a strong impression on the viewer. I call them tricks. I think colour is one of those tricks.

How did you enjoy working with CGI? Those moments fit in very well, their artificial nature mixes well with your visual approach.

I believe that a movie is a handmade thing, so I don’t like new technology so much. If you create a colour on the set, it looks very nice, but if you make it afterwards by computer, then for me it’s something fake. But I’ve experienced for the first time on this film that computer technology can actually be quite useful.

The use of Cinemascope is very typical of your films from the 1960s. So why did you decide to shoot Pistol Opera in the 1.33:1 (or 4:3) ratio? That’s hardly done these days anymore.

It was the idea of the director of photography to use the standard size ratio. He felt that in this format every part of the screen would equally dense with colour.

The music by Kazufumi Kodama has a lot of variety and a lot of influences to it, including jazz and ska.

I use music in moments where the audience might become bored. In this situation if the audience hears a lot of variety in the music, rather than one type, maybe it’s more fun and not so boring for them. So that’s why I did it this way.

Earlier this year, there were two major retrospectives of your work in cinemas in Japan. One of those, the bigger one, was created by Nikkatsu. Does it feel like a vindication of sorts? Because they were the studio that fired you in the 1960s. Do you think: “Now they finally realise that I did make good films”?

(laughs) The best thing for a movie is to have a lot of people come to see it when it’s released. But back then my films weren’t so successful. Now, thirty years later, a lot of young people come to see my films. So either my films were too early or your generation came too late. Either way, the success is coming too late (laughs).

During the 50s and 60s you made a lot of films, sometimes four a year. The last few decades you have been making a lot fewer films. Would you like to work more than you’ve done in recent years?

No (laughs). Because I’m old. To be a film director, the first, second, and third priority is to have physical strength. It’s not a matter of knowledge or brains.

But a lot of Japanese directors, such as Kinji Fukasaku and Shohei Imamura, who are in their 70s have been making films recently that are very energetic and very dynamic.

It’s roujin power! (laughs) Old people’s power! It’s something that’s very happening in Japan recently. So that must be it (laughs).

Your speed of making films in those days, was that because you wanted to, or because of how the industry was structured, the program pictures structure.

I was one of the Nikkatsu contract directors, so it was the company that made me direct films at this pace. Like you said, the program pictures.

Did you enjoy working at this pace?

It was more of a job than getting any kind of enjoyment out of making a film.

Do you enjoy it more now that you make fewer films?

Right now, it’s still a struggle to me. Maybe in a few more years I will be able to enjoy making a film. If it becomes more like a hobby, it’s also more enjoyable to make a film. But it’s very hard to achieve that state, for it to become like a hobby. You need the strength (laughs).

I was told that in the structure of program pictures, films were divided into degrees of importance. The A movie was most important to the studio, so it was closely monitored and controlled. The B movie was a little bit less important to them and the C movie was not important at all. But because nobody cared about him, the C director had the most freedom and he would often make the most interesting film of the three. Which level were your films on and did you benefit from this freedom?

Since I was working for a company, I couldn’t deviate too much from the company’s course. But because my films were in the B category, I had a wider range than an A director. Even if it went off a little bit, it wouldn’t be too much of a problem with them. So in that sense I had a little bit of freedom. More than the A directors.

Clearly you didn’t have that much freedom because a few years later you were fired by Nikkatsu. Then you didn’t make any films for ten years until Story of Sorrow and Sadness (Hishu Monogatari, 1977). What did you do in those ten years? I heard you were involved in anime at some point. You were also a witness in the obscenity trial of Nagisa Oshima’s In the Realm of the Senses, I believe.

I shot commercials, I was involved in animation, the Lupin series. And yes, I was a defence witness for Oshima.

What was your defence argument at the time?

Oh! Well, I hardly remember. (long silence) If you have a book that’s prohibited and individual words are crossed out to censor it, which happened in Japan before the war, the book would lose all its meaning. With the film, the same argument applied. That is what happened to In the Realm of the Senses. So I said that if you take out those scenes, cross them out, the film wouldn’t make sense. It was exactly like the old system of censorship that we had before the war.

In the last ten years or so you also made a number of acting appearances, in particular in Cold Fever, by Icelandic director Fridrik Thor Fridriksson. How did that come about?

When you become over 60, everything you do is okay with everyone. You can do whatever you want. That’s why I started acting. I was invited to be an actor in Cold Fever, so I decided to do it.

Did you enjoy being an actor?

(laughs) It’s better than doing nothing at home! It’s exciting and also, it gives you money (laughs).

Do you look at actors differently since having acted yourself?

I was mainly acting on TV. I was not a professional actor, more like a semi-pro, so my experiences as an actor are not so important. I’m not a perfect actor, but I also don’t surrender completely to the director. I would do what I could, but never go too far from the director’s wishes and I would never talk back to him. When I direct, I always make sure that actors don’t talk back to me. So I just used the same attitude that I always expect from my own actors.

Cold Fever also starred Masatoshi Nagase, who is in Pistol Opera. Any connection between the two or is it a coincidence?

There’s no relation between the two, no.

I believe your next project is going to be a short film that you will be shooting in Paris, starring Sayoko Yamaguchi again. Could you tell how that came about?

The producers invited me to be one of the directors for that project, which is a sort of omnibus film. My sequence is only going to be six minutes long before another director takes over. I believe there are twenty different directors involved.

Why did you accept?

Because my producer forced me to do it! (laughs). Ogura-san kept telling me over and over to accept the offer.

 

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21 of Seijun Suzuki’s 58 films

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Underworld Beauty (1958)
Underworld Beauty introduces a theme Suzuki would revisit often: the lone wolf attempting to make amends for his past, a debt he’s usually unable to repay. Miyamoto (Michitaro Mizushima), just out of prison, wants to sell diamonds he has stashed away, in order to pay back his friend Mihara (Hideaki Nitani), who took a bullet for him. After the deal goes bad, Miyamoto’s efforts to recover the gems are thwarted at every turn, by his backstabbing former boss; by Akiko (Mari Shiraki), Mihara’s wild sister; and by Arita (Shinsuke Ashida), her artist boyfriend, who swipes the diamonds out from under everyone’s noses. The film is saved by the starkness of its noir-ish cinematography, and Suzuki’s marvelously staged set pieces. Scenes in a mannequin factory recall the final moments of Stanley Kubrick’s debut film, Killer’s Kiss, as the camera pans the eerie fake body parts that litter Arita’s studio, echoing the truly damaged human beings that occupy the movie’s landscape.’ — Pop Matters


Trailer

 

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The Boy Who Came Back (1958)
‘Seijun Suzuki imbues this youth melodrama, influenced by Rebel Without A Cause, with palpable subtext and visceral violence. An early work but Suzuki is already a master of CinemaScope composition and the tracking shot. He also propels the action with clever edits, such as the scene in the nightclub where he shows Keiko (Sachiko Hidari) getting drunk by the steady build of empty pint glasses on a table. Lead delinquent, Akira Kobayashi, unsubtly plays to the melodrama, and there is an unrequited love triangle subplot which is only unsatisfying because Suzuki builds up the emotional tension so well. But it goes beyond the teen melodrama template with its location sequences showing Tokyo bustling after the end of the American Occupation, and the consequences of the new prosperity and American pop culture undermining traditional Japanese life. Watch for a young Joe Shishido in a supporting role as the delinquent with no redeeming features.’ — Silversaxophone


Trailer

 

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Voice Without a Shadow (1958)
‘Seijun Suzuki might be best remembered for his surrealist pop art masterpieces from the late sixties or his even less comprehensible art films which followed his return to directing after settling his dispute with Nikkatsu, but everyone’s got to start somewhere and it comes as something of a relief to know that Suzuki was perfectly capable of making a straightforward movie if he wanted to. Voice Without a Shadow (影なき声, Kagenaki Koe) is exactly what it sounds like – a fifties style, US inspired noir however, Suzuki adds his usual flourishes and manages to wrong foot us pretty much the whole way through so that we never end up where we thought it was that we were going.’ — Windows on the World

Watch the film here

 

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Age of Nudity (1959)
‘One of the many wayward youth films Seijun Suzuki did early on his career. As usual Age of Nudity doesn’t quite have the weight of some of similar films from the era, but Suzuki shows great empathy for his young characters. Terrific scope framing and only 53 minutes long.’ — Filipe Furtado


Trailer

 

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Take Aim at the Police Van (1960)
‘At the beginning of Seijun Suzuki’s taut and twisty whodunit, a prison truck is attacked and a convict inside murdered. The penitentiary guard on duty, Daijiro (Michitaro Mizushima), is accused of negligence and suspended, only to take it upon himself to track down the killers.’ — The Criterion Channel

Watch the film here

 

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Everything Goes Wrong (1960)
‘Seijun Suzuki’s film, released the same year as Oshima’s Cruel Story of Youth, might not be as polished or thematically resonant, but there’s something about its unvarnished, fly-by-the-seat-of-its-pants quality that feels even more vital to the true experience of youth. Suzuki was coming at this as an outsider, already in his late-30s, but seems, even from a distant, totally in touch with the volatile emotions of youth.’ — Criterion Cast

Watch the trailer here

 

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Tokyo Knights (1961)
‘TOKYO KNIGHTS is a high point in the first five years of director Seijun Suzuki’s career within Nikkatsu’s “Borderless Action” series. Drawing inspiration from Hollywood and the French New Wave, Suzuki’s works for Nikkatsu blended East and West, movie-fueled fantasies and gritty realities of life in postwar Japan. Here, we follow a college student who takes over the family business in the field of organized crime…’ — Nightlight Cinema


Trailer

 

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The Wind-of-Youth Group Crosses the Mountain Pass (1961)
‘What better subject for Seijun Suzuki’s first foray into colour film than the carnival? The unlikely choice of narrative for Japan’s master of the gangster genre is but one of the quirks that make 1961’s The Wind-of-Youth Group Crosses the Mountain Pass (Tôge o wateru wakai kaze) a standout in the director’s filmography. While it’s a far cry from the slick and violent later works, the film is, if nothing else, a love letter to Japan’s vibrant, wild, and unique festival culture.’ — Eastern Kicks


Trailer

 

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Teenage Yakuza (1962)
Teenage Yakuza is middling work from the master Seijun Suzuki during his middling period. Within a year he’d be entering his most fertile period with truly creative work like Youth of the Beast, Gate of Flesh, and Kanto Wanderer, but for the moment he was still making programmatic gangster and youth flicks for Nikkatsu.’ — Cinema_Strikes


the entirety

 

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Youth of the Beast (1963)
‘When a mysterious stranger muscles into two rival yakuza gangs, Tokyo’s underworld explodes with violence. Youth of the Beast (Yaju no Seishun) was a breakthrough for director Seijun Suzuki, introducing the flamboyant colors, hallucinatory images, and striking compositions that would become his trademark.’ — The Criterion Collection


Trailer

Watch the film here

 

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The Incorrigible (1963)
‘Nobody does teen melodrama quite like Seijun Suzuki. This is mostly a by-the-numbers delinquency flick but with a third act revelation that gives the conclusion an unearned poignancy. I’ll even give Suzuki credit for the young boy’s recollection of losing his virginity. It’s shot and edited in a disjointed, dreamlike way that makes you doubt the reliability of the author.’ — HotDonkeyBear


Trailer

 

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Kanto Wanderer (1963)
‘Visually Kanto Wanderer owes much to the style of Kabuki theatre, starting with Katsuta’s sharply painted, gigantic eyebrows. In keeping with the loose allowances of borderless action, Katsuta is, inexplicably, the only character with such garish makeup and yet his eyebrows somehow fall into place in a film with an emotional tone and colour scheme worthy of a Douglas Sirk melodrama. As Suzuki explained to Mark Schilling, “in Kabuki they show everything at once. The interest is in seeing where and how the actors enter and exit […]. The continuity comes from the unity of atmosphere.” For further evidence of Suzuki’s appreciation for Kabuki staging, one need only look to the astonishing depth-of-field in certain scenes in Kanto Wanderer. Narrow streets and alleyways abound in the outdoor scenes, leading out, upward and away from the action in the foreground. For a man who constantly had to direct “on the fly” with minimal resources at hand, Suzuki’s compositions are meticulous. In this film, most of Suzuki’s “special effects” – changes in colour and light; swinging overhead lamps or colourful spotlights – occur in front of the camera in real-time, creating both a theatrical aesthetic and an urgent sense of time passing. The presence of an unabashed spectacle in front of the camera and Suzuki behind it is palpable, particularly during specific scenes of wordless dramatic import.’ — Senses of Cinema


the entirety

 

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Gate of Flesh (1964)
‘In the shady black markets and bombed-out hovels of post–World War II Tokyo, a tough band of prostitutes eke out a dog-eat-dog existence, maintaining tenuous friendships and a semblance of order in a world of chaos. But when a renegade ex-soldier stumbles into their midst, lusts and loyalties clash, with tragic results. With Gate of Flesh, visionary director Seijun Suzuki delivers a whirlwind of social critique and pulp drama, shot through with brilliant colors and raw emotions.’ — The Criterion Collection

Watch the film here

 

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Story of a Prostitute (1965)
‘Volunteering as a “comfort woman” on the Manchurian front, where she is expected to service hundreds of soldiers, Harumi is commandeered by the brutal Lieutenant Narita but falls for the sensitive Mikami, Narita’s direct subordinate. Seijun Suzuki’s Story of a Prostitute is a tragic love story as well as a rule-bending take on a popular Taijiro Tamura novel, challenging military and fraternal codes of honor, as seen through Harumi’s eyes.’ — The Criterion Collection


Trailer

Watch the film here

 

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Tattooed Life (1965)
Tattooed Life begins with a parasol wielding Yakuza assassin attacking a rickshaw. It almost looks like feudal Japan until somebody pulls a gun and we’re reminded that it’s the 20th century. Post-shooting, the assassin delivers his bounty to his brother (to pay for his art school education) before getting ambushed in one of the few rickshaw-jacking incidents in film history, and being rescued by his art-student brother. In the aftermath, one brother is marked for death by the Yakuza, and the other brother won’t go to art school with blood on his hands, so they decide the perfect way to deal with such hardships is to become fugitive construction workers in northern Japan . And why not?’ — letterboxd


Trailer


Excerpt

 

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Tokyo Drifter (1966)
‘In this jazzy gangster film, reformed killer Tetsu’s attempt to go straight is thwarted when his former cohorts call him back to Tokyo to help battle a rival gang. Director Seijun Suzuki’s onslaught of stylized violence and trippy colors is equal parts Russ Meyer, Samuel Fuller, and Nagisa Oshima—an anything-goes, in-your-face rampage. Tokyo Drifter is a delirious highlight of the brilliantly excessive Japanese cinema of the sixties.’ — The Criterion Collection


Trailer

Watch the film here

 

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Branded to Kill (1967)
‘Suzuki took the conventions of the Japanese crime film and fashioned them into something authentically strange and disturbing. No moral reflex apologises for the carnage, nor is there a thematic counterweight in the form of intense male bonding, as in the heroic bloodshed genre that flourished in Hong Kong in the 1980s. Doubtless this is why the film has found favour with latter day aesthetes of violence such as Tarantino. Indeed, the film shares many of the formal and thematic concerns of his beloved Spaghetti Western. But unlike Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs, Suzuki’s film did not find an instant audience of slavering fan boys on its release. Branded to Kill’s stature grew over the years, while Suzuki was inactive as a director for a decade, due to his freewheeling approach to genre material. But modern seekers of termite art and crazed, unqualified violence will find much to admire in this exhilarating film.’ — John A. Riley


Trailer

Watch the film here

 

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Zigeunerweisen (1980)
‘The first of Suzuki’s Taishō Period (1912-1926) Trilogy, Zigeunerweisen flows like a river of blood, calmly but disturbing at the same time. A psychological surreal, dark story full of allusions to ghosts both alive and dead with brief instances of kaleidoscopic horror and madness mainly mystifying death and other condemnable perversions, Suzuki’s new branch of poetic experimentation is one strong psychological examination of marital relationships and extramarital affairs while discussing, by segments, transcendent terms such as life, mortality and Sarasate’s violin composition. Haunting and spiritually arresting with an unforgettable closure, Zigeunerweisen marks the director’s trajectory towards more kaleidoscopic, metaphysical reflections through a style completely new to Suzuki followers but incredibly rewarding when read between lines.’ — Edgar Cochran


Excerpt

 

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Kagero-za (1981)
‘This is even more oblique than Zigeunerweisen, using a fairly simple love triangle as the jumping off point for a complicated, messy exploration of Westernization, eroticism, and Japan’s Taisho period. Suzuki pulls out and refines all of the tricks from his Nikkatsu days, hiding all sorts of perversity inside the shell of a love story. The final result is even more poetic and disorienting than its predecessor, as our fictional characters are rendered as characters in a children’s theatre production that comes crashing down at the moment of emotional release.’ — Evan


Trailer

Watch the film here

 

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Capone Cries A Lot (1985)
‘In this surreal comic confection, a traditional naniwa-bushi singer moves to Prohibition-era San Francisco. He goes in search of Al Capone, whom he mistakenly believes is president, hoping to impress the gangster with his singing and popularize the art form in the States. Filmed mostly in an abandoned amusement park in Japan, Suzuki’s vision of 1920s America is an anarchic collage of pop culture images, from cowboys to Charlie Chaplin. One reason Capone is so rarely seen is that it reflects the racial attitudes of the time in which it is set by including, for example, a minstrel band in blackface. Such discomfiting images are balanced by scenes featuring an actual African American jazz ensemble that joins the film’s hero in jam sessions mixing blues, jazz, and naniwa-bushi.’ — Harvard Film Archive

Watch the film here

 

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Yumeji (1991)
‘YUMEJI is the final film in youth-gone-berserk auteur Seijun Suzuki’s acclaimed TAISHO TRILOGY. Sensual and absurdist, it spins a ghost story around the character and work of real-life painter and poet Yumeji Takehisa (1884-1934). The eponymous character (conjured by Suzuki as a chronic philanderer and dreamer played by former rock star Kenji Sawada) is plagued with ideals of perfect beauty and the terror of his own demise. He falls in love with women but can never capture their hearts. He is constantly escaping his rivals but can never face them down. As the film opens, Yumeji is on a scenic trip to Kanazawa, where he plans to meet Hikono (Masumi Miyazaki), his lover. Instead, he falls for Tomoyo, a recent widow whose husband, Wakiya (Yoshio Harada), was slain by the murderously jealous Onimatsu. Complications ensue when Wakiya returns from the dead; Onimatsu is understandably distraught. Yumeji is not deterred, however, setting out to seduce Tomoyo while avoiding the rages of Wakiya and Onimatsu as well as a phalanx of ghosts, apparitions and nightmares.’ — Fandor


Trailer


Excerpt

 

 

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p.s. Hey. ** Laura, Ass not Arse. Arse doesn’t count. Swear to god I won’t hate it. You dressed like me? In organic clothes? Where did you buy them? Next re: script is finding a producer who’s willing to work with us to make the film. So we’re in a tedious, stressful phase unless we get very lucky. Weekend of expanding energies. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Henson’s great. There’s a big book of his photographs out that I wrote the intro to, although it’s probably o.o.p. It’s true that summer can be bearable, but no more than that (to me), whereas fall is almost always more than merely bearable, don’t you think? Xavier Dolan, curious. Huh. Gosh, I don’t know who to pick that you would be familiar with and not just walking down a Paris street. I guess I would say maybe Vincent Kartheiser circa ‘Another Day in Paradise’. That’s an important task you’ve given love, and I hesitate to give him another, distracting task, so maybe love hiring me to be his nurse for the weekend, G. ** _Black_Acrylic, I know, it’s weird. The idea of being naked in a Turrell almost freaks me out, which is certainly a plus. Oh, great, about the Print Shop! Let’s make it your second home, shall we? ** Carsten, See, as a cold weather fan, I say the more clothes the better. On me at least. It’s true that there was a short time in the late 60s/early 70s when some major studios decided that bankrolling and paying to promote the occasional non-standard film that might appeal to wild youth could make them some money. And there were a few director/actor-run biggish studios for a while then, and that helped. Now that mostly only happens for unconventional horror movies. If there were studios, streaming services, wealthy people willing to fund radical films now, there would be a bunch of them being made with sufficient support to have a shot at coming to the attention of the larger public. I wish the decision to bankroll and stream ‘Twin Peaks: The Return’ or to give wide distribution to ‘Skinamarink’ had burst the dam, but neither earned enough money, so it didn’t. Nice about the local fiesta, and happy weekend. ** Adem Berbic, Hi. There are people everywhere who want to be famous enough to get an invite to Taylor Swift’s wedding, but, I mean, that’s not interesting, and who cares? London always has a literary reputation. I don’t know if it’s currently warranted. There are a lot of exciting newer writers there. From afar and as a reader, it seems to me that there’s a lot of literary energy there. I don’t know about the bigger names. Immaterial nudity rules. ** charalampos, Hi. The writers I listed were all extraordinary fiction writers, so I wouldn’t say Stephen Tennant fit in. My favorite ‘Morning of the Poem’ poem, and one of my very top favorite poems of all time, is ‘This Dark Apartment’. Sparkling vibes from almost pleasant Paris. ** kenley, You made it! And there are pubs there. And beauty of a natural basis! Great, pal. Heatwave is maybe not even a wave anymore! Nothing and nowhere could ever transform me into a nude beach guy. I don’t even really like going to the beach clothed until it’s nighttime. Bon weekend! ** Steve, I hope your trip to ‘The Odyssey’ is more than dutiful, but I can’t imagine that. I’m going to a rare screening of the 3D version of Godard’s ‘Adieu au language’ today, and it’s one of my favorite films, so I’m psyched. ** Sam F, Hi. Wow an hour. That’s pretty amazing in this day and age. Two weeks … tick tick. Are you going to do a bunch of readings and stuff? Even Baltimore is beset with that smoke? Shit, it’s massive. Try to breathe out mostly. And survive your weekend. ** HaRpEr //, I suspect teenagers have no problem erasing the framing with their minds. French TV still has a fair number of intellectual talk shows, and they’re popular! It’s crazy. If you read the Schuyler bio, which I recommend, he had a very hard life, and the feeling in his poems makes a lot of sense. ** Armando, Wow, hey there, man. It’s been ages. How are you? Are you writing? I’ve been to Norway, mm, four times. I really like it. It’s physically very beautiful among other plusses. Before too long, ‘RT’ will be streaming and on BluRay, so hopefully you can see it in those ways if nothing else. At the moment, the weather is kind of pleasant here, which feels strange and may not last long given the heatwave assaults we’re been getting this year. I assume it’s hot where you are? Your comment made it! Um, I’m seeing ‘Adieu au language’ in 3D this afternoon, and I have my biweekly Zoom book/Film club on Sunday, and 90% of my friends are out of town, so the rest should be pretty lowkey. You? Great to get to see you, pal! ** Uday, Her nonfiction is kind of her best thing. Maybe not even kind of. Hopes on the protests toppling the govt. Don’t get arrested though. Unless you want to. ** Right. This weekend I am providing you with the opportunity to spend some time with the films of Seijun Suzuki if that notion pleases you. See you on Monday.

Nudes 2

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Artur Żmijewski Game of Tag, 1999
‘Poland’s interior minister on Friday instructed his country’s prosecutors to follow up on an investigation by groups representing Holocaust survivors into how a video featuring a naked game of tag came to be filmed at a former Nazi death camp in the country. Mariusz Błaszczak transferred to prosecutors the dossier on the video that was filmed inside the gas chamber at Stutthof, he said Friday on Twitter. Two days earlier several groups, including the Simon Wiesenthal Center, had sent a letter to Polish President Andrjez Duda noting the video was traced back to Stutthof and demanding to know who gave permission for the filming. “It is the most disgusting thing I’ve seen in a long time,” Efraim Zuroff, the Wiesenthal Center’s chief Nazi hunter, said in 2015 about the exhibition. “They lied about it. It is just revolting and a total insult to the victims and anyone with any sense of morality or integrity.”

 

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Jan Smaga Untitled (dog), 2007
‘Jan Smaga works with photography and combines classical techniques with computer editing, constructing three-dimensional photographic objects. The technique developed by Grzeszykowska and Smaga is reminiscent of the process of scanning – a total voyeuristic documentation of the space and the people which inhabit it. In the individual projects, the artist subjects the human body to a similar, detailed analysis of the surface.’

 

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Sally Mann The Wet Bed, 1987
‘In The Wet Bed, for example, it is not clear whether the young Virginia is asleep or posing, coloring our view of the circles of urine that stain the sheet around her. Many observers of Mann’s work feel manipulated by this sense of artifice, yet Mann argues for its use, stating that “You learn something about yourself and your own fears. Everyone surely has all those fears that I have for my children.”‘

 

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John DeAndrea Various, 1972 – 1988
‘John DeAndrea is an American sculptor whose intensely realistic depictions of human figures, both nude and clothed, offer an uncanny portrait of contemporary human life. Made using plastic, polyester, fiber glass, and natural hair, his work is painted after naturalistic gypsum casting to achieve a high degree of technical precision and lifelike appearance. He has explained that his work is not intended as political, but rather an existential glimpse at an individual’s sense of self. “You don’t look at people like you look at a sculpture,” the artist has explained about the public’s interest in his work. “We’re in a room and we glance at each other. With a sculpture you can walk around it, take it apart, examine it. That’s part of what makes them appealing.”’

 

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Campaign Against Sex Robots, 2015 ->
‘True Companion’s female sexbot, Roxxxy, is apparently “always turned on and ready to play,” though as the FAQ page makes clear, she does have an off switch for when the robot shagging is over and it’s time for her to get back into the cupboard. Customers can select the skin tone, hair colour and eye colour of Roxxxy. She can even come with pubes in a variety of styles, but this costs extra. Roxxxy is suggestive of a time when men all over the world will be able to forgo the trouble and inconvenience of a real girlfriend, with all their PMT tantrums and feminist sexual demands, and simply go online, design their ideal sex pet, and wait for a woman-sized cardboard box to be delivered to their door. Dr. Kathleen Richardson wants to stop us hurtling towards this bleak version of the future. A senior research fellow in the Ethics of Robotics at De Montfort University, she’s recently launched the Campaign Against Sex Robots, along with Dr. Erik Billing of the University of Skövde in Sweden. Their campaign manifesto points out that by creating robots for sex, society is reinforcing patriarchal ideas about how women should look and behave, as well as normalising the idea that a relationship can be purely physical.’

 

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Roger Hiorns Untitled 2005–10, 2010
Untitled 2005–10 is a sculpture comprising a black metal bench that is intermittently inhabited by a naked youth and a lit flame. The sculpture also functions without the presence of the youth or the flame and, in this case, sets up an anticipation of presence. According to the wishes of the exhibiting institution, a youth can become part of the sculpture by occupying the bench in sessions of roughly fifteen minutes each over an agreed period of time. Once the youth is present and fully disrobed, a gallery attendant can choose to set light to the gel which ignites the flame on the metal bench, although this is not necessary for the sculpture to be activated. On a prepared area of the bench, enough flame gel to allow for approximately nine to fifteen minutes of flame is lit. The youth and the flame are then present together. Once the flame is extinguished, through the exhaustion of the flame gel, the youth may take leave of the bench.’

 

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Hilde Krohn Huse Hanging in the Woods, 2015
‘A Norwegian contemporary artist has confessed to being left hanging naked in a tree for three and a half hours after an video art installation she filmed in a Norwegian forest went wrong. Hilde Krohn Huse, who lives and works in London, ventured into the forest in her native Aukra in Norway to film a video featuring herself hanging naked from a rope in a tree. However, when she reached the end of her filming, she realised that she was completely unable to free herself. “The video ends when the camera shuts off, but I was there calling for help for another 30 minutes,” told Norway’s VG newspaper. “I felt sick when I saw the video for the first time, I experienced everything anew. But I slept on it and realised that the video is quite decent.”‘

Watch excerpts from the video here

 

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Eric Gill Prospero And Ariel, 1932
‘The BBC has announced plans to restore a statue by the highly controversial artist Eric Gill after it was attacked with a hammer in January 2022. There has been a movement to remove the British sculptor’s public works from view ever since the late 1980s, when his posthumously published private diaries revealed that he had sexually abused his two eldest daughters and his pet dog.’

 

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Paul McCarthy The Garden, 1992
‘For his solo show at SMAK in 2007, Paul McCarthy included two kinetic sculptures of male figures humping a tree and the floor, and in the next room both were laid out on tables, castrated.’

 

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Charles Ray Young Man, 2012
‘A 1,500-pound sculpture in solid stainless steel.’

 

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Paolo Schmidlin Porno Queen, 2007
‘Italian artist Paolo Schmidlin makes his second appearance on this list. Porno Queen is a controversial 2007 sculpture. It shows a topless Queen Elizabeth II. The figure seems totally disinterested in the pair of hands gripping her torso. One hand is fondling her breast. The sculpture debuted in Madrid, Spain at a show opened by King Juan Carlos. The work is funny but insulting. This figure was once labeled by the Queen’s photographer as “the work of a lunatic”’

 

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Eddie Peake Touch, 2012
‘Peake is best known for his 2012 performance piece Touch, a five-on-five 30-minute football (soccer) match in which male players were only clad in shoes and socks denoting their team. The sheer name of the event, Touch, has a homoerotic connotation, though, Peake seems to ask, “is there anything inherently sexual about naked men, with flaccid genitals, kicking a ball around a court?”’

 

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Jamie Wyeth Orca Bates, 1990
‘Orca Bates (born 1976) was the favorite model for artist Jamie Wyeth. He was first painted in late 1989, and numerous times over the next five years. Orca was a “wild child”, described by Jamie as “more of a seagull than a person”. Orca’s parents, Daniel and Amy Bates, had divorced by the time Orca was 12. Orca currently lives in Pine Island, New York and owns several companies (Orca’s Construction & Restoration Inc., Growboxco, and Muckland Hops LLC).’

 

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Gilles Berquet Various, 1980 – 2000
‘Gilles Berquet is a French artist known for his highly-sexual photographs featuring theatrical stagings of the woman’s body. Influenced by various mediums (adventure fictions, comics, films, television), Berquet exhibits our worst nightmares and most guilty desires. His works are regularly published in his own magazine Maniac as well as in Muscle Carabine.’

 

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Wagner Schwartz La Bête, 2017
‘Wagner Schwartz received the first death threat two days after lying naked on the floor of a museum in São Paulo. It was October 2017 and the Brazilian artist had invited members of his audience, which included children, to adjust his body: move a limb, roll him over, that kind of thing. This was for a dance piece called La Bête, a work he had already staged many times at home and abroad. So it was a shock to suddenly find himself the target of an increasingly emboldened network of rightwing and evangelical Christian groups. During La Bête, a four-year-old girl, encouraged by her mother, lifted Schwartz’s hand and then his foot, while another slightly older girl touched his head. These moments were caught on video and uploaded to Facebook. “The creators of this page,” says Schwartz, “put a caption on the video saying the museum incited paedophilia and that I was a paedophile. From this moment on, people who did not know me or the work decided La Bête was a threat.” Evangelical activists and members of the Movimento Brasil Livre, a group that claims to be libertarian, gathered outside the venue, the Museum of Modern Art (MAM), while 100,000 people signed a petition denouncing the work. One popular meme juxtaposed a picture of Schwartz with three bullets and the caption: “Paedophilia has a cure.”

 

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Daniel Edwards Monument to Pro-Life: The Birth of Sean Preston, 2006
‘Singer Britney Spears has found her way into the world of art history. Artist Daniel Edwards has depicted Spears nude in a life sized statue giving birth on her hands and knees on a bearskin rug. The sculpture is meant to promote “Pro-Life” and depicts Britney in the pose of a natural birth (whereas in reality her son was born with a C-section and the celebrity was heavily drugged). The name of the sculpture is “Monument to Pro-Life: The Birth of Sean Preston”. The ‘art’ piece has caused a political storm but Edwards is keen to explain that he purely sees Brit as a modern fertility goddess. He said: “My feeling about it was that for her to give up her career, to sacrifice that essentially to have a child that seemed like a real dedication to birth. I guess I’m just really responding to the public’s general interest in her pregnancy and trying to capture the ultimate moment being the birth.”‘

 

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Bill Henson Various, 2003 – 2010
‘Photos of a naked teenager by artist Bill Henson are part of a taxpayer-funded exhibition teaching students about art and adolescence. The Monash Gallery of Art touring exhibition features photographs of a naked teenage boy, with his ribs protruding, and his pubic hair on display. The educational resource provided to students and teachers said the exhibition dealt with themes such as the human body, adolescence and suburbia. Students are also invited to look at Henson’s body of work via a weblink to the Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, which was raided by police in 2008. This site depicts teenage girls naked and wrapped in tinsel or topless. It ties the photography to VCE subjects ranging from art to philosophy and asks students how successful Henson is at capturing youth and adolescence.’

 

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Jennifer Rubell Nutcrackers, 2011
Nutcrackers consists of 18 life-size interactive sculptures of women surrounding a pedestal holding one ton of Texas pecans. Each prefabricated female mannequin is mounted on her side in an odalisque position and has been retooled to function as a nutcracker. Visitors interact with each sculpture by placing a pecan in the mannequin’s inner thigh, then pushing down the upper leg to crack open the nut so they may eat it in the gallery. Inspired by nutcrackers depicting female figures – and in particular one found on the internet of Hillary Clinton – these interactive sculptures embody the two polar stereotypes of female power: the idealized, sexualized nude female form; and the too-powerful, nut-busting überwoman. The work also serves as a prompt to action, encouraging the viewer to transgress the traditional viewer-artwork boundary and complete the work by participating in it.’

 

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Elin Magnusson Skin, 2009
‘In a room on the seventh floor in a cold city, two people are waking up. They hug each other hard, still, it’s not enough to be able to forget where one body starts and the other ends. Neither of them has a sex or a face and they both wear more layers of skin than they ought to. Old disappointments and badly healed wounds have turned them into this. With a pair of scissors they ask each other for permission to expose, rip up and get in. Something forgotten turns into a memory that later transforms into fingers, and finally a hand. Hair begins to smell and the sweat is pouring. In close-ups about closeness we see the longing for something new.’

Watch an excerpt here

 

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Juan Rivero Various, 2013 – 2014
‘Juan Rivero’s art seeks to expose the human body to twist and distort it, to humiliate and display it in all its strength and neglect, in all its brilliance and misery, impressing on them the most personal, unique and exclusive to the idiosyncrasies of the artist, who can afford the spectacle of the terrible and the problematic, even the terrible action of mutilation, decomposition, negation, because what exists, even all that exists, until every being, irritates him.’

 

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David Shrigley Life Model, 2015
Life Model invites the public to draw a rather not so handsome male nude that occasionally urinates into a bucket.’

 

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Stelarc & Havve Fjell Shadow Suspension, 2013
‘SHADOW SUSPENION WAS A COLLABORATION WITH HAVVE FJELL FOR THE DALLAS SUSCON 2013, ORGANISED BY ALLEN FALKNER. IT WAS HELD AT THE LAKEWOOD THEATRE, DALLAS ON THE 30 MARCH. 6 BODIES, 3 MALES AND 3 FEMALES, WERE SUSPENDED HORIZONTALLY FACE-UP IN A HEXAGONAL CONFIGURATION. THE BODY STRUCTURE WAS SPUN, WHILST WINCHED UP AND LOWERED DOWN AND THE SOUNDS AMPLIFIED. THE DURATION OF THE SUSPENSION ITSELF WAS 23 MINUTES.’

 

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Sam Jinks Untitled (Kneeling Woman), 2015
‘A crowd of people jostle for a closer look at the naked woman crouching on her knees. Phones held aloft, the group shamelessly take pictures of her bare back and bottom — safe in the knowledge she won’t be waking up anytime soon. The remarkably life-like nude sculpture, created by Australian artist Sam Jinks, was by far the most photographed work at this year’s Art Basel in Hong Kong, a three-day art fair that has attracted tens of thousands of visitors since it first launched nearly three years ago.’

 

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Konstantin Somov Various (1930 – 1936)
‘In about 1930, Somov met Boris Mikhailovich Snejkovsky (born 23 July 1910), “the twenty-year old young man who would inspire several of Somov’s best later works. He would sit for straightforward portrait drawings, beautiful, mildly suggestive oil paintings, and he may have been the model for more erotic watercolors. Somov was a homosexual, but the exact nature of his relationship with his model and friend is unknown.”‘

 

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This naked woman crossed Interstate 95 near Flagler Beach, Florida, in footage shared on Facebook on March 22, 2019.

 

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银角大魔王 霜星的脚01 (2020)
‘锃明瓦亮嘿嘿嘿’

 

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‘Art lovers have stripped off for nude tours of a new exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia, a concept designed to remove the material barrier between artist and audience. The first adults-only tour, where clothes are discarded, attracted about 50 people after-hours on Wednesday evening to view James Turrell: A Retrospective, exploring the American’s love of light and landscape.’

 

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Thordis Adalsteinsdottir Bear Eats Man, 2013
‘A questionably offensive sculpture at Queens’ Socrates Sculpture Park has merited a fence installed around the work. Bear Eats Man by Thordis Adalsteinsdottir depicts a wooden bear gripping a man from behind and biting into his neck, but a closer look reveals that the victim may in fact have an erection. A wooden enclosure has been placed around the piece, with a warning notifying visitors about the subject material.’

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Laura, Hi, thanks for the braving. I’m sure Dead Kid’s Ass would have a happy home if you decide to build it. Thanks, the ending of ‘RT’ is probably my favorite thing in the film. I hope your nemesis didn’t flare. Wtf, you’ve done so much more than your time. When does karma swoop in? ** Dominik, Hi!!! I know, I don’t quite believe it. But can God or whoever please fast forward to September, like, right now, just to be safe? Of course love is the perfect sex partner, of course he is. Love wondering who you would most like or even would pay to see nude, G. ** Adem Berbic, No apologies necessary of course. The blog is like a trampoline. The ocean is underrated. Depends on the kind of fame, no? It’s hard to think analytically about something that encompasses both Clavicular and David Lynch, for instance. It is interesting that London still has the kind of international clout it does. London had a period where it practically owned the canon: Compton-Burnett, Rhys, Quin, Kane, Brophy, Frame, Green, Firbank, Welch, Brooke-Rose, Spark, Churchill, etc. The Beatles: Some of their work is unimpeachably great. The pervasiveness of the excitement they generated is singular. They essentially both invented in large part and expanded the perimeters of the pop song form as it is still practiced today. Their influence is absolutely massive. But do you need to listen to them? No, of course not. ** _Black_Acrylic, I think you would like the novel. Who are rooting for in the final? ** Tosh Berman, Fine wordage on The Beatles, sir. And presumably fine wordage on Proust as well. You’ve never read ‘What’s for Dinner?’ That surprises me. It’s lovely, surely needless to say. Your description of that reading is starting to ring a bell. That is how I tried to handle the bookstore events around ‘Smothered in Hugs’. At Skylight I read my Keanu Reeves interview with Bruce Hainley reading Keanu’s part. That was funny. I’ll ask my nephew what he remembers. Based on what I hear and read, I have no interest in the new Nolan film. Even when I’ve been ok with his films, it was always a take it or leave it thing. And I thought ‘Oppenheimer’ was unspeakably boring and empty, and I think that pretty much killed my curiosity about his stuff. If you see it, let me know. ** Hugo, The only clubs I know are the ones that knock you on the head. New York, wow. I hope you slip in there in between heat waves. What are you doing there? You couldn’t lose your edge, trust me. ** Thom, It’s a real pleasure. Your alternate ‘Frisk’ movie sounds dreamy compared to the actual. ‘Recollections of the Golden Triangle’. Awesome. That’s my favorite Robbe-Grillet novel, as you may know, although I do love everything he did. Sweet! My week is beginning to improve. You all geared up for the weekend? ** Carsten, Hi. If only originality was humanity’s top goal. Can you imagine? I guess my opinion is that there is lots of radical art and there always has been and it has never been everywhere and flooding the gates. That’s why it’s radical. The vast majority don’t want artistic radicality, never have. The mainstream has its slight ups and downs, but it’s never static. ** julian, Hi. ‘Coraline’ was the biggest reason I was so excited by the possible ‘God Jr.’ film. So good. I like Jarman’s films, I just don’t like ‘Sebastiane’. My favorite of his is ‘Last of England’. ** Steve, Your panic was understandable. I’m glad you can move on. So far it feels cooler out today, and that’s the prediction, but I’ll believe it when step outside. I guess I will do a gig post, yeah. I haven’t started making it, but I will. ** HaRpEr //, It’s a lovely novel, and if you like Schuyler, it’s a must. Schuyler’s poems can almost make me cry. I can’t think of another poet who does that to me. Interesting that you like ‘A Sentimental Novel’ so much. Me too, but it never really seemed to get much traction among even his readers. It did cause the predictable scandal here in France when it was released. I like what I’ve read of Renata Adler, but I never quite got what it is about her work that certain people are so big on. I think the one of hers that I liked the best is ‘Pitch Dark’. ** Uday, Billy Childish … I’ve read a little, here and there. I’m more familiar with his music, though. Let me know what you think if you score that book or any book by him. ** Okay. If you liked ‘Nudes’, then theoretically you will love ‘Nudes 2’. Or not. See you tomorrow.

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