The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Category: Uncategorized (Page 9 of 1102)

Lech Majewski’s Day

 

‘Today, Lech J. Majewski lives in Venice, however, he often visits the region of Silesia where he was born and grew up. He works as a lecturer at the Rutger Hauer Filmfactory in Rotterdam. He started his academic education as a student of graphics at the Academy of Fine Arts in Katowice, a branch of the Academy in Kraków. In 1973 he entered the Directing Department at the Film School in Łódź, where he graduated in 1977. Majewski made his debut as a film director in 1978 with Zwiastowanie / Annunciation, the first part of the two-part feature film Zapowiedź ciszy / Harbinger of Silence. The first film that Majewski directed on his own was Rycerz / The Knight (1979). In 1980 the director left for England. In England, in 1982 he staged Homer’s The Odyssey. Soon after, Majewski came into contact with an American producer, Michael Hausman, and moved to Hollywood. In 1985 he directed Lot świerkowej gęsi / The Flight of the Spruce Goose, his American debut. In 2011 he presented The Mill and the Cross at the Sundance Film Festival. The film brings The Procession to Calvary, Pieter Bruegel’s 16th Century painting, to life.

‘Lech Majewski has received numerous film awards, such as the Wielki FeFe Prize awarded at the 9th Fefe Film Festival in Warsaw in recognition of his independent spirit. He won main awards at several film festivals, including the Polish Film Festival Award (Gdynia, 1999) for direction of Wojaczek. The director was also nominated to the Orzeł / Eagle Polish Film Award for his two films: Wojaczek and Angelus.

‘In the early 1990s, Lech Majewski also took up directing theatre and opera productions. He has created street art or performance as well. His theatre production of Czarny Jeździec / The Black Rider in Helbronn, Germany was given cult status and brought him the Kilianpreis award for best direction in the 1994/95 season. He was awarded the Golden Mask for visual effects of the opera production Pokój saren / The Roe’s Room staged at the Silesian Opera in 1993. He has said that he sees his life as a journey through diverse countries, art fields, languages and modes of expression.

‘Lech Majewski’s artistic journey is truly characterised by diversity, however, it distinguishes itself by consistency and loyalty towards the director’s early fascinations. Some visions have been recurring in Majewski’s works in various art forms depending on the genre in which this versatile artist creates at a given moment.

‘As early as in 1977, before his debut as a novelist, Lech Majewski published a well-received poem in Nowy Wyraz, a monthly journal devoted to rising writers. The surreal poetics of this poem, as well as the entire volume entitled Mieszkanie / Apartment, recurred years later in his opera and film by a similar title (Pokój saren / The Roe’s Room, 1997).

‘In his press interviews, Majewski has often referred to events and situations from his childhood or adolescent years that have left him with a distinct impression and years later have provided an inspiration for his artistic projects. The artist’s experiences were exceptional as for the Polish reality. He spent his childhood years in a gloomy, mining and industrial landscape of the Upper Silesia, which, as if in an unreal vision, was interwoven with the extraordinary scenery of Venice, where the future director of Ogród rozkoszy ziemskich / The Garden of Earthly Delights used to spend summer holidays at his uncle’s. Thus, it is not hard to identify the source of suggestive imagery present first in Majewski’s poems and subsequently in his films. In his works, the artist draws a picture of a human being as an integral element of nature, not privileged in any sense. He makes numerous cultural references to works which he had a chance to admire in Venice.

‘Majewski remarked that in Bosch’s In The Garden of Earthly Delights a human being is depicted in a symbiotic relationship with plants and animals. The middle part of the triptych shows an uncanny union of naked figures with the surrounding world.

‘On many occasions, the artist’s fascinations had developed in secret for years before they unexpectedly became the source of inspiration for a film. Such source could be e.g. Rafał Wojaczek’s poem, or a press information about a robbery of the century and a photograph of Ronald Biggs, an escaped prisoner relaxing on the Copacabana beach. It could also be a conversation with a friend from an elementary school who worked hard as a coalminer and dreamed about living a different life. Wojaczek, Więzień z Rio / Prisoner of Rio, or Lot świerkowej gęsi / The Flight of a Spruce Goose have all been inspired by such events.In his art, Majewski derives inspiration from more dramatic events, such as a death of a close person which he experienced and managed to overcome, recalling I realised that we treat death with an increasing superficiality, we push it aside these days when the entertainment is the sole value (interview with Katarzyna Bielas, Gazeta Wyborcza, July 12, 2004).

‘Soon after this significant loss, the director created Wypadek / Accident, an exhibition-performance, in Katowice (1996). Majewski used personal belongings of the deceased in this exhibition: “I mummified them, said the artist in the above-mentioned interview for Gazeta Wyborcza, that is, I bandaged a mobile phone, post card, necklace, high heel shoes, and a coat. I paid a tribute. At the same time, I exhibited all elements that constituted the body of this woman. There were two containers. The first one represented the amount of blood pumped within 24 hours, and the other one the amount of the pumped air. I displayed a body transformed into chemical elements in exactly the same proportions as in her body. There was an exact amount of coal, calcium, iron. Like in Metaphysics and The Garden.”

‘A similar action was performed by the main protagonist of Majewski’s novel Metafizyka / Metaphysics on which he based his film Ogród rozkoszy ziemskich / The Garden of Earthly Delights. However, before the novel and feature film had been created, Majewski filmed the exhibition in Katowice which lasted for 18 days and produced a film about art (Wypadek / Accident). Many viewers, Polish viewers used to keeping the subject of death at a certain distance in particular, found it hard to accept the art form chosen by the artist. For the director however, the installation in Katowice was an important attempt to draw near the mystery.In an interview with Jerzy Wójcik, the director said: “For millennia, a human being has tried to solve the mysteries and ‘describe’ the world, or organise it in line with one’s needs, but it becomes difficult to achieve it because even simplicity holds great mysteries. Each side of a square can be expressed in number 1, while its diagonal is incalculable. We know what a circle is, but we are not able to calculate Pi accurately.”

‘As Jerzy Wójcik put it, Majewski balances between the mystery of metaphor, symbol and the logics of numbers. With time Lech Majewski has continued to pose, in different ways, several fundamental questions regarding the mystery of existence. Thus, he populates his films with protagonists who ask similar questions. Beginning with The Knight, a film set in the Middle Ages, whose main protagonist embarks on a quest for the lost harp, just like many seekers of the Holy Grail; to Silesian naive painters, simple coalminers with their famous leader Teofil Ociepka, associated in an occult community portrayed in Angelus; to the protagonist of The Garden of Earthly Delights who tries to apply rationality and logics.

‘In many of his films, Majewski uses motifs from the tradition of esotericism aimed at penetrating metaphysical mysteries. Such as, in Lot świerkowej gęsi / The Flight of Spruce Goose and Ewangelia według Harry’ego / Gospel According to Harry, the director highlights different aspects of existential quest. His interests lie in an existential pain, which is an integral element of the extreme and reckless attitude of his protagonists, and can be found in such films as Wojaczek or Basquiat – Taniec ze śmiercią / Basquiat, a film about a legendary American graffiti artist (Majewski did not direct the film himself, however, it was based on his screenplay and his concept). Similarly to Wojaczek, the title protagonist of the film, Jean-Michel Basquiat, commits suicide at the peak of his career following his self-destructive instinct.

‘The most important thing both in art and life is mystery. We make all efforts to bring the mystery down to zero, we are afraid of it (…) Whereas I believe that this lack of knowledge is like air for our soul, said Majewski to Grzegorz Wojtowicz and he repeated similar ideas on numerous occasions.

‘Lech J. Majewski managed to find a niche for his artistic cinema in the West, which does not shy away from commercial projects. As the director admitted himself in a conversation with Tadeusz Sobolewski (Kino, no 12/1992), Więzień z Rio / Prisoner of Rio is the sole exception, or rather concession to the popular cinema. And yet, Majewski’s own vision of poetic and metaphysical cinema gains him popularity among the audience. Wojaczek, Angelus, and The Garden of Earthly Delights met with enthusiastic reception.

‘”I am only trying to make films in line with my desires… Some of my films, e.g. Gospel According to Harry, have not found their own audience, while others, like Wojaczek have enjoyed great popularity all over the world.” — Interview by Dagmara Romanowska, Kino, November 5, 2001)

 

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Stills


























































 

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Further

Lech Majewski Personal Website
Lech Majewski @ IMDb
Lech Majewski Website (in Polish)
LM @ MUBI
The Films of Lech Majewski: A Touring Exhibition
‘Lech Majewski: still life with movement’
‘Anaesthetic gardens. On Metaphysics by Lech Majewski’
‘On the Films of Lech Majewski’
‘Painting on Film: An Interview with Lech Majewski’
‘Majewski Is the Surreal McCoy’
‘Lech Majewski: Independent Ethos’
‘Going inside the metaphysics of Bruegel’s art in The Mill and the Cross’

 

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Extras


Keyframe: Lech Majewski’s Stillness in Motion


A talk with Lech Majewski about The Mill and The Cross


Lech Majewski “Jak zrobiłem swój film”.


Lech Majewski talks to Grolsch Film Works

 

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Interview

 

You’re showing Bruegel Suite at The Wapping Project onto raw brick walls. It seems at odds with the painterly nature of the film.

I love it here. You could say the walls reflect ‘the hand of time’ made visible; it keeps its own diary. I like that very much. When you look at old unrenovated paintings you can still see this incredible additional texture made by time passing. Nowadays everything is being renovated, so everything looks like plastic. The images projected on The Wapping Project walls retain a sense of time.

When I saw the walls here, I thought, “This is it”. The images I’m projecting are from Bruegel Suite, which I made alongside my film The Mill & the Cross, a film that took four years to ‘build up’. I use that term because each shot required an enormous amount of construction – there were at least 40 layers in any of the images, and up to 147 in some places. Every layer was shot separately against a green screen, then landscape filters were added, then fog filters, then different angles were included. We had to reflect the fact that Bruegel’s paintings were composed of seven contradictory angles in a single landscape, so we were trying to replicate a very magical trick.

And what, other than a visual density, is contained within these layers? They seem to offer multiple perspectives, both literally and in terms of narrative.

Bruegel was reflecting a situation that was absolutely contemporary to his time: issues around Christianity and the death of Christ, particularly in The Procession to Calvary [the painting into which Majewski’s film enters]. But then, I’m an artist in the 21st century, doing the same thing again – making it contemporary. So in a sense these layers reflect a series of endless mirrors, or bridges, between Bruegel and myself. It’s like Bruegel cast a 1,500 year bridge, and I am casting my own 500 year-old bridge – I’m sure there will be many other artists after me doing the same.

For me, these are pillars from which we can build history; it’s real art. Many events that are happening now can’t go anywhere because the bridges immediately collapse.

Which filmmakers would you call ‘pillars’ of cinema, upon whose bridges you have built upon?

There are so many. Tarkovsky, Fellini… they taught me so much. And Antonioni. In fact, he really introduced me to cinema.

One day, when I was much younger, I travelled to Venice as my uncle was a teacher in the Conservatorio there. Venice really opened my eyes to the beauty that human beings can create, as opposed to the koshmar of socialism I was living in, in Poland – a life of forced happiness. In Venice, I was standing before Giorgione’s La Tempesta, and I made the connection to Antonioni’s Blow Up, and the scene in the park.

To return to the bridges analogy, I saw another 500-year-old bridge. I thought, if Giorgione was alive today, he’d be making films like Antonioni. And that was it. In that instant I decided to leave the academy of fine arts where I was studying, and go to film school in Lodz. And from then on, I tried to paint in my films.

And do you have a sense that if Bruegel were alive he’d be making films like you?

But Bruegel was making films. I mean, when you are standing in front of Bruegel in Vienna, looking at the paintings, you are in a Fellini film. I mean, all the facciatas, and all those crazy, corpulent guys.

It’s true that many of his paintings are very cinematic. Procession to Calvary is like a slow pan.

He is a filmmaker. He’s mixing two styles: firstly, an extremely careful composition, which is constructed by an absolutely surreal landscape, mixed with very real costumes and props. But the landscape doesn’t exist. I mean, Flanders is as flat as this table, and yet Bruegel’s Flanders is full of protruding rocks and mountains, hills. The various perspectives don’t really make sense, only in a pictorial way.

Through this technique, he’s capturing a magnificent scene; the people seem to be caught off-guard, red-handed. They are captured in an instant. With other paintings, figures are looking at you and they are intensely aware of being painted, posing; they are draped in front of you. When you see Bruegel characters, they don’t give a damn whether you are looking at them or not. That is a beautiful thing, psychologically, because it draws you a lot closer, and you are instantly intimate with them, rather than being brought into the draped officialdom of posed paintings.

There is a certain sense of time and movement in Bruegel, and in turn in your film. It’s a very slow-moving film – things happen in real time. Does this sense of temporality come from its painterly origins?

Well, my initial idea was to make a feature film of motionless characters… I like stillness, I think stillness happens at the most important moments in life. When you are concentrating, you slow down. When you are horrified, you stop. When you are in love, you slow down and then stop, and you look like an idiot. The crowd passes you by, pushing and punching, but you don’t notice anything. It’s like Gaston Bachelard says: “vertical time”. I like it when time builds upon itself, time that doesn’t stretch like chewing-gum. But, in the end I decided to let the characters move. But even so, at the heart of it, when the central part of the film occurs, everything comes to a standstill.

What do you think the effect of vertical time is upon the viewer?

Well, it depends on the viewer. If you want time chewing-gum, you’ll be bored. If you are coming to see something different, then perhaps you will be satisfied. I have been showing this film all over the world, 47 countries have bought the film for distribution, every country in Europe apart from one. Can you guess which?

Poland?

No, we’re sitting in it. England. It’s strange, it’s spoken in English, it’s got Charlotte Rampling and Michael Yorke. Even Rutger Hauer! Even Andorra bought it.

I’m interested in your relationship to Poland. There is a tendency for artists from Poland to be unable to escape certain interpretations of their work, particularly if there is any violence in it. It’s often interpreted in relation to Poland’s history. How do you negotiate that? Do you see that as a part of the work?

I don’t think Poland is particularly different from other countries. So many countries have suffered. I cannot say that this work is about a history of Polish suffering, because for me the problem lies elsewhere.

The villain of my piece is the 21st century, which has brought with it the absolute devastation of the human figure. It happened in art first, and then one could argue that the armies came afterward and finished the job that the visual world had already started.

Now, we are accustomed to being fooled, we are fed very problematic ideas. I feel very strongly, after spending four years with Bruegel and being a humble observer of his might, that art offers no saviour for us now, no arcadia, no rescue.

Do you see your film as an antidote to this foolishness?

My film is a function of my unease with modern art. Mind you, I was also a perpetrator, and after all, my brainchild was the film Basquiat (1996) [Majewski wrote the screenplay], so I’m not throwing the baby out with the bathwater. There are contemporary artists who are important, but I’m talking about the vast majority of works in the art market right now, a market that is full of chaotic nonsense. So, instead of the brutality of the past, it’s a kind of white-gloved brutality now.

And finally, casting Rutger Hauer? How do you get past Blade Runner?

Well, now he’s unavoidably Bruegel. He left the blade and hit the canvas.

 

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12 of Lech Majewski’s 15 films

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The Knight (1980)
‘This is a hard film to evaluate because it doesn’t treat itself like film at all. It doesn’t even try to be appealing for the audience. In terms of its figurations and themes, The Knight is equally underplayed–all traces of plot or moral/thematic development seem to simply fizzle out, leaving the film largely unresolved and inconclusive. The boundary between the world of the film and world of the viewer is constantly violated by characters who stare into the camera–sometimes appearing to directly address the audience. Artifice is made intentionally obvious throughout. However, the film left a lasting impression on me. Because the film plays by its own rules, perhaps it is unfair to judge it based on preconceived cinematic notions. I feel like The Knight reiterated tired themes of futility and imprisonment in the search for happiness/meaning in a new (albeit strange) way. Really, I don’t know what to say about it other than it is difficult but ultimately worthwhile.’ — SportexTheLewd


the entire film

 

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Prisoner of Rio (1988)
‘The fact that Ronnie Biggs co-wrote this fiasco (filmed in English) may explain the portrait of the Great Train Robber as a sharp-witted charmer, his sole real concern in life his son. The story recounts the less-than-legal efforts of cop Berkoff (macho, variable accent) to bring Biggs (Freeman, larger-than-life Londoner) back to Blighty and prison. The intrigue is messily and murkily conceived, involving undercover agents, swarthy thugs, shady fixers, and much predictable ado about Carnival. Majewski renders entire scenes devoid of dramatic point or meaning by the sort of editing that makes you wonder what’s happening, why, and where; the pacing is listless, the camera invariably wrongly placed, the whole stitched with leering shots of skimpily clad revellers and travelogue padding. Risible throughout.’ — Time Out (London)


the entire film

 

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Gospel According to Harry (1994)
‘Starring Viggo Mortensen just moments before he was discovered by Hollywood, Gospel According to Harry is a visionary allegory set in the near future when the Pacific Ocean has dried up and California has become a desert. Against this vast canvas, Majewski tells a marital morality tale of modern discontent. With Jennifer Rubin, Rita Tushingham, and Jack Kehoe.’ — Wexner Center


Excerpt

Watch the film here

 

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The Roe’s Room (1997)
‘A fitting introduction to Lech Majewski’s singular vision and multiple talents, THE ROE’S ROOM is the cinematic version of the “autobiographical opera” POKOJ SAREN (itself based upon a book of his poetry) which was later selected as one of the best new operas in the world by the International Theater Institute. In nineteenth century opera, emotions sing. This twentieth century film jarringly recreates these truths inside a decaying Polish apartment complex. Between the four walls of their flat, a mother, father and son grow older by the day. But their “reality” blossoms with the poetics of fantasy: milk spurts from the table, leaves sprout from a cracked shower wall and, in autumn, deer invade their living room to hide in the wheat that has grown through the carpet. THE ROE’S ROOM is a work to be felt as well as heard and seen, soaring with the harmonic beauty of song and the beatific world of dream. Within their apartment, a father, mother and son bear the dulling yoke of an ordinary urban life. His mind and heart borne aloft by the cycle of the seasons and the images and music within him, the son transforms his cloistered existence into a richly poetic emotional utopia. As autumn arrives, cracking flakes of plaster become falling leaves. With spring, a cold hard floor comes alive with meadow grass and love beckons in the form of a beautiful young girl’s outstretched hand.’ — Fandor


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Wojaczek (1999)
‘The last days of Rafal Wojaczek, a rebelious poet who died prematurely in his twenties like Jean-Michel Basquiat and Jim Morrison. Fueled by his self-destructive life, his poetry made a lasting impression on generations of Poles. He drank and fought and walked through windows. Confronting death on a daily basis, he tried to tame it. Loved by women, he cared for no one, not even himself, living desperado-style only for poetry. Conscious of the need for myth in the mythless reality of communist Poland, he burned his life as an offering.’ — International Film Circuit


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Angelus (2000)
‘Thoroughly and rather inscrutably Polish, Angelus makes a fable of Poland’s 20th-century history. In it, caricatures of Hitler and Stalin mix with angels, saints, and a kooky band of sun-worshipping cultists who believe a ray from Saturn will destroy the planet. In a world director Majewski renders in stylized, eccentric tableaus, this eschatology seems fairly reasonable–even if it means a naked, virginal teen boy must be sacrificed to absorb the ray and save the Earth. (Is he a Christ figure? Well, Angelus is fairly well suffused with religious symbolism, so you do the math.) This guileless chosen one narrates the decades-spanning tale, which often suggests a gentler kind of Emir Kustericia-style absurdist nationalism (see Underground) shorn of sex and violence. What lies next for Poland after the horrors of WWII and repression of the communist era? How will the world end? Judged by the movie (if not its prophecies), more with a whimper than a bang.’ — Joan Alice


the entire film

 

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The Garden of Earthly Delights (2004)
‘Working from his own novel “Metaphysics,” writer-director Lech Majewski crafts “magic in THE GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS’ intimate passion plays, which are filled with loving detail” (Village Voice) and creates “a luminous, highly erotic treatise on art, love and death” (Chicago Reader). When London art historian Claudine (Claudine Spiteri) meets engineer Chris (Chris Nightingale), it is love and lust at first sight. But their spiritual and erotic connection is threatened by a devastating and deadly illness. Her remaining days on earth numbered, Claudine chooses to fan the flames of her obsession with Hieronymus Bosch by taking her lover on a trip to Venice, where the artist’s work becomes the background for their physical passion and emotional discovery. Like Dante’s Beatrice, Claudine becomes Chris’ guide into a labyrinth of sensuality, love, death, regret and redemption.’ — Fandor


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Glass Lips (2007)
‘Lech Majewski’s Glass Lips (2007) debuted as an instillation piece at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. It’s original title was Blood of a Poet, paying homage to Jean Cocteau’s 1930 film. Surreal, kaleidoscopic, and predominantly silent, Glass Lips feels like a series of interrelated shorts literally forming a “motion picture.” The homoerotic frescoes of St. Sebastien are re-imaged with a Marian sheen. Mother repeatedly replaces son in martyrdom. Rows of the maternal tree, reduced to an orifice by exploring patriarchal hands. There is also resurrection. Nothing is permanent, possible because the martyr also co-created his passion, painted his pathos, and unraveled the rope which ties him to the cliches and traditions of the doomed poet. Majewski himself composed the impressive score, creating a lush language to supplant impotent words. Glass Lips not only inspires the viewer to labor in his or her voyeurism, but the film also demands some sweat from those who write about it.’ — 366 Weird Movies

Watch the film here

 

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The Mill and the Cross (2011)
‘Here is a film before which words fall silent. The Mill & the Cross contains little dialogue, and that simple enough. It enters into the world of a painting, and the man who painted it. If you see no more than the opening shots, you will never forget them. It opens on a famous painting, and within the painting, a few figures move and walk. We will meet some of those people in more detail. The painting is “The Way to Calvary” (1564), by the Flemish master Pieter Bruegel the Elder. We might easily miss the figure of Christ among the 500 in the vast landscape. Others are going about their everyday lives. That’s a reminder of Bruegel’s famous painting “Landscape With the Fall of Icarus,” about which Auden wrote of a passing ship “that must have seen something amazing, a boy falling out of the sky, had somewhere to get to and sailed calmly on.” Extraordinary events take place surrounded by ordinary ones. We regard most of the events from one perspective: the front, as looking at the painting. But the camera sometimes enters into the action. There are many closer shots of the peasants, solemnly, sadly regarding the pain they witness. They are as passive as beasts. Others in the same frame may be engaged in indifferent occupations. At the center is the death of Christ, but it, too, is only a detail. Here is a film of great beauty and attention, and watching it is a form of meditation. Sometimes films take a great stride outside the narrow space of narrative tradition and present us with things to think about. Here mostly what I thought was, why must man sometimes be so cruel?’ — Roger Ebert


Trailer


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Field of Dogs (2014)
Field of Dogs is a film from Lech Majewski, a Polish poet and painter and has been working on film since 1980. His earlier films are not so well known, although he has worked in the fantastic genre a number of times with efforts such as the mediaeval fantasy The Knight (1980), The Roe’s Room (1997) and Angelus (2000) about a cult and their prophecies coming true. Majewski was the writer and what was to have been the original director of Basquiat (1996). More recently, he gained attention with his arthouse and festival hit The Mill and the Cross (2010), which restages a painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder in elaborate detail. Majewski calls Field of Dogs the third in a triptych of films made from artworks following The Garden of Earthly Delights (2004) and The Mill and the Cross. Though the other two are based on classical works of art, Field of Dogs is based on Dante Aligheri’s epic poem The Divine Comedy (1308-21), which Majewski calls a work of art because it is so visual in nature. The Divine Comedy, one of the classic works of literature, comes in three parts that concern the narrator’s journeys through Hell, Purgatory and finally to Paradise (or Heaven). The section that The Divine Comedy is of course always known for today, except among literary scholars, is Inferno and the image of Hell as a realm of seven circles with punishments meted out to the damned.’ — MORIA


Trailer


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Valley of the Gods (2019)
‘Majewski reteams with Rampling for his latest, Valley of the Gods, an ambitious sci-fi fantasy which uses Navajo folklore to enhance this story of a reclusive trillionaire (Josh Hartnett) who has the ability to alter reality as he’s shadowed by a biographer. In May of 2016, John Malkovich joined a cast which also included Keir Dullea and John Rhys-Davies. We’ve been waiting for quite some time for Majewski to unleash his latest. Filming took place in May of 2016 in Poland, but based on the amount of CGI special effects needed for the five million dollar plus budget, we’re assuming this has been quite the extensive post-production period. While The Mill on the Cross received a premiere at Sundance, his 2014 Field of Dogs received a more demure festival circuit run. With Hartnett and Rampling, we’d expect Valley of Gods to either premiere somewhere in Berlin, or perhaps in an international program in a Spring festival in the US, maybe SXSW.’ — IONCINEMA


Trailer

 

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Brigitte Bardot Forever (2021)
‘Inspired by the tale of Telemachus in Homer’s Odyssey, young Adam’s mother is persecuted by the state police because his father fought in WWII as a pilot before disappearing. Adam fantasizes about his father and one day, while watching Godard’s Contempt in the cinema, finds himself transported into the dressing room of Brigitte Bardot and into a world where he meets a coterie of her contemporary celebrities.’ — Letterboxd


Trailer


Excerpts and interview

 

 

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p.s. Hey. ** James Bennett, Hi, James! Details on the December reading are still in-process, but I’ll let people know when/if it’s set. It would be at the very beginning of December, maybe even Dec. 1st. Oh, yeah, about the influence. Mostly Ivy Compton-Burnett. Her voice definitely sunk way in. Yes, about using that stuff as an ingredient rather than as the overriding whole. Or I’ve always thought about it that way. You just need to find your own way to do that where that stuff is allowed its full power without allowing it overpower the rest. Obviously I use that stuff in my work, and even though it’s mixed with things both tangential and non-tangential, it glares at readers so much that they have a hard time seeing anything else. That’s kind of the big thing to think about when choosing how to use it. So sorry about you having to be on the job. Obviously, there are few more distracting and stress-inducing pursuits. Major luck getting something nailed down. Bisous back, moi. ** jay, Hi. Cool. Oh, right, the ‘Poltergeist’ occasion. Strange that didn’t pop up, I guess. When I was a kid they were building a big freeway (the 210 Freeway for you LA familiars), and where they were building it was this area full of huge houses and mansions. It took forever, so for many years all those mansions were just sitting there decaying, and I spent a lot of my childhood exploring them then doing drugs there later a teen. They finally tore them all down, and it was amazing to see how quickly and easily those amazing houses — some of them with 6 floors — were reduced to piles of wood, in mere minutes, and that kind of haunted me permanently. I remember ‘Young Werther’ being pretty great. See what you think. ** Dominik, Hi!!! No, the German festival thing is complicated and very frustrating. Long story short, they want the film, but the film is also under consideration by a bigger festival that wants the ‘international premiere’ rights, which would mean we couldn’t do the German festival because it takes place earlier. So we’re having to wait to hear from the bigger festival before we say yes, and the bigger festival, which I very seriously doubt is going to take the film, won’t let us know until after the deadline to say yes to the German festival, so we’re having to ask the German festival to give us an extra couple of days to answer, and I’m afraid they might get pissed and change their minds, but our producer insists that we have to wait on the bigger festival, and it’s driving me crazy, haha. Vienna is a major city, so hopefully My Chem will see it as a must. Haha, a pale pool boy wearing lots of sunscreen, I hope. Love hoping our French film distributor’s poster and trailer for our film, which we’re getting a peek at today, aren’t too boring and horrible, G. ** Steeqhen, Hi. Growing up in LA, I lived through many earthquakes, some quite big, but broken windows and toppled bookshelves are the worst that ever happened. Glad you’re feeling better, of course. No, Roman’s bike thing had no relation to my axe thing. I can’t remember where that came from. Oh, shit, so sorry about the loss of your bag. Awful. You can’t trace it down? ** Charalampos, All thanks to the discoverer and provider. ‘Vile Days’ is one of Gary’s best books, I think. Bobby French had nice hair, or he did in your head at least. Waving hello from Paris central. ** Carsten, Remind me never to be your landlord, haha. If you like rough and unkempt and coincidentally French, you’ll like Marseilles. On the Duende Day, ideally you can put the images in the doc where they’re meant to be placed and also send me the actual images as attachments. I can, worst comes to worst, screen grab the images from the doc, but they tend to be in lower quality when I do it that way. Or, yes, you can just name the images in the text, if you prefer. ** Nicholas., Hi. I decided at a very young age that my parents were not to be trusted or emulated so I distanced myself from them from then on. I don’t think it’s an age or generation thing, no. But there are much less people my age who are still wildly on the hunt for newness and the unknown than there were when I was, say, a teen or in my twenties. I never write short stories. My short stories are always experiments for novels that didn’t end up panning out. I don’t know if it’s singular or a Multiverse. I guess the latter if I had to guess. ** Steve, Frost Children is on my radar. Hot flashes … I guess I don’t know what those are. I associate the term with menopausal women for some reason. And I thought they were maybe sexual or something. ** Darby 🦛, Rhino, right? Or maybe hippo. Writing and crafting, cool. Nice day. I think I can imagine that, but I don’t know why. Good old imagination. So roomy. Sure, yes, send me an email, yes, thank you. If I don’t see you, may your week heavily provide. ** HaRpEr //, It was amazing to grow up a few blocks from all those abandoned mansions I mentioned to jay up above. There were so many, maybe 50 of them. I think that influenced me even more than Disneyland. There was a point when I was first developing my fiction where I had to reject Genet for a long time for maybe the same concern. It is sad when amazing writers get ruined by being assigned in school. Emily Dickinson is a big example of that. ** julian, I’d take Satanic pedophile warlords over the current situation, yes. I haven’t seen ‘Eddington’, no. Zac saw it the other and very strongly warded me off seeing it. ** Dev, Hi, Dev! Very excellent to see you, sir! Me too re: that melancholy. Muriel Spark is wonderful. A favorite? Hm … maybe either ‘A Far Cry from Kensington’ or ‘Not To Disturb’? I hope the busyness has been good? Any tidbits? ** Mari, Hi, Mari. Oh, okay, I’ll do my best. No, I don’t think I ever put myself in the shoes of someone interviewing me. I think I’m too concentrated on paying attention and trying to answer differently than I have before. I have been denied interviews a handful of times that I can remember. Trent Reznor (coincidentally enough), Marilyn Manson, Larry Clark, Vin Scully (the legendary Dodgers baseball announcer), and Randy Newman, and, no, I’ve never run into any of them since. Zac and I are very much on the same wavelength, so collaborating with him is always great and exciting. I don’t have a strong enough visual sense in terms of mapping out how a film could be shot to make a film on my own, I don’t think. I have lots of ideas, but I suspect they’re very impractical, so I would need to work with a very good DP. But I only want to make films with Zac, so it’s not an issue really. I get asked to blurb books all the time. I’ve learned to not say yes to everything I like because it dilutes the value of your endorsements. No, when writers are compared to me, I just think it’s part and parcel of what happens to writers when they’re new. Critics always do that. I was tagged ‘the new Burroughs’ for years until people recognised that I had my own style. It was a little annoying since Burroughs wasn’t an influence on me, but that’s just the way it goes. Thank you for wanting to know those things. I don’t know ‘The Good Doctor’. The last thing I was watched was a really great film by Alexander Kluge called ‘The Power of Emotion’ (1983). Oh, and I watched the Devo documentary, which was okay. Thank you about the socks! Cotton is easier for me, yes. And Zac has no allergies so he would love socks. I think I can speak for him on that front. Thanks so much! So … how was your first day, or if it takes a bit for you to comment, your first week? I hope you have the best school week ever ever! ** horatio, Thanks. No, never used roblox. I barely even know what it is. Nice, interesting about your theatre background. Some part of you must miss being a performer, no? Well, I used to play guitar in bands and I don’t miss doing that all, so maybe not. I do like the hint at your possible Bataille performance. Decent job you landed at the very least, I hope. Congratulations on that, I presume. Def. let me in on that secret zine thing, yes. Day of days to you. ** ellie, Hi! Congrats on finishing your year and moseying around on the East Coast. Really, about cigarettes there? Wow. (Victim of insanely overpriced cigarettes here). ‘Faerie Devouring’ … I’ll go see what that is. Yes, I’m almost entirely doing ‘Room Temperature’ things, probably at least until the end of the year. A bit burnt out, but I’ll make it. Have a dreamy one. ** Tyler Ookami, Gotcha, about relocation > excitement. Yeah, those qualities of ‘Lonesome Cowboys’ are a big reasons why I love it so much. You can’t manufacture those qualities, although god knows Zac and I do try sometimes. ‘Chelsea Girls’ is definitely best seen in a theater and when projected live not when pre-set and launched as a done deal. The reel changes and so on are a big part of it. And etc. That said, if you’re extremely unlikely see it projected, you can watch it online and imagine/add those qualities probably. ** Right. Today your ‘task’ is to investigate (or re-investigate if you already know his stuff) the lovely films of Lech Majewski. See you tomorrow.

Ex-mansions 2

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Marquis de Maussabre blows up his family mansion to evade taxes. Airvau, Poitiers, France.

 

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The Hüseyin Avni Paşa Mansion in Istanbul was completely destroyed by flames on the afternoon of June 28. “[During our analysis of the incident] we discovered there were no electrical connections in the abandoned mansion … the exact reason of the fire cannot be determined, as no [concrete] factor as to what could have caused the blaze has been found,” the fire department’s report said.

 

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A party intended to be a small gathering for friends saw 2,000 young revelers turn up causing over £400,000 in damage. 60 police cars were called in to deal with the shindig which had been promoted on Twitter using the hashtag #MansionParty. Parents of the boy who hosted the party said they had given him permission ‘to have a small number of people over’. However, after posting news of the party to social media, the house in Brampton, Ontario was flooded with young people who fueled by drinking, drugs, and deafening techno music, proceeded to destroy virtually everything in the house. One party goer called Nick, who claimed to be 16, said: ‘There were hundreds of people here. Some people were climbing over ladders, smashing the windows, and trying to drive their cars into the party through the walls’.

 

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Superstar rapper 50 Cent’s mansion burned to the ground Friday – and his enraged ex-girlfriend, who was living in the house with their son, accused the entertainer of torching the $2.4 million Long Island home. Shaniqua Tompkins and two of her children, including the rapper’s 10-year-old son, Marquise, were among six people who fled the early morning Dix Hills blaze. “He tried to kill me and his own child,” Tompkins claimed, as she stood screaming outside the decimated mansion hours after the inferno. 50 Cent’s reps refused to respond to her allegations.

 

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Destroy the Mansion!!!! The owners are gone… The house has no one in it… and i have a rocket launcher and bombs… hehehe… BY ZORO GAMING. odd51 Wut!? I’m juste finishing to destroys!!! 4 days * LittleLittleAdelyn Yes, I know. It’s just colored again. 4 weeks * SpazzMan502 Has nobody noticed how it’s ALL free modeled? Completely free modeled. If you look closer, that house is a recolored version of haunted mansion. 1 month * zenny911 I I LOVE IT ME ZOMBE 5 months * amyiou Builders Club fun yayayyayayayayaya 5 months * zenny911BBBBBBBBOOOOOOOOOOOOOOYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYAAAAAAAAA 5 months * policeofficer295 fun!! 6 months * Artoro Awesome game! But the couch in the attic can’t get destroyed. 😛 1 year * epicdude5843 2 people are haters 1 year * ChefHayden FUN!!!! XDXDXDXDXDXDXDXDXD 1 year * SoulEliminator 1 person (Who disliked) was still inside the house while it was destroyed. xD 1 year

 

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Giant boulders the size of a house have left a trail of destruction during rockfall in rural Italy. The enormous boulders ripped through a 300-year-old mansion – causing millions of pounds worth of damage.

 

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Fire guts historic mansion once owned by Polaroid founder

 

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It’s been two weeks since this lavish seaside Mansion was beaten, smashed and burnt by angry mobs. Neighbours around the home say it was occupied by a nephew of former president Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. Every day, several Tunisians can be seen at the home going through debris and taking pieces of the home, Sami Soukah says, “They stole the people’s money. We are not sorry that this happened.” Another angry Tunisian described the home as an “illegal building” built on “illegal land.” Today, the Mansion is just a shell with an infinity pool filled with debris, wide screen TV’s smashed, furniture charred, 30 Foot Floor to Ceiling Windows completely shattered and the smell of fire is strongly present. There is also a large amount of graffiti spread throughout the home including “The Rich got Richer. The Poor got Poorer” which can be seen on a wall in a marble tiled bedroom, which once had a jacuzzi. Another wrote “You killed the people, Ben Ali,” in the hallway overlooking the landscaped gardens which includes tropical plants and fountains. Many of the onlookers had never known how lavishly Ben Ali’s family lived, so when the Mansion was ransacked the people were shocked.

 

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The film’s crew and designers spent months building the replica building in the middle of the English countryside to create the perfect mansion worthy of a secret agent. But in true action film style, nothing ever stays standing or intact for too long. And last night, James Bond’s countryside lodge in Skyfall was destroyed in a huge explosion as more scenes were filmed for the upcoming 007 film. The purpose-built mansion, made from plywood and plaster. Even though the house and the set were razed to the ground last night, Javier Bardem, who plays the movie’s villain, was asked not to light up in case he accidentally started a fire too early. ‘Javier loves his cigarettes and is always smoking on set to pass the time. The Skyfall lodge has been built in a field with some pretty dry grass, though. It wouldn’t take much for one of his butts to catch alight. They’ve had word with him and he keeps well away now when on a smoke break.’

 

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Gage Lane Mansion

 

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$125M mega-mansion from Succession destroyed in LA fires: ‘The owner is 29 years old in 2025, bought the property in 2021. He used it to film shoots, and it was vacant and up for rent at $450,000/month when it burned. He never lived there! Plus, he bought it for $83 million and it never sold. Not sure why outlets are valuing it at $125 million just because he listed it. This was not a home. It was a real estate investment vehicle. Insurers and potential renters may be devastated; I just can’t be.’

 

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These pictures are pictures of Steve Jobs’ mansion, which is now demolished. Jackling House was designed by the famed architect George Washington Smith, who was, among other things, credited with the Spanish-Colonial Revival style in the United States. Smith designed the home for Jackling, a metallurgist who went on to become an executive at the Utah Copper Company. Jobs lived in the mansion for ten years, and then rented it out until 2000, when he stopped maintaining the building. Despite a bitter battle with Uphold Our Heritage, who held the property out as a historic landmark, Jobs was eventually granted permission to bulldoze Jackling House, which he did last February.

 

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The Batcave is history: A fire gutted the California mansion that served as the home of Bruce Wayne, aka Batman, in the 1960s TV series. “It was a fully engulfed inferno, for lack of a better term,” Lisa Derderian, a spokeswoman for the Pasadena Fire Department. said of the fire last night. The Tudor-style home on South San Rafael Avenue was 1440 sq m and sat on 2ha of land. It was being remodelled by the owners, Derderian said. The home also was used for filming other TV shows and films, including 1991’s Dead Again, which starred Emma Thompson and Kenneth Branagh.

 

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How Kanye West Ruined an Architectural Treasure

 

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Most people would be beside themselves if their home and prized possessions were destroyed in a natural disaster. But despite being ‘numb’ and ‘in shock’, former Skid Row singer Sebastian Bach tried to look on the bright side after his New Jersey mansion was destroyed by flooding caused by Hurricane Irene. Writing on Facebook , the metal singer said: ‘I have been holding on to my house. I just could not let go of the only home I had ever known. Well, God has other plans for me it seems. He has made His decision for me. My home has been taken away by an “Act Of God”. I just think He is giving me a much needed push, is all. New Jersey, thank you all so much for 25 years of rock n’ roll.’

 

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Official cause of $10 million Middlebury Mansion fire remains a mystery, but officials believe spontaneous combustion is the likely reason.

 

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Ever wonder what it be like to skate inside a multi-million dollar mansion on the beach?! Well OC riders Dave Bachinsky, Jordan Hoffart, Greg Lutzka and friend Shuriken Shannon did! Watch them turn this house into their personal skatepark.

 

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The Luthor Mansion was the main estate of the Luthor family. It was Lex Luthor’s primary residence after he moved to Smallville in October 2001. A locked room on the third story in the east wing of the mansion housed Lex’s “obsession”: computer screens with a rotating CGI image of the octagonal key, wall paintings and murals from the Kawatche caves, Roger Nixon’s computer simulation of Lex’s porsche hitting Clark Kent on Loeb Bridge, an enlarged photograph of Clark’s face, a family photograph of the Kent family, an enlarged copy of Clark’s family tree that he transliterated with Kryptonian symbols, a large meteor fragment containing green and red kryptonite and a glass-encased carcass of a Kryptonian parasite extracted from the Katwatche caves. After Lex went missing in mid 2008, he selected Tess Mercer as his caretaker CEO to watch over his estate until he returned, but when she found out his true intentions, she declared him dead. After Lex died, Tess Mercer controlled the Luthor Mansion. She was temporarily held captive in the mansion by Major Zod and his army. Later, Lionel came from Earth-2 using a mirror box, and took over the mansion. The mansion was destroyed by a fire caused by Alexander.

 

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‘I just learned yesterday that the home in Toronto known as “Toronto’s Weirdest House” was demolished within the last few days. The home, which was located at 110 Maybourne Ave. in Toronto was a 1970s bungalow that was reimagined over the years by its longtime owner, Max Heiduczek, and included interiors as eccentric as its eye-catching exterior, with split levels, bright red and green carpeting, and an indoor pool, as well as archways, wallpaper and murals galore.’

 

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How to destroy Luigi’s Mansion

 

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In its Gilded Age heyday, it was the scene of lavish parties attended by the likes of Winston Churchill, the Marx Brothers and F. Scott Fitzgerald. But now Lands End, the grand colonial mansion said to be the inspiration for Daisy Buchanan’s house in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, is set to be torn down – because no one will buy it. The 1902 property, set in 13 acres on the tip of Sands Point, Long Island, is slowly crumbling and costs $4,500 each day to maintain. David Brodsky, who bought the estate with his father Bert in 2004, has had the dilapidated mansion on and off the market for several years, but has never found a buyer for it. Now he plans to demolish the house, valued at $30million, to make way for Sands Point Village, a community of five custom-made homes which will cost $10million each.

 

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The grim search has begun of the country mansion where the bodies of a Conservative MP and his wife are believed to be after fire swept their home. Michael Colvin, 67, and his wife Nichola, 62, are believed to lie somewhere in the gutted remains of the west wing of Tangley House, near Andover in Hampshire. Conservative party leader William Hague paid tribute to both Mr Colvin and his 62-year-old wife, praising the countryside-loving MP as a “true Tory”.

 

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The National Trust Clandon Park has been destroyed by a devastating explosion whose origin remains a mystery despite having been studied by several international teams of investigators. Including the Marble Hall with its original stucco ceilings and marble fireplaces. “If I wasn’t a betting man,” United States special disaster investigator Henry Vaxen, “I would almost venture to guess that the building committed suicide rather violently. It seems to have exploded with immense force for no reason whatsoever.” Built in 1720 for Lord Onslow by a Venetian designer. It was the most complete example of a Palladian mansion and it’s loss is a loss for us all.

 

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Just how powerful were the tornadoes that tore through Nebraska last week? Based on a newly released video, powerful enough to pull a 2 million dollar mansion from the ground and toss it in the air.

 

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At just £4, it was a cheap and easy way of keeping her paperwork in order. But the three-inch glass weight proved an expensive investment after it caused a freak fire which left Martin and Ruth Ball’s £1million home in ruins. Fire investigators believe the paperweight concentrated the sun’s rays on to a pile of books and set them alight when it was left in the first floor conservatory during last month’s mini-heatwave. The resulting blaze caused an estimated £300,000 of damage, destroying the roof of the house which collapsed through to a swimming pool on the ground floor.

 

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‘Actor Chris Pratt has drawn ire from architecture aficionados after news broke that the actor and his wife, Katherine Schwarzenegger, had razed a historic, mid-century modern home to make way for a sprawling 15,000-sq-ft mansion. Last year, the couple purchased the 1950 Zimmerman house, designed by the architect Craig Ellwood, in Los Angeles’s Brentwood neighborhood for $12.5m. The residence, with landscaping by Garrett Eckbo – who has been described as the pioneer of modern landscaping – had previously been featured in Progressive Architecture magazine. The single-story home and its grounds have since been cleared and in its place will be a massive home in the modern farmhouse style that has come to dominate US suburbs.’

 

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Tony Stark’s Malibu Mansion was a place where Tony Stark lived in California. The whole house was wired through J.A.R.V.I.S.. It was destroyed during a helicopter attack initiated by the Mandarin. Sometime after the Chitauri invasion of New York, a haunted Tony Stark became a recluse in his mansion workshop and obsessively began building several Iron Man suits. When Tony made a statement on television to The Mandarin issuing a challenge to confront him in person at his home, The Mandarin’s forces responded with lethal action by attacking Stark in his home, destroying the mansion and submerging it into the ocean below.

 

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Aerial shots show luxury of Beijing roof-top mountain villa as demolition of the mansion begins The elaborate rooftop mountain mansion in Beijing has been filmed from above, showing the big villa, the pool and impressive rock garden as it is announced it must be destroyed. The 8,610-square foot structure, built illegally, has been ordered to be demolished and must be removed within 15 days. As the video of the impressive villa went viral, the owner, a professor Zhang Biqing, began to take his home apart.

 

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Ellaville was a boom town of the 1800’s where approximately 1000 people lived at one time. The location was at the merging of the Withlacoochee and Suwannee rivers. George Drew and Louis Bucki had a number of business’s here including logging, sawmill, turpentine, and railroad car building. On May 19, 1895 two negro men, John Brooks and Samuel Echols were lynched in Ellaville. George Drew became the first Governor of Florida after the Reconstruction. His mansion was 1/2 mile northwest of the Ellaville site. Built in the 1860’s the two story mansion was surrounded by formal gardens. The mansion was destroyed by fire in 1970. The ruins are still there.

 

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“They took the idols and smashed them, the Fairbankses, the Gilberts, the Valentinos”! Well they smashed houses too! This was Norma Desmond’s mansion in Sunset Boulevard. Its address was 641 S. Irving Blvd. and was looking towards the NW corner of Wilshire/Irving Blvd. It was demolished in 1957.

 

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p.s. Hey. ** jay, Hi. If only someone had filmed when I had my head cleaved open with an axe when I was 11, I’d share it with you. I was in a daze at the time, but I suspect the blood spurts were pretty wild. When I first found the Kresnik play there was a video of it, but someone took it down, alas. It is a bit of a war at the top between ‘Benny’s Video’ and ‘White Ribbon’, it’s true. It wouldn’t have been too hard for your weekend to win the contest, and I hope it did. ** Carsten, Amen to that. I have very burnable skin. I was twice hospitalised with very bad sunburn when I was a teen, so I’m pretty cautious. And hats look weird on me. My head’s too big. I like Marseille. It’s the least French French city, visually. It’s pretty rough and worn down. Buildings spontaneously collapse there rather frequently. I wouldn’t want to live there, but it’s an interesting visit for sure. ** tomk, My pleasure, yay. I’ve only seen Banyan trees in Hawaii where they’re reasonably common, and, yes, they’re wild. Good, you’ll have company for the readings. That should help with the nerves. Is the DC site still down? Grr. The person who does it told me it would be back online months ago. I’ll go badger him. I guess jay found the interview for you if you didn’t see the reply comment. ** Bill, Cool, thanks! No, I don’t know Kresnik’s work at all. I’ll ask Gisele. My ideas are still pretty vague, but, yeah, it’d be interesting to confer about that. The meaning killing is kind of the big problem for me. I’m old fashioned or something enough to want meaning. Or, well, only in things I make myself. I hope the extension acquiesces to you in time. But, if not, you’ll know what to do. ** Tyler Ookami, Very true, I think, re: prog rock vs. math rock. I could get into math rock recordings, but whenever I saw Tortoise, etc. live it always just seemed uptight wanky. Amazing about that Warhol/Morrissey dump. I just peeked, and there are things I thought I would never get to see. Thank you! Everyone, Via Tyler Ookami: ‘Someone has put a ton of Warhol/Morrissey material in a big folder on Archive: here, including Lonesome Cowboys, though the image quality is not great (it seems to be ripped from video), though also I suppose it is better than not having it at all. It’s very scattershot in terms of what looks optimal, though Soap Opera and Chelsea Girls look far better than I have seen elsewhere! Very interesting that a majorly influential filmography is inching towards being available after, in some cases, not being seen for half a century.’ Incredible score! Thanks again!!! ** Misanthrope, David, David, David. Once we finally get a gig for ‘Room Temperature’ in NYC, I’ll go for that. I supposedly am going to do a reading there at the beginning of December, so maybe then if nothing else. ** julian, Blood lives too briefly once plucked, like avocados. I think the far right conspiracy theories flying all over the place are without pleasure or interest whatsoever personally. Give me ‘Paul is Dead’ over that any day. Okay, the rich NYC folks is a drawback in theory, yeah, but still. ** horatio, What kind of theater did you used to do, and why did you stop? Thanks. And for reading ‘Guide’. Yes, that title was a disguise of the actual title. I can’t remember why I did that though. There’s a lot of disguising in the novel, as you saw, so I guess it was just part and parcel of that. Yeah, of course, about after the event or whenever. Thank you! It’ll be really nice to meet you. I’ve been fine, just the usual work and stuff. You? ** Steve, Hi. Yes, that’s an actual body (the artist’s) in FINISH’IT. I hope your doctor gives you what you need today. New show! Everyone, Here’s Steve: ‘My latest “Radio Not Radio” show is now up on Mixcloud: here. This one features several artists I learned about from your Gig Day, among many others: Ensemble Nist-Nah, Gnaw, Gila, Pharaoh Overload, Major Stars, Vesta SA, Halima, Deekpaz, Nadeem Din-Gabisi, Amaarae, Asa Bantan, Purity Ring, Tropical Fuck Storm, Black Eyes, Guerrilla Toss, Eye Ball, Witch Club Satan, Ritual Mass, Abhorrent Expanse, Nina Nicolaiwesky, Ethel Cain, Whitney Johnson/Lia Kohl/Macie Stewart, Nina Garcia, Harlem River Drive, Chicago Underground Duo and DJ Narciso.’ ** _Black_Acrylic, Nice: the Simons/Ruby collab. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Cool. The film is pretty much the Sword of Damocles right now, but in a mostly good way. Strange about the death of the smell. But dogs know things we don’t, so that’s spooky. I think My Chemical Romance is on tour, no? Coming near you, I hope? Love being gifted with a universal mansion fire damage insurance policy, G. ** HaRpEr //, It’s a little joy, that Sean DeLear book. Yes, that book series that David’s and Nayland’s/my books were part of was a fantastic series. Lots of excellent things. The books were gorgeous. I wish they’d reprint them. The Warhol/Morrissey dump is amazing, yeah. To be able to see ‘Batman Dracula’ even in shitty shape is remarkable. Really good luck with the move. I hate moving so much, but then it’s over, and then you forget. ** Steeqhen, Yeah, that definitely qualifies as a tough weekend. So sorry, man. Concerts can work miracles if you want them to. Thanks a lot about ‘PGL’. And the things you saw in it. Much appreciated. I hope the week erases the weekend. ** Darbzzzzz, Howdy. Kind of intense about the cutting and the timing with the post. That might have made me ‘see’ it more than I normally would have or something. Old Navy, okay. I wasn’t sure if that place still exists ‘cos I’m here where it never existed. Or maybe it did at some point, I don’t know. That’s good. Islands: Yes, the Hawaiian islands, and … Iceland, Catalina (off the coast of LA), a few in Japan, … that might be all. I’m sort of over real sex. Too much trouble. I did see that Reznor thing. It’s hilariously dreadful, haha. Have a good to great week, okay? ** Nicholas., Oh, I was overly judgey about vaping. Whatever works. It just doesn’t look very … suave. You’re going to Fire Island. I always stayed at friends’ little houses there. Fire Island and I were like oil and water, so I don’t have any tips. All my tips would be to avoid the things that you’re going to do there and find exciting. So I’m useless. I haven’t had a treat lately. I’ll try to find one today though. ** Corey, That could make you a friend or two. Excellent about the event success, etc.! I haven’t read Hart Crane since I was assigned to read his stuff in high school. I have no memory of his work at all. It could be great. I feel like nobody in the States at least read him anymore. Except maybe in high school? But I don’t know. ** ellie, Hi, ellie! How good to see you. I’m good enough, how are you? Jeanne Dunning, yay! Thank you! Everyone, ellie made a fine add to the Bloody weekend, a work by the excellent artist Jeanne Dunning, and it’s here. Take care, pal. ** Okay. And today you get the sequel to ‘Ex-Mansions’ whether you like it or not, haha. See you tomorrow.

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