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‘If one were to place Jan Švankmajer in a schemata which might signal a point of access to his work, it might be as someone who anticipated the low-rent, anti-technology, quasi-documentary suggestiveness of The Blair Witch Project (1999) and coupled it with the tactility and cinematic bravura of Dario Argento’s more coherent visual ideas. This significantly undervalues the distinctiveness of Švankmajer’s approach, of course, but points up an important tension at the heart of his work between his conception of “fantastic documentary” and the fundamental principles of “militant surrealism.”
‘Animation readily facilitates this co-existence because its intrinsic artifice effectively creates an ontological equivalence in all aspects of the textual apparatus, imbuing it with the simultaneous capacity to both amplify meanings and imperatives in the materials used and images constructed, while also potentially diluting their significance by working as a model of expression which in enunciating its illusionism offers the possibility of “innocence” and “distanciation.” Simply, this is one of the reasons why animated films—from Disney cartoons to Japanese animé—can be both viewed as conservatively “mainstream” and subversively “left-field” depending upon how they are received and interpreted. The issue underpinning this, of course, remains animation’s enduring identity (and burden) as “children’s entertainment.”
‘Švankmajer refuses this ghetto, however, not merely through the ways in which he uses the free, and in some ways, unregulatable language of animation, but in the way he perceives “the child.” He suggests, “I’m not at all sure that any work of art is unsuitable for children. When children are confronted by something they can’t understand, [they engage with it] so that it works by analogy, or they simply reject it and carry on as before. Adults have a very distorted idea of a child’s world; they are crueller, more animalistic, than we like to admit.
‘The principles of desire live on in a child, who still hasn’t been domesticated by the world; its imagination is that much freer.” It is clear here that in suggesting there are no aesthetic boundaries that a child may not cross, Švankmajer is already challenging the socially and legally determined parameters of what is, and what is not suitable for children. In this respect, too, he signals modes of transgression which may be understood as the necessary imperatives of the artist in the facilitation of exploring new ideas, and the rejection of the restrictions of “citizenry” during that process.
‘The “horror” here resides in the recognition that humankind is fundamentally driven by obsessive and compulsive needs and desires, often rooted in childhood anxieties, and played out in dream-states. Švankmajer “frightens” by prompting recognition of transgression, and by physicalising alternative perspectives. Švankmajer contemporises and materialises the documentation of his agit-scares through the “fabrication” of his mise-en-scène, noting that “Animation can bring the imagery of childhood back to life and give it back its credibility,” adding “The animation of objects upholds the truth of our childhood.”‘ — Paul Wells, Kinoeye
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Further
Jan Svankmajer Official Website
Jan Svankmajer Fan Page
The Jan Svankmajer Home Page
Jan Svankmajer page @ Facebook
‘The Decalogue of Jan Švankmajer’
Jan Svankmajer’s ‘Little Otik’ Diary
‘Jan Švankmajer: Animated Self-Portrait’
Jan Svankmajer interviewed @ Electric Sheep
Book: ‘The Cinema of Jan Svankmajer: Dark Alchemy’
Jan Svankmajer DVDs
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General

The Brothers Quay ‘The Cabinet of Jan Svankmajer’ — Watch it here
Jan Švankmajer – IFFR Big Talk
Jan.Svankmajer – J.S.Bach.Fantasia.in.G.Minor
Darkness Light Darkness (1990) by Jan Svankmajer
Hugh Cornwell Another Kind of Love [dir. Jan Švankmajer, 1988]
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Interview
by Wendy Jackson

Would it be bold to say that Conspirators of Pleasure is your most Surrealist film to date?
Jan Svankmajer: Conspirators is actually a film about liberation, and about gaining a freedom. It is not art, but a film. Just as, for example, André Breton would not say “Surrealistic painting”, he would say “Surrealism in painting”. In the same way, I speak of Surrealism in film. Surrealism is psychology, it is philosophy, it is a spiritual way, but it is not an aesthetic. Surrealism is not interested in actually creating any kind of aesthetic. It was drawn as an element from various different artists, but it does not exist.
How can something so prevalent in your work be non-existent?
JS: Surrealism does exist, but it is not an art form. To characterize Surrealism, you can say it is the Romantic movement of the 20th century. Each romantic period expresses three elements: love, freedom and poetry. Each generation is seeking their own artistic expressions according to the environment and the time period they live in. The Romanticism of the 21st century will ask the same question. It doesn’t matter whether that Romanticism will be Culturalism, or something else.
You are very versatile in your filmmaking and other art, with the use many different techniques. Can you tell me something about your process for determining which medium should be employed to communicate or express a particular idea?
JS: I always say that I basically make my work “to order”, by which I mean to my “inner order”. It is really inside me, what’s going to come out. The way I see it, each individual accumulates in his or her lifetime. That which accumulates inside him or her needs to find a way out. Basically, everybody can do that, but most people do not find a way of releasing it, they have certain blockage. There is no such thing as talent.
No such thing as talent? That is a bold statement.
JS: It’s very simple. The artist is able to reach their resources, and overcome the block. But a clerk who sits in the office, obviously, has his blockage and cannot. This so-called “professionalism”, is much more a matter of technique, or skill than creativity. You can see that in naive art, or folk art, if an individual wants to express him or herself, they find a way to do it if they really want to.
You grew up in a time of such oppression of creativity and self-expression. How is it that you are so “lucky” as to not have this block, that you are able to realize your potential to express yourself through art?
JS: It’s a difficult question to answer. I believe there is a lot to it, including family influences. Certain children are just very difficult to handle. I was one of these children (laughs). For example, all children can draw. Some of them retain this ability until adult age, while in other children the ability is subsequently killed.
Rightly, you are often referred to as the “alchemist” of film.
JS: Yes, alchemy is about trying to connect things that you cannot connect, that are “un-connectable”. Poetry is a parallel for alchemy, and alchemy is a parallel for poetry.
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13 of Jan Švankmajer’s 40 films
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Punch and Judy (1966)
‘Probably the most densely allusive, frenetically charged film ever made about puppets hitting each other, Jan Švankmajer’s Punch and Judy is pretty extraordinary. At their best his short films are as tightly structured as incantations, delivering a sequence of actions and a barrage of images that somehow add up to a perfectly arranged whole. That’s not to say that it’s easy or even possible to draw conclusions about what it means, what the conjuration of that incantation might be, and the lack of easy explanation for all of its imagery is unsettling. If I give a recap of the plot, it might all seem very simple. After a prologue in which a band of automaton monkeys introduce the opening titles before the curtain rises on the stage within the film. Mr Punch is caring for his guinea pig. His neighbour Joey (another stock character from the Punch and Judy stories – note that, despite the title, Judy, along with all the other characters, is nowhere to be seen) envies the guinea pig and tries to buy it. Mr Punch refuses every cash offer, and they settle the dispute with violence, each taking turns to stuff the other into a coffin. It all ends with both characters dead and boxed, while the guinea pig strolls away through a hole in the scenery.’ — Spectacular Attractions
the entirety
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Jabberwocky (1971)
‘The spanked arse that opens the film like the clapstick that marks the start of a kabuki performance is not the only similarity to Todd Haynes’ Superstar. Both films use dolls and their mutilation to explore the degradation of the subject in the process of socialisation. That is, dolls in both cases are made into metaphors for the ways people’s bodies are not their own, but the blank objects onto which are carved the pressures and injunctions of families and society. Svankmajer’s dolls start out as the innocent embodiments of childhood, playthings invested with life by the animation process. Quickly, their innocence is polluted, and they are put to work in a series of actions that knock them into submissive shape. Birthed out of the inert body of a larger doll, they are installed in a house that spins them round and spits them out to be ground into food for more dolls. They are ironed flat, boiled and baked to sustain a cannibalistic circle of stunted life and grotesque death.’ — Spectacular Attractions
the entirety
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The Fall of the House of Usher (1980)
‘Even without understanding the voiceover (in softly lulling Czech) Svankmajer’s film soaks up the mysterious gloom of Edgar Allen Poe’s gothic story of death, doppelgangers and the claustraphobic weight of history. Like the story, it’s the house, brooding in the dusky light, that is the main character in Svankmajer’s film, dominating the landscape of barren trees and pulsating from foundation to roof with doom. Freed from any pesky humans (or even puppet people) to carry the narrative, it’s also the atmospheric house that Svankmajer uses to tell the tale, in crumbling plaster moulding itself into tormented shapes, words appearing out of dead leaves, blank faces appearing in walls and a coffin silently, clunkily and apparently singlemindedly weaving its own way through the rooms. This short film might be the best unlikely example of Svankmajer’s belief in the memories of materials and objects, and in the power of animation to free those memories.’ — The Spectral Dimension
the entirety
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Dimensions of Dialogue (1982)
‘Divided into three separate dialogues entitled ‘Exhaustive Discussion,’ ‘Passionate Discourse’ and ‘Factual Conversation,’ Svankmajer indeed exhausts the subject of social interaction in this unbounded critique of human malfeasance. In the first dialogue, two anthropomorphized assemblages of food-stuffs and kitchen utensils respectively lurch towards one another with the latter devouring the former. In turn, this pattern is repeated when a collection of intellectual markers vies with the kitchen products destroying the returning collage with similarly ease. Next it is the now degraded food objects which sully the books, paints, etc., as though the two were mingling in some fictious trash bin. This process of disintegration continues with the resulting forms appearing closer and closer to the form of man himself.’ — Tativille
the entirety
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Alice (1988)
‘After more than two decades as a prolific director of short films, Alice became Švankmajer’s first venture into feature-length filmmaking. The director had been disappointed by other adaptations of Carroll’s book, which interpret it as a fairy tale. His aim was instead to make the story play out like an amoral dream. Alice appears to be in her bedroom when a taxidermically stuffed rabbit comes to life and breaks out of its glass case. Alice follows the rabbit through the drawer of a desk into a cavern. She subsequently falls through a bucket and seemingly down an elevator shaft. Wonderland itself is a mix of drab household-like areas with incongruous relationships of space and size. The Queen’s execution sentences are carried out by the White Rabbit with a pair of scissors. At the film’s end, Alice wakes in her room, discovers that the rabbit is still missing from his glass case, and finds a secret compartment where he keeps scissors. She ponders whether or not she will cut his head off. The film is ambiguous about whether this room is Alice’s real world or “Wonderland.”‘ — Wikipedia
Trailer
the entirety
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Meat Love (1989)
‘Meat Love is a short film directed and animated by Jan Švankmajer, released in 1989. It appears as a commercial in Švankmajer’s feature-length film Otesánek. It has also been shown on MTV. It depicts two slices of steak, personified as two individual beings with a consciousness, that become aware of each other and form a romantic relationship, showing the steaks dancing with one another. This soon leads to passionate love, exemplified by the steaks rolling around on a plate of flour, which can be seen to symbolise sexual intercourse. Their passion is killed, however, when the steaks are placed in a frying pan.’ — Marked Animation
the entirety
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The Death of Stalinism in Bohemia (1990)
‘In 1990, the year after the “Velvet Revolution” in Czechoslovakia, Jan Svankmajer made The Death of Stalinism in Bohemia and subtitled it “A work of Agitprop.” As these titles plainly demonstrate, it is the most political of all his films, attempting an overview of his country’s history after the Second World War. It is commonly believed that overt political comment within a work can badly affect its artistic value. The complexity and sophistication of artistic language is too often weakened when faced with the simplicity of political vocabulary. Accordingly, from the standpoint of the work of art, the relationship between art and politics is extremely delicate. Despite this, Svankmajer made an explicitly political film. Did he sacrifice the artistic value? If so, to what end? And what significance does the film have to its creator? It is a film that reveals the characteristics of Jan Svankmajer the Militant Surrealist. Svankmajer recognizes that Stalinism in its many guises is just one symptom of contemporary civilization, a civilization he believes that art must attack at its roots. It seems that Svankmajer intends to continue the fight against the absurdities of the human beings by means of his surrealist art.’ — The Slavic Research Center
the entirety
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Faust (1994)
‘Svankmajer’s long awaited follow-up to his acclaimed Alice is an equally astounding version of the myth of Dr. Faustus. Merging live action with stop-motion and claymation animation, Svankmajer has created an unsettling universe presided over by diabolic life-sized marionettes and haunted by skulking human messengers from hell. Svankmajer’s Faust (movingly incarnated by one of the Czech Republic’s finest actors, Petr Cepek) is an ordinary, inquisitive everyman who, upon exiting a Prague subway station, is handed a map that draws him to his doom. Led to an abandoned theater he finds a copy of Goethe’s Faust, begins to read aloud, and unwittingly summons up a devil who offers him everything his heart desires in return for his soul. With breathtaking rapidity, Faust’s journey takes him to the tops of mountains, drops him in the middle of lakes, and sends him out onto the unsuspecting streets of Prague. Peopled with shape-changing demons and puppet versions of Goethe’s characters, Svankmajer’s tour-de-force is alternately hilarious and shocking, always unique, and ultimately unforgettable.’ — kino
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Conspirators of Pleasure (1996)
‘Svankmajer’s newest over-the-brink creation is Conspirators of Pleasure, the absorbing story of an obsessive handful of hardcore sexual fetishists whose lives intersect and dance around one other in serendipitous fashion. Conspirators of Pleasure is an erotic film, although not in the ways that we usually think of eroticism on film. That is, while sexuality is the film’s subject, the titillation factor here is low. For the most part, the characters remain fully clothed throughout. Importantly, there is no sexual intercourse, per se. Nobody talks dirty, because there’s no dialogue at all. Like pornography, communication here is almost completely nonverbal. What’s most gratifying to these motley sensualists — even the married couple, who pursue their own desires separately — is self-gratification. The film itself begins methodically, cross-cutting from story to story and growing ever more complicated as each minute passes. Finally, it achieves its own sort of orgasm, as the stories cross and interconnect, reaching a delirious climax and then a comedown — a disturbing resolution in the best surrealist tradition.’ — deep focus
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Excerpt

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Little Otik (2000)
‘With his latest feature, Little Otik, Svankmajer is poised to move out of the ghetto tag of animator and take his place as a cinema visionary who happens to use animation in his films. Little Otik is based on a Czech fairy tale about a childless couple who adopt a tree stump that looks like a baby. As usual with fairy tales, any deviation from normal behavior triggers disaster — in this case the stump comes to life, grows huge, and starts murdering and eating everybody and everything in its path. Svankmajer, who’s credited with story, screenplay, and direction, uses this narrative as a springboard for a genre-busting masterpiece about the perils of parenthood and what can happen to those who don’t leave well enough alone with the status quo nature has determined.’ — Morphizm
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Lunacy (2005)
‘The latest provocation from surrealist master Jan Svankmajer is loosely based on two short stories by Edgar Allan Poe and inspired by the works of the Marquis de Sade. In nineteenth-century France (albeit one full of deliberate anachronisms) a young man, Jean Berlot, is plagued by nightmares in which he is dragged off to a madhouse. On the journey back from his mother’s funeral he is invited by a Marquis he meets at lunch to spend the night in his castle. There Berlot witnesses a blasphemous orgy and a ‘therapeutic’ funeral. Berlot tries to flee but the Marquis insists on helping him conquer his fears and takes his guest to a surrealistic lunatic asylum where the patients have complete freedom and the staff are locked up behind bars. Described by Svankmajer himself in a prologue to the film as a ’philosophical horror film,” Lunacy combines live action and stop-motion, sex and violence, grand guignol terror and gallows humor, and a lot of animated meat.’ — zeitgeist films
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Surviving Life (Theory and Practice) (2010)
‘Eugene, an aging man, leads a double life: one real – the waking life he spends in the company of his wife of many years, Milana – and the other in his dreams, his sleeping hours being devoted to a recurring evolving dream of a beautiful young woman, Evgenia. Seeking to perpetuate his dream life, he goes to see a psychoanalyst, who attempts to provide an ongoing interpretation of his experiences. On the wall there are portraits of Freud and Jung, which become animated, alternately applauding, disapproving or fighting over her interpretations. The latest film from practising surrealist animator Jan vankmajer is a mix of cut-out animation from photographs and live action segments, combining real actors with their animated photographs, against black and white backdrops of photographed Czech buildings. This stylistic approach which, Svankmajer jokes during the films introduction, was due to lack of funds and saved on catering, provides freedom for imaginative collages, and humorous nods in the direction of some of surrealism’s familiar practitioners (Dalí, Ernst, Buñuel). Drawn directly from Svankmajer’s own dreams, the film is a complex, multilayered story about aging, love, sex, childhood, trauma and dreams, steeped in Freudian and Jungian analysis and injected with a healthy dose of perversity. As Eugene labors in different versions of reality, Svankmajer’s own deeply curious take on reality manifests in all its surrealist splendor.’ — RT
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Insects (2018)
‘Lesser works by great directors needn’t diminish long-standing reputations, so calling Jan Švankmajer’s “Insect” a disappointment in no way weakens the master’s position as a key proponent of surrealist cinema. However, there’s no getting around the fact that the film is a minor entry in a glorious career, despite having all the raw ingredients for a classic Švankmajer stew. Based on the 1922 satirical play “Pictures From the Insects’ Life” by the Čapek brothers, in which performers dressed as bugs expose the thin line between human and insect behavior, the film takes a meta approach, with the director himself acting as commentator (as in “Surviving Life”) to the story of a provincial amateur production.’ — Jay Weissberg
Trailer
Jan Svankmajer introduces his last feature film.
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p.s. Hey. ** jay, Yep, if a writer is suicidal, I’ll eventually showcase him, it appears. There’s one reason why I intend to never read Proust. My brain’s too flighty, I think. So nice that living in solitude is paying off and righting whatever wrongs. Your explanation of ‘Expedition 33’s’ reason for popularity makes total sense of course. Games are not unlike movies in that sense. I’m doing pretty good. Like you to some degree. Is it freezing there? It’s freezing here. ** Vincent, Hi, Vincent! No, I don’t know ‘Untold Night and Day’, but I’ll seek it out certainly. Thanks a lot. How are you? ** adrian, Hi. Sorry we’ll miss each other this time, but try to come again soon. ** Nicholas., Thanks about Mom. I think she’s a rather underrated character. Stanya’s amazing. We wrote the film hoping she’d agree to play that role, and she did. She makes these great videos, sometimes with Harry Dodge, that she stars in. They’re very worth hunting down if you like her. I like cumdumps. Or I guess theoretically since I don’t any personally that I know of. Probably ‘that I know of’ is the key there. Something good … If you say something is sky-colored rather than blue, you’re showing it more respect. ** Carsten, I’m aways very happy to have guest-posts under any circumstances, so thank you. What you wrote made me feel happy that I don’t own anything. Other than a car. I know of Turtle Island Press. I don’t know if that’s the same venture. Anyway, sounds cool, congrats. Assuming their thing is Gary Snyder influenced or homage-y? ** Lucas, What a great paragraph about that book! Cool about the party, and I think connecting with even one person is a lot. It’ll be nice here in April. Well, it’s always nice here exact maybe in August. Great. Mm, I think I’ll wait until the script is nailed down before I say too much about it because a lot can change in the final draft, you know? I should quit smoking too, but I won’t. But you should. Smoking sucks. ** _Black_Acrylic, Here too. Really cold, very brr. But pretty through a window. And we got a good four hours of snow yesterday, which is monumental for Paris these years. ** Dev, You know it. The book. Yeah, really something, right? I know for sure ‘PGL’ is on Kanopy and I think ‘Cattle’ is, but I’m not totally sure. No Kanopy in Paris for me to check. I hope the grind’s challenge has a lovely percolating aspect somehow. ** Steve, No, I haven’t seen the Ruiz. Luck at the repair shop. How weird that NYPL doesn’t give its adherents Kanopy access. What’s that about? ** darbz (⊙ _ ⊙ ), And miraculously my market suddenly restocked those falafels I like yesterday. When I get to NC, I’ll follow you around, trust me. I like(d) coke, but it’s not an important enough high to risk not getting back on your meds, that’s for sure. And you just proved you don’t need it. I’m 100% in favor of medication that works. Generalisations are bullshit, so being against, say, Adderall and Vyvanse across the board is just lazy thinking. Poems! xo. ** Steeqhen, Maybe Kanopy is a US only thing. That would make sense, I guess. I trust you made it out of the barber shop in one piece. You talked with Jack, nice. I still have never watched even two seconds of ‘Stranger Things’, but I might one of these days. Nothing against it. ** HaRpEr //, Yay re: your medicating! Strange can be a positive thing obviously. Can you feel anything yet? Garielle Lutz is definitely among the very tippy-top greatest sentence writers in the English language, if you ask me. So happy you saw and liked ‘‘Portrait d’une jeune fille de la fin des années 60 à Bruxelles’. That girl/actress is so unbelievably good in it, right? Wow, I’m shocked that it’s in youtube. I’ve looked for it so many times. I’ll pass that along. Wow. Everyone, Harper has found a link whereby you can watch the very hard to see and very fantastic Chantal Akerman film ‘Portrait d’une jeune fille de la fin des années 60 à Bruxelles’, and I super extremely highly recommend that you take this opportunity. Here. Thanks!!!! ** Laura, I know extremely little about the history of Iran, which I really should rectify. Some of the things you say Verlaine did are not factually proven and have been labeled as exaggerations by some knowledgeable Verlaine scholars. I can’t say that I agree with you that the split with Verlaine was a reason why Rimbaud quit writing. I think it’s an idea, but there are so many other speculations too. No one actually knows when he stopped writing, for one thing. I’m happy to embrace the unknowable. ‘Confusion is the truth’ is my lifelong motto. Yeah, Yury said ‘let me think about it’, and he hasn’t proposed an answer yet. I’ll nudge. Reading Reddit seems like enough. No presents, for me too, on the respective day over here, but who needs presents really? I may not be in the pink, but I’m close. Yeah, send whatever, just knowing that I’m way, way behind on things due to said illness and probably even slower than I usually famously am. Thank you! ** Right. Do any of you out there like Jan Švankmajer’s stuff? I hope so. See you tomorrow.



Now available in North America
Hey Dennis! Walked ~25 km today up and down some mountains and my legs are destroyed. Totally worth it. Jan Švankmajer is one of my absolute favourite filmmakers of all time. I think I’ve said this on the blog before but I watched his version of Alice as a kid and couldn’t find it for years until my very first professor at college turned out to have met him. His wife, Eva Švankmajerová, is also a good author and you should check out her novel Baradla Cave if you get the opportunity. It’s very of its movement, which is not a bad movement to be typical of. Which of his films is your favourite? Alice aside, I think it’s Little Otik for the feature length ones and either Darkness, Light, Darkness or Virile Games for the shorts.
alright so you’re into the bloke and i’m sort of weirdly a newb to him, where you reckon i should start? <3
oh i loved ‘alice’! probably not a surprise at all knowing me but it tickled exactly the combination of fascinating/cute/disturbing/funny/upsetting that i live for. the punch and judy film seems like smth i would want to check out next… punch and judy kind of style of puppets creep me out the most, i think, i dont know why. i remember there was puppet theatre right next to my old school’s courtyard which displayed those kinds at puppets, and i would look at them while being bullied probably and i would be disturbed and soothed by their appearance in equal measure.
btw ‘untold night and day’ is a fascinating little book! worth checking out.
ugh, yeah, paris in the summer, i can remember. its not much better here but i at least dont remember any catastrophal heatwaves this summer at the level of the ones from the year before, in 24. how was your summer actually this year, well last one lol?
and yeah get that on the script, still good luck on finishing it!
i knowww, smoking is horrible. every time i’ve half-seriously tried to stop i just got the most unbearable brainfog, and like 90% of what i do day to day relies on me being able to concentrate and think about things so thats why those attempts have stayed half-serious. but its not like ill be able to think much better if i end up getting lung cancer or something
Hey Dennis! Fall of the House of Usher by Svankmajer is incredible. He also made a really good version of “Castle of Otranto” that’s sort of stuck with me, but it’s got a very bizarre atonal ending that kind of robs it of any staying power. I kind of prefer the Quay brothers as an adult, but I remember seeing some of this guy online as a kid and finding it really interesting. I like his way of thinking about art for children.
Yeah, agreed about Proust. I actually wouldn’t really recommend it to someone, haha, I’m mainly reading it as a sort of meditative experience. The story’s nice and all, but I think the really complex sentences and sort of low-level relatable experiences definitely sort of improve my mood, or make me more present in my life or whatever. It’s also quite … immersive, I guess, like I’m inhabiting another person when I’m reading the book. I couldn’t imagine reading it for the plot / structure though.
It’s so absurdly cold here, haha. I went out for a run yesterday and really regretted it, although now that I’m inside the weather’s nice, because we’ve had a lot of snow recently. Hopefully you’ve got a similar weather situation, see ya!
Dennis!
huh, Jan Švankmajer, don’t know him but he’s def creepy and childhood-coded. looking back it’s true, there’s almost nothing we wouldn’t do lol. the world was just v big. and scary but fun.
i finished A Boy’s Own Story btw! super beautiful, think i’ll def go for seconds so thanks for the recommendation. ^_^
but hey point me to Verlaine scholars! yesterday! 😀 i’m way more versed in his counterparts’ but now i’m looking up this whole moral restoration arc and there’s nothing immediately available? obvi i want to luxuriate in the Romance Sans Paroles w nothing too fâcheux underneath the automatic heart eyes lol.
now let’s feud lol cause i reaaaally do think the breakup contributed to Rimbaud’s literary retirement fr— ofc i didn’t say it was the whole reason, bc duh, but my gut and the Season In Hell and the sort of mercenary life of action which followed do a fair bit of pointing imo… confusion is major, yep, but just imagine how confused he must have felt when he realised he’d sacrificed himself so massively to art, to love, and then… anticlimax, the world was still what it had always been (to him, for the rest of us he did do a huge thing).
can’t begin to tell you how much my forays into Russian Reddit are sucking rhino’s bollocks rn lol. srsly is it like a Redditer badge of honour to be asked a question then refuse to answer it and get mad.,idk but gah do push him a bit pls, my most recent search on that app yielded a bunch of ppl trying to shame some poor soul into saying ‘screw me’ rather than ‘fuck me’ bc the latter is rude. ^_^
i’ll send you the thing, then you can approach it however you want to. reminder that it’s basically my semi-edited folder, just so you don’t relapse out of shock when you see it and then get this irrepressible urge to dig out my dead =)
also who needs presents? we do, Nature’s Son, lol. hope you continue to improve! improving is a present. i’m having this weird med side effect as i write and it’s highkey super fucked but i reckon it’ll have worn off by the afternoon… evening…?
anyway, keep on keeping on!
<3
my subconscious is so modest lmao, like give me Verlaine’s honour back and i’ll roll about in all of one Romance wtf…
Back in the 2008 heyday of my domestic film screening club the _Black_Acrylic Cine Salon, I did include some Svankmajer in the program. Believe a DVD of Little Otik would have been shown. The JS aesthetic is so diametrically opposed to our current CGI uniformity that it’s a real rush to see. This might also apply to a bunch of other pre-90s kids TV, I would wager.
it totally reminds me of smth but i’m not sure what! v visceral reaction tho
Hey Dennis, I’m a Svankmajer fan, though I’ve only seen a few of the features. Will have to check out the more obscure shorts.
I like the new look for the blog! Or is my browser broken? No one else has mentioned it. That could be the start of a Brian Evenson story: man sees change in blog layout that nobody else can see. Explores further: uncanny and disturbing things happen.
I read the recent Infinity Land email, and they’ll reissue some early New Juche. Yesss.
Bill
Hey Dennis,
The haircut went surprisingly well; i originally just asked for a trim but the guy cutting my hair must have just known what I actually wanted to do/knew what would suit me, and I left there for the first time without feeling self-conscious about the cut! Really pushed that fear out of me I think!
I’ve seen Alice and I really liked it, though the constant repetition of cuts to Alice’s lips in narration really frustrated me by the end. Still, a movie I highly enjoyed and Faust has been on my ‘will watch this very soon’ list — I was only reminded of it by some instagram post a week ago. Which others would you recommend as must-watch?
I’m tempted to try and figure out if I can just use someone I know in the US’ library card to access Kanopy, I know someone who works for them so perhaps him. I already have a VPN for using BBC iPlayer and Tubi so if that’s needed I have that too. Speaking of the iPlayer, it really brings out the Irish distaste of the British in me as it is region-locked to the UK despite having access to the actual BBC channels; the RTE player (the Irish equivalent of the BBC) isn’t region-locked, so they can access it abroad, though frankly there’s not much on RTE that I would imagine people abroad would want, aside from Irish ex-pats. I’ll probably be grateful to have it once I’ve moved.
Went to the library today to get out some CDs to put on my mp3 player: some Bjork, Bowie, Eno, and Stop Making Sense by Talking Heads. When I’m back from London I might see if I can volunteer there as well as this other bookshop, so I have something to do and get the experience on my CV for London.
Getting nervous excitement about going there tomorrow. I tend to have constant anxiety about a lot of things, crucially traveling and not being “at home” or “safe”, but I was listening to a podcast on the bus today and they were talking about some stupid self-help book that their friend had read, but one thing did actually help me, which is that you need to be aware of what is actually happening right now: are you hungry, shelterless, in danger, an active warzone? No? Then there’s no need to dally on the stress of what is imagined. It’s something I’ve kind of done to deal with my agoraphobic tendencies, but without realizing it.
Anyway I’ve rambled on enough, hope you’ve recovered enough to even momentarily forget that you’re sick.
I get his point about surrealism in the interview up there, in that it’s not really an aesthetic. To me surrealism always meant freedom from a number of things the founding members opposed. So it’s almost a code of ethics or a sensibility, not a particular “style”. I’m just glad there are still people who think about the meaning of words & don’t just carelessly toss them around.
I’m with you on opposing ownership. The responsibility is a pain in the ass. Similar to bringing children into the world. Unless you’re really into home maintenance, repairing stuff etc., you should stay the fuck away from the idea.
Today was a good example: a heavy storm knocked out the power grid. So as the landlord’s handyman was getting ready to weld the electric lever back to the front gate, we had to wait for the power to come back on. 15 min job ended up taking over an hour. Then the water pump had to be reset after the power came back on: otherwise no running water. And so on & so on…
I don’t think Turtle Island Poetry & Press are related. The magazine doesn’t strike me as particularly Gary Snyder-inspired. Turtle Island was the name a bunch of native tribes used for the continent pre-invasion, so I think it just riffs on that. Don just sent us the PDF, which I’ll try to share here via Google Drive:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1MmHhuxtmCI2UvRu0sXDSfg743C7NwmL3/view?usp=drivesdk
Hope that works. My contribution is no. 42: To an Old Ford Bought at Auction
They do a printed version as well & then there’s the live reading, which I’ll mention again once the date approaches.
I had a DVD of Svankmajer’s Alice as a kid, but still haven’t seen anything else of his.
Re: Kanopy, sadly it turns out that their selection is dependent on which subscription tier your library pays for, and your films are not on mine. I checked. I guess the New Orleans library has the cheapo subscription lol. I will watch them somewhere else eventually!
Oh yeah, by the way, today is Twelfth Night, which is the first day of Mardi Gras season here in New Orleans. King cake is legal again!
I am good, thanks! And yeah, like Lucas said. Great little book.
Hey. RE: my new meds. Almost immediately after taking the first pill I had this frantic feeling and a light buzz. My jaw also relaxed like what happens on MDMA. It happened again when I took the second pill today. When I got up this morning I was unbelievably groggy and nauseous, as if hungover, and my body was sort of confused. Now I feel fine, not any better or worse than usual, it’ll probably take some time to notice any big change.
The actress in the Akerman film is brilliant indeed. I don’t think she went on to do much else. She’s funny and charismatic but also very sad without having to do much physically or with her face. And also awkward which I always like in an actor. I actually liked the film more than ‘Je Tu Il Elle’, and there’s similarities between the two.
One of my favourite scenes is the exchange she has with her friend who doesn’t enlist. She says ‘I like books about incommunicability’
‘I don’t’
‘That’s weird’
Sounds less interesting when I write it down but I got a kick out of that part.
I’ve always really liked Svankmajer, particularly his shorts where plot doesn’t have to get in the way and it’s just his imagination. ‘Food’ is a personal favourite. I do really like ‘Alice’, though my love of Lewis Carroll might play a part in that. I still haven’t seen ‘Faust’ despite being about to when I was writing the book semi-inspired by the Faust legend.
Also did you do something new with the blog today? For me at least there’s a grey border which I really like. It’s comforting to look at for some reason.
The NYC library has gone through severe budget cuts, and they could no longer afford to maintain Kanopy. They do offer access to projectr.tv for members’ free streaming. It’s operated by Grasshopper Film (the US distributor of AFTERNOON OF SOLITUDE and Jem Cohen’s latest film), and while their selection’s pretty small, they do have the complete Straub/Huillet filmography.
I’ll second the question about the layout change. It took me a while to realize I needed to click on “comments” to be able to post one.
The adapter started working again today, so maybe yesterday was a temporary glitch.
There must have been a point when Svankmajer fell out of fashion in the U.S., because the last two features are new to me.
hey dennis, love svankmajer. it’s been a while since ive seen him though, i associate him with a suicidal time in my life, though i guess since i am properly post-suicidal i can look at him again in new light. or something like that.
thirding the whole look, if you got no clue what we are talking about, check the front page. assuming it was just a misclick or improper copy and paste. did make it more tense though.
schattenfroh is on the blurry cusp of either being bullshit or genius, it is tickling a weird obsessed part in my, brain that no other thing has, it is seemingly as obsessed with linguistics, history, mythology and daddy issues as much i am.
playing a racing game, tokyo xtreme racer. really good, it’s one of those racing games where i don’t feel demeaned by the story. honestly i would say it is pretty good if not minimalist as all hell. the main gameplay loop of drag racing is genuinelly fun. even if i am not good at racing or even understand anything beyond hitting the pedal to metal, what the hell is a brake.
bought e33 after a friend said it was good, i am a bit wary of it becuse to be blunt i think the major reason for the interest and popularity is people who want to play jrpgs but don’t like a “cartoony” or anime look to them.
it’s properly cold inside of my apartment so i hope the heater starts to do its magic soon. that’s all from me!