The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Post-Actors *

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2009’s Iron Cross utilized CGI and a latex mask to recreate Roy Scheider, who died during production. Director Joshua Newton and his team employed an old-fashioned technique to resurrect Scheider on screen. Their first port of call was to create a prosthetic latex mask of the actor’s very distinctive features which was then worn by a stand-in. The family of the late actor gave the director permission to recreate Scheider using CGI while the film was in production.

 

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The first 30 minutes of Gaspar Noe’s Irreversible has a background noise with a frequency of 28 Hz (low frequency, almost inaudible), similar to the noise produced by an earthquake. In humans, it causes nausea, sickness and vertigo. It was a cause of people walking out of the theaters during the first part of the film. In fact, it was added with the purpose of getting this reaction. The “Rectum”, where these first 30 minutes take place, is in fact a genuine gay S&M club in Paris, called Club Banque (“Club Bank”) and located in a former bank. The crew changed the name, redressed the set and added red lighting. The club was spread across the basements of three separate buildings and was so cavernous and confusing that many of the crew members became claustrophobic in it. The man whose face is bludgeoned to death with a fire extinguisher was a mix of an actor in the first few stages which was then substituted with a latex head. Digital effects were added to make the transition more convincing.

 

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That’s a real puppet they tested out to play Renesmee, Bella’s wildly powerful vampire/human hybrid child in Twilight: Breaking Dawn Part Two.

 

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Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow began life as a teaser trailer produced by a guy in his living room, which impressed movie producers so much they gave him a giant stack of money to make a feature length film that ended up looking like a blurry $80 million Xbox game. After over 90 minutes of build-up we finally come face to face with Dr. Totenkopf, played by … a long-dead Laurence Olivier. The conversation they have with him is bizarre and stilted, which is to be expected when you try to write dialogue for an actor that matches old archival footage they had laying around. They just manipulated old BBC footage of Olivier when he was young, then used a lot of glitches in the “hologram” to cover the rough spots.

 

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Nancy Marchand, who played Tony Soprano’s angry, ancient badger of a mother Livia, died from lung cancer in 2000. Livia was still a major character in the Sopranos universe, though, so creator David Chase was tasked what with to do with her, both in terms of her relationship with Tony and the possibility of her speaking to the FBI. Chase killed Livia, but not before she shared one final scene with her son. Well, “she.” The Livia that appears in “Proshai, Livushka” was created using CGI and previous sound clips of Marchand speaking. It cost $250,000, but looked like $25.

 

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Tyrone Power had over half of the movie Solomon and Sheba shot when he collapsed and died of a heart attack on set during a fight scene. The Studio started over by having Yul Brynner replace Tyrone Power and reshoot all of his scenes. As tribute to the actor though, the director left him visible in some long shot scenes in memory of Power.

 

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The blog avrilestamorta.blogspot.com.br, as you might have guessed by the title, purports that at some point between 2002 and now, Avril Lavigne killed herself and was replaced by a doppleganger actress. It’s a long rambling Blogspot page, comparing old photos of Avril Lavigne with new photos of Avril Lavigne. It also purports that the new actress Avril Lavigne might be trying to tell people about the secret switch in her lyrics.

 

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“We went through and we put a kind of catalogue together of Robert Downey Jr.’s earlier films. Part of the process was deciding what Robert should look like, as this younger version of himself. And we settled on kind of a mix between a couple films. It became more of a young Tony Stark, than a young Robert, in a way. You actually take Robert’s face and warp it. You’ll go into your computer and you’ll take his face and basically massage it so areas as you age, that we’ve all experienced, you know, that kind of distort from when you were young—then kind of distort those back to when you were young, at an earlier age.”

 

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The digital artists working Steven Spielberg’s first Jurassic Park film took video of themselves acting like the Gallimimus herd for reference before they animated the stampede scene; it helped them create more realistic instinctive behavior. Meanwhile, Stan Winston’s crew built raptor suits … and got into them.

 

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For a 2014 Galaxy chocolate commercial, Audrey Hepburn was digitally recreated thanks to advanced VFX techniques some 21 years after her death. A production company called Framestore created the effect by building a 3-D model of Hepburn using her films, images, and other footage as a basis.

 

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Film legend Oliver Reed died of a heart attack during a break from shooting on Gladiator, leaving several important scenes unfinished. Using CGI, Reed’s face was mapped onto a double’s head in the editing process.

 

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Because of budgetary limitations and the pressure to create television animation within a tight time frame, the children’s show Clutch Cargo was the first to use the “Syncro-Vox” optical printing system. Syncro-Vox was invented by Edwin Gillette, television cameraman and partner in Cambria Studios, as a means of superimposing real human mouths on the faces of animals for the popular “talking animal” commercials of the 1950s. Clutch Cargo employed the Syncro-Vox technique by superimposing live-action human lips over limited-motion animation or even motionless animation cels.

 

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The Billboard Music Awards promised fans ‘Michael Jackson: As You’ve Never Seen Him Before’, but most were left wishing they hadn’t seen him at all last night following a much-criticised performance by a hologram.

Initially the decision of what age Jackson should be in the performance was wide open. The performer could have been almost any age, as his career spanned decades. In reality, an actual ‘plaster’ life cast of the singer’s face made in 1997 meant that this would be the age of the Jackson the world would see: 39. It was at this age that the veteran special effects expert Stan Winston made a life cast of the singer for the project Ghosts. The team got access to that original life cast and had the mold scanned. As great as Stan Winston’s work always was, the very weight of the material and the agents used to avoid it sticking to a subject’s face can fill in skin pores. So while the life cast was a great measure of the performer’s dimensions it was not as accurate as today’s techniques for accurate skin pore texture.

The life cast got the effects team only about 75% of the way there. The pressure from the alginate (plaster) not only pushed out some of the pore features but some of the facial features, chin, general skin. Jackson had a very unique face, and part of his face was softer (thus it was more affected), so the team had a bit of a challenge, they also had a physiological challenge of what we think Michael Jackson looked like at age 39, what they perceived he looked like, but from the hundreds of images they got from the Estate, they arrived at what he should actually look like.

 

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Had Bela Lugosi not expired shortly after Ed Wood filmed what might otherwise have been an innocuous bit of footage of the horror icon sniffing a rose outside his house, his contribution to one of the much-beloved bad films of all time could surely have been eclipsed by yet more baffling forays into B-movie legend. Instead, Wood finished the rest of his 1959 film using his wife’s chiropractor impersonating Lugosi – badly, holding his cape up to his face for the entire film.

 

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‘Well, it’s an extraordinary technology that we’ve been looking at. You don’t use prosthetics, make-up, they have acting and the technology is able to have them go through different time ages without the prosthetics. So we’ve seen some tests and it looks extraordinary. We were able to film Robert De Niro and just do a scene, and we saw it come down to when he was like 20, 40, 60, so we’re looking forward to that, from that point of view, for my next film The Irishman … Imagine seeing what De Niro looked like in the Godfather 2 days, that’s pretty much how you’re going to see him again.’ — Martin Scorsese

 

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Peter Sellers has an impressive filmography, but arguably, his most famous character is Chief Inspector Clouseau from the Pink Panther series. Sellers passed away before production on the seventh film in the franchise, but the director decided a body double would take Sellers’ place, using heavy bandages to obscure his face, until Clouseau presumably dies mid-film.

 

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For Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, CGI animators painstakingly brought an iconic character into the movie. Grand Moff Tarkin, who was played by the late actor Peter Cushing. Cushing died from prostate cancer more than 20 years ago at the age of 81. One of the most difficult tasks was recreating Cushing’s legs and feet. While filming the Star Wars movies, the Death Star employees all wore tight leather boots, but Cushing complained to George Lucas and got out of having to wear the uncomfortable costume piece. However, in order to maintain the aesthetic of the film, Cushing always had his legs and feet hidden from the camera. For the CGI team, this proved to be a difficult aspect to recreate for Rogue One. The team went through Cushing’s other films in order to accurately recreate his legs to create natural and realistic movements.

 

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I have written several papers critiquing Stephen Hawking, including a long one on his Brave New World series for the BBC. But this is my first paper really linking my science research with my faked events research. I will use simple photo analysis and facial analysis to quickly show you the current Stephen Hawking is not the same person as the original Stephen Hawking. This should not surprise you too much, especially if you know something about ALS. ALS is Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease. We are told Hawking has had ALS for over 52 years, which is a record by many decades. Jason Becker is the only person I have heard of who has lived more than 20 years with the disease, so there is about a three-decade difference between the longest survivor and the second longest survivor. That is a more than 100% difference between first and second place. It would be like Justin Gatlin running the 100 meters in 9.8 seconds, and Usain Bolt beating him with a time of 4.5 seconds. In other words, statistically it doesn’t happen. The average survival time for ALS is four years. When Hawking was first diagnosed in 1963, doctors gave him two years to live. And yet here we are, 52 years later and counting. Should you believe it? Well, no. Like Becker, it appears the real Hawking did beat the odds and live for about 20 years. But at some point he was replaced. I have no proof he died, but I assume that is why they replaced him. He was a very useful public relations entity for physics, and they didn’t want to lose him. (cont.)

 

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Kevin Spacey in Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare.

 

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‘In 1955, Stooge Shemp Howard (older brother of Moe and the late Jerry or “Curly”) died of a heart attack. The Three Stooges still owed Columbia Pictures four shorts by the terms of their contract. Producer Jules White shot new footage of Moe and Larry and edited it together with bits recycled from previous shorts and stock footage (both of which included Shemp). When continuity required that Shemp appear in these new scenes, a body double (Joe Palma) stood in for him, appearing only from behind or with an object obscuring his face. They also dubbed in audio of Shemp’s voice, although occasionally its Palma’s actual voice. I pulled out all the fake Shemp footage (also a couple of lines referring to Shemp’s conspicuous absence) from those four shorts and strung them together. (Sorry, the audio level varies among the shorts, but the audio is not the point anyway.)’ — Dropofahat

 

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BINA48 & ME portrait “sitting” is one in a series of Android Portraits that artist Claire Jervert is creating of Humanoid Robots throughout the world. This series of drawings appears to be a group of traditional portraits, reflecting the individuality and psychological nuance of their “subjects”. They are, in fact, drawings of robots created with the intent of manifesting human emotion–which are currently being produced by scientists around the world. BINA48, one of the worlds most advanced social robots created by Hanson Robotics and Martine Rothblatt, founder of Sirus Radio. BINA48 is based on Martine’s wife Bina Aspen.

 

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In Ant-Man’s opening scene, Michael Douglas’s Hank Pym strides into S.H.I.E.L.D. headquarters to tender his resignation. The scene takes place in 1989, and the Douglas that walks into the room is the spitting image of the actor during his Wall Street and Fatal Attraction days. To de-age Douglas, a special effects team added a little more fat to the middle of his cheeks. And since human ears and noses never stop growing, they also had to shrink Douglas’s back to their 1980s’ sizes, as well as remove some of his ear wrinkles. Then it came time to restore Douglas’s “youthful glow,” adding shine to his skin and hiding the blood vessels in his nose.

 

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Before making Enter the Dragon, Bruce Lee had been working on his own movie, The Game of Death, but had only managed to finish filming part of the climatic action scene. The sequence featured him fighting the likes of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar while encased in a yellow track suit that proved his skills at martial arts did not extend to costume design. The director of Enter the Dragon took these unfinished scraps and tried to cobble together a finished film using new footage featuring several stand-ins who, aside from also being Asian guys who knew how to kick and punch, didn’t resemble Bruce Lee in any way. Of course this death fakery plot needed some sort of set-up, so early on in the film they had to shoot around the impostors using shadows, giant sunglasses, incredibly awkward editing and gluing a cardboard cutout of Bruce Lee to a mirror.

 

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Johnnie Walker’s Bruce Lee obviously isn’t the real thing, but you could be forgiven for being confused. The whisky maker used the latest in computer-generated graphics to resurrect a realistic near-video quality version of Lee.

 

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To create the CG head replacement for Paul Walker in Furious 7, VFX started by scanning his two brothers as the closest reference. Then they used Paul’s footage for the final touch up to his model to capture details like skin textures. To animate the simulated performance, they used a lot of Paul’s footage as reference, because as close as the brothers were in style and mannerisms, they just weren’t Paul when Paul played his character. They tried to limit their interpretation of the character to things that they had seen Paul do as the character. They found performances that matched the situation that they needed to put him in and used that to guide them.

 

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The puppets featured in the Puppet Master films are the aforementioned Jester – an emotive clown. Blade – a knife and hook wielding puppet with a face modeled after actor Klaus Kinski. Pinhead – the muscle of the bunch with a head that’s too small for his body. Tunneler – a Nazi-uniformed puppet with a drill-bit head. Ms. Leach – a lady puppet who can regurgitate deadly leeches. Oddly, he oriental puppet from the start of the film is never seen again. The marionettes do not get a lot of screen time in the film until the last 3rd but their sequences are well shot and their interactions with the actors are believable and eerily effective.

 

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Bob May (September 4, 1939 – January 18, 2009) played the Robot on Lost in Space. He also appeared as Adolf Hitler in The Time Tunnel episode The Kidnappers (uncredited). He also may have played the voice of Zalto’s Dummy in the Lost in Space episode ‘Rocket to Earth’.

 

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For Tron: Legacy, Disney hired Digital Domain to create a younger version of Jeff Bridges. Motion capture was used to capture Bridges’ facial expressions and that formed the visual foundation of a younger, digitized version of his self.

 

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Marty’s adorably dorky dad in 1985’s Back to the Future was played impeccably at two ages by Crispin Glover. But when it came time to negotiate his role in the two sequels, something went awry, and Glover refused to return (he either demanded a preposterous amount of money or was offered insultingly too little, depending on which side you believe). Director Robert Zemekis therefore cast Jeffrey Weissman in the role. Weissman was disguised with prosthetic makeup and sunglasses, turned upside down, and intercut with footage of Glover from the first film.

 

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Arnold Schwarzenegger’s iconic Terminator character briefly popped up in McG’s ill-fated Terminator Salvation, but it was a slightly unconvincing recreation. He was too busy running California to appear in person. A crude, barely mobile mapping of his face done by Stan Winston in 1983 was digitally placed over a Schwarzenegger-esque body instead.

 

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The famous comedian and SCTV alum John Candy died of a massive heart attack during production of the mostly forgotten Western comedy Wagons East! Candy had not completed all of his scenes before his untimely passing; therefore, much of his role was cut from the film. What little was filmed was reused as reaction shots, including the one which is shown twice in the movie, with different backdrops.

 

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Orville Redenbacher was resurrected to star in this gourmet popcorn commercial in 2007. The result, according to Advertising Age, was “the resulting Orville zombie sounds nothing like the original. More importantly, it is visually jarring. It looks more like Dana Carvey made up to look like an old man. It is high octane nightmare fuel. It’s a desiccated undead zombie-mummy in a bowtie, and it will steal your soul.”

 

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This British television series Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons was created and produced in 1967, by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson, the same genius minds behind the worldwide success of Thunderbirds, the direct predecessor of Captain Scarlet, in a long line of Supermarionation shows. Captain Scarlet was very different from these other series. It was the first to use the real proportions of the human body, instead of the caricatured proportions and features used by its predecessors. Its gloomy atmosphere was also a far cry from the lighter and often humorous tone generally displayed in the other shows (such as in Thunderbirds). Captain Scarlet was a more serious show – Humour, although present in some episodes, was rare. Those two aspects served to give more much depths and realism to the series – something that was somewhat lacking in other Supermarionation series.

 

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The third episode of HBO’s Westworld took the series to a whole new level, and not just in terms of android abilities. The visual effects for the show also went up a notch in “The Stray,” which flashed back to a younger version of Westworld’s creative director, Dr. Robert Ford, played by 78-year-old Anthony Hopkins.

 

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Brandon Lee’s scenes in The Crow were completed using revolutionary CGI technology. The film began under Paramount Pictures, but after the actor was accidentally shot to death on set by a misfiring stunt gun, the company quickly abandoned the project. It was actually Entertainment Media Investment Corporation that decided to buy the film and finish it using newly developed CGI technology and body doubles. For example, effects team Dream Quest Images superimposed Lee’s face on a body double in the scene where we see Eric Draven’s face in a smashed mirror. In total, the team spent between 500-600 hours on effects to bring Brandon Lee “back from the dead.”

 

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Swiss Army Man, directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert (who also want to remake White Chicks as an R-rated drama), stars Paul Dano as a man stranded on a desert island who stumbles across a flatulent corpse (Daniel Radcliffe), which he then uses to sail to the mainland. According to Jason Hamer, who produced the film’s makeup effects, “Building a body that looks convincingly like Daniel Radcliffe and can hold another body that’s propelled by farts going across the ocean. Things that have never been done before. That’s what makes it exciting,”

 

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Pee-Wee Herman — played by Paul Reubens for many years on TV — recently returned in a Netflix original film. Reubens, who is now sixty-three years old, said that he felt age didn’t work with the character, and would take away from the film. So a mixture of make-up and digital effects took the current Reubens, on the left of the below picture, and created the Reubens on the right.

 

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Lena Headey used a body double to film her most brutal (and nude) scene on the season five finale of Game Of Thrones. The scene took three days to shoot with Lena and her body double reenacting each brutal moment over and over again in Dubrovnik, Croatia. Then the star’s head was superimposed upon the body of her double for the final cut. And upon close examination it’s pretty clear that come computer graphics were at work to create the scene. In many shots the head does not match the body, and Lena’s neck is often different shapes and sizes.

 

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Few people would have put money on old-fashioned stop-motion animation surviving this far into the digital age. Compared to modern computer animation, it’s like writing your emails in needlepoint. But stop-motion has not just prevailed, it has moved into new territories. Once associated with children’s entertainment, it has somehow found a new lease of life among “grown-up” film-makers – be they live-action auteurs, or animators dealing in darker, child-unfriendlier content. Charlie Kaufman’s Anomalisa ticks both boxes, and it’s the tip of an iceberg that’s still growing.

 

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No, that’s not an image from a video game from the 2000s. That’s an image from 2001’s Mummy Returns, a $98 million blockbuster from Warner Bros. where The Rock appears as an absurdly fake-looking CGI man-scorpion.

 

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Surely the most shocking victim of the so-called “Poltergeist Curse,” child actress Heather O’Rourke died of septic shock caused by a bowel obstruction before completing the 1988 sequel, in which she is the only returning member of the long-suffering Freeling family. A body double was used to film the final sequences of the film.

The planned original ending

 

 

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p.s. Hey. ** CAUTIVOS, Hi. Yes, icy anything becomes more appealing every day. My posts tend to have a lot of information and media in them that can be slow to unfold, for sure, but I guess I’m maximalist blogger, which is strange since I’m not as a writer at all. Anyway, I hope your weekend is temperate. We’re supposed to get rain for the next two days here. Not bad at all, considering. ** Misanthrope, Well, then my blog sighs in relief for at least one day. You have months. Months can go by in blinks. Mine are at the moment. I hope and trust your mom will come away A-okay. My weekend is going to be every other day currently, i.e. working my brain off to get our film organized and funded in time. No fun in store yet, in other words. ** David Ehrenstein, Here it is, in all its glory. Curious: that ‘Julia’ link. I’ll check it, thanks. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Oh, well, of course, about SCAB. The sewer thing is charming and kind of interesting, but lovely might be pushing it, ha ha. Didn’t see any leopards, no. Or even dolphins. No toaster, no, but I found a friend who has one, so I’ll tote a coupla pop tart over to his place. Oh, I also bought two Twinkies (banana and chocolate, ugh/yum), creamy peanut butter, and fake cheese in a squirt can (weird impulse). I wanted to buy Macaroni and Cheese and Ding Dongs, but they were out of stock sadly. Thank you for the moose. My downstairs neighbors, who are neurotic as hell and are constantly fantasising that everything that goes wrong with their apartment must be the result of me deliberately sabotaging them, would lose their minds at the dripping water, but their hysteria can be fun in certain moods. Love using the highest technology to remove ten years of aging effects and weight gain from Gerard Way, G. ** _Black_Acrylic, Zac has this Japanese machine that makes one flawless, extremely clear, perfectly spherical ice cube, and it’s a weirdly sublime thing. Oh, yeah, I read that they booed Harry and Meghan too. I have a strange fondness for how British cis men turn into obnoxious, braying children when they don’t like something. Sometimes I even tune into your parliamentary debates just to get an earful. ** Steve Erickson I haven’t heard that. I’m sure I can easily. It’s sad that Americans don’t buy novelty records in bulk like they used to. ‘They’re Coming to Take Me Away Ha ha’ and ‘Monster Mash’ and the likes of them would never top (or even enter) the charts over there now. Nice about your meet up. You guys cooking something up? I read your Cronenberg review yesterday, and I thought it was excellent (even though haven’t seen the film yet). Everyone, Steve has written a very smart review of Cronenberg’s ‘Crimes of the Future’ for The Quietus that I highly recommend to you. Here. ** Okay. I was fishing around in the ruins of my ex-blog the other day and found the post up above and thought it deserved another chance. See you on Monday.

14 Comments

  1. CAUTIVOS

    Hi Dennis as always great post. Here enjoying a splendid day without a hint of rain or cold. Paris must be an ideal place to spend the summer. When I went once, a summer many years ago, it was quite hot. I remember being at Euro Disney and being very hot. I especially like the alternate ending of Poltergeist III among many other things. Everything in general, I like it, I have been able to see all the images and videos and in general, from a bird’s-eye view, I find nothing reprehensible. Keep it up and enjoy this day.

  2. David Ehrenstein

    I expect you’ll shortly be able to purchase Kevin Spacey Action Figures a the Pleasure Chest

  3. Dominik

    Hi!!

    This post is full of gems! Thank you!

    I promised myself not to read your reply about your Real McCoy treats when I’m hungry, but I didn’t keep myself to it, so now I’d really like to eat peanut butter, chocolate Twinkies, and Ding Dongs. I’m sorry they were out of the latter. And Mac & Cheese. That’s a sin.

    Oh, no. Hysterical neighbors can be quite a huge pain in the ass. Maybe it’d be easier for love to put the moose right in the middle of their bathroom. Nothing to blame on you, then. … Unless they think you snuck into their apartment and put it there yourself. Hm.

    Haha, I’ll see Gerard twice next week, once in Budapest and once in Prague, so I’ll let you know if love was successful! Love analyzing every single Avril Lavigne song that came out after 2002 for signs of The Switch, Od.

  4. Misanthrope

    Dennis, I feel like all this type of stuff still isn’t advanced enough to be convincing. But it’s getting there.

    So, I finished what I needed to with that one project, though that means the work really begins and I need to finish the whole thing. First part down, the rest to go. It’ll take months. And that’s fine.

    Now, I’ll be getting up with Callum on the other thing.

  5. Bernard

    As for myself, I simply indulge in an annual renewal through extensive cosmetic surgery. I assume I’m more or less embalmed by now and should anyone wish to make a movie star of me after my demise–and I’m not promising I’ll die at all–all they’ll have to do is move my limbs around like a stop-motion puppet.
    I mean, I’m already extraordinarily life-like.
    I like to think how they’ll make my dialogue out of recordings of poetry readings and lectures on film history and dreams.
    Aw it was so good to hang. Reassuring and inspiring. Why are we both so sensible about everything in a world gone mad?
    Catching up:
    –Art(hur) promises we will stay in an ice hotel one day. Didn’t you do that?
    –You don’t need to buy the Truthful Bear. I am the Truthful Bear. Really, I’m obsessed with fortune telling machines, and as I think you know, with other automata. Bridging to today’s Day: I taught this course on The Uncanny a number of times, starting maybe 2006. After a few years, references to “uncanny valley” began to drownout any other use of the word in online searches, because it had become a prominent issues in video games, AI, etc. It’s hard to see almost anything in this whole gallery as other than grotesque, but I suppose that’s the point: erase the concept of the recognizably human. Zombification via resurrection of the actor. Anthropocene my ass.
    –In the monthly roundup, there is nothing more unsettling or offensive than the concept of “citizen’s arrest.” In the US people are circulating videos of themselves dangerously confronting people they suspect of minor infractions; of course sometimes they kill them; and it all seems to come from 2nd amendment propaganda and the Reagan-era individual sovereignty vicious nonsense.
    As you are well aware, it is raining in Paris. The park in front of my window is especially swell during a thunderstorm. I feel calm.

  6. Robert

    Why do the CGI faces always end up being so twitchy? I remember seeing fake Princess Leia come on screen and her face just kept constantly making these tiny little movements. Super uncanny valley. I love the Anomalisa sex scene though.

    The general incredibleness of CGI does make you sort of wonder about the point of books, though. I almost feel like straightforward realist honest-to-God novels don’t really move me that much because you’re always thinking that they could’ve been pulled off more effectively as a movie, but now as I’m typing that out I remember having a pretty intense reaction to War and Peace back in my freshman year, so maybe I’ve just gotten jaded from reading too much Thomas Bernhard. At least I think I’ve developed some kind of intellectual laziness from a lifetime filled with screens that’s made me more inclined to read books as collections of words qua words, if that makes any sense—I sometimes have to remind myself to keep consciously coming up with mental pictures when a book demands it, instead of just tracking bits of text. Or maybe I’m just an unimaginative reader in the first place?

    Anyway, cool post, hope you’re doing well!

  7. Steve Erickson

    Americans still do buy novelty records, but our idea of novelty is so politicized that pro-MAGA songs have become the current versions of “Monster Mash.”

    I heard Frank Sinatra’s WATERTOWN for the first time yesterday and was struck by how much it seemed influenced by SCOTT 3 & SCOTT 4. I have no idea if Sinatra was actually listening to Walker or just inspired by more popular ’60s albums like PET SOUNDS, but it brought me full circle to hearing Walker for the first time and thinking “this sounds like Leonard Cohen mixed with Sinatra.” (I had not heard Jacques Brel or other chanson artists then.)

    I hope I’m able to make a film later this year with my friend shooting and editing it, but she’s so overworked that it’s probably not feasible for a while.

    Thanks for your praise on the CRIMES OF THE FUTURE review! I’m very happy with it. My review of Bertrand Mandico’s very tedious new film AFTER BLUE (DARK PARADISE) also came out yesterday: https://gaycitynews.com/bertrand-mandicos-after-blue-offers-style-over-substance/

    My dad has come down with a cold. I hope it’s nothing more serious, but he refuses to take a COVID test till Monday because he can’t consult his doctor over the weekend if he tests positive.

  8. Billy

    I’m always unnerved by how wildly, perversely crap and naively camp everything to do with twilight is. Renesme, indeed. I tried watching it like it was interview with the vampire – dumb sexy nonsense, in short, but it’s too awkwardly bad for that.

    I think they did a posthumous prince hologram too. Kind of like that post you did a while ago about the bankrobber whose remains got passed around various freakshows. Ghastly high tech grave robbing – how do appearance fees work for the dead? There was a fad for cgi models a few years back – the appeal being that they didn’t age or talk back or need paying or anything. All very macabre. Maybe in Britain we’ll have a QE2 hologram – how far can this be from politics?

    Hoping you’re well. I picked up Good Morning Midnight off the back of your best novels list last week, but have yet to start it. I took my loose thread into work and it was immediately stolen – I hope by someone who’s having their life changed by it as we speak.

    Xx

  9. Brandon

    Hey Dennis,this wekk has proven better than last, saw Crimes of the Future which was fun to see even though I didn’t care much for it, nothing could ever top Videodrome for me but Cronenberg holes are always a good time. Getting ready to go out tonight, last week I did Not black out thankfully so lets hope for the same graces from the gods tonight. How has your week been going, and good or exciting news? Good movies? Hope everything is smooth and exciting as can be, talk more later, Brandon.

  10. _Black_Acrylic

    I remember those Clutch Cargo Syncro-Vox animations being truly uncanny. Surely any viewers would have to be on some sort of register.

    Yesterday I went along with my brother Nick (and his dog Penny) to a big Jubilee event featuring DJs and live music outdoors at a nearby pub. When we arrived there was none of that, in fact we were the only customers there at lunchtime. However a few folk did turn up in dribs and drabs as the afternoon wore on. It was the first time I’d been to a pub in a couple of years so it was quite a pleasurable experience. Later I saw the England football team lose to Hungary on TV, just to complete the patriotic experience.

    • _Black_Acrylic

      England player Trent Alexander-Arnold has been criticised for not singing the national anthem. Haha this is the kind of country I am faced with living in now.

      • Bill

        Ben, at least Boris Johnson appears to be in deep trouble. Nothing close to this happened to Trump.

        Bill

  11. CAUTIVOS

    If you find someone who makes you smile, who looks at you often to see if you’re okay. Who takes care of you and wants the best for you. That she loves you and respects you. Do not let him go. People like that are hard to find.
    Franz Kafka.

  12. Bill

    I didn’t know about the Stephen Hawking conspiracy. Curious.

    Glass and ice earlier, what’s not to like?

    Hope you had a good weekend, Dennis. The gig went smoothly. We moved into some unusual territory for us. A recording was made, will see how it turned out.

    Went to see “Everything Everywhere All At Once”. Some good ideas, but I didn’t expect it to be so excessive, not really my thing.

    Bill

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