* (restored)
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Quentin Dupieux Rubber (2010)




‘Rubber tells the simple and often humorously demented tale of an ordinary car tire that magically comes to life in a junkyard, only to roll its way into a nearby populated desert town and kill various people who confront it through what seems to be a kind of telekinetic power.
‘This very simple yet fascinating and funny concept is played out in a fairly realistic, deadpan way but with a heightened sense of theatricality for its most violent moments. The tire kills several policeman in a similar way that Rutger Hauer’s nameless character in The Hitcher manages to rampage through the landscape with no remorse.
‘But while Hauer is clearly a human being who acts like a soul-less killing machine, the tire, on the other hand, is obviously not human, yet strangely enough when it uses its telekinetic powers to kill the viewer’s impulse is to somehow project an idea of human emotion onto it. Is it angry? Does it seek revenge for being dumped in a junkyard? No real explanation is given.’ — Michael Okum
Trailer
Opening scene
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James Quinn Flesh of the Void (2017)




‘Flesh of the Void is a terribly disturbing experimental horror film about what it could feel like if the act of dying truly were the most horrible thing one could ever experience, instead of the peaceful fading many think of. It is intended as a trip through the deepest fears of human beings, exploring its subject in a highly grotesque, violent and extreme manner. Shot entirely on 16mm and Super 8, including an entire segment (Act I) that was shot on Kodachrome. Written and directed by James Quinn.’ — Sodom & Chimera Productions
Trailer

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John Parker Dementia (1955)




‘Dementia is the only film of obscure director John Parker. The shooting ended in 1953 but the premiere did not take place until 1955. In order to skip censorship they made four different versions of the film.
‘For several reasons, this little jewel has become a cult film. There is not need to take present day indie cinema seriouly, Dementia was produced with the director’s mum’s savings and most of the cast were amateur actors or just non-actors, as is the case of protagonist Adrienne Barrett who allegedly was the director’s secretary and did not perform in any further films. The film is fascinating and upsetting with a photography that takes us to Edgar G. Ulmer’s low cost noir cinema, German expressionism and Buñuel and Dali’s surrealism.
‘Bruno VeSota seemed Ordon Welles’s doppelganger and was the most experienced member of the cast. Allegedly, he even had a deep influence in the final result of the film. In 1955 he directed a noir, Female Jungle, with Lawrence Tierney, Jayne Mansfield and John Carradine. Later on, he used to work for Roger Corman and directed The Brain Eaters (1958) and Invasion of the Star Creatures (1962), two essential works for psychotronics film lovers.’ — Molins Film Festival
Trailer
The full film
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Jon Rafman Mainsqueeze (2014)




‘Honestly, I could not recommend that you watch Mainsqueeze, a short film made out of collaged YouTube-Instagram-et-cetera videos and screenshots by the hip and genuinely talented Jon Rafman. I can say that it remains one of the purest and most visceral expressions of a very modern —standing in for Reddit-savvy — kind of horror that I’ve ever seen. I should admit, too: there are parts of it I’ve never seen, due to the fact that Rafman cuts in clips from online fetish videos for “crush” fans, in which crayfish are unkindly and unethically destroyed by high heels. That you can’t “unsee” is, for a horror fan, an occupational hazard. Faked-up pseudo-violence, I can take; real violence — even on crustaceans fated to be eaten — I refuse to.
‘Otherwise, this is a cruel and clever sewer-slew of web memes, ugly images, and deep web junk. It makes a broken washer-dryer into something out of hell. It adds a drone to passed-out sharpie pranks, and makes the prankees look like casualties of war. A fat man in a frog suit, hogtied in Shibari style, is seen to writhe against a sound-scape of dogs barking, ticking clocks, and car alarms, which would be funny if it were not so unsettling and I-should-not-be-seeing-this surreal. “Do you ever wonder,” asks a dreamy, electronic voice, “if rocks are actually soft, and tense up when we touch them?” This sounds existential — actually, it comes from Tumblr. Maybe both things are not, per this artist, mutually exclusive.’ — Horror Bakers Dozen
The full film
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Graham Reznick I Can See You (2008)




‘While I Can See You is a challenging experience due to its lack of a clearly defined narrative or any palpable sense of clear motivation for many of the characters’ actions, there is still a healthy measure of mischievous fun and playfulness to what little story it does engage the viewer in.
‘It seems that many indie filmmakers see the vague plot template of “bad things happen in the woods” laid down by so many slasher films from the 80s as a blank canvas for them to unleash their unbridled creativity and I Can See You is no exception. Little explanation is given for the spiral into hallucinatory madness that the viewer is privy to here, but Reznick and his game cast and crew certainly are willing to boldly experiment with the horror genre.
‘Wild psychedelic visuals, creative lighting, sound design and editing choices as well as a generous bit of theft from David Lynch’s bag of strange cinematic tricks set this film apart from your average “no frills” indie horror exercise which makes I Can See You even more of an exceptional viewing experience to be had.’ — Taste of Cinema
Trailer
Excerpt
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Peter Tscherkassky Outer Space (1999)




‘Using scenes from Sidney J. Furie’s infamously nasty 1982 film The Entity as a starting off point, Tcherkassky uses film as a screen, re-projecting the fragment over itself in stark overlays. The Entity (based on the factual Doris Bither case that is every bit as disturbing as the film) presents the story of a sexually abusive apparition in a woman’s home in 1980s America in the mode of other slick phantasmagorical thrillers of the time and, perhaps unsurprisingly, plays out like Poltergeist manifested at a back street porn cinema: grimily smutty, arguably exploitative, and genuinely nasty in its presentation of violence (sexual and other) — a point that’s only exaggerated in the polish of its relatively high production values.
‘Passing through into Tscherkassky’s non-space of obsessive reflection, actress Barbara Hershey re-enters a house that’s been turned into a weapon against her — supposedly a familiar and safe space that is benign in its domesticity — only to find it expand around her, casting off an infinite mirror-world of generational decay. Through his process, Tscherkassy doubles-down on the feelings of everyday isolation and fear, and frees the film from any diegetic sense of meaning, insisting the viewer confronts both its dissolution and ultimately its integral parts with a stunning force, and moving the source material into the purism of the avant-garde.’ — Thogdin Ripley and Philippa Snow
Trailer
The full film
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Bill Gunn Ganja & Hess (1973)




‘The opening scenes of most films intended for commercial distribution tend to ease viewers into their fictional worlds, introducing protagonists, defining the context in which these protagonists exist, hinting at experiences they will subsequently undergo. Bill Gunn’s Ganja and Hess (1973) does precisely the opposite. By the time its opening credits finish playing, we will already have read a series of onscreen texts referring in the past tense to events which have not yet occurred, heard a voiceover narration from a minor character (which also evokes future situations retrospectively), listened to a ballad which outlines the film’s supernatural mythology, encountered novelistic chapter headings, seen close-ups of paintings, watched documentary-style footage of a church service, and been subjected to a barrage of disjointed editing techniques which obscure rather than clarify – at least, that is, if we believe the clear exposition of narrative to be a sine qua non for works ostensibly outside the experimental or avant-garde traditions.’ — BFI
Trailer
The full film
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Adam Wingard Pop Skull (2007)




‘Pop Skull takes the general shape of a revenge thriller but filters it through the drug-distorted point of view of its main protagonist Daniel. Inevitably we’re given an up close and personal view of Daniel’s descent into madness while he pops all manner of that help to distort his already crumbling reality. Along the way he also seems to be influenced by ghostly visions of prior violence and murder that happened near his home.
‘Pop Skull is a film that again demands a certain amount of open-mindedness from the viewer. But anyone willing to let its dark brooding mood seep in will be rewarded with an experience that really does get under the skin and feel like an authentic downward spiral into insanity. Plus the film boasts some impressive camera work and psychedelic visual distortions while Daniel trips out on drugs. And there’s also some really great music tracks from the experimental noise-punk group “The Liars” filling out the background.’ — Parasite
Trailer
The full film
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Shin’ya Tsukamoto Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989)




‘Before addressing Shinya Tsukamoto’s fierce cyberpunk horror Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989) in detail, a warning. Despite its family-friendly title, parents should take great care not to confuse this modern Japanese classic with the similarly titled Marvel superhero film. Almost every scene of Tsukamoto’s 67-minute lunacy involves graphic depravity completely unsuitable for children. And more power to it for that.
‘Tsukamoto wastes few seconds of his greyhound-lean runtime before showing us the ‘metal fetishist’ (played by Tsukamoto himself) inserting lengthy iron rods of substantial girth into his body. When maggots congregate around the noxious wounds, he goes insane and sprints from his grim industrial hovel along a desolate road, where he’s run over by the ‘salaryman’ (Tomoro Taguchi) out driving with his girlfriend (Kei Fujiwara). The pair hide the corpse, but the salaryman is soon tormented by demented dreams and, far more seriously, a gradual metamorphosis into a living heap of scrap metal.’ — Lou Thomas
Trailer
The full film
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Ronny Carlsson Regissören (2011)




‘Shot mostly as a first person shooter film, we come into the story as the director is trying desperately to get his low budget film made. Actors keep flaking and dropping out, and he gets more angry and frustrated as time goes on. The director so wants to finish what he feels will be his last project.
‘This is Mr. Carlsson’s first feature length film and is described by the director as an experimental film. That it is, to be certain. It’s hard to grasp at first. To be honest, I was halfway through it before I finally realized what I was watching.
‘It took me a while to figure it out, but there are actually three stories going on here. Each vignette relates to something in the previous vignette, creating a connected story. Then of course, there are the in-betweeners following the director’s story in trying to get this thing made. Then there is an overall story being told by both the vignettes and the video diaries together that follows the themes of the prequel short films. It’s really genius, and amazingly clever.
‘I don’t see this as a horror film as much as it might be a phsychological exploration of some sort. Yes, there are horror elements in it. But viewers should be prepared for some really uncomfortable and disturbing scenes. I don’t think this film is for everybody.’ — HNN
The full film
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Jordan Harris, Andrew Schrader Fever Night aka Band of Satanic Outsiders (2009)




‘I have not seen Band of Outsiders, the Godard film from which Fever Night obviously derives its subtitle, and thus it would be very difficult for me to compare and contrast the two. And yet what I know of Godard films definitely strikes a chord when I watch Fever Night; there’s the same general plotlessness, the same overacting, the same feeling of discontinuity from scene to scene. And I have to say that I like it better here than I do in Godard, but not much.
‘I think there’s a plot, kind of, and I think it goes like this: three Satanists, Elliot (Peter Tullio in his first screen appearance), Warren (Doilie’s Diner’s Philip Marlatt), and Terry (Poker Run’s Melanie Wilson, also debuting), head out into the woods to conduct some sort of ritual. (The director’s synopsis on IMDB says they actually go through with it; if so, it’s a very subtle ritual, because I didn’t even notice.) Then Terry disappears. While Elliot and Warren are trying to figure that out, they see a dim light through the trees and pursue it, hoping to find some help (or Terry, maybe).
‘…and the majority of the movie is Elliot and Warren following this light and arguing with one another. If that’s not Godardian, I don’t know what is. Horrid memories of forcing myself to sit through Pierrot le Fou, but if both of the main actors were male. And not in a car. Wilson is cute, though for obvious reasons she doesn’t get a great deal of screen time, and there are some mildly amusing bits (which is better than I can say for Godard), but overall, this one will confuse you while boring you senseless at the same time.’ — Robert Beveridge
Trailer

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Karim Hussain Subconscious Cruelty (2000)




‘A couple of days ago, the censorship did not allow the exhibition of “A Serbian Film” in Rio Fan Festival 2011 in Rio de Janeiro. A friend of mine mentioned that “Subconscious Cruelty” was another polemic film and I decided to watch it.
‘”Subconscious Cruelty” is indeed gruesome, gory, sick and disturbing, and one of the nastiest and pointless films I have ever seen. The film is divided is segments and it seems that the only intention of the director is to shock the audiences with a confused narrative and disconcerting impressive images. Paradoxically, the music score is very tender and beautiful.
‘Ovarian Eyeball – In the first segment, a naked woman is sliced by a sharp blade and an eyeball is removed from her belly. This surrealistic short is absolutely senseless. Human Larvae – in this second segment, a deranged man that hates his sister that is pregnant kills her newborn offspring and she during the delivery. This short is one of the sickliest films I have ever seen. Rebirth – in this third segment, a group of naked people rolls around mud and blood in another pointless segment. Right Brain/Martyrdom – in this last incomprehensible segment, there are the visible intention to offend the Christians with religious symbolism associated with gore and sex.’ — claudio_carvalho
Trailer

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Ivan Zulueta Frank Stein (1972)




‘Zulueta’s peculiar singularity of vision points ultimately toward the digital dream of instant access to all components, as he doubly reconfigures James Whale’s 1931 classic Frankenstein by playing it at speed — reducing the runtime to under 4 minutes — and crossing the boundary between the televised and the filmed. In demolishing both form and narrative in such a well-known film, Zulueta transforms it, transposing the lumbering creature feature into an exploration of time and the authenticity of the camera’s gaze.’ — The Quietus
The full film
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Calvin Lee Reeder The Oregonian (2011)




‘This is an unheralded masterpiece that came and went sadly enough and is as anonymous as any other surreal experimental film. But I imagine the director Calvin Reeder not expecting to get rave reviews anytime soon. Sure, like many reviewers point out here on Letterboxd you can make reasonable comparisons between “The Oregonian” and the works of Brakhage and Lynch but Reeder still manages to chisel out a movie that is perhaps better described as a surreal essay with its own artistic merits.
‘”The Oregonian” is decidedly unconventional, impressionistic (I’m using the more apt literary term here) and drenched with unpleasant, buzzing and squeaking sounds and unsettling, hypnotic visuals. In other words: elements that are perhaps not uncommon in art-films but rarely utilized in horror movies. “The Oregonian” doesn’t shy away from being inaccessible and bewildering. I must admit though that the lo-fi soundtrack greatly explains my affection for this weird little movie. I just love the music.
‘It’s hard to summarize this movie plot-wise but a woman is introduced early on that presumably has been the victim of a horrible car accident. (I’m recounting this from memory) The woman that I suppose is the titular Oregonian staggers out of her demolished car with a large wound on her forehead. She sees two bodies lying on the ground, in front of the wrecked car giving indication that she might be responsible for the accident. Moving further into the isolated landscape she finds herself in she encounters a bizarre old lady, all sorts of menacing individuals and a man dressed in a furry green monster costume. Yes I know, this all sounds ridiculous but it works.’ — Nicolas @ letterboxd
Trailer
Watch ‘The Oregonian’ VOD here
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p.s. Hey. ** Adem Berbic, Italicizing is my only godlike option. Conquering the ‘great penis novel’ is a noble goal. I’m rooting for you. ** Carsten, Hi. Paul Bowles’s work is just being recalibrated, which is natural. He’ll be fine. ‘Landscape Suicide’ is highly worth seeing, for sure. It must suck being an actor who lands an amazing, dream role and then the director botches it. Must happen all the time. ** _Black_Acrylic, I miss the days when the Turner Prize dominated water-cooler talk. ** Larst, It’s actually rather difficult to find ass-centric art that isn’t just obvious and predicable. My honor on the steering, of course, sir. Big weekend I trust. ** jay, Hi. Haha, yeah, I almost didn’t put Anna Uddenberg in there because I feared obviousness, but she eventually won me over. I guess even 20% stranger is a victory these days? Hence the ‘Backrooms’ and ‘Obsession’ phenomenons. The heat didn’t end up breaking yesterday miserably enough, but I do detect a wee bit of coolness seeping through my windows this morning. I hope your weekend provides the option of hopping, skipping and jumping. ** Bill, Oh, it’s online. How did I miss that? Thanks! Everyone, if you want to see Cheryl Donegan’s butt piece from yesterday in motion, Bill found a way for you to do that. And it’s here. Someone posted a very nice photo of you performing at that event on Facebook yesterday. It looked terrific. ** James Bennett, The fog sculpture is fantastic. It’s still up at Pinault for a while longer if you want to see for yourself. No storms last night, obviously, but maybe just maybe it’s just a little more liveable today? Have fun with your pals irregardless. ** Ferdinand, Hi. Well, then they should sue her, goodness knows. I do intend to start living somewhat normally again this weekend if it takes pity on me. Do yours up. ** Steve, Hm, I would think John would have jumped at the chance to direct the final ‘Jackass’. Huh. Signs are that the heat is possibly going to faint later today or at least show signs a la Rod Stewart and Lionel Ritchie. Thank you whatever happens. ** Shea, Hi, Shea! Wow, that’s crazy, thank you. I’m honored. I’ll go blast that when I finish these ‘duties’ here this morning. Okay if I share? Hope so. Everyone, Shea who makes beautiful music under the rubric MAKESHIFT KINK recorded a song a couple years ago after reading my novel ‘Try’, and you can listen to it right here. Amazing, thank you! I think preparing for the worst has to become second nature, you know? I think we’re about to ease up here. But I wish I was in Portland. Seriously. ** Laura, I do have and treasure Charalampos’ book, of course. Your disfavoring of J Bowles is duly noted. I wonder if any work of fiction could survive that kind of fact checking? The meet up with Matt Wolf was very nice. I hadn’t realised until I met him that he directed that interesting documentary about the Biosphere. I would rather make films with my iPhone for the rest of my life than make a film that got me invited to show myself off at Fashion Week. Funny and great how a novel in progress will just eat everything. ** HaRpEr //, You could probably find those videos on one of the edgier porn sharing sites like motherless or ThisVid. Luck galore, pal. Do you want to share where you submitted, or, wait, maybe that would be bad luck? Amazing about the centrepiece. Dude, you don’t sound pretentious. Ambition above all. I think … I hope we might both get a weekend that doesn’t intend to commit a felony, but let’s see. ** Thom, Hey, Thom! Oh, shit, about the vomiting, although I suspect I’d feel a lot better over here if I did. Awesome that you like ‘Malina’ so much. Yeah, right? I think today is still going to suck heat-wise, but slightly less, and that tomorrow might just might occasion a certain liveliness. Max out your weekend on Parsians’ behalf. ** laura w, Yesterday Instagram suddenly decided that I am ravenous to see as many posts about Clavicular as humanly possible. Why? Their illogic is almost fascinating. Gary and I were friends when ‘Rent Boy’ came out, so I was touched. Later when we weren’t really friends anymore, he got very drunk one night and called me at 3 am and said he was going to make his publisher pull that book off the market so he could delete the reference to me. Quite a character. The weekend is now here in Paris, but I hesitate to get too excited yet for the obvious reason. ** Okay. Some years ago a blog reader who called themself TheNeanderthalSkull helped the blog miss Halloween a little less by guest-curating a Halloween post in June, and it’s June yet again, and the missing is still operable, so there you go, folks. See you on Monday.



Now available in North America
Italicising is a very good power to wield. Well, I wouldn’t say my ambition is that big — even ‘great novel which includes penises’ sounds remote.
This is a very well-compiled list and I want to acquaint myself with some of the picks but not tonight because I’ve found myself inexplicably wedded to the football and there’s some football.
I just started joining the Guillaume Dustan party to which I know I’m extremely late. So far, so great, I think.
Paris round 2 and the Pinault fog approach. I get in Friday and have to sprint across town to catch a friend’s short film which is screening 11 minutes after my Eurostar arrives. Saturday, wedding. Sunday/Monday, TBD. Lemme know if you might be around. I will do whatever the equivalent of a rain dance is for a Zac encounter. Plus an actual rain dance, I guess.
Today’s collection is totally up my alley, Dennis. I’ve only seen a few of these. Will jump on the Tscherkassky, Zulueta etc ASAP.
Hope Paris is cooling by the time you read this. Camp Miasma tonight, yessss.
Bill
Funny, I was checking out some of the items in the post, and came across:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCnp63TbxXw
Don’t think it has anything to do with the Brian Evenson story. But turns out Weird House just published a super expensive limited edition of the collection! It’s sold out, but there’s a less expensive unlimited edition coming.
Bill
The East Coast will be going through a heat wave next week, so our pain will begin when Europe lets up.
Great Day! OUTER SPACE, TESTUO: IRON MAN, RUBBER and GANJA & HESS are all favorites. The current horror scene could use a bigger dose of weirdness in place of careerism and respectability.
The Instagram algorithm tends to make strange, inaccurate judgments about one’s interests.
Take off to doom folk, field recordings of humpback whales and pachinko parlors, tropicalia and much more on my latest “Radio Not Radio” show: https://www.mixcloud.com/callinamagician/6272026-radio-not-radio/. This one features Gilberto Gil, Space Afrika, KOGG, Lemon Kittens, Cinder Well, Gaika, Mohamed Bouroissa, Malcolm, Sango, K-Rosif, Alewya, Boniface & LYZZA, Shannen SP & HENNYBELIT, Lido Pimienta, MXKA, Mary Halvorson & Ambrose Akinmusire, Sun Ra, EarthBall, Jake Muir, Alison Cotton, Phil Niblock/William Hooker/David Soldier/David First, Chris Watson, Lénok, Warning and Forsman.
hi Dennis!
ahh knew i could count on you not to give us a splattered bunny right away — splattered ppl are whatever, but bunnies <33
massive post this weekend! Tscherkassy fucks. not sure i think diegetic meaning is hugely important, i mean ~my~ sense of meaning didn’t go away and that’s what matters (maybe).
Mainsqueeze is the internet almost at its best, tho i’m a hypocrite and don’t want to see splattered seafood under any circumstance.
mate, Flesh of the Void is woooonderful ^_^ and it reminds me of a dream i had as a v little kid — i’d been asking my mother if dying hurt, right, like do you literally choke to death when you stop breathing and does your flesh start falling off before you’re properly corpsey, how long does the whole endeavour take, the lot. in my defense i really was v little lol. anyway she was all yikes wtf and i didn’t get a good answer so i then had this p unforgettable nightmare about smth called Titan Syndrome (so sad Dennis) whereby ppl died bad and slow and decomposed ahead of time before going super nuts from like pain, body horror and social rejection and stuff. the upside was they also became super strong for a while there in the process, if they didn’t mind losing a hand by punching smth into dust or whatever. ofc these ppl were permanently freaked out by the obvious but also bc the condition was hereditary and there were this father and daughter i really wanted to make it but alas i eventually woke up and idt they did. ended up putting them in the book so maybe, mayyybe they’ll stand a chance now after all these years =)
Frank Stein is sick obvi but i always love my Zulueta. making smth go meta by recapitulation is a total flex.
Dementia is a gem, duh <3 been wanting to watch the silent and narrated versions back to back forever now, maybe today at long last lol. anyway, slay jazz and The Gamin lives rent free in my head a little (who tf was she really!). has Brian Evenson whom i like so much watched this film and he’s still not even a bit into Freud? i wanna know!
anyway, i once was on a bus somewhere industrial in LA, p late at night, and this v beautiful girl got off at the most random pitch black stop imaginable, i mean to the point i thought of getting off too just bc it looked so freakishly unsafe. she seemed super confident tho, so i ended up deciding against, like having sudden company might have been the thing to actually freak her out. but i def thought Dementia as she faded to black and have never forgotten her, wonder it she’s still as beautiful and foot-forward as she was that night ^_^
anyway, so many films here i’ve yet to watch! ty Dennis my always fav <3
i’ve amended my wish for you btw: may you make a film on your phone so weird yet golden agey they end up inviting you to… (he makes films on his phone too, you’re making this connection so unbearably desirable to me lol)
now, would any book live up to so much fact-checking? yes ofc! tho it’s not a fact-checking thing for those of us from the (broader) culture, it’s just… the culture lol. and she lived there for so long i’m just like… it’s excellent to write culture non-naturalistically when it’s excellently done, but imo she would only fail to fact-check this stuff in her own book if she wasn’t expecting an Arab to ever read it, and that makes me so mad and sad.
clearly you know you did The Marbled Swarm well on that level tho… i’m not French but i make friends and i travel and read lol, and i find the French-ness of that book super super pervasive. like from the cultural beats to the purely linguistic, which is obvi a bit of a feat to achieve in English. your prose there is also v cosy to me btw, maybe bc (i think i already told you this) my OG take on Spanish really was a Marbled Swarm which i learnt from my father. likely just as manipulative and labyrinthine huh, only i think i eventually outgunned him. or maybe not, bc he’s taken to speaking to me v plainly but w the same undercurrent (at least i know).
will you write us a book again soon? my book is currently eating up everything fr. what i’ve got planned next should have come first tbh, v few characters, easily storyboardable structure, limited vantage point and focused clean lines but uhhh it’s horror vacui over here.
as such tho i love you p fully, i do. unironically stylish man. =D
Yayyyy, Tetsuo mentioned! I really, really love that movie, it’s so clean and neat for how visually messy it is. Very, very good movie, thank you both for platforming that film. I actually quite liked Subconscious Cruelty haha, I maybe give it more credit than the review up there.Lots of other ones for me to check out too.
Heat has finally, finally fucking broken for me. Hope it’s the same for you, and everyone else in Europe on here lol. What a miserable week that was. I’ve gotten a lot of mileage out of a gif of Dirk Bogarde dying at the end of Death in Venice this week, the one where he’s profusely sweating and looking semi-ecstatic. Blegh, congrats on making it through. See you!
@ TheNeanderthalSkull, this is an excellent list! Tetsuo is a long time favourite of mine, and its sequel Body Hammer is none too shabby either.
I have rearranged the appointment at Leeds Print workshop for Friday the 10th, which will hopefully not be in the middle of a heatwave. The temperature outside today is slightly more bearable so I’m off out with my brother and nephew for a spot of Sunday brunch.
Scotland are out of the World Cup after a rather brief and inglorious run.
i’m afraid we’re going to be getting some serious heat next week… i went outside this morning and had to immediately come back in- it’s so fucking humid!!
i’m back to work next week or at least from tuesday through thursday so at least i have my basement to hide in (i work in a basement, which is where they typically imprison library workers in larger institutions, when we aren’t exiled off site entirely). july is glaring down on us and i happen to not be looking forward to it or doing so with trepidation because i add a lot of new stress to my life that i volunteered to take on next month.
at least summers are slow around here. the perks of a college town, though the international tourists and school groups are starting to trickle in. international tourists always seem kind of surprised by new england, maybe we’re not the americans they expect or something. i don’t know if that’s a good thing or not.
not clavicular!! he got a nose job and now his life is ruined, apparently. my algorithm also likes him but not to the extent as yours. the whole phenomenom is vaguely interesting but i can’t really speak on it with any sort of intelligence. i think the destruction of beauty, intentional or not, is more interesting a topic than the desperate chase for it- i also didn’t really find the substance that compelling because of that.
got the new nightboat edition of memories that smell like gasoline to replace my old copy. introduction by ocean vuong!! i feel like david wojnarowicz would have strong things to say about ocean vuong’s books and potentially not good ones either. vuong is also writing the introduction for the new bound notebook trilogy and it’s like, couldn’t you have gotten anyone else?
i hope the heat breaks for you this weekend! it can’t last forever, can it?? don’t answer that.
Keep the movie recommendations coming Dennis. This Iron man looks great and sounds great too!!!
Thanks Apeskull !
Hey brother, I’m currently on the road again but wanted to check in quickly. Left the house which was scenic but quite a hassle with the inept owners. Got the guest apartment in place for July & August, where I was already able to stash most of my stuff. Right now I’m on a 3-day-drive toward Zurich, where I’ll be dropping my family off. They continue on toward Germany by car. Now considering that the heatwave is waning I thought it wouldn’t be a bad idea to squeeze in that quick Paris trip after all. I noticed you have an Amsterdam screening coming up. I hit Zurich on July 1st & could fly right over. Thinking of staying till the 5th or so. You’re gonna be around?
Staying in Tarragona tonight at a campsite. Tomorrow near Valence, France & then Zurich. I’m a bit of a road dog so I’m actually enjoying this.
Hi Dennis.
Alice and her friends just left my place the other day, so I’ve been exhausted. I will be back to reading and commenting. Been in a bit of a rut, I have 160 or so pages of a novel down, and I don’t even know if the whole structure works (even though some of it I think is well done/written) – I’m waiting for Laura’s judgment because I might end up giving it a long break. Hope the worst of the heat has broken over there!
Hey. A great selection! Tscherkassy is so great. Glitchiness is my drug. And I’ve been meaning to see ‘Dementia’. I reckon I will this week.
Is it bad luck to say the publishers? Maybe. I can be pretty superstitious about that sort of thing so I’ll stay tightlipped. Well, I guess I already mentioned Calamari. They’re a mysterious entity. I think whoever runs it is anonymous, so it’s a curious process submitting to them. The other presses are in a similar vein in their admirable receptiveness to odd little books.
Trying to put something so huge in your imagination on the page… yeah, in this case I’m in a position where it feels so incredibly impossible, but that hugeness makes it all the more enticing. Not to say that I didn’t do something ambitious with the book I just finished, but with the trilogy I know I needed to start with the slightly less emotionally charged idea in preparation for the centrepiece.
I’m thinking a lot about how Blanchot used the recit form to make it so that the writing became the thing that was being written about rather than just a narration of it, and that’s how you approach something so huge and terrible. But how does one do that? I suppose by creating a book that is born out of its shortcomings if that makes sense? Like, does a book about itself become THE THING (being written about) itself? I’m just being rhetorical, but I have lots to think about.
Great selections here. The ones I haven’t seen have since been added to the docket. As for the ones I have seen, Ganja & Hess and Tetsuo are is always worth the shoutout. Rubber is that thing in high school everyone talked about that I didn’t vibe with, but have since found myself tuning into every new Quentin Dupieux project. He’s the signature absurdist in film right now, and is more often a hit than a miss.
It does remind me of a recent discovery in a film from 2016 called Black Mamba directed by Belinda M. Wilson. A strange yet impressive Fantasy Island-like anthology about deals with a black magic practitioner gone wrong. Bleeding Skull released it as part of their Backyard Bloodbaths release, but it’s far and away the best project on that disc.