This is an aside titled 'The First Post-Apocalyptic Children’s FIlm' dated 5/14/08
City of Ember seems to be the most anticipated movie of the year. And it might be the first post-apocalyptic film aimed at children.Posted by Joanne on May. 14, 2008 Tagged: bill murray, children's movies, city of ember, movies, post-apocalypse
-
A collection of interesting ideas curated by
Joanne McNeil and
Jerry Brito. About us ➚ Asides
Audrey Tautou is set to play Coco Chanel. And Karl Lagerfeld will recreate her original wardrobe. There are so few fashion movies although most of them, even the behind-the-scenes documentaries, are very good. I recently watched Robert Altman's Ready to Wear (Prêt-à-Porter) again (the first time I saw it was in junior high.) I think I enjoyed it more, because in retrospect, 1994 was a great year for fashion. The models, the designs, the everything. Even more remarkable is how most of the people featured in the film are still around, if not more famous: Christy Turlington, Björk, Ute Lemper, Forest Whitaker, Rossy de Palma, Carla Bruni...
Alejandro Jodorowsky originally wanted to direct Dune. "[Salvador] Dalí agrees with much enthusiasm the idea to play the Emperor of the galaxy. He wants to film in Cadaquès and to use as throne a toilet made up of two intersected dolphins. The tails will form the feet and the two open mouths will be used one to receive the "wee", the other to receive the "excrement". Dalí thinks that it is of terrible bad taste to mix the "wee" and the "excrement"." Wow! I very much recommend his graphic novel The Metabarons. Also, I'm looking forward to checking out the recent translation his memoir The Spiritual Journey of Alejandro Jodorowsky.
Harvard University Press lists their favorite books at the moment published elsewhere.
Until 1948, Olympic medals went out for "oil painting, sculpture, architecture, music and literature." (via.)
Here's a rendering of the UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell, New Mexico. (via.)
Are we already living in the Death Race-age if you can get Dale Earnhardt Sr. footage on YouTube at "three angles amassing 88,251 views in just the first result, complete with a user-generated, slideshow-mashup hagiography to the tune of Freebird."I tend to side with the Crashman on these matters. Yet the number of people who have accessed this site by searching "Christine Chubbuck" never ceases to amaze me. In the words of Frankenstein in the original Death Race 2000, as quoted by Jackson West, "Sure it's violent, but that's the way we love it — violent, violent, violent!"
Sao Paulo is creating a registry of street art to be preserved. The city accidentally painted over a number of beloved murals, even when the art was officially sanctioned. (Previously.)
Our nervous systems are only equipped to conjure images in three dimensions. Yet Étienne Ghys of the École Normale Supérieure in Lyon, France is creating videos to help people see in four. "How on earth can we visualize such a thing? Ghys and his colleagues begin by pointing out that our challenge in visualizing four dimensions is very similar to the one that would be faced by a perfectly flat creature who lived in two dimensions and tried to visualize three, like the inhabitants of Edwin Abbott’s Flatland or the lizards in the page in Escher’s Reptiles. A cube or a sphere would be nearly unimaginable for the two-dimensional lizards, since they are unable to rise out of the plane." (via.) Maybe next they could make a movie out of Christopher Priest's Inverted World.
The Economist on Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the first woman in Africa to become a democratically elected head of state. (via.) Liberia's new president has "made headway against what she calls the 'debilitating cancer of corruption.'"
Blogroll
- Active Social Plastic
- Aggregat456
- Antiwar
- Art Fag City
- Art Review
- Ballardian
- Bioephemera
- BLDGBLOG
- Blue Tea
- Book Forum
- Bookslut
- Brainiac
- Brainwashed
- Bruce Sterling
- C-Monster
- Cabinet of Wonders
- City of Sound
- Coilhouse
- Collision Detection
- Debauchette
- Design Observer
- Diapsalmata
- Drawn!
- Ectoplasmosis
- Ed Champion
- Fimoculous
- Futurismic
- Henry Jenkins
- Idiosynchrony
- Infinite Thought
- Information Aesthetics
- io9
- Iris Iris
- Jahsonic
- Jesse Walker
- Kottke
- LCRW
- Marginal Revolution
- Morbid Anatomy
- mstrmnd
- Naked City
- Paul McAuley
- Posthuman Blues
- Right Some Good
- Steady Diet of Film
- Tao Lin
- Technoccult
- The Abstract Factory
- The Errant Aesthete
- The Frontal Cortex
- The Future of the Book
- The Kircher Society
- Things Magazine
- This Recording
- Uncertain Times
- Waggish
- WMMNA
- Powered by WordPress, styled by Bogart 0.8.
-
"The future is here. It's just not evenly distributed yet."
—William Gibson Categories
-
Sponsor
Good Books
-
Sponsor
-
Recent Posts
- Women's Office Fashions: From Holloway's Wiggle Dress to Hillary's Pantsuit
- Handmade Looking Writing
- When Humanity Only Survives Within Driving Distance of a Shopping Mall
- Crazy Artists, Crazy Authors, and Blog Comments as a Slush Pile Unfiltered
- Five Books I Recommend to Everyone
- In Favor of the Sensitive Superheroes
- How to Frame the Internet: Attention and the New News Cycle
- Suburban Ruins and The Ethics of House Flipping
- The Dystopic Hippie Election Movie That Might Have Stopped the Twenty-sixth Amendment
- Graffiti in the Wilderness: Rock Climbing in a Granite Museum
- Please Don't Leave a Facebook Comment on My Birthday
- Rules for an American Fantasy Road Trip
- Thomas M. Disch: Cult Writer for the Next Generation
- The Best Fireworks Display is Seen From a Plane Flying into LAX Sometime Between 9 - 10pm
- A Trip to the Zoo
- The Weirdest Sci-Fi Kids Movies
- William Gibson Completely Deleted from BoingBoing Archives
- Urban Safaris: Graffiti Sites Considered for Heritage Protection
- Saying Yes and Hearing No
- Microcelebrity and Frienemies
- Science Fiction: Women Do It Better
- The World's Strangest Housing Communities
- Possession
- Dario Argento and the Paradoxical Feminism of Horror Films
- A Hundred Chances: White Lies Post-Facebook
- Fruit and Colors
- The President Isn't Your Boss
- Synthetic Performances: Sylvere Lotringer, Second Life, and the Politics of Perversions
- We Live in Public
- An Apology for Idlers
- Our Past is Haiti's Present: An Interview with "Secondhand (Pepe)" filmmakers Hanna Rose Shell and Vanessa Bertozzi
- Open Source Art: Will There Ever Be Another Lily Chou-Chou?
- Rip Mix Stitch: Free Fashion Culture
- Boris Johnson isn't London's New Bicycle
- Alright, Sokay: Tomorrow's English Language








Post a comment