CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

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SENSE AND SENSIBILITY (Ang Lee, 1995) #CoMoGBakaUK
Sense and Sensibility is Jane Austen's first published novel.
She started writing it in 1795 as an epistolary novel, first entitled Elinor and Marianne.
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In November 1811 it was published under its new title
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[Eavesdropping in the Novel from Austen to Proust, 2003]
The word “eavesdropping” implies placement of a listener in space. “To eavesdrop” originally meant to stand within the “eavesdrop,” or the space under the eaves of a building likely to receive rainwater from the roof. The word contains within it the concept of being near a private space (a house) and its secrets, and suggests a punishment for being so positioned; a person in the “eavesdrop” is likely to get wet. From this spatially oriented locution, which places an individual next to but not within an enclosed, protected space, eavesdropping comes to mean to listen secretly to the private conversation of others. The evolving meaning of the word changes from a physical encroachment on tangible private property to a metaphoric intrusion on psychological and discursive space. Eavesdropping suggests a particular sense of space: one that indicates boundaries of public and private areas, and transgressions of the former into the latter. It represents liminality: not being fully a part of the private world, but somewhat protected, while still part of the natural and public world. In its very demarcation, this border state presupposes the trespass of another individual’s sense of private space. Such transgressive activity usually carries with it the threat of danger or physical injury to the trespasser. Illicit acts usually do not go unpunished. In other languages, the locutions for eavesdropping also register the idea of location vis-a-vis privacy or domestic space, although in a less precise manner than in English. The German lauschen, meaning “to listen, strain one’s ears, prick up one’s ears, eavesdrop,” offers an adjectival form lauschenig, which means “snug, cozy, idy llic; hidden, tucked away,” and intimates a listening in on a space that is apart from a public area. The Russian pod slushivanye (literally, “underlistening”) etymologically positions the eavesdropper in a hidden space close to the speakers. Polish contains two locutions to express overhearing: podsluchiwanie and przysluchiwanie, where the former implies a transgression of privacy (being underneath the private conversation) and the latter a less morally weighted and less clandestine listening, usually in a semipublic place (the preposition przy meaning “next to” or “beside”). The French and Italian expressions for and prohibitions against eavesdropping, while not stressing a domestic environment, often indicate a proximity to walls or doors, structures that separate one space from another or regulate the passage from one to the next. These expressions include “les murs don't des oreilles;” “écouter aux portes;” “origliare alla porta;” “i muri hanno orecchie.” Other locutions are even less spatiallyprecise and articulate overhearing as “surprendre une conversation,” “etre aux écoutes,” or “ascoltare di nascosto,” “udire per caso, di nascosto.” In Spanish, the expression emphasizes the quality of being hidden: “escuchar a escondidas.”
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The configuration of individuals and flow of information presented in eavesdropping are not exclusive to the novel. Indeed, eavesdropping plays a central role in drama from classical Greek tragedies through Shakespeare and eighteenth-century French and British comedies.
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As the pun in its title suggests, Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing (1598) is constructed almost entirely around scenes of deliberate and inadvertent overhearing or “noting.”
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Bakhtin perceives the centrality of eavesdropping to the genre of the novel and bases this recognition on the paradoxical correlation between its subject matter (private life) and a narrative transgression of privacy and private spaces. He asserts, “The literature of private life is essentially
a literature of snooping about, of overhearing ‘how others live’ . . . What matters are the everyday secrets of private life that lay bare human nature – that is, everything that can be only spied and eavesdropped upon.”
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A wide variety of novelists from the English and French literary traditions represent narrative activity in a manner that confirms Bakhtin’s statement. Samuel Richardson has been disparaged for his “keyhole view of life,” by which he discloses to his readers the intimate aspects of his heroines’ individual experiences.
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In the nineteenth century, the eavesdropping scene comes into its own as the flow of information — in novels and other media — accelerated. During this period, social, technological, and economic structures developed that fostered communication and produced a transfer of news from one body — individual, social, political, or economic — to another. Such changes transformed the experience of daily life in the nineteenth century.
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By making information more available to a larger public, institutions such as the penny post, the telegraph, and newspapers transformed local events into potentially national knowledge.
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Although the division of public and private spheres of activity emerged earlier, it is in this era that the desire to distinguish between the two became keenly felt, in part because “the rise of publicity. . . changed the significance of privacy and created a real or imagined need for secrecy.” The creation of an information society brought with it an anxiety about public opinion and placed an increased value on the notion of “discretion.”
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Moreover, in a period that witnessed vast migrations to cities, social experience itself changed. People were in closer proximity to unknown others. Physical propinquity coincided with psychological mystery, producing both curiosity and opportunity to learn about others, as well as desire to shelter one’s own private life from them. Social mobility in general increases publicity, which in turn produces the greater desire for and value of privacy. Those who could afford to do so tried to protect private life through either the organization of living space or retreat to the suburbs or the country.
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Eavesdropping produces narrative complication.
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It figures not only the desire for secret knowledge but the multiple uses to which information maybe put, and the many stories generated, from an originary moment of overhearing. Episodes of secret listening mobilize or redirect narrative energies. They engender situations such as misunderstandings, partial hearings, or incorrect scenarios that require narrative to explain or account for them.
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A character often overhears only part of a conversation and makes erroneous assumptions about the situation and the individuals it concerns. This causes a misunderstanding that may require the length of the narrative to resolve.
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Even if overheard information is accurate, its secret appropriation almost always alters the course of the story and encourages narrative dilation. Alternatively, by providing information otherwise unavailable to characters and thus correcting misunderstandings or solving mysteries, eavesdropping can produce narrative closure.
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by sally »

i rewatched this as well

it's very pretty but after a while the tastefulness of the composition began to grate and what the hell was up with kate winslet in sympathetic backdrop shots

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by nrh »

https://twitter.com/MarcDavidJacobs/sta ... 5947913407
doesn't work in the us, but hopefully this is better than the tv/vhs quality rip that's been floating around for awhile?
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

clergymen spitting wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 11:13 pm THE MIGHTY BOOSH (S1, E1): KILLEROO (Paul King, 2004) #CoMoGBakaUK

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https://youtu.be/rZZESvFWRwo?si=abZSbqZCHZV8RJA6
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THE MIGHTY BOOSH (S1, E2): Mutants (Paul King, 2004) #CoMoGBakaUK
THE MIGHTY BOOSH (S1, E3): Bollo (Paul King, 2004) #CoMoGBakaUK
THE MIGHTY BOOSH (S1, E4): Tundra (Steve Bendelack, Paul King, 2004) #CoMoGBakaUK
THE MIGHTY BOOSH (S1, E5): Jungle (Paul King, 2004) #CoMoGBakaUK
THE MIGHTY BOOSH (S1, E6): Charlie (Paul King, 2004) #CoMoGBakaUK
THE MIGHTY BOOSH (S1, E7): Electro (Paul King, 2004) #CoMoGBakaUK
THE MIGHTY BOOSH (S1, E8): Hitcher (Paul King, 2004) #CoMoGBakaUK

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by sally »

nrh wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 5:48 pm https://twitter.com/MarcDavidJacobs/sta ... 5947913407
doesn't work in the us, but hopefully this is better than the tv/vhs quality rip that's been floating around for awhile?
a musical? ah.....but I see there's others too :)
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by Lencho of the Apes »

The opposite of 'reify' is... ?
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by nrh »

Lencho of the Apes wrote: Tue Nov 21, 2023 9:16 pm Um... this is a thing.
there are some good performances in that series but they are mostly awful, with the directors really having no idea at all what to do with staging and camera with these things.

the major exception was egoyan's version of krapp's last tape, starring john hurt. the rest are best avoided...
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by greennui »

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rcyzAIkMwrg

Also watched Miranda a while ago. Feather light but raunchy and enjoyable enough.

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Glynis Johns is still alive, turned 100 just last month.
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

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RITA, SUE AND BOB TOO! (Alan Clarke, 1987) #CoMoGBakaUK
When West Yorkshire’s literary culture is discussed, its merits often include a roll call of swaggering towers of masculinity such as Ted Hughes, Tony Harrison, J.B. Priestley, David Peace or Keith Waterhouse. But Andrea Dunbar is rarely mentioned. She is a cult hero of working-class drama whose difficult truths were (and to some extent still are) unpalatable. Dunbar’s visceral scenes sadly hold little traction against these literary titans. It begs the question, why hasn’t Yorkshire claimed Dunbar as one of its own? Unlike her closest contemporary, Shelagh Delaney, on the other side of the Pennines, there is no iconic status for Bradford’s ‘genius straight from the slums’.
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In Dunbar’s play, Bob’s story follows Aristotle’s rule; in the beginning he has everything, and ends up with nothing. He is stripped of his assets, status, manhood – and his car, the symbol of his freedom and sexual potency. It is the classic reversal of fortune. It was always Dunbar’s intention that Bob would be punished for his actions, yet in Clarke’s film, Bob loses his wife, but ends up with Rita and Sue in his bed in the final scene. This was a bone of contention for Dunbar, who was furious at Clarke’s revised ending. She burned the original script after hearing they had used other writers to add new scenes.
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“Oh thanks” —annoyed
“Thanks a lot” —sarcastic
“Thanks for that” —dismissive

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“Thanks anyway” —disappointed
“Thanks a bunch!” —furious
“Many thanks” —lazy to count

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“Thanks I guess!” —frustrated
“Hmm thanks” —wish you hadn't bothered
“Thank you (with ar**h*** added sotto voce!)” —really annoyed!
“Thank you so much” —you're on my fantasy death list

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by Lencho of the Apes »

nrh wrote: Tue Nov 21, 2023 9:40 pm
mostly awful
I don't know about 'awful' -- the text was pretty damn intractable and this guy whoever made some passably "in-te-rest-ing" choices about how to present it. I didn't realize there were a series of productions going on; I'll be on the lookout for Egoyan's Krapp. Loved that play when I was a teenager.
The opposite of 'reify' is... ?
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by sally »

glynis johns had the loveliest voice ever...

rewatched:

central bazaar - stephen dwoskin (1976) #CoMoGBakaUK

not as mesmerising 2nd time around but always up for dwoskin's tender, sensual questioning of spectatorship

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

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views from home - guy sherwin (2005) #CoMoGBakaUK

♥♥♥ this

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and a couple more from nick collins, who i already know i love everything from

views from a city - nick collins (1993) #CoMoGBakaUK

archaeology AND found footage! ♥

https://vimeo.com/255122106


winter woods - nick collins (2006) #CoMoGBakaUK

https://vimeo.com/274330804
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

ROBIN HOOD: PRINCE OF THIEVES (Kevin Reynolds, 1991) #CoMoGBakaUK
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by rischka »

i didn't know there was a knock off sherlock holmes called sexton blake!
Sexton Blake is a fictional character, a detective who has been featured in many British comic strips, novels and dramatic productions since 1893. Sexton Blake adventures were featured in a wide variety of British and international publications (in many languages) from 1893 to 1978, comprising more than 4,000 stories by some 200 different authors. Blake was also the hero of numerous silent and sound films, radio serials, and a 1960s ITV television series.
and now i've seen one of those films! sexton blake and the hooded terror (d. george king 1938)

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he certainly looks like holmes and even lives in baker street

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i think he meant that ironically!

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he has a (very young) watson named tinker

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the story is kind of (ok very) absurd but the film looks good and george curzon is convincingly dashing

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wow there are 10 silent films (incl. 5 serials) and 5 talkies of which this was the third. who knew! :shock:

and now i'm gonna watch spice world 8-)

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more supervillains!! ok this has too much music. i was thinking idk any their songs but it's starting to come back now...

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:lboxd: + ICM + :imdb:

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

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never heard of this sexton blake!
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by sally »

watched a silent

masks and faces - fred paul (1917) #CoMoGBakaUK

it was stuffy and dull as per expected, but there was this AMAZING zoom on a piece of meat that was pretty insanely radical for 1917 britain

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by sally »

lost sound - john smith (2001) #CoMoGBakaUK

this is typical (great) JS, amusing, creative, poetic, great sense of real place

he finds a suspiciously large amount of cassette tape bedraggling london, then playfully plays the fragments, and films in situ...

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

THE FIRST FILM (David Wilkinson, 2015) #CoMoGBakaUK
Filmmaker David Nicholas Wilkinson uncovers the fascinating truth behind the greatest mystery in cinema history in The First Film, following his 33-year quest to prove who really invented moving images. In 1888, Frenchman Louis Le Prince produced the world's first moving image film in Leeds, England. But just as he was about to unveil his invention, Le Prince disappeared, never to be seen again...
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Le_Prince
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wordsworth_Donisthorpe

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by greennui »

The Passing of the Third Floor Back (Berthold Viertel, 1935)

Rene Ray adorable, Beatrix Lehmann sexy.

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T'was a decent film.
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

CORRIDOR OF MIRRORS (Terence Young, 1948) #CoMoGBakaUK
one of the greatest British film performances by an actress you’ve never heard of, Edana Romney
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Edana Romay, the leading actress, crafted the part of Mifanwy for herself, collaborating on the screenplay with coproducer Rudolph Cartier, adapting a novel by Chris Massey.
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She moves through the film almost like a somnambulist,
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her somewhat-limited acting ability contributing to the dream-like atmosphere, as she is closely surveilled by a secretive woman and a fluffy white cat.
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Smith, writing for the Criterion website, points out that after a war, there is such a yearning to connect with the dead that spiritualism has a brief cultural surge, and the dead certainly seem like they might walk the “Corridor of Mirrors.” But the post-war era also brings the shared experience of those women who married in haste before their husbands shipped off and find themselves coupled to virtual strangers, either because of brief acquaintance before matrimony or the brutality of war and resulting PTSD of their spouses.
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The film asks how much you need to know about the object of your romantic madness.
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Paul certainly knows nothing or cares anything about Mifanwy other than that her appearance matches a treasured portrait in his possession.
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Andre Thomas' gorgeous cinematography reveals the film’s sumptuous costumes and elaborate decor within glistening shadows.
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The gowns, “which appeal to the ten-year-old girl within every female viewer,” wrote Imogen Sara Smith for Criterion, were designed by Owen Hyde-Clark and constructed by French couturier Maggy Rouff.
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Evocative music by George Auric, who scored Cocteau’s “La Belle et La Bête,” conjures a bewitching atmosphere, although, surprisingly, it is directed by future “Dr. No” director Terence Young in his debut.
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A nightclub table with Mifanwy and fellow revelers provides a brief glimpse of an impossibly young Christopher Lee in his first film, sitting with Lois Maxwell (the future Miss Moneypenny).
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by sally »

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view - william raban (1970) #CoMoGBakaUK
colours of this time - william raban (1972) #CoMoGBakaUK
angles of incidence - william raban (1973) #CoMoGBakaUK
breath - william raban (1974) #CoMoGBakaUK
thames barrier - william raban (1977) #CoMoGBakaUK
fergus walking - william raban (1978) #CoMoGBakaUK
sundial - william raban (1992) #CoMoGBakaUK
a 13 - william raban (1994) #CoMoGBakaUK
mm - william raban (2004) #CoMoGBakaUK

something obscure happened to raban in the 80s where the films changed from being structural experiments, almost unconcerned with the subject, to being poetic essays where the subject directs the shots, i like both

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by sally »

watched the completion of the trilogy he did with mark von schlegell, all lovely (would have helped having subtitles, no clue what was said half the time)

urth - ben rivers (2016) #CoMoGBakaUK

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look then below - ben rivers (2019) #CoMoGBakaUK

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

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greennui wrote: Tue Nov 07, 2023 10:22 am Place of Work 1976 Directed by Margaret Tait
PLACE OF WORK #CoMoGBakaUK (watched it too, thanks!)
TAILPIECE (Margaret Tait, 1976) #CoMoGBakaUK
Tailpiece (black & white) was conceived as a coda to a longer (colour) film, Place of Work, made in the same year.
It covers the time of finally emptying a long-time family home, with its personal memories...

stream → https://movingimage.nls.uk/film/6233
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

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well if we're still doing this i will place here 'the drum' (zoltan korda 1938) a last gasp of the raj kinda thing

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starring sabu and filmed on the north west frontier of india/pakistan

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sabu once again saves the white people from an evil warlord (played by raymond massey)

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but why would the peaceful natives turn against their colonizers? all very cringe but the technicolor is so pretty
:lboxd: + ICM + :imdb:

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

rischka wrote: Sun Dec 03, 2023 3:14 pm well if we're still doing this
well, my November folder is still far from empty and thus gonna move to December a bit later...

THE CARTOON THEATRE OF DR GAZ (Jeff Keen, 1979) #CoMoGBakaUK
a lo-fi, stop-motion maelstrom of sketches and cutouts
(imagine the surrealism of Monty Python collages, but more disturbingly demented and visceral)
WHITE DUST (Jeff Keen, 1979) #CoMoGBakaUK
Named after the horror film White Zombie and the rom-com Red Dust (both 1932)
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

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A FIELD IN ENGLAND (Ben Wheatley, 2013) #CoMoGBakaUK

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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

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EMMA (Douglas McGrath, 1996) #CoMoGBakaUK
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The posthumous queen of genteel cinema is still on a roll. Jane Austen remains a hot ticket with the arrival of ''Emma,'' another decorative comedy of 19th-century manners honed to a sharply 20th-century edge. With an anachronistic snap bordering on irreverence, Douglas McGrath's agile first feature manages to be nearly as savvy as ''Clueless,'' the deliriously pop version of this story.

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Gwyneth Paltrow makes a resplendent Emma, gliding through the film with elegance and patrician wit that bring the young Katharine Hepburn to mind.
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And as with Hepburn, that very refinement turns sly, bestowing a serenely polite veneer upon her character's sneaky, meddlesome tricks. This Emma is the centerpiece of a broadly amusing film in which characters expound earnestly about the merits of celery root or the horrors of having a sore throat.
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In the midst of such stupefying refinement, a demure schemer like Emma can affect a pose of pampered idleness while vigorously working her wiles.
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When the camera leaves off lingering on Ms. Paltrow's fine-boned beauty, it discovers the expert, mostly British supporting players with whom the film's American star seems quite at home.
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'Emma'' is rated PG (Parental guidance suggested).
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It includes violence of the discreet conversational variety, which perfectly suits the film's idea of polite society.
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

THE HOUSE THAT MACKINTOSH BUILT (Eric Knowles, 2014) #CoMoGBakaUK
Mackintosh only ever completed one architectural commission outside of Scotland during his lifetime — a residential renovation at 78 Derngate in Northhampton, England. This was also the last commission Mackintosh completed before he moved to the south of France, where he lived most of the remaining years of his life.

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/78_Derngate

78 Derngate is a Georgian house in Northhampton, England, originally built in the 1820s. In 1916, the house's new owner — toy manufacturer Wenman Joseph Bassett-Locke — commissioned Mackintosh to renovate the rather pokey and old-fashioned interiors into a modern and convenient home. The work was conducted from 1916-1917 and the resultant interiors are considered by architectural historians to be one of the most important works of this period.

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Over the subsequent years, through a multitude of owners, the house gradually deteriorated and fell into disrepair. By 1964, the house was owned by the Northhampton High School for Girls, who subdivided it into offices and classrooms. By the mid-1990s, concerns were raised about the condition of the house and various organizations began to collaborate to try and save it.

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After funding was obtained, work was started in 2002 to restore 78 Derngate to Mackintosh's original designs. The adjacent house — 80 Derngate — was obtained to act as a supporting museum. After nearly two years of painstaking research, conservation and restoration, the house and museum were opened to the public in late 2003.
"The House That Mackintosh Built" was originally a 15-episode half-hour series broadcast on Discovery Home and Leisure in the UK in 2003. The commercial DVD release has been edited into a single 93-minute program.
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Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by niminy-piminy »

LEFTIES: ANGRY WIMMIN (Vanessa Engle, 2006) #CoMoGBakaUK
In the late 1970s in Leeds, a group of women called the Revolutionary Feminists splintered away from mainstream feminism. Unlike the socialists, who pictured a revolution where the ruling class and the working class would be on opposite sides, Revolutionary Feminists declared war on men. Their leading activist was academic Sheila Jeffreys.
who (btw.) wrote a book about "penile imperialism"
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/610 ... mperialism
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The Revolutionary Feminists' first move was to publish an inflammatory document called 'Political Lesbianism - the Case Against Heterosexuality'. It stated that in order to achieve liberation, women should stop having sexual relations with men. They rejected beauty practices, turning their backs on high-heeled shoes, make-up and uncomfortable clothes. They strove to eliminate men from their language, inventing new ways to spell 'wimmin'. They espoused separatism as a way of life and some even abandoned their sons.

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The Revs were deeply affected by the Yorkshire Ripper, who for them represented the threat of male violence. In response, they set up WAVAW — Women Against Violence Against Women — and instigated 'Reclaim the Night' marches, campaigning vociferously against pornography. An extremist wing of WAVAW calling itself 'Angry Women' even went as far as burning down sex shops.

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In the early 1980s, feminism entered a second phase and increasingly turned inwards on itself. As black, working-class and disabled women focused on their differences, and the creation of the GLC's women's committee incorporated females into mainstream government.
the second part of the LEFTIES trilogy consisting of:
1/ PROPERTY IS THEFT
2/ ANGRY WIMMIN
3/ A LOT OF BALLS
https://www.vanessaengle.com/lefties
You have to be enraged.
I still have the rage.
And I still carry the rage.
Rage is absolutely fundamental.
Not anger.
It's not strong enough.
It has to be the rage.
https://youtu.be/Apo72n01ESI?si=AyzT1tzwq0U7SzsZ
https://youtu.be/Tn7bZM9okY8?si=QeJip9V6wwZBUmsG
https://youtu.be/TSHQpRXlTzE?si=zTTGrOrWWFTjlx9k
https://youtu.be/gX5wOxRhvec?si=9QXbKy20Hj2yds2-
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greennui
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Location: Sweden

Re: CoMo No. 19: Great Britain (November, 2023)

Post by greennui »

greennui wrote: Wed Nov 22, 2023 9:20 am´´

Glynis Johns is still alive, turned 100 just last month.
Not anymore...

https://twitter.com/guardianculture/sta ... 4147160419
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