Pregnant woman from ‘De Conceptu et Generatione Hominis’ by Jacob Rueff (1554)
Under construction, a post dedicated to –esques and –ians, the fantastic Bibliodyssey, Hans Bellmer, the 16th century and perversion in art.
Pregnant woman from ‘De Conceptu et Generatione Hominis’ by Jacob Rueff (1554)
Under construction, a post dedicated to –esques and –ians, the fantastic Bibliodyssey, Hans Bellmer, the 16th century and perversion in art.
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6l-InqDHmA]
Grindhouse (2007) – Rodriguez and Tarantino
As I’ve pointed out before here, Greencine is serializing Eddie Muller’s 1996 non-fiction book Grindhouse: The Forbidden World of “Adults Only” Cinema on the grindhouse phenomenon. From Greencine’s latest entry:
“I’m almost surprised that Tarantino and Rodriguez didn’t convince their patrons, Harvey and Bob Weinstein, to coat the floors of the theaters themselves with the very special shoe-sole-sticking gunk that was an unavoidable aspect of the real grindhouse experience,” writes Premiere‘s Glenn Kenny. “Death Proof offers ‘thrills’ that are deeply unpleasant and deeply unwholesome, and it’s here that Grindhouse comes closest to achieving the ‘climate of perdition’ that another surrealist critic, Robert Benayoun termed the hallmark of ‘authentic sadistic cinema.’ A lot of people associate a taste for grindhouse movies with the tiresome condescension of the ‘so-bad-it’s-good’ ethos, but Tarantino understands the aesthetics of aberrance that animated the explorations of so-called trash hounds.” —Greencine
Returning to Glenn Kenny’s review, I am intrigued by his opening lines mentioning Ado Kyrou and by the mention of Benayoun. I quote:
“…[G]o and learn to see the worst films; they are sometimes sublime,” the surrealist filmmaker and critic Ado Kyrou advised in 1963. While neither Robert Rodriguez nor Quentin Tarantino are (to my knowledge) disciples of Kyrou, they carry his ethos in their bones.
…
And it’s here that Death Proof offers “thrills” that are deeply unpleasant and deeply unwholesome, and it’s here that Grindhouse comes closest to achieving the “climate of perdition” that another surrealist critic, Robert Benayoun, termed the hallmark of “authentic sadistic cinema.”
I am especially interested in where Benayoun supposedly talked about the “climate of perdition” and “authentic sadistic cinema.”
Anyone know more?
Just a quick note to tell you that the 25th Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival starts today. Here is the program. The festival is a unique oportunity to see some out of the ordinary films. Scheduled today for example are a tribute to Enki Bilal as well as Lunacy (see also here), the latest feature film by Jan Švankmajer.
… But the Brussels International Festival of Fantastic Film is no ordinary film festival. It’s a multidisciplinary event with a unique atmosphere. For 13 days it will present the very best in genre cinema from all over the world and open to all audiences and tastes…. Even though the BIFFF will move most of its activities to Tour & Taxis, the outstanding collaboration with Cinema Nova – home of the cutting-edge 7th Orbit Section – and with the Film Archive will be continued ! —http://www.myspace.com/fantasticfilmfestival
In case you are wondering what type of festival the BIFFF is, you can best compare it to
Trailerboy has this:
1, 2, 3, Whiteout – James June Schneider
2010 – Peter Hyams
The 4th Dimension – Tom Mattera & Dave Mazzoni
Aachi & Ssipak – Bum-jin Joe
The Abandoned – Nacho Cerda
Aliens – James Cameron
A.P.T. – Byung-ki Ahn
Attack Of The Mushroom People – Ishiro Honda
Black Sheep – Jonathan King
Blade Runner – Ridley Scott
Broken – Simon Boyes & Adam Mason
Bugmaster – Katsuhiro Otomo
The Butcher Boy – Neil Jordan
D@bbe – Hasan Karacadag
The Dark Hour – Elio Quiroga
Day Watch – Timur Bekmambetov
D-Day: Roommates – Eun-kyeong Kim
Dead In 3 Days – Andreas Prochaska
Death Note – Shusuke Kaneko
Death Note II: The Last Name – Shusuke Kaneko
Disturbia – D.J. Caruso
Dog Bite Dog – Pou-soi Cheang
Dragon Tiger Gate – Wilson Yip
Electric Dragon 80.000 Volts – Sogo Ishii
End Of The Line – Maurice Deveraux
The Entrance – Damon Vignale
Espectro – Juan Felipe Orozco
Eternally Secure – Santosh Sivan
Exit – Peter Lindmark
The Ferryman – Chris Graham
The Girl Who Leapt through Time – Mamoru Hosoda
The Glamorous Life Of Sachiko Hanai – Mitsuru Meike
Gomeda – Tan Tolga Demirci
Gruesome – Joshua & Jeffrey Crook
The Hills Have Eyes 2 – Martin Weisz
The Host – Bong Joon-Ho
Hot Fuzz – Edgar Wright
How To Get Rid Of The Others – Anders Ronnow-Klarlund
I.D. – Kei Fujiwara
Immortel – Enki Bilal
In The Name Of The King – Uwe Boll
The Invisible – David S. Goyer
I Spit On Your Grave – Meir Zarchi
Jade Warrior – Antti-Jussi Annila
Kaw – Sheldon Wilson
The Kovak Box – Daniel Monzon
Like Minds – Gregory J. Read
Lunacy – Jan Svankmajer
The Machine – Joao Falcao
Maniac – William Lustig
Marmorera – Markus Fischer
The Messengers – Danny & Oxide Pang
Mug Travel – Aaron Lim
Mulberry Street – Jim Mickle
Nightmare Detective – Shinya Tsukamoto
Nos Amis Les Terriens – Bernard Werber
Offscreen – Christopher Boe
Plane Dead – Scott Thomas
Poultrygeist: Night Of The Chicken Dead – Lloyd Kaufman
Primeval – Michael Katleman
Re-Cycle – Danny & Oxide Pang
The Reflecting Skin – Philip Ridley
The Restless – Dong-ho Cho
The Return – Asif Kapadia
Return Of The Killer Tomatoes – John De Bello
Retribution – Kiyoshi Kurosawa
Roman – Angela Bettis
Shadow Puppets – Michael Winnick
Shattered Soul – Mustafa Altioklar
Short Circuit – John Badham
Shrek – Andrew Adamson & Vicky Jenson
Silk – Chao-pin Su
Simon Says – William Dear
Special – Hal Haberman
Star Trek: The Motion Picture – Robert Wise
Strange Days – Kathryn Bigelow
Sunshine – Danny Boyle
The Sword Bearer – Philipp Yankovsky
Tripping – Yiwen Chen
Tron – Steven Lisberger
Unholy Women – Keita Amemiya Takuji Suzuki & Keisuke Toyoshima
Unknown – Simon Brand
The Unknown Woman – Giuseppe Tornatore
The Unseeable – Wisit Sasanatieng
Wicked Flowers – ToricoNo trailer available:
Tykho Moon – Enki Bilal
Le Dernier Homme – Ghassan Salhab
Vampire Cop, Ricky – Si-myung Lee
Bunker Palace Hotel – Enki Bilal
Don’t Deliver Us From Evil – Joël Séria
Unman, Wittering And Zigo – John McKenzie
The Ugly Swans – Konstantin Lopushansky
Brand Upon The Brain – Guy Maddin
The Ungodly – Thomas Dunn
Following on my previous post on Venetian Snares where I mentioned Trevor Brown, some more about the latter:
Artwork by Trevor Brown
My Alphabet (1999) – Trevor Brown
[Amazon.com] [FR] [DE] [UK]
Li’l Miss Sticky Kiss (2004) – Trevor Brown
[Amazon.com] [FR] [DE] [UK]
Though presently living in Japan, Trevor Brown is an British artist whose work explores paraphilias, such as pedophilia, BDSM, and other fetish themes, with unusual wit.
Important career motivating friendships include French artist Romain Slocombe (the pioneer of “medical art”) and William Bennett (leader of the notorious electronic-noise band Whitehouse.
Trevor Brown’s art has been featured in Adam Parfrey’s Apocalypse Culture II, and in Jim Goad’s ANSWER Me! zine, as well as a variety of other publications. His work has been featured as cover art for a number of bands, including Deicide, Whitehouse, GG Allin, Kayo Dot, and Venetian Snares.
He is often compared with Mark Ryden in that he is known for child-like characters in various states of distress. However themes in his work extend to car crashes, (reminiscent of J.G. Ballard’s Crash), abattoirs, and Japanese pornography. His art is close in spirit to the Young British Artists such as Damien Hirst or Jake and Dinos Chapman. —[1]
Trevor Brown illustraded CDs by Merzbow, Venetian Snares and Whitehouse (here, here, here and here).
Related: Google gallery 1 – Google gallery 2 – fetish art – grotesque art – hyperrealism – perversion in art – erotic art – transgressive art – British art
Articles: Trevor Brown interviews Masami Akita – Trevor Brown on Japanese bondage, Kinbiken and Chimou Nureki
I am, that is to say I was, a great man, but I am neither the author of Junius nor the man in the mask, for my name, I believe, is Robert Jones, and I was born somewhere in the city of Fum-Fudge.
The first action of my life was the taking hold of my nose with both hands. My mother saw this and called me a genius:—my father wept for joy and presented me with a treatise on Nosology. This I mastered before I was breeched. ..
Who else but Borges could start a story by introducing a character who is unsure of his own name? The answer is Poe, the story is titled Lionizing (1835). It makes you wonder if there are any precedents of stories with characters who are unsure who they are.
I am currently reading Poe for the first time in my life. I’d written about Poe without ever having read one of his stories. Much like I had written about Baudelaire and Borges (and decided I was going to like them) without ever having read them. Recently, I found a rationale for my behaviour. It came by way of Oscar Wilde who supposedly said: “I never read a book I must review, it prejudices you so.”
I am reading Poe in Dutch, my native language. Poe is really too difficult for non-native speakers. I mean, how many native speakers know what vituperate means? In Dutch this translates as beschimpen, and while not a word I use every day, nor every month, maybe once every year, I do know what to make of it. Nevertheless, I enjoy difficult words and I learn every day. My main site Jahsonic helps me in this by providing context. Yesterday I came across arcane, I look it up at my place and at Wikipedia and at Answers.com. Roughly it means esoteric.
Then I remember Eric Losfeld and his Editions Arcanes:
Losfeld began secret publishing about 1949, and openly in 1952 when he established Editions Arcanes. For the following ten years or so his feet were planted firmly in the fields of both clandestine and open publishing. His open publications were certainly avant-garde and included works by Nelly Kaplan, Claude Seignolle, Boris Vian, Francis Picabia, Andre Pieyre de Mandiargues amongst others. —Patrick J. Kearney more…
Back to Poe. Please check this post with a very good illustration of Lionizing. And the superb The Nose by Gogol.
Totally unrelated is a Horace Andy track over at Sly and Robbie’s MySpace.
Excuse the rambling post. My name, I believe, is Jan Geerinck.
Unidentified photograph of Bouyxou
Sourced here.
For those of you living in Paris, or visiting Paris, the cinémathèque has given Jean-Pierre Bouyxou carte blanche to run a retrospective of “his kind of cinema“. Bouyxou (born 1946 in Bordeaux) is an erotomaniac and a countercultural historian. Most recently, Mike of Esotika … reviewed his film Satan bouche un coin. I also added some Bouyxou products to my Flickr account here and here as well as a cover of his magazine Sex Star System here. Some other magazines Bouyxou contributed to were Vampirella, Zoom, Métal hurlant, L’Echo des savanes, Penthouse, Lui, Hara-Kiri and Paris Match. He was editor-in-chief of Fascination (thirty issues from 1978 to 1986).
Bouyxou belongs to that European tradition of eroticism which is represented in Italy for example by the people of the Glittering Images publishing house to which Bouyxou is a contributor. For a review of one of the products of this publisher, see this and this blog entry at K. H. Brown’s Giallo Fever.
Thanks to Harry Tuttle of Unspoken Cinema for the notice.
Here is the program:
Terence Stamp as Toby Dammit
From Never Bet the Devil Your Head — A Tale with a Moral (1841) by Edgar Allan Poe:
Defuncti injuria ne afficiantur was a law of the twelve tables, and De mortuis nil nisi bonum is an excellent injunction — even if the dead in question be nothing but dead small beer. It is not my design, therefore, to vituperate my deceased friend, Toby Dammit. He was a sad dog, it is true, and a dog’s death it was that he died; but he himself was not to blame for his vices. They grew out of a personal defect in his mother. She did her best in the way of flogging him while an infant — for duties to her well — regulated mind were always pleasures, and babies, like tough steaks, or the modern Greek olive trees, are invariably the better for beating — but, poor woman! she had the misfortune to be left-handed, and a child flogged left-handedly had better be left unflogged. The world revolves from right to left. It will not do to whip a baby from left to right. If each blow in the proper direction drives an evil propensity out, it follows that every thump in an opposite one knocks its quota of wickedness in. I was often present at Toby’s chastisements, and, even by the way in which he kicked, I could perceive that he was getting worse and worse every day. At last I saw, through the tears in my eyes, that there was no hope of the villain at all, and one day when he had been cuffed until he grew so black in the face that one might have mistaken him for a little African, and no effect had been produced beyond that of making him wriggle himself into a fit, I could stand it no longer, but went down upon my knees forthwith, and, uplifting my voice, made prophecy of his ruin.
The fact is that his precocity in vice was awful. At five months of age he used to get into such passions that he was unable to articulate. At six months, I caught him gnawing a pack of cards. At seven months he was in the constant habit of catching and kissing the female babies. At eight months he peremptorily refused to put his signature to the Temperance pledge. Thus he went on increasing in iniquity, month after month, until, at the close of the first year, he not only insisted upon wearing moustaches, but had contracted a propensity for cursing and swearing, and for backing his assertions by bets.
Through this latter most ungentlemanly practice, the ruin which I had predicted to Toby Dammit overtook him at last. The fashion had “grown with his growth and strengthened with his strength,” so that, when he came to be a man, he could scarcely utter a sentence without interlarding it with a proposition to gamble. Not that he actually laid wagers — no. I will do my friend the justice to say that he would as soon have laid eggs. With him the thing was a mere formula — nothing more. His expressions on this head had no meaning attached to them whatever. They were simple if not altogether innocent expletives — imaginative phrases wherewith to round off a sentence. When he said “I’ll bet you so and so,” nobody ever thought of taking him up; but still I could not help thinking it my duty to put him down. The habit was an immoral one, and so I told him. It was a vulgar one- this I begged him to believe. It was discountenanced by society — here I said nothing but the truth. It was forbidden by act of Congress — here I had not the slightest intention of telling a lie. I remonstrated — but to no purpose. I demonstrated — in vain. I entreated — he smiled. I implored — he laughed. I preached- he sneered. I threatened — he swore. I kicked him — he called for the police. I pulled his nose — he blew it, and offered to bet the Devil his head that I would not venture to try that experiment again. —continue reading …
This post inspired by the ever excellent Ombres Blanches who notes:
When approached for the Edgar Allan Poe omnibus Histoires Extraordinaires (Spirits of the Dead) Fellini was initially reluctant to do it, but Toby Dammit turned out to be the film’s finest episode … Fellini chose to transpose Poe’s source story Never Bet the Devil Your Head to a contemporary setting …
Ombres Blanches points us to this wonderful clip of the Fellini short with an OST by Nino Rota. The live band are the Rutles. The scene is euro chic felliniesque.
Unidentified illustration of the Welwitschia mirabilis
I want to quickly share this find with you. The Welwitschia mirabilis is a Gymnosperm (“naked seeds“) plant which is quite literally sui generis: of its own kind. The plant reminds of the Komodo dragon.
via thrillingwonder
See also: this, the Google gallery and the Wikipedia entry. Check also the same blog’s post on lenticular clouds.
And some Goltzius to bid you good night:
Icarus, from The Disgracers, engraving, 1588
At the age of twenty-one Goltzius (1558 – 1617), Dutch painter and engraver, married a widow somewhat advanced in years, whose money enabled him to establish at Haarlem an independent business; but his unpleasant relations with her so affected his health that he found it advisable in 1590 to make a tour through Germany to Italy, where he acquired an intense admiration for the works of Michelangelo, which led him to surpass that master in the grotesqueness and extravagance of his designs. He returned to Haarlem considerably improved in health, and laboured there at his art till his death.
Via Celeste comes this:
Description of a Monster Born of a Ewe (Translation of August 1708 Work)
“The monster which is shown in the figure appeared in Buenos Aires on August 26. The contrast of three resemblances which it had, that of a child, a horse, and a calf, surprised all who saw it. I asked the person who showed it to me if I could examine it in order to describe it faithfully, but he never allowed me to do this. I examined it from quite close and drew its principal traits without his noticing. As soon as I returned to my room, having all the information about the monster vividly in my memory, it furnished what was missing from the drawing. I completed it and represented it in its natural color.”[2]
Louis Éconches Feuillée (sometimes spelled Feuillet) (1660-1732) was a French member of the Order of the Minims, explorer, astronomer, geographer, and botanist.