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    Bring4th Bring4th Community Art, Media, & Entertainment what movie did you last watch?

    Thread: what movie did you last watch?


    jacrob (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 387
    Threads: 29
    Joined: May 2011
    #331
    02-27-2018, 05:25 AM
    Putuparri and the Rainmakers

    A MUST watch!  Filmed over many years it shows the elders trying to share their knowledge of ritual to the younger generations, and the importance of maintaining the rituals.  Reminded me of my shamanic teacher saying aboriginals walk the land to keep the spirits alive.  I understood exactly what she meant when I watched this.  The rain dance rituals then and now moved me to tears.  See what we are losing by not being connected to the land.

    I should have posted this in the good docos thread...sorry  

    Putuparri trailer
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      • flofrog
    hounsic (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 229
    Threads: 0
    Joined: Jun 2015
    #332
    02-27-2018, 07:02 PM
    (02-27-2018, 05:25 AM)jacrob Wrote: Putuparri and the Rainmakers

    A MUST watch!  Filmed over many years it shows the elders trying to share their knowledge of ritual to the younger generations, and the importance of maintaining the rituals.  Reminded me of my shamanic teacher saying aboriginals walk the land to keep the spirits alive.  I understood exactly what she meant when I watched this.  The rain dance rituals then and now moved me to tears.  See what we are losing by not being connected to the land.

    I should have posted this in the good docos thread...sorry  

    Putuparri trailer

    That looks interesting.

      •
    Dekalb_Blues (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 885
    Threads: 12
    Joined: Mar 2012
    #333
    03-02-2018, 07:37 PM (This post was last modified: 03-26-2018, 09:34 PM by Dekalb_Blues.)
    ~

    No. 12. "Passion According to Gould"



    No. 6. "Hamburg"



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thirty_Two...lenn_Gould

    Most of this film may be found on YouTube, e.g. 
    https://www.youtube.com/user/booksontria...shelf_id=1
    [Note that the mighty SMG corporation, following standard evil-corporate-free-info-denial
    logic, strives to either blacklist clips of its films outright or, more cunningly, allows multi-part
    presentations like this one -- minus one of the parts, of course.]


    [Edit 26Mar18 -- just found: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OlI3Lq_opL4 -- The film entire. Sacré bleu! Miraculeux! ]

    Re. the actual man (who might perhaps be approached in today's paradigm as an extremely
    superiorly-functioning Aspergersite of daunting musical genius), there are many literary and
    cinematic analyses of his enigmatic personality and idiosyncratically original (and often iconoclastic)
    life-work; the following two-part 1959 documentary is an interesting early example.

    In Part One, Canadian Gould enjoys a respite at his lakeside cottage on Lake Simcoe, in southern
    Ontario. This is an aspect of Gould previously known only to the collie pacing beside him through
    the woods, the fishermen resting their oars to hear his piano, and fellow musicians like Franz Kraemer,
    with whom Gould talks of composition.



    Part Two follows Gould to New York City. There, we see the renowned Canadian concert pianist
    (at age 26 already a world-traveled recording and performing luminary) kidding the cab driver,
    bantering with sound engineers at Columbia Records, and then, alone with the piano, fastidiously
    recording Bach's Italian Concert.


    (LOL -- Initially facetious characterization of the stellar artist as a young man by his RCA handler, following 17:57;
    also, an interesting view of the driving effect of psychogeographics on musical aesthetics is advanced, with special
    reference to my own little one-horse hick town, NYC)

    Cool
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      • sunnysideup
    Dekalb_Blues (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 885
    Threads: 12
    Joined: Mar 2012
    #334
    03-23-2018, 03:17 AM (This post was last modified: 03-26-2018, 09:46 PM by Dekalb_Blues.)
    ~
    [Image: 600638_574077139312134_675225542_n.jpg]

    "The Rules of Fire is a documentary film by French director Jeremiah featuring the Swiss artist Sophie Hunger.
    It shares its name with the 10 Rules of Fire -- Hunger's collection of principles that a musician ought to follow.
    The film shows a variety of live performances and on the road footage of her European Tour in 2013 all circling
    around the golden rules." -- from her website http://store.sophiehunger.com/en/



    Singer/songwriter/guitarist/pianist Sophie Hunger is a big deal in Europe among progressive musical types,
    and deservedly so; see, for instance:

    (ca. 2008)

    (ca. 2013)
    https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenville_Festival

    (ca. 2016)
    https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blues’n’jazz

    . . . Not so much in America, due to (dare I say) a certain provincial xenophobia there, I fear, along with the
    fact that she is not easily "marketable" in the U.S., as her songs weave through folk, rock, jazz, and classical
    forms, propelled by a highly energetic but artistically very disciplined, not-so-corporatistically-oriented personality
    that transcends the more petty nationalismic differences in favor of a humaner approach to universal themes of
    life and love. Which she may couch variously in German Swiss (her native tongue), German, French, or English. 
    http://leipglo.com/2015/08/19/music-rais...ie-hunger/

    SOPHIE'S DECALOGUE OF MUSICAL PERFORMANCE ("RULES OF FIRE")
    1. Accept that you will never be Jesus Christ or Leonardo da Vinci.
    2. Never accept invitations from people who "adore" you.
    3. Never explain your Self or your Work.
    4. Never go on stage with a drink in your hand, or your hands in your pocket.
    5. Never tell the audience what to do.
    6. Never stop the song.
    7. Never announce that you are selling something -- CDs, tee-shirts.
    8. Know that Charlie Chaplin was a great businessman -- and that Bob Dylan tried to look like him.
    9. Seek humiliation.
    10. Never try to please.
     

    DEKALB_BLUE'S ADDENDUM TO SOPHIE'S RULES
    11. All guitar-amp settings shall be: "11"-- for that extra push over the cliff.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHCmkV27200

    [Image: serveimage?url=http%3A%2F%2Ft0.gstatic.c...che=375841] Cool
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      • sunnysideup
    sunnysideup (Offline)

    hen to pan
    Posts: 361
    Threads: 5
    Joined: Feb 2014
    #335
    03-29-2018, 11:58 PM
    [Image: la-haine-affiche_429615_24331.jpg]

      •
    Cyanatta (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 645
    Threads: 2
    Joined: Apr 2011
    #336
    03-30-2018, 10:31 PM
    [Image: 7Kindwt.jpg]

      •
    Quan (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 2,197
    Threads: 14
    Joined: Oct 2012
    #337
    04-02-2018, 08:07 AM
    The Ashram, highly recommend. Guy trys to find his missing girlfriend in the Himalayas in India who left to go on a spiritual path. Has key elements of service to others, service to self, importance of balancing lower 3 chakras before moving to the others, following the heart. Reminds be of the big movement of the 60, 70's pilgrimage to India(and beyond) but balancing it with modern view. There is some corny parts but it adds to the flavour BigSmile

    [Image: MV5BMTY2NjM2Njg3MV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwNTA4...68_AL_.jpg]
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5596104/
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      • flofrog
    Dekalb_Blues (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 885
    Threads: 12
    Joined: Mar 2012
    #338
    04-20-2018, 09:44 PM (This post was last modified: 04-20-2018, 09:50 PM by Dekalb_Blues.)
    ~
    A Japanese couple obsessed with 1950s America goes to Memphis because the male half of the couple 
    emulates Carl Perkins. 



    Chance encounters link three different stories in the city, with the common thread 
    being the seedy hotel where they are all staying.

    [Image: Mystery_Train.jpg]  This film rated SG -- for super genki, y'all!

    [Image: a76d88eccb77f120e1f36e4977518557--myster...rmusch.jpg]

    Mystery Train is a 1989 independent anthology film written and directed by Jim Jarmusch and set in Memphis, Tennessee, 
    in the U.S. The film is a  triptych of stories involving foreign protagonists unfolding over the course of the same night. 
    "Far from Yokohama" features a Japanese couple (Youki Kudoh and Masatoshi Nagase) on a blues pilgrimage, "A Ghost" 
    focuses on an Italian widow (Nicoletta Braschi) stranded in the city overnight, and "Lost in Space" follows the misadventures 
    of a newly single and unemployed Englishman (Joe Strummer) and his companions (Rick Aviles and Steve Buscemi). They 
    are linked by a run-down flophouse overseen by a night clerk (Screamin' Jay Hawkins) and his disheveled bellboy (Cinqué Lee), 
    a scene featuring Elvis Presley's "Blue Moon", and a gunshot.


    What I like about the Japanese kids in Memphis is, if you think about tourists visiting Italy, the way the Romantic poets 
    went to Italy to visit the remnants of a past culture, and then if you imagine America in the future, when people from 
    the East or wherever visit our culture after the decline of the American empire – which is certainly in progress – all they'll 
    really have to visit will be the homes of rock 'n' roll stars and movie stars. That's all our culture ultimately represents. So 
    going to Memphis is a kind of pilgrimage to the birthplace of a certain part of our culture.
    —Jim Jarmusch, Interview, November 1989

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mystery_Train_(film)

     

      Cool

      •
    flofrog (Offline)

    Unclear if frogs wander
    Posts: 3,119
    Threads: 13
    Joined: Dec 2016
    #339
    04-21-2018, 06:56 PM
    a film I had seen when I was a teen and thought I would never see again, big impact. love uniting at the end, really wonderful

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yielLYZ5lo
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      • Dekalb_Blues
    isis (Offline)

    ♄ ♃ ♂ ☉ ♀ ☿ ☽
    Posts: 2,863
    Threads: 42
    Joined: Jul 2013
    #340
    04-21-2018, 07:05 PM (This post was last modified: 04-22-2018, 07:00 PM by isis.)
    The Founder (2016), Hidden Figures (2016), Land of Mine (2015), The Zookeeper's Wife (2017), The Foreigner (2017), The Disaster Artist (2017), Coco (2017)

    all good

      •
    isis (Offline)

    ♄ ♃ ♂ ☉ ♀ ☿ ☽
    Posts: 2,863
    Threads: 42
    Joined: Jul 2013
    #341
    04-22-2018, 06:47 PM
    Unable to perceive the shape of you, I find you all around me. Your presence fills my eyes with your love. It humbles my heart, for you are everywhere.

    [Image: m-theshapeofwater.jpg]
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      • sunnysideup, flofrog
    AnthroHeart (Offline)

    Anthro at Heart
    Posts: 19,119
    Threads: 1,298
    Joined: Jan 2010
    #342
    04-22-2018, 07:36 PM
    I'm on Season 2 of Mythbusters.

      •
    native (Offline)

    Foolin' Around
    Posts: 2,414
    Threads: 71
    Joined: Dec 2010
    #343
    04-23-2018, 05:41 PM
    Check this out..The Endless!

    "A mind-bending thriller, two brothers receive a cryptic video message inspiring them to revisit the UFO death cult they escaped a decade earlier. Hoping to find the closure that they couldn’t as young men, they’re forced to reconsider the cult’s beliefs when confronted with unexplainable phenomena surrounding the camp."


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      • sunnysideup
    Dekalb_Blues (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 885
    Threads: 12
    Joined: Mar 2012
    #344
    04-26-2018, 12:43 AM (This post was last modified: 06-27-2018, 09:52 PM by Dekalb_Blues.)
    ~
    "Sub ek." [Hindi, "It's all one."]
    ---- Neem Karoli Baba (known familiarly to his devotees as "Maharajji" ["Great King"] an honorific often used by high-caste
    Indians in a comically ironical way when addressing a low-caste laborer, servant, etc.)

    You know, sometimes I think there oughta be a Law about this "oneness" thing. . . ! Maybe, self-characteristically, it would be a
    unitary, holistically all-embracing Law about The Oneness, itself being of that Oneness, created by and for this Oneness-Without-A-Second
    for use in rejoining fragments of Itself that have been off exploring Oneness as Parts of that Oneness. . . a Law of One, to coin a phrase.

    “'I was six when I saw that everything was God, and my hair stood up, and all,' Teddy said. 'It was on a Sunday, I remember. My sister
    was a tiny child then, and she was drinking her milk, and all of a sudden I saw that she was God and the milk was God. I mean, all she
    was doing was pouring God into God, if you know what I mean.'”
    ― J. D. Salinger, "Teddy", in Nine Stories (1953)

    "[A] key error among your peoples has been to forget that all things are one. It is a very simple truth. There are many, 
    many ways to say this truth. But you are part of the entity sitting next to you, the entity on the other side of the world, 
    the ground that lies closest to your feet at this time, and the ground of the entire planet. All of these energies coalesce 
    within your energy system."
    http://www.llresearch.org/transcripts/is..._0101.aspx

    [Image: Neem-Karoli-Baba-Photo-550x309.jpg]


    "When I don't know who I am, I serve You; when I know Who I am, I am You: I am Loving Awareness. . . I'm Home."
    --- Ram Dass




    ^ Excerpt from the CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Co.) documentary How To Go Out Of Your Mind -- The LSD Crisis, which was made for 
    Canadian TV (airing 24 April, 1966) and featured, among others, psychedelics/mystical-spiritualism pioneers Tim Leary, Richard Alpert 
    (later Ram Dass), and Ralph Metzner.
    Complete documentary here: 
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIkot1DYC8Q 

    Free files of relevant books:

    > Don Lattin, The Harvard Psychedelic Club: How Timothy Leary, RAM Dass, Huston Smith, and Andrew Weil Killed the Fifties 
    and Ushered in a New Age for America (2010) -- http://b-ok.xyz/book/2221778/703f05

    > Ram Dass & Ralph Metzner, Birth of a Psychedelic Culture: Conversations about Leary, the Harvard Experiments, Millbrook and the Sixties
    (2010) -- http://b-ok.xyz/book/2316530/99bd8f



    After he returned from India to the U.S., ex-Harvard Professor of Psychology Alpert (now re-christened Ram Dass* by his guru) wrote 
    and had published the seminal (or culminating?) work of the true '60s spirit of being open to new horizons of thought and feeling: 
    Be Here Now (1971) -- http://www.organism.earth/library/document/99

    * I.e., "Servant of Ram" (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rama)

    Later works dealt more anecdotally with Neem Karoli Baba, who demonstrated (if the situation called for it) extraordinary metaphysical 
    abilities in the course of absolute-top-drawer STO behaviour while under the intense & often hyper-sceptical scrutiny of linearly-rational-
    minded, logically-thinking Westerners who were thus catalyzed to radically question their models of reality itself, much less their culturally-
    conditioned ideas of "God," "spirituality," "love," "good/evil," "service," & all the rest of it mechanically emerging from these models.
    (See, e.g., Ram Dass, Miracle of Love: Stories about Neem Karoli Baba -- http://b-ok.xyz/book/3410533/322514 (.epub); http://b-ok.xyz/book/2172492/fbf26b [.pdf])

    I've personally interacted with Maharajji, and I have also in a much darker period of my life followed a line of work in the covert-influence biz which 
    called for what amounts to a scientifically-oriented, unavowed-tech-using, sociopathically-worldviewed & utterly-paranoid mindset. What fun! 
    So trust me on this one: this is not your everyday, predictably-conditioned automatonic human being who can be manipulated in any way. This 
    character is off the bloody charts, and is an exemplar of the apotheosis of STO polarity in action at the good old grass-roots. As he would say:
    Love people, serve people, remember God. 
    https://www.ramdass.org/simple-truth/
    Very simple, really, but try actually doing this, through thick & thin, come hell or high water, in such a negatively-tinged environment as today's 
    ultra-psychologically-invasive world of disinformative-info-pollution & psyop-distorted, increasingly improbable "contemporary history," sort of a 
    non-stop general-broadcast of "psychic greetings" -- that's  what separates the professionals of unconditional-love-with-no-reward-expected from 
    the amateurs of contingent-kinda-sorta-love-but-only-if-it's-a-nice-day-&-I-get-something-for-it.

    The effect on modernity of Ram Dass's work -- the change in paradigm underlying the popular received-knowledge of spiritual lore --
    has been enormous. Many ideas passing current in youth culture have their origins in this work. Confluently with other important streams of 
    wisdom-culture-diffusion through various human media (some quite openly, some in hidden ways) a new framework of advanced thought 
    accessible to the common man emerged in the late 20th century and is having its massive effect on the human spirit even here, even 
    now, as you and I take advantage of this laudably-used high-tech platform for exchanging ideas and experiences that are merely laughable
    signs & symptoms diagnostic of simpleton-ism or even madness to the hyper-materialist culture that refuses to get with the program. 
    STO hearts, firmly rooted in the One, support the validity of others even as they are fallible, imperfect mortal beings currently in timespace -- 
    by accentuating the positive & eliminating the negative & not fooling with Mr. In-Between (as in the old song has it); STS ever strives to 
    invalidate others by ludicrously magnifying these innate human frailties, and sophistically putting them in the worst context -- and vehemently 
    denying oh-so-disinformatively that this negativizing process is occurring.

    In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
    -- Popularly attributed to George Orwell (but see https://quoteinvestigator.com/tag/george-orwell/ ; in any case, it's an Orwell-class truth)

    "The truth" for today is what we actually are as beings in the light of Infinity & Eternity, regardless of the prevalent black propaganda to 
    the contrary.




      
    ^ The hard-earned wages of weirdness are passed on by well-traveled old-timer miscreants to a new generation of gullible & self-obsessed 
    young ne'er-do-wells also up to no good whatsoever, under the cunning guise of "spirituality" -- bwa-ha-haa!

    Just pour lagniappe: A look at a true super-hippy, who hipped & hopped before the official "hippy trip" happened -- an archetypal blonde-
    haired Californian surfer-dude, he took off for India as a teenager in '64, in reaction to the assassination of JFK; within a year he was. . . 

    [Image: be-here-now-004.jpg]  [Gives zero f***s about your phoney-baloney world-o'-maya]

    . . . a much-revered traveling sadhu (ascetic spiritual aspirant, yogi) who visited Indian villages, leading kirtan (musical worship-narrative) 
    sessions for everyday-folk (example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bIlmBek0...Pcd0NDyhdd )
    and energizing local esoteric-cult religious observances -- under the guidance of his guru (life-exemplar/spiritual teacher) Maharajji, who had
    himself been no slouch along these lines --

    [Image: m-05-0342w.jpg]  [Minus-zero-f***s given, ditto]
    ^ Ca. pre-1920s Neem Karoli Baba as a young-whippersnapper transcendental-hippy sadhu
    https://www.maharajji.com/Premavatar/hal...tment.html
    Frighteningly enough, this is what I looked like for most of my teens, before I knew of Maharajji! Ah, youth. So wasted on the young -- especially
    young'uns who are pretty wasted. I wonder how many younger wild-haired ones today groovily infesting the playa at Burning Man or the nooks &
    crannies at various other ultrahep gatherings realize they are living out cultural memes expressing thousands of years of sadhu culture, transmitted 
    to Europe & America by mimetic world-traveling hippies now old enough to be their grand-mas & -pas? 

    (Example of kirtan adapted to modern-day Western esoteric-cult requirements:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXSizNdh...LcK7u1Xy2t )

    Cool जय हो  Jai ho! "Let [spiritual] victory be yours!"

      •
    Dekalb_Blues (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 885
    Threads: 12
    Joined: Mar 2012
    #345
    08-29-2018, 04:36 PM (This post was last modified: 08-29-2018, 05:28 PM by Dekalb_Blues.)
    ~
    [Image: 220px-One-Dimensional_Man%2C_first_edition.jpg]

    D R U X  
    F L U X



    "Part figurative, part abstract, Drux Flux is an animated short compris[ing] fast-flowing images showing modern 
    people crushed by industry. Inspired by One-Dimensional Man, by philosopher Herbert Marcuse, the filmmaker
    deconstructs industrial scenes and their terrifying geometry to show the inhumanity of progress."

    http://www.nfb.ca/film/drux_flux_en/ [Plenty o' wacky filmz to edify/stupefy/mortify & etc.-fy you, featured at this site]


    [Image: one-dimensional-man-4.jpg?w=300&h=300]

    One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society is a 1964 book by philosopher Herbert Marcuse.

    Marcuse offers a wide-ranging critique of both contemporary capitalism and the Communist society of the Soviet Union, documenting 
    the parallel rise of new forms of social repression in both these societies, as well as the decline of revolutionary potential in the West. 
    He argues that “advanced industrial society” created false needs, which integrated individuals into the existing system of production and 
    consumption via mass media, advertising, industrial management, and contemporary modes of thought.

    This results in a “one-dimensional” universe of thought and behaviour, in which aptitude and ability for critical thought and oppositional 
    behaviour wither away. Against this prevailing climate, Marcuse promotes the “great refusal” (described at length in the book) as the only 
    adequate opposition to all-encompassing methods of control. 

    Much of the book is a defense of “negative thinking” as a disrupting force against the prevailing positivism.

    Marcuse also analyzes the integration of the industrial working class into capitalist society and new forms of capitalist stabilization, thus 
    questioning the Marxian postulates of the revolutionary proletariat and the inevitability of capitalist crisis. In contrast to orthodox Marxism, 
    Marcuse champions non-integrated forces of minorities, outsiders, and radical intelligentsia, attempting to nourish oppositional thought 
    and behavior through promoting radical thinking and opposition. He considers the trends towards bureaucracy in supposedly Marxist countries 
    to be as oppositional to freedom as those in the capitalist West.

    Critical theorist Douglas Kellner claims in his book Herbert Marcuse and the Crisis of Marxism that One-Dimensional Man was one of the 
    most important books of the 1960s and one of the most subversive books of the twentieth century. Despite its importance, it was—due to its 
    subversive nature—severely criticized by both orthodox Marxists and academic theorists of various political and theoretical commitments. 
    Despite its pessimism, represented by the citation of the words of Walter Benjamin at the end of this book that “Nur um der Hoffnungslosen 
    willen ist uns die Hoffnung gegeben” (“It is only for the sake of those without hope that hope is given to us”), it influenced many in the New Left
    as it articulated their growing dissatisfaction with both capitalist societies and Soviet communist societies. One-Dimensional Man was the book 
    that made Marcuse famous.

    -- from https://ivystore.wordpress.com/2014/12/0...-man-1964/


    If watching in 2-D just doesn't do it for you, why, then -- just don your snazzy 3-D specs and join the crowd!:

    [Image: eof-1950s-3d-masterpiece.jpg?w=645]




    (Actually, this version actually looks pretty good in 2-D, too -- a dash more psychedelically surrealist,
    which is often a good thing.)

    Bonus: Highly technical 3-D specs test & calibration vid, to optimize your depth-enhanced viewing experience:

     

    Pour lagniappe, a vintage surrealist avant-garde film right up Drux Flux's  industrially-zoned alley:



    "Ballet Mécanique (1923–24) is a Dadaist post-Cubist art film conceived, written, and co-directed by 
    the artist Fernand Léger in collaboration with the filmmaker Dudley Murphy (with cinematographic 
    input from Man Ray). It has a musical score by the American composer George Antheil. However, 
    the film premiered in a silent version on 24 September 1924 at the Internationale Ausstellung neuer 
    Theatertechnik (International Exposition for New Theater Technique) in Vienna presented by Frederick 
    Kiesler. It is considered one of the masterpieces of early experimental filmmaking."


    Noted bohemian artist & artist's muse Kiki of Montparnasse's smile:


    [Image: tumblr_mch7djzKWG1qg39ewo1_500.gif]
    L'Éternel Féminin . . . archetypal deep-psyche verity -- or shallowly-patriarchal exploitative myth? Or what?

    Only Betty knows!:
    [Image: 001.gif]


    https://www.britannica.com/biography/Kik...ntparnasse

    A bit more of Kiki as seen by Man Ray:
    https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/obj....6467,0.43
    http://www.anothermag.com/art-photograph...ntparnasse
    http://25.media.tumblr.com/7d357a6782296...r1_500.gif
    Cool
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      • sunnysideup
    Dekalb_Blues (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 885
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    #346
    10-03-2018, 10:18 PM (This post was last modified: 08-19-2019, 03:24 PM by Dekalb_Blues.)
    ~
    The Nature of Daylight  (2018)

    Featuring actress Elisabeth Moss (of Mad Men and The Handmaid's Tale renown), who also was a producer of it.


    A nameless Woman, (almost) alone late at night in a bleak public eatery in some big city, has perhaps just finished a cellphone conversation. 
    (If so, what has been said and heard? [font=Roboto, Arial, sans-serif]What is its import? Is it about her private life, or her professional life? Or both? [/font]Is she a civilian, 
    or is she an espionage agent?)
    Or has it been a crucially important call she's attempted that has significantly gone unanswered? 
    Or a crucially important call she's received that has significantly been cut off?
    Or . . .
    In any case, it [font=Roboto, Arial, sans-serif]seems to have affected her profoundly.[/font]
    [font=Roboto, Arial, sans-serif]She walks and walks, to the end of the night, and into the first light of a strange new world that has somehow come into being f[/font]or her. 
    Can yesterday's self carry-over unaltered into today's world, or must there be an essential break in continuity, however challenging?
    Without a word being spoken throughout by the character, through just her demeanour -- and guided by the film's viscerally poignant 
    music -- we must strive to empathically understand the true dimensions of just what it could possibly be that she is coming to terms 
    with, and whether we ourselves are in fact dwellers in her now-changed world or not . . .




    . . . or is this an allegorical dramatization of the human dying process, the final Dark Night Of The Soul in the Hero's Journey?
    In the opening scene, an enigmatically intense man softly strokes the head of a small bird he has enfolded gently but firmly in his Earth-begrimed hand --
    birds, of course, have from ancient times been considered to be symbolic of the human soul . . .
    The Woman's crisis comes when she is suddenly faced with an ascending flight of stairs which she evidently must take to get to her destination . . .


    "Everything that’s important goes on in the darkness, no doubt about it. We never know anyone’s real inside story."

    "That is perhaps what we seek throughout life, that and nothing more, the greatest possible sorrow so as to become 
    fully ourselves before dying." 

    " 'Chin up, Ferdinand,' I kept saying to myself, to keep up my courage. 'What with being chucked out of everywhere, 
    you're sure to find whatever it is that scares all those bastards so. It must be at the end of the night, and that's why 
    they're so dead set against going to the end of the night.' "


    ― Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Journey to the End of the Night (1932)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journey_to..._the_Night



        My heart is a student:  

            it studies Love,

         And, like the night,

            waits at the gate of dawn.

         Where I go,

            I follow where Love's face leads --

         Because oil flows 

             to the flame that it feeds.



         -- Rumi (13th c.)


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blue_Notebooks

        
    [Image: Winged-Sun.jpg]

      •
    RitaJC (Offline)

    I AM YOU AM I
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    #347
    10-04-2018, 07:00 AM (This post was last modified: 10-05-2018, 04:16 AM by RitaJC.)
    Bridget Jones's Baby Smile and 3% (still watching on NF; such an efficient depiction of STS, STO and the struggles around the polarization process in 3rd density)

      •
    ada (Offline)

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    #348
    03-31-2019, 05:27 PM
    Heal (2017)

    "A documentary film that takes us on a scientific and spiritual journey where we discover that by changing one's perceptions, the human body can heal itself from any dis-ease."

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      • schubert, flofrog
    schubert (Offline)

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    #349
    04-13-2019, 11:24 PM
    Children Who Chase Lost Voices
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1839494/

    [Image: AbccQTK.gif]

      •
    flofrog (Offline)

    Unclear if frogs wander
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    #350
    04-13-2019, 11:29 PM (This post was last modified: 04-13-2019, 11:31 PM by flofrog.)
    Incredibly beautiful and haunting

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=P71QutE0n3I
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      • loostudent
    ada (Offline)

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    #351
    04-25-2019, 07:02 AM
    Our Planet (TV Series 2019)

    "Documentary series focusing on the breadth of the diversity of habitats around the world, from the remote Arctic wilderness and mysterious deep oceans to the vast landscapes of Africa and diverse jungles of South America."

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      • Minyatur, Plenum
    ada (Offline)

    Member
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    #352
    07-26-2019, 10:12 PM

      •
    Plenum (Offline)

    ...
    Posts: 6,188
    Threads: 1,013
    Joined: Dec 2011
    #353
    08-19-2019, 02:14 PM
    Arrival (2016): this was highly recommended to me, and finally got around to watching it.

    It didn't disappoint Smile

    / /

    Endgame (2019): it's finally over!!!

    / /

    Green Book (2018): 'inspired' by a true story.  I knew nothing going into it.  I came out the other end truly moved.  
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      • flofrog, Glow
    flofrog (Offline)

    Unclear if frogs wander
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    #354
    08-19-2019, 09:30 PM
    (08-19-2019, 02:14 PM)Bring4th_Plenum Wrote: Arrival (2016): this was highly recommended to me, and finally got around to watching it.

    It didn't disappoint Smile

    / /

    Endgame (2019): it's finally over!!!

    / /

    Green Book (2018): 'inspired' by a true story.  I knew nothing going into it.  I came out the other end truly moved.  

    I loved Arrival too !!! And the Green Book, didn't see Endgame.

    Plenum if one day you can see 'Never Look Away" it is incredible...
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      • Plenum, Glow
    RitaJC (Offline)

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    #355
    08-20-2019, 10:27 AM
    Alita: Battle Angel
    [+] The following 1 member thanked thanked RitaJC for this post:1 member thanked RitaJC for this post
      • schubert
    Glow Away

    Over Caffeinated Wanderer.
    Posts: 2,109
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    #356
    09-11-2019, 06:49 PM
    Me too! Re Arrival.
    I am not prone to re-watching movies but I have watched it at least 5 or 6 times every time it moves me so deeply.

    Not a movie but documentary. I watched living in yesterdays past and it was such a refreshing break for me somehow. I think I have a cognitive dissonance when I go out in the world and every one is so consumed by their stuff, amibition to aquire more stuff/prestige. Watching living in yesterdays past made me peaceful even though I know that was not the intention. It is just nice to see truth handled so gently.

      •
    RitaJC (Offline)

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    #357
    09-12-2019, 01:00 AM
    https://uplift.tv/2018/the-economics-of-happiness/

      •
    Diana (Offline)

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    #358
    10-22-2019, 10:42 AM
    I just rewatched "The Time Traveler's Wife." If you don't mind a love story, it is a very cosmic and thought-provoking. I absolutely love the nature of the relationship in this movie. It is very moving and may require a few tissues. Smile
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      • ZW929
    RitaJC (Offline)

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    #359
    10-23-2019, 02:16 AM
    [+] The following 1 member thanked thanked RitaJC for this post:1 member thanked RitaJC for this post
      • schubert
    schubert (Offline)

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    #360
    04-19-2020, 01:52 AM
    (08-20-2019, 10:27 AM)RitaJC Wrote: Alita: Battle Angel

    i just recently watched this and i can't even believe how much i loved it. HIGHLY recommend!! it has a very good-hearted feel, alita herself is an amazing character, the action was phenomenal, and the story was engaging and emotional.
    [+] The following 1 member thanked thanked schubert for this post:1 member thanked schubert for this post
      • isis
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