30 May 2012

Caligula

Caligula
On 1st June, film professor Stephen Barber will introduce a free screening of Caligula at the Electric Pussycat Lounge in Bangkok. Caligula, directed by Tinto Brass, remains one of the most controversial films ever made.

The original director's cut featured scenes of graphic violence and simulated sex, though producer Bob Guccioni inserted hardcore sex sequences against the wishes of the director and the distinguished cast (which included Malcolm McDowell and John Gielgud). Brass, director of exploitation classics such as Salon Kitty, later disowned the film, and it has been heavily censored around the world.

Explicit imagery is rarely permitted by Thailand's film ratings board: Insects In The Backyard and This Area Is Under Quarantine were banned for this reason. (However, film-festival screenings, such as Anatomy Of Hell, Serbis, Otto, Antichrist, and Dogtooth, are generally given more leniency.) There have been covert screenings of Taxidermia, Reincarnate, and The Terrorists, all of which are extremely graphic; presumably the forthcoming showing of Caligula is similarly unauthorised.

How To Cook Jesus Christ

Artist Javier Krahe has been charged with blasphemy after his art film How To Cook Jesus Christ was shown on television in Spain. Krahe directed the short film with Enrique Sesena in 1978, and it was immediately banned. It was broadcast on the Canal+ TV show Lo + Plus in 2004, and the show's producers are also facing blasphemy charges. The film's original title is 10 Comentarios: Sobre La Cristofagia, though it is more commonly known as Como Cocinar Un Cristo (How To Cook Jesus Christ).

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26 May 2012

Citizen Dog

Citizen Dog
Tomorrow, the National Film Archive (in Salaya, near Bangkok) will screen Wisit Sasanatieng's film Citizen Dog. This whimsical romantic comedy retains the over-saturated colours of Wisit's debut film, the incredible Tears Of The Black Tiger (screened at the Archive in 2009 and 2010). After Citizen Dog, Wisit directed more mainstream projects: the horror film The Unseeable (featured in Spirits) and the action movie The Red Eagle (screened at Movies On The Beach).

Wisit has also made the short film Norasinghavatar (part of the Traces Of Siamese Smile exhibition), the music video เราเป็นคนไทย, and segments of the portmanteau films Sawasdee Bangkok and Camellia. He wrote the scripts for Nonzee Nimibutr's Nang Nak and 2499, appeared at the 28 Days festival, and designed the posters for the 2008 and 2009 Bangkok International Film Festivals. Currently, he is working with Thunska Pansittivorakul on the forthcoming film Supernatural.

25 May 2012

Artists' Postcards

Artists' Postcards
Artists' Postcards: A Compendium, by Jeremy Cooper, is the first book dedicated to the postcard as an artistic medium. Rather than discussing scenic tourist postcards (which have not yet been fully documented), Cooper focuses on limited-edition postcards produced by artists.

An excellent introduction traces the cultural history of postcards and their artistic appropriation, and subsequent chapters present a chronological survey of postcard artworks. The bulk of the book is dedicated to an annotated taxonomy of contemporary artists' postcards. There is no bibliography.

Sumet Jumsai

UOB HQ
Elephant Tower
Architect Sumet Jumsai has designed two of Bangkok's quirkiest buildings: the anthropomorphic UOB HQ and the zoomorphic Elephant Tower. The UOB building resembles an enormous yet benevolent robot, while the Elephant Tower (like the Erawan Museum) is a simplified representation of an elephant.

Sumet's robot building was originally designed in 1986 as Bank of Asia's Bangkok headquarters, though it was rebranded in 2005 when Bank of Asia was taken over by UOB. His Elephant Tower, which incorporates residential units and offices, was completed in 1997.

Mae Nak

Wat Mahabut
TV Buddha
The grounds of Wat Mahabut in Bangkok contain a shrine to Mae Nak, one of Thailand's most famous mythological ghosts. The shrine includes a television for Mae Nak's statue, thus resembling Nam June Paik's TV Buddha installations.

According to legend, Mae Nak was a woman who died in childbirth and whose spirit returned to stay with her husband. The myth has been filmed several times, including the blockbuster horror film Nang Nak, the animation Nak, and this year's Mae Nak 3D. There have also been TV dramas, an opera, and a musical based on the story.

Erawan Museum

Erawan Museum
The Erawan Museum in Bangkok was designed by Praphai Viriyapant, and its construction was completed in 1998. The Museum's outer shell is an enormous three-headed bronze elephant, inspired by Hindu mythology. The interior is ornately decorated, and features an impressive stained-glass dome depicting the cosmos. A narrow staircase leads to a celestial chamber with undulating walls and dramatic lighting.

In addition to the Erawan Museum, Bangkok has another elephant-inspired building: the Elephant Tower designed by Sumet Jumsai. Zoomorphic architecture was pioneered by James V Lafferty, who built several elephant-shaped structures, including the Elephant Bazaar in New Jersey in 1882.

Wat Arun

Wat Arun
Wat Arun was first built during the Ayutthaya era, and shares Ayutthaya's Khmer-style prang. It was originally known as Wat Chaeng, though it was renamed in 1768 when King Taksin established Thon Buri as the capital of Thailand.

The temple, on the west bank of the Chao Phraya river, is decorated with fragments of Chinese porcelain. Opposite Wat Arun on the river's east bank is Wat Phra Kaew, representing the Rattanakosin era and the development of Bangkok as Thailand's modern capital.

Ayutthaya

Wat Mahathat
Ayutthaya was founded in 1350, and it became Thailand's second capital city following the invasion of Sukhothai in 1378. The capital was later moved to Thon Buri near Bangkok, after Burma razed Ayutthaya in 1767.

Architecturally, Ayutthaya is notable for its distinctive Khmer-style circular, tapering prang (pillars), a style later utilised for Wat Arun in Thon Buri. One of the city's ruined temples, Wat Mahathat (not to be confused with Wat Mahathat in Sukhothai), contains a Buddha head enveloped by the roots of a tree.

Sukhothai

Wat Mahathat
Sukhothai, Thailand's first capital city, was founded in 1238. The Kingdom was expanded by King Ramkhamhaeng, in a time of prosperity encapsulated by Ramkhamhaeng's inscription "this land of Sukhothai is thriving, with fish in the water and rice in the fields".

Sukhothai's temples are notable for their distinctive lotus-bud chedis (Buddhist reliquaries). The ruins of Sukhothai are dominated by the picturesque Wat Mahathat (not to be confused with Wat Mahathat in Ayutthaya, Thailand's subsequent capital city).

Wat Umong

Wat Umong
Wat Umong in Chiang Mai was established in the 14th century for a monk known as Thera Jan. Its most distinctive feature is the network of tunnels, built in the 1380s, that run underneath the temple.

The adjacent chedi, which traditionally contains a Buddha relic, was constructed in the 1520s. The temple is also notable for its realistic statue of an emaciated Buddha. Last year, the temple grounds were used as a location for the Thai film Umong Pa Mueng, a remake of Rashomon.

22 May 2012

The Spear

The Spear The Spear
The South African government, the ANC, has insisted on the removal of a portrait of President Zuma from the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg. The painting, The Spear by Brett Murray, depicts Zuma exposing his genitals, and is based on an iconic propaganda portrait of Lenin; it was due to be exhibited until 16th June, as part of the Hail To The Thief II exhibition.

The painting was also reproduced by the Sunday newspaper City Press, on 13th May. It was vandalised today, when two gallery visitors daubed paint onto it. Zuma has been caricatured before, by the cartoonist Zapiro.

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15 May 2012

ประชาเฌอระลึก

ประชาเฌอระลึก
The Terrorists
An arts event, ประชาเฌอระลึก, will be held tonight at Bangkok's Soi Rangnam to commemorate the second anniversary of Black May 2010. An abridged version of Thunska Pansittivorakul's powerful film The Terrorists will be screened.

Two years after the Thai army massacred its own citizens, there has been no accountability. The military's destructive influence continues, and its immunity is a stain on Thailand's reputation.

14 May 2012

Dark Shadows

Dark Shadows
Dark Shadows is Tim Burton's eighth film with Johnny Dep, after Edward Scissorhands, Ed Wood, Sleepy Hollow, Corpse Bride, Sweeney Todd, Charlie & The Chocolate Factory, and Alice In Wonderland. Depp's vampire references Nosferatu (rising from his coffin), but also Michael Jackson (with umbrella and shades); he has flashes of violence (like Sweeney Todd), and the naivety of Edward Scissorhands (adjusting to modern suburban life).

Like Depp, Helena Bonham Carter (playing a kooky psychiatrist) and Christopher Lee (in a cameo role) are also Burton regulars. The cast also includes Michelle Pfeiffer, who played Catwoman in Burton's under-rated Batman Returns, Chloe Moretz (from Hugo and Kick-Ass), and Burton lookalike Alice Cooper.

Compressing a soap-opera into a feature film results in an over-abundace of characters. There's a suitably Gothic atmosphere, especially in the historical flashback sequences, though there's more camp humour than horror or pathos.

12 May 2012

Hypocrisy

Hypocrisy
Killing Idiot - Greed In Your Heads
Hypocrisy, a new exhibition by Vasan Sitthiket, opened this evening at Thavibu Gallery in Bangkok. Vasan's work is often scathingly direct in its condemnation of political figures, and the new paintings in this exhibition are no exception. Most graphically, Hillary Clinton is portrayed nude, giving birth to an enormous and literal representation of phallocentric power. In another painting, a beatific Buddha shoots various world leaders with an automatic rifle.

The paintings are accompanied by Thai Nukes, a supplementary exhibition of more than a hundred wooden phalli painted with ironic globalisation slogans, in an adjacent gallery. Hypocrisy and Thai Nukes will close on 9th June. Vasan's recent exhibitions have included the solo shows Obsessive Compulsive and Ten Evil Scenes Of Thai Politic, joint shows The Human Clay and Chaotic Victory, and group shows Return Ticket and From Message To Media.

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Nameye Amir

Nameye Amir The Guardian
An Iranian cartoonist, Mahmud Shokraye, has been sentenced to twenty-five lashes after he drew a cartoon of politician Ahmad Lotfi Ashtiani as a footballer. The caricature was published by the newspaper Nameye Amir.

In solidarity with the cartoonist, and in protest at his barbaric sentence, Martin Rowson reproduced the original cartoon and drew a grotesque portrait of the politician as an obese, wailing baby. Rowson's cartoon was published by The Guardian in the UK on Thursday.

Indian Constitution At Work

Indian Constitution At Work
An Indian school textbook has been withdrawn after politicians complained about a cartoon on one of its pages. The book, Indian Constitution At Work, was published in 2006, and it features a cartoon by Shankar Pillai which was first published in 1949 (in the cartoonist's magazine Shankar's Weekly).

The cartoon depicts former Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru preparing to whip revered statesman BR Ambedkar, who is sitting on a snail symbolising the Indian constitution. Ambedkar was the head of the Constitution Drafting Committee and, as the textbook explains, the cartoon is an "impression of the 'snail's pace' with which the Constitution was made".

3 May 2012

Cryptoart

Cryptoart
Cryptoart: The Hidden History Of Art, an exhibition by Rafael Andres, known as The Raf, opens at Eat Me in Bangkok on Monday. The Raf has reproduced iconic paintings, such as Leonardo's Mona Lisa, though with a twist: he digitally adds subversive additional elements to each picture.

The effect is similar to Jake & Dinos Chapman's appropriation of Goya's etchings, or an extension of Marcel Duchamp's LHOOQ. Cryptoart, curated by Pan Pan Narkprasert (Gagasmicism) closes on 29th June.

The Heritage Of World's Prints

The Heritage Of World's Prints
The Heritage Of World's Prints
An exhibition of signed prints, The Heritage Of World's Prints [sic.], opened today at Artery Post-Modern Gallery in Bangkok. The exhibition, featuring works by Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, and others, will close on 31st May. (Prints by Picasso and other iconic artists were also included in The Art Of Time, in 2008.)

The exhibition's poster is a reproduction of Picasso's 1954 lithograph La Femme Au Singe, which was produced in an edition of fifty. The exhibition also includes another Picasso lithograph, which is perhaps a variation of his Le Chevalier & Le Page from 1951, and three Picasso etchings. (Strangely, the exhibition does not list the titles or dates of any of the exhibits.)

Bastards Of Misrepresentation

Bastards Of Misrepresentation
Bastards Of Misrepresentation: Doing Time On Filipino Time, a group exhibition showcasing contemporary art from the Philippines, opens today at H Gallery in Bangkok. The exhibition, curated by Manuel Ocampo and featuring MM Yu's photographs of Manila roadkill titled Itch, will close on 11th June.

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30 April 2012

Museum of the City of New York

Stanley Kubrick & Rosemary Williams
Alfred Hitchcock
The Museum of the City of New York has put its vast collection of Stanley Kubrick's photographs online. In the 1940s, before he became a director, Kubrick worked as a photojournalist for Look magazine, and Look's photographic archive was subsequently donated to the Museum. Now the Museum has uploaded all 7,271 of Kubrick's photos onto its website. Highlights include a self-portrait of Kubrick's reflection in a mirror, and portraits of Alfred Hitchcock on a train.

The Stanley Kubrick Archive in London and the Library of Congress in Washington both have small collections of Kubrick's Look photos, though MCNY's archive is far more extensive. Many of the photographs originally appeared in Look (1945-1950), and others have been published in various catalogues: Ladro Di Sguardi, Still Moving Pictures, Drama & Shadows, Only In New York, and Fotografie. (Fotografie includes an appendix, written by me, listing all of Kubrick's published photographs.)

28 April 2012

100 Artists' Manifestos

100 Artists' Manifestos
100 Artists' Manifestos: From The Futurists To The Stuckists is an anthology of manifestos from 20th century art movements, edited by Alex Danchev and organised with minimalist clarity. Danchev's comprehensive selection includes not only artists but also film-makers and architects. The concept is similar to the excellent Manifesto: A Century Of Isms, by Mary Ann Caws.

Danchev begins with FT Marinetti's Futurist Manifesto, published on the front page of Le Figaro in 1909, the document that inspired all subsequent art manifestos. The various avant-garde movements of the 1920s all published manifestos, inspired by Marinetti's breathless enthusiasm.

The book ends on a sour note with the Stuckists, a reactionary group of anti-Conceptualists who are impossible to take seriously. If Danchev had extended the survey into the early 21st century, he could have concluded instead with the optimistic Sustainism manifesto published in 2010.

19 April 2012

500 Classic Films

Psycho 2001: A Space Odyssey
I've previously compiled lists of 100 Greatest Films and 15 Essential Films. They were both selected from a master list of 500 Classic Films, which covers the entire history of international cinema (in a PDF file).
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18 April 2012

Talk About Cinema

Talk About Cinema
Talk About Cinema, by Jean-Baptiste Thoret, discusses how contemporary cinema is influenced by stylistic innovations of the past. It was originally published in French, with a more descriptive title: Cinema Contemporain: Mode d'Emploi.

Thoret, who writes for Charlie Hebdo magazine, highlights some cinematic technical breakthroughs, briefly summarises cinema's major artistic movements, and profiles some leading contemporary directors (as in Cinema Now). He also lists 20 Seminal Films, chosen because they contain "motifs, situations, or images destined to be reused again and again".

Talk About Cinema's 20 Seminal Films are as follows:
  • Freaks
  • The Red Shoes
  • Invasion Of The Body Snatchers
  • The Searchers
  • Rear Window / North By Northwest / Vertigo / Psycho / The Birds
  • Big Deal On Madonna Street
  • The Twilight Zone
  • 'the Zapruder film'
  • Inferno
  • A Fistful Of Dollars / For A Few Dollars More / The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly / Once Upon A Time In The West / Duck, You Sucker!
  • Blow-Up
  • Play Time
  • The Prisoner
  • Le Samourai
  • Night Of The Living Dead
  • Bullitt
  • 2001: A Space Odyssey / A Clockwork Orange / Barry Lyndon / The Shining
  • Easy Rider
  • Aguirre: The Wrath Of God
  • Scarface
The list, in chronological order, actually has far more than twenty titles, because Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick, and Sergio Leone are each represented by multiple films. Even more esoterically, Thoret includes television series (The Prisoner and The Twilight Zone), an actuality film (Abraham Zapruder's footage of John F Kennedy's assassination), and an unfinished film (Inferno). (Note that Scarface is the Brian de Palma version, not the Howard Hawks original.)

The Greatest Movies Ever

The Greatest Movies Ever
Gail Kinn and Jim Piazza's book The Greatest Movies Ever has been slightly updated for its second edition. The list in the latest edition, published last year, is almost exactly the same as the 2008 version, as only two entries have been changed.

My Fair Lady, #55 in the old edition, has been replaced by Slumdog Millionaire; also, The Bank Dick, the old edition's #84, has been changed to The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King. The new edition still lists 102 films, because The Godfather and The Godfather II appear as a single entry at #1.

The 101 Greatest Movies are as follows:

1. The Godfather I-II
2. Citizen Kane
3. Casablanca
4. Sunset Boulevard
5. Lawrence Of Arabia
6. North By Northwest
7. The Wizard Of Oz
8. Annie Hall
9. Chinatown
10. Singin' In The Rain
11. Nashville
12. Some Like It Hot
13. All About Eve
14. Psycho
15. Taxi Driver
16. Apocalypse Now
17. On The Waterfront
18. Gone With The Wind
19. To Kill A Mockingbird
20. The Searchers
21. La Dolce Vita
22. Double Indemnity
23. Pan's Labyrinth
24. Vertigo
25. Close Encounters Of The Third Kind
26. GoodFellas
27. Jules & Jim
28. Funny Face
29. A Streetcar Named Desire
30. Saving Private Ryan
31. Strangers On A Train
32. It Happened One Night
33. The Graduate
34. It's A Wonderful Life
35. Raging Bull
36. The Best Years Of Our Lives
37. The African Queen
38. Dr Strangelove
39. Blade Runner
40. The Conformist
41. Schindler's List
42. The Lives Of Others
43. Diner
44. City Lights
45. The Deer Hunter
46. 8½
47. Top Hat
48. La Regle Du Jeu
49. 2001: A Space Odyssey
50. Bonnie & Clyde
51. King Kong
52. Star Wars IV: A New Hope
53. The 400 Blows
54. A Night At The Opera
55. Slumdog Millionaire
56. The Night Of The Hunter
57. The Third Man
58. Dr Zhivago
59. ET: The Extra-Terrestrial
60. Invasion Of The Body-Snatchers
61. Pinocchio
62. Shadow Of A Doubt
63. Fargo
64. Blue Velvet
65. Jaws
66. The Grapes Of Wrath
67. Do The Right Thing
68. Wild Strawberries
69. Bicycle Thieves
70. Bringing Up Baby
71. Paths Of Glory
72. The Maltese Falcon
73. Pather Panchali
74. The Lady Eve
75. The Last Picture Show
76. One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
77. Rosemary's Baby
78. Midnight Cowboy
79. M*A*S*H
80. American Graffiti
81. The Producers
82. Rashomon
83. Cabaret
84. The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King
85. A Place In The Sun
86. Red River
87. The Conversation
88. Grand Illusion
89. LA Confidential
90. Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid
91. Imitation Of Life
92. Raiders Of The Lost Ark
93. Spartacus
94. The Manchurian Candidate
95. Seven Samurai
96. A Hard Day's Night
97. Atlantic City
98. American Beauty
99. Pulp Fiction
100. The Shawshank Redemption
101. Groundhog Day

Note that The Maltese Falcon is the John Huston version, which is actually a remake of an earlier Roy Del Ruth film. Also, Some Like It Hot is the Billy Wilder classic, not the 1939 film of the same name.

17 April 2012

The 100 Best Movies Ever Made...
Mostly Suck

The 100 Best Movies Ever Made... Mostly Suck
The 100 Best Movies Ever Made... Mostly Suck, written pseudonymously by Nick S, is a self-published rant against the classics of world cinema. There are actually 101 films on the list, because he also includes Day For Night as an extra entry.

The films were selected from various other published lists, and the reviews (written in the same 'style' as the late Chas Balun) are taken from the author's website. (Online, he uses a different pseudonym: Mr Satanism.)

I'm not sure exactly how serious Nick Satanism (?) is. If he genuinely hated classic films, why would he bother to watch so many of them? And if he actually liked classic films, why would he review them so negatively?

His comments often border on self-parody, so maybe the book is intended to be ironic? If it is, then he has no sense of humour; if it isn't, then he has no taste.

The 100 Best Movies Ever Made are as follows:

1. Citizen Kane
2. Singin' In The Rain
3. Schindler's List
4. On The Waterfront
5. Casablanca
6. The Godfather
7. Gone With The Wind
8. Lawrence Of Arabia
9. 2001: A Space Odyssey
10. All About Eve
11. The Bridge On The River Kwai
12. Annie Hall
13. Star Wars IV: A New Hope
14. One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
15. The Best Years Of Our Lives
16. Raging Bull
17. ET: The Extra-Terrestrial
18. The Wizard Of Oz
19. West Side Story
20. The Graduate
21. Vertigo
22. The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre
23. It's A Wonderful Life
24. The Godfather II
25. Some Like It Hot
26. High Noon
27. It Happened One Night
28. The African Queen
29. Midnight Cowboy
30. Amadeus
31. The Gold Rush
32. Psycho
33. Chinatown
34. City Lights
35. The Maltese Falcon
36. Dr Strangelove
37. Taxi Driver
38. Bonnie & Clyde
39. The Rules Of The Game
40. Mr Smith Goes To Washington
41. 8½
42. From Here To Eternity
43. Battleship Potemkin
44. Ben-Hur: A Tale Of The Christ
45. The Searchers
46. L'Avventura
47. M*A*S*H
48. Double Indemnity
49. Bicycle Thieves
50. Greed
51. The Deer Hunter
52. North By Northwest
53. The Passion Of Joan Of Arc
54. Rear Window
55. The Magnificent Ambersons
56. King Kong
57. Intolerance
58. L'Atalante
59. The Birth Of A Nation
60. Persona
61. The Silence Of The Lambs
62. A Streetcar Named Desire
63. A Clockwork Orange
64. Ugetsu Monogatari
65. An American In Paris
66. Snow White & The Seven Dwarfs
67. Sunset Boulevard
68. The Apartment
69. The General
70. GoodFellas
71. The Grapes Of Wrath
72. Pulp Fiction
73. Seven Samurai
74. Tokyo Story
75. All Quiet On The Western Front
76. Unforgiven
77. Apocalypse Now
78. Louisiana Story
79. Rocky
80. The Sound Of Music
81. Pather Panchali
82. Fantasia
83. Daybreak
84. To Kill A Mockingbird
85. Rebel Without A Cause
86. Dr Zhivago
87. Tootsie
88. La Terra Trema
89. Network
90. Brief Encounter
91. Le Million
92. My Fair Lady
93. Wild Strawberries
94. Jaws
95. Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid
96. The Philadelphia Story
97. The Third Man
98. Raiders Of The Lost Ark
99. Stagecoach
100. Close Encounters Of The Third Kind
101. Day For Night

Note that Some Like It Hot is the 1959 comic masterpiece, not the obscure 1939 comedy. Also, The Maltese Falcon is the John Huston version and Ben-Hur is the William Wyler version.

Crazily Good!

Crazily Good!
Crazily Good!
Sutee Kunavichayanont's exhibition Crazily Good! opened at Number One Gallery in Bangkok on 15th March, and will close on 21st April. The exhibition features Psycho and other Hollywood film titles - mostly 1950s science-fiction like Creature From The Black Lagoon - copied from vintage movie posters.

12 April 2012

Bullingdon Club

Bullingdon Club
Daily Mirror
Private Eye
After it was suppressed for several years, a photograph of UK Prime Minister David Cameron and Mayor of London Boris Johnson from their student days has been published again. The photo, taken at Oxford University in 1986, shows Cameron and Johnson with other members of the Bullingdon Club.

The image was printed in various UK newspapers when Cameron became leader of the Conservatives, as a symbol of his extremely privileged background. Then, in 2007, its copyright-holder, Gillman & Soame, withdrew it from circulation to avoid embarrassing Cameron.

The Daily Telegraph printed the photo on 7th May 2008, and it appeared on the front page of the Daily Mirror on the day of the last UK general election, 6th May 2010. It has now been reprinted in the current issue of the satirical magazine Private Eye, apparently because the photo's copyright has expired.

4 April 2012

Shakespeare Must Die

Shakespeare Must Die
Ing K's film Shakespeare Must Die has been banned by the Thai Film Censorship Board. The film was refused a certificate yesterday, on the specious grounds that it may create division within society. (The Thai Ministry of Culture has long been obsessed with maintaining the out-dated notion of social harmony, when in reality Thai society is deeply polarised between reds and yellows.)

The film, inspired by Macbeth, was produced by the photographer Manit Sriwanichpoom; Ing and Manit run the Kathmandu gallery in Bangkok. Presumably the story of Macbeth, which includes violent regicide, was too much for the Censorship Board. The film also references the 1976 Thammasat massacre, one of the most politically sensitive moments in modern Thai history (an event which also features in Manit's Flashback '76 and Horror In Pink, and Thunska Pansittivorakul's film The Terrorists).

Shakespeare Must Die is not Ing K's first banned film. Her cult film My Teacher Eats Biscuits was also banned, and its screening at the inaugural Bangkok International Film Festival was halted by the police. Public screenings of Apichatpong Weerasethakul's Syndromes & A Century (heavily cut in 2007), Tanwarin Sukkhapisit's Insects In The Backyard (banned in 2010), and Thunska's This Area Is Under Quarantine (banned in 2009) have also been cancelled due to state censorship.

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3 April 2012

Project Japan

Project Japan
Project Japan: Metabolism Talks..., written by Rem Koolhaas and Hans Ulrich Obrist, and edited by Kayoko Ota with James Westcott, is the first comprehensive survey of the Japanese Metabolism architecture movement. The book, published by Taschen, features extended interviews with Metabolism's founders, including its prime exponent, Kisho Kurokawa.

Kurokawa's most famous building, the Nakagin Kapuseru Tawa in Tokyo, was intended as a utopian reconfiguration of urban housing. The structure, an icon of Metabolism, is comprised of movable, connectable, and replaceable capsule apartments. It epitomises Metabolism's focus on expandability, flexibility, and adaptability. Today, like Metabolism itself, the building is largely forgotten.

Project Japan is, therefore, most valuable as a comprehensive record of this under-valued movement. The book reproduces the movement's posters, blueprints, and other rare documents, including the Metabolism 1960 manifesto. Only a handful of copies of the manifesto survive, and it had never previously been reprinted.

Klab Dawla

Moroccan rapper Mouad Belghouat, also known as L7a9d and El Haqed, was arrested on Friday and charged with insulting state authorities. His song Klab Dawla criticises the Moroccan police, and he is a member of the February 20 Youth Movement, a group which organised protests as part of last year's Arab Spring.

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1 April 2012

The Extraordinary Voyage

The Extraordinary Voyage
The Extraordinary Voyage, directed by Serge Bromberg and Eric Lange, is a documentary about Georges Melies and the restoration of his most famous film, A Trip To The Moon. The documentary was made by Lobster Films, the same company which restored A Trip To The Moon last year. It includes interviews with Jean-Pierre Jeunet (director of Delicatessen), Michel Gondry (director of Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind), and Michel Hazanavicius (director of The Artist).

The Extraordinary Voyage begins with a biography of Melies: his initial career as a stage magician and theatre manager, his attendance at the Lumiere brothers' first film screening in 1895, and his subsequent work as a pioneer of cinematic special effects and camera tricks. The documentary features extracts from HBO's From The Earth To The Moon - which included a recreation of Melies's studio - and clips from a tinted version of A Trip To The Moon created for a gala event honouring him in 1929.

The documentary also reveals how the hand-coloured version of A Trip To The Moon was restored. An original colour print was discovered at an archive in Barcelona, and this nitrate reel was digitised by Technicolor. A black-&-white negative, supplied by the Melies estate, was utilised to replace missing fragments from the colour print, which were then digitally coloured.

Melies is the subject of Martin Scorsese's most recent film, Hugo, released in 3D. The 5th World Film Fesitval of Bangkok organised a Melies retrospective in 2007. The restored version of A Trip To The Moon was screened as part of La Fete earlier this year.