The book, written solely by Beylie, was first published in 1987. He compiled a further four editions, in 1990, 1993, 1997, and 1998. Pinturault has been Beylie's co-writer since the sixth edition, published in 2002. Together, they wrote subsequent editions in 2006 and 2008.
11 September 2012
Les Films-Cles Du Cinema
The book, written solely by Beylie, was first published in 1987. He compiled a further four editions, in 1990, 1993, 1997, and 1998. Pinturault has been Beylie's co-writer since the sixth edition, published in 2002. Together, they wrote subsequent editions in 2006 and 2008.
10 September 2012
Cartoons Against Corruption

Aseem Trivedi has been arrested in Mumbai, and charged with insulting India’s national symbols. Trivedi founded Cartoons Against Corruption last year, to campaign against political corruption, and his cartoons were displayed at MMRDA in Mumbai last December.
Trivedi’s most controversial cartoons include National Emblem, which represents the four Sarnath lions as bloodthirsty wolves; National Toilet, in which the country’s parliament is depicted as a toilet; and Gang Rape of Mother India, which uses a violent sexual metaphor to symbolise the damaging influence of corruption. Trivedi faces up to two years in prison if found guilty. His detention comes after the arrest last year of another Indian cartoonist, Harish Yadav.
Trivedi’s most controversial cartoons include National Emblem, which represents the four Sarnath lions as bloodthirsty wolves; National Toilet, in which the country’s parliament is depicted as a toilet; and Gang Rape of Mother India, which uses a violent sexual metaphor to symbolise the damaging influence of corruption. Trivedi faces up to two years in prison if found guilty. His detention comes after the arrest last year of another Indian cartoonist, Harish Yadav.
09 September 2012
Creativities Unfold 2012
Rams, speaking in German, delivered a speech about the challenges facing contemporary designers in a consumer society, including materialism, disposability, and visual pollution. He followed this with a more relaxed Q&A session, in which he discussed some of his classic Braun designs - the TP1 portable turntable, the T1000 world-band radio, the TG60 reel-to-reel recorder, the ET66 calculator, the T2 lighter, and the MPZ2 juicer - in relation to his famous 'zehn thesen zum design' ('ten principles of design', first published in 1995).
06 September 2012
VSD
10th Printemps Des Arts
17 August 2012
The MDNA Tour
After the tour opened in June, Le Pen announced that she would sue if Madonna included the swastika in her French concerts. When the tour reached Paris on 14th July, the swastika was present (prompting a loud cheer from the crowd), and Le Pen sued Madonna for defamation. When Madonna played the video at her next French stadium show, in Nice on 21st August, she changed the swastika to a question mark, though the swastika has been included in all of her concerts outside France.
The question mark at the Nice concert is a rare example of Madonna censoring any aspect of her live shows. Scottish police had warned her against using prop guns during her MDNA Tour performance of Gang Bang, though her Edinburgh show on 21st June included the guns. Similarly, the behind-the-scenes documentary Truth or Dare shows Madonna defying police in Canada during her 1990 Blond Ambition Tour in 1990.
Madonna also performed a concert at the Olympia concert hall in Paris, on 26th July, which was livestreamed online. The show, MDNA a l'Olympia (MDNA at the Olympia), ended with a cove version of the Serge Gainsbourge classic Je t'aime... moi non plus.
14 August 2012
Ashes

Ashes, a new short film by Apichatpong Weerasethakul, features the director’s dog, King Kong, and various farm animals. It will open the 16th Thai Short Film and Video Festival (เทศกาลภาพยนตร์สั้น ครั้งที่ 16) on 16th August.
The film has no dialogue, though it has a voice-over describing “a dream within a dream”. There is also footage of a protest against Thailand’s lèse-majesté law, kaleidoscopic light patterns, jungle scenes, and a horizontal split-screen sequence. It ends with a pyrotechnical display at a funeral ceremony.
The film has no dialogue, though it has a voice-over describing “a dream within a dream”. There is also footage of a protest against Thailand’s lèse-majesté law, kaleidoscopic light patterns, jungle scenes, and a horizontal split-screen sequence. It ends with a pyrotechnical display at a funeral ceremony.

Ashes was made for the Mubi website, and was filmed with a LomoKino, a hand-cranked camera that records short film clips on consumer 35mm film rolls. There is even a special Mubi edition of the LomoKino available to buy, branded with Apichatpong’s signature.
16th Thai Short Film & Video Festival
The Thai Short Film & Video Festival is Thailand's oldest film festival. The 11th Festival was at Bangkok's now-closed EGV Grand Discovery cinema, though the 12th, 13th, and all subsequent festivals have been hosted by BACC.
12 August 2012
The Unfinished Revolution
The new section covers Labour's three terms in government under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown (though Andrew Rawnsley dealt with the same period more objectively in Servants Of The People and The End Of The Party). Blair has written an extensive foreword to Gould's book, arguing that Brown "took an Old Labour way out of the financial crisis"; advocating a return to the New Labour agenda, Blair even uses that old phrase from the Bill Clinton era, 'the Third Way', which is hardly likely to inspire a revival of Labour's fortunes.
09 August 2012
Dieter Rams: As Little Design As Possible
The book includes a foreword by Jonathan Ive, Apple's chief designer, who is the nearest equivalent to Rams in contemporary industrial design. Working with Steve Jobs, Ive produced a series of consumer-technology devices (including the iMac, iPhone, iPod, and iPad) that conformed to the "ten principles of good design" that Rams formulated.
Rams felt that successful design should be innovative, useful, aesthetic, understandable, honest, unobtrusive, long-lasting, thorough, environmentally friendly, and should involve "as little design as possible". That last maxim, adapted from Mies van der Rohe's 'less is more', became the title of Lovell's book.
In her preface, Lovell writes that Rams told her: "Why on earth do we need another book about me?" Thus, while there are occasional quotes footnoted as "Rams, in conversation with the author", Rams clearly didn't give Lovell a formal interview. There are, however, plenty of glossy photos fetishising beautiful radios, clocks, and other objects from the past fifty years.
The Dark Knight Rises (IMAX 70mm)
Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman, and Gary Oldman reprise their roles from the two previous Batman films, and there are two new villains: Bane (Tom Hardy) and Catwoman (Anne Hathaway). [Incidentally, Gary Oldman has become Gary Old Man: the Oldman of The Dark Knight Rises and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy seems far removed from the Oldman of Nil By Mouth or True Romance.] Marion Cotillard and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who appeared with Hardy and Caine in Inception, also star in The Dark Knight Rises.
The Dark Knight Rises is most interesting as a celebration of analogue film technology at a time of digital transition. Nolan is (alongside Quentin Tarantino) one of the last Hollywood directors to use 35mm film cameras; even Martin Scorsese (Hugo) and Steven Spielberg (Tintin) have now made digital films. Nolan has actively campaigned for the preservation of analogue cameras and projectors, recognising that digital production and exhibition are cheaper yet technically inferior. Nolan is also notable for his use of traditional sets and special effects, minimising the use of CGI.
I saw The Dark Knight at the Krungsri IMAX cinema at Siam Paragon in Bangkok, which is now the only IMAX cinema in Thailand with a 70mm projector. (The IMAX cinema at Major Cineplex Ratchayothin in Bangkok, the country’s first 70mm IMAX venue, converted to digital projection in 2010.)
03 August 2012
The Greatest Films Of All Time
The poll was originally conducted in 1952 (with Vittorio de Sica's Bicycle Thieves at #1); in the second poll, in 1962, Orson Welles's Citizen Kane was #1, and it remained in pole position throughout each subsequent poll. This year, however, Citizen Kane was displaced by Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo (which came a close second to Kane in the previous list, in 2002).
This year's new entries include The Searchers and The Passion Of Joan Of Arc (both of which skipped a list, appearing in 1992 though not in 2002). Man With A Movie Camera, the other new entry, is the first documentary to appear in a Sight & Sound list. Man With A Movie Camera has replaced another Russian silent classic, Battleship Potemkin, which had appeared on every Sight & Sound list since 1952; the relegation of Battleship Potemkin (to #11) leaves The Rules Of The Game as the only film to have appeared on every list.
Apart from Battleship Potemkin, two other films from the 2002 list are also missing from this year's top ten: Singin' In The Rain drops to #20, and The Godfather (now counted individually, rather than as a joint entry with The Godfather II) falls to #21. Surprisingly, Apocalypse Now (at #14) received more votes than The Godfather, making it Francis Coppola's most acclaimed film.
Sight & Sound's ten greatest films are as follows:
1. Vertigo
2. Citizen Kane
3. Tokyo Story
4. The Rules Of The Game
5. Sunrise
6. 2001: A Space Odyssey
7. The Searchers
8. Man With A Movie Camera
9. The Passion Of Joan Of Arc
10. 8½
The ten greatest films will be shown at the BFI Southbank cinema in London, from 1st September to 9th October. The top three will be shown at the UK's National Media Museum in Bradford on 16th September.
Museum of Contemporary Art
MoCA was funded entirely by Boonchai Bencharongkul, founder of the DTAC telecommunications company. Boonchai is also Thailand's leading art patron, approximately equivalent to Charles Saatchi in the UK. Like Saatchi, Boonchai gobbles up new art: with vast financial resources and determination, he doesn't just dominate the local art market, he is the local art market.
Boonchai not only paid for the Museum's construction, he also filled it exclusively with his own art collection, and personally curated each gallery. Highlights include Birth-Ageing-Sickness-Death (a vivid oil triptych of disturbing figures by Kittisak Chanontnart, influenced by Freudian psychoanalysis) and Animal-Man Family (Anupong Chantorn's bronze dogs from his Hope In The Dark exhibition, presumably commissioned by Boonchai).
These are the exceptions, however. The Museum's permanent collection reflects Boonchai's personal taste, and unfortunately his taste is largely traditional. Thus, there is no political art at all, and representation of contemporary life is almost entirely absent. Instead, there are numerous galleries filled with religious and mythological paintings (and plentiful female nudes). Also, the collection consists entirely of paintings and bronze sculptures: there is no video art, photography, installation, digital, or new-media art of any kind.
Indeed, much of the collection is not even particularly recent. The ground floor contains works by Silpa Bhirasri from almost 100 years ago, and there's a collection of Victorian-era paintings on the fifth floor. The Museum's name is somewhat misleading, because the art there is largely modern rather than contemporary.
So, MoCA is an impressive building, with an extensive yet traditional art collection. It's like a conservative version of the Saatchi Gallery: a grand showcase for a formidable patron's personal taste.
01 August 2012
Great Movies
There is no western category, so High Noon and The Searchers appear in the Action/Adventure section and Once Upon A Time In The West is in the Historical section. Some of the other classifications are also rather odd: Pulp Fiction is listed under Comedy rather than Thriller/Crime, and Dr Strangelove is in the War section rather than the Comedy section. The author admits that the final category, Drama, is "an opportunity, within limited space, to attempt to include any movies that simply didn't fit into the preceding nine genre categories" (hardly an ideal solution).
The book also includes brief articles on significant film movements, such as the French New Wave, documentaries, realism, and underground cinema. However, these should really have been included in the main 100 list instead of being relegated to supplementary sections.
There are a few mistakes regarding technical details: the prologue to The Wizard Of Oz is described as "sepia black and white" (they are two different formats), there is a reference to "Blu-ray Avatar" (Blu-ray is not a theatrical format), a photo of a 35mm camera has a "digital camera" caption, and Inception is used as an example of "digital special effects" (visual effects are digital, special effects are analogue; Inception is notable for its analogue special effects). A famous line from Taxi Driver, "You talkin' to me?", is twice misquoted as "Are you looking at me?".
There is a brief bibliography, though it's rather outdated as it consists almost entirely of annual film guides that are no longer being published (Halliwell's, Time Out, etc.). It even cites the "invaluable Filmgoer's Companion", a book which was superseded long ago by Ephraim Katz's Film Encyclopedia.
The Great Movies are as follows:
Comedy
- The Gold Rush
- The General
- A Night At The Opera
- Bringing Up Baby
- Kind Hearts & Coronets
- M. Hulot's Holiday
- Some Like It Hot
- Manhattan
- Women On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown
- Pulp Fiction
- The Thief Of Bagdad
- The Adventures Of Robin Hood
- High Noon
- The Wages Of Fear
- The Searchers
- Goldfinger
- Raiders Of The Lost Ark
- The Terminator
- Die Hard
- Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl
- The Blue Angel
- Anna Karenina
- Gone With The Wind
- Casablanca
- Sundet Boulevard
- The African Queen
- Written On The Wind
- Breakfast At Tiffany's
- Pretty Woman
- Thelma & Louise
- The Jazz Singer
- Gold Diggers Of 1933
- Top Hat
- Singin' In The Rain
- Oklahoma!
- Jailhouse Rock
- West Side Story
- The Sound Of Music
- Grease
- Moulin Rouge!
- The Big Sleep
- Rififi
- The Night Of The Hunter
- North By Northwest
- Bonnie & Clyde
- Point Blank
- The Godfather
- Jaws
- Taxi Driver
- The Silence Of The Lambs
- Intolerance
- Napoleon
- Alexander Nevsky
- Lola Montes
- The Ten Commandments
- Spartacus
- Lawrence Of Arabia
- Once Upon A Time In The West
- The Wild Bunch
- Schindler's List
- All Quiet On The Western Front
- Henry V
- The Red Badge Of Courage
- The Dam Busters
- The Great Escape
- Dr Strangelove
- Lacombe, Lucien
- Apocalypse Now
- Ran
- Saving Private Ryan
- Snow White & The Seven Dwarfs
- Way Out West
- The Wizard Of Oz
- It's A Wonderful Life
- Star Wars IV: A New Hope
- ET: The Extra-Terrestrial
- Home Alone
- The Lion King
- Toy Story
- The Lord Of The Rings I: The Fellowship Of The Ring
- Nosferatu
- Metropolis
- King Kong
- The Bride Of Frankenstein
- La Belle & La Bete
- Invasion Of The Body Snatchers
- Psycho
- Night Of The Living Dead
- 2001: A Space Odyssey
- The Matrix
- Greed
- Pandora's Box
- The Rules Of The Game
- Citizen Kane
- Les Enfants Du Paradis
- On The Waterfront
- Easy Rider
- Last Tango In Paris
- Raging Bull
- American Beauty
27 July 2012
To Rome With Love
The film contains four separate stories, though they have little in common except that they are all set in Rome. The effect is a concise alternative to Paris, Je T'Aime, Sawasdee Bangkok, or New York Stories. The four narratives are intercut, though their timeframes aren't parallel.
In one of the strands, Roberto Benigni plays a clerk who suddenly becomes a 'reality TV' star, chased by paparazzi (first seen in La Dolce Vita, also set in Rome), in a satire on contemporary celebrity culture. There is also a one-joke segment featuring a mortician who performs operas from a shower cubicle (inspired by Rolando Villazon). Another story concerns a man who becomes involved with a prostitute (a recurring theme: there were also prostitutes in Allen's Mighty Aphrodite, Deconstructing Harry, and You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger).
The most intriguing and ambitious strand stars Alec Baldwin as an architect who meets an architecture student played by Jesse Eisenberg. Baldwin becomes an ever-present mentor to Eisenberg, though he is apparently not visible to other characters. At first, it seems that Allen is repeating the ontological device of Play It Again, Sam, in which an apparition of Sam Spade (from Casablanca) gives relationship advice. However, in this case the trick is reversed: Eisenberg exists only in Baldwin's imagination, as Baldwin is remembering the experiences of his own youth. (This interpretation is suggested by the repeated phrase "ozymandias melancholia", which comes from Allen's Stardust Memories; it recalls Owen Wilson as a back-street time-traveller in Midnight In Paris, and Allen and Diane Keaton as spectators of their memories in Annie Hall.)
The film has an impressive cast, including Penelope Cruz (who also starred in Vicky Christina Barcelona) and Judy Davis (wonderful in Deconstructing Harry). Allen himself makes a welcome return to acting, in his first role since Scoop. In the film's funniest sequence, Allen over-reacts on an aeroplane ("I can't unclench when there's turbulence, I'm an atheist"). He also returns to his favourite themes: death (which he says is a natural consequence of retirement) and analysis ("Don't psychoanalyse me", he insists. "Many have tried, all have failed").
To Rome With Love is enhanced by Allen's schtick and the excellent ensemble cast. Most of the action is rather frivolous, though Baldwin's scenes are more substantial. It's too much to ask for a return to form (more than thirty years after Annie Hall and Manhattan), but this is the next best thing.
17 July 2012
Designing Media
Moggridge has also interviewed the founders of Facebook (Mark Zuckerberg), YouTube (Chad Hurley), Blogger and Twitter (Evan Williams), and Wikipedia (Jimmy Wales). Extracts from the interviews are featured on an appropriately well-designed DVD which accompanies the book.
オールタイム・ベスト 映画遺産200
04 July 2012
Art, Politics, and Censorship

The Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand in Bangkok will host a panel discussion tomorrow titled Art, Politics, and Censorship. Ing K. and Tanwarin Sukkhapisit will take part, and the event will be moderated by Bangkok Post film critic Kong Rithdee.
Ing and Tanwarin have both directed films that were banned by Thai censors. Tanwarin’s Insects in the Backyard (อินเซคอินเดอะแบ็คยาร์ด) was banned in 2010, and Ing’s Shakespeare Must Die (เชคสเปียร์ต้องตาย) was banned two years later.
Ing and Tanwarin have both directed films that were banned by Thai censors. Tanwarin’s Insects in the Backyard (อินเซคอินเดอะแบ็คยาร์ด) was banned in 2010, and Ing’s Shakespeare Must Die (เชคสเปียร์ต้องตาย) was banned two years later.
02 July 2012
39 Steps To The Genius Of Hitchcock
Paglia is most famous for her collections of post-feminist essays (Sexual Personae; Sex, Art, & American Culture; Vamps & Tramps), though she also wrote a BFI Film Classics study of The Birds. Gottlieb edited Hitchock On Hitchcock. Krohn wrote a Masters Of Cinema study of Hitchcock, and the superb Hitchcock At Work. Thomson's Biographical Dictionary Of Film has been highly praised (though not by me); he has also written Have You Seen...? and The Moment Of Psycho.
Hitchcock has been analysed and written about more than perhaps any other director. Paul Duncan's Hitchcock: Architect Of Anxiety is an illustrated summary of Hitchcock's career. François Truffaut's book-length interview Hitchcock, and Donald Spoto's filmography The Art Of Alfred Hitchcock, are both indispensable. There are shorter interviews in Who The Devil Made It (Peter Bogdanovich) and The Men Who Made The Movies (Richard Schickel). The standard Hitchcock biography is Spoto's The Dark Side Of Genius, and John Russell Taylor wrote Hitch, an authorised biography. Laurent Bouzereau's Hitchcock: Piece By Piece and Dan Auiler's Hitchcock's Notebooks both delve into the Hitchcock archives.

