Links for the weekend

22nd September 2013

Courtesy of The Notebook at mubi.com and the Spanish film magazine Transit comes The Melville Variations, great video+text essay by Cristina Álvarez López and Adrian Martin about the films of the great French director Jean-Pierre Melville. Once you have enjoyed this short, sharp and so-precise montage, do also read the text here: ‘In the end, there is only ever the hat: mute, static, frozen, inhuman.’

There are further film links and much more below, with thanks due this week to @filmstudiesff, @KarlinMarc, @tiffanyjenkins@manovich, @Obridge@sebchan and @melissaterras.

Innovation by accident: yet another essential piece by David Bordwell about narrative innovation in 1940s Hollywood films.

Harry Potter treated with gravity: Kristin Thompson makes the case for filmmaker Alfonso Cuarón, director of Children of Men, 2006 and the much-anticipated Gravity, as well as Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, 2004.

A walk through Carlito’s Way: also from Adrian Martin (co-author of  the Melville essay) is this tremendous analysis of the below set-piece from Brian De Palma’s 1993 movie, published in the new issue of the online film journal Lola.

Carlito’s Way Clip from LOLA JOURNAL on Vimeo.

On the edge of slander: Stephen Greenblatt on Joss Whedon’s Much Ado About Nothing, which is about to be released on DVD.

10 great films set in museums: I’m a bit late to this one but Samuel Wigley’s BFI blog post does exactly what it says in its title, and includes Topkapi, for which this is a terrific trailer:

Ealing on air: a good piece from Network by Sheldon Hall about the licencing of Ealing Studios feature films to British television in the 1950s.

Stuart Hall – mourning, migration and Miles Davis: a Prospect interview by Jonathan Derbyshire with filmmaker John Akomfrah about The Stuart Hall Project; here is the trailer:

Edward II @ The Olivier, National Theatre: the ever-thoughtful Peter Kirwan at the Bardathon on the Marlowe production that is dividing critical opinion – ‘Not a perfect production… but stylish and provocative, and performed with gusto.’

Why the Blackfriars in 1596?: Holger Syme worries away productively at a question about late Elizabethan theatre history.

Backstage drama at the Met, worthy of opera: do take a look at Zachary Woolfe’s report about the Met’s Eugene Onegin as the director of which Fiona Shaw has replaced the sadly indisposed Deborah Warner.

Writing with images: a fascinating and truly rich diary-like response by James Elkins to T.J. Clark’s rather wonderful book The Sight of Death: An Experiment in Art Writing. (Clark is the co-curator of Tate Britain’s show Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life (until 20 October), and tomorrow night there is a Lowry on Film event which includes John Read’s BBC film L.S. Lowry, 1957.)

Bacon/Moore – Flesh and Bone: the Financial Times’ Jackie Wullschlager (perhaps the best regular art critic this side of the Atlantic) on the unmissable show at Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum – ‘a brilliant pairing (obvious now, yet never before attempted by a museum)’.

The rectangular canvas is dead – Richard Diebenkorn and the problems of modern painting: a fine essay by Jed Perl for New Republic.

Sound is here – an interview with Barbara London: Charles Eppley at Rhizome talks with the curator of MoMA’s exhibition Soundings: A Contemporary Score.

A magus of the north: for The New York Review of Books, A.S. Byatt hymns the work of Icelandic writer Sjón: ‘Every now and then a writer changes the whole map of literature inside my head.’

From Mars: never heard of Bustle.com? Don’t let that put you off Lizzie Widdicombe’s piece for The New Yorker about the economics on online publishing.

Crawling the UK web domain: Peter Webster at The British Library marks the completion of the first trawl for an archive of what we might regard as the British web – just the 31TB of compressed data (which actually doesn’t seem that much).

Download the Let’s Get Real 2 report: this is important – a free .pdf of Culture 24’s new report on understanding and measuring digital engagement.

… and finally, this by Sally Kohn for New York magazine is very sweet,
Watching a Brooklyn sunset with the blissfully wed Patrick Stewart

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