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Kubrick: The opportunity to see things the way they are.

WARNER BROS. DISTRIBUTORS LTD
135 Wardour Street (Registered Office)
London WIV 4AP
Telephone: 01-437 5600
Fax: 01-437 9544
Telex: 22653
Registered in England No. 259661

Dott. Rocco Moccia
Direttore Generale Dello Spettacolo
Ministero Del Turismo e Dello Spettacolo
Via della Ferratella in Laterano, 51
00184 Roma
ITALIA

5th October, 1987

Dear Dott. Moccia,

You will undoubtedly understand my disappointment that my film "Full Metal Jacket" has been classified so as to prevent it being viewed by young people under the age of 18. Obviously I do not regard young Italians as being substantially different in nature, character or temperament to young people in other parts of the world and it was my earnest desire that my film be an experience capable of being shared by the widest audience possible.

This is important to me because I sincerely hope that "Full Metal Jacket" will be regarded as making an important and relevant contribution to the ways in which people view their own nature.

My intention was not to relish violence for it's own sake but to emphasize the reality of both the training process undergone by the recruits and the war situation in which they found themselves. A crucial aspect of this process is the use of language to dehumanise the young men. This had to be presented in a totally truthful way otherwise I would have compromised the reality of the story.

I make no apology for taking such an approach. It is what attracted me to the project from the beginning: it's sense of uncompromising truth. "Full Metal Jacket" offers no easy moral or political answers.

I think you should know that Sweden has classified the film, 15, New Zealand has a 13 age restriction, Finland has given it a 16 age restriction, as has Germany. These ratings were applied without any cuts.

I believe that all the people should be given the opportunity to see things the way they are.

Yours sincerely,

(Signed)

Stanley Kubrick

cc: Dott.ssa Rosa Alba de Gaetano Leardi
Mr Bernard Weinreich, Warner Bros Italia

via Letters of Note | Archivio Kubrick | L'ascensore per il secondo piano

Filed under  //   film   language   letters   politics   psychology   science   semiotics   word  
Posted November 12, 2009
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Allen Ginsberg & Stokely Carmichael

A photo of a photo found on the interior wall of the Camden Roundhouse.

via Mark Landells


Stokely Carmichael

IRC Stokely Carmichael Page

Allen Ginsberg

The Allen Ginsberg Trust

Filed under  //   history   photography   poetry   politics  
Posted November 8, 2009
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Hockney Smoking iPhone

               
Click here to download:
Hockney_Smoking_iPhone_tag_art.zip (2529 KB)

David Hockney

Artist David Hockney isn't afraid of picking up new media -- over the years, he's used Polaroids, photocollages, and even fax machines to create his art -- in addition to regular, old-fashioned painting. Now, he's taken to using his iPhone to create new works of art. The resultant "paintings" have been exhibited at the Tate Gallery and Royal Academy in London, as well as galleries in Los Angeles and Germany. Like artist Jorge Colombo (whose iPhone fingerpainting was featured on the cover of The New Yorker), Hockney uses the iPhone app Brushes to create his works.

David Hockney's Long Road Home | New York Times

David Hockney paints with his iPhone:  results not typical | engadget

David Hockney's iPhone Passion | New York Review of Books

It's always there in my pocket, there's no thrashing about, scrambling for the right color. One can set to work immediately, there's this wonderful impromptu quality, this freshness, to the activity; and when it's over, best of all, there's no mess, no clean-up. You just turn off the machine. Or, even better, you hit Send, and your little cohort of friends around the world gets to experience a similar immediacy. There's something, finally, very intimate about the whole process.

David Hockney's iPhone Paintings | boing boing

David Hockney's iPhone and Digital Art.  Take Two. | AFC

Another Bouncing Ball:  Regina Hackett in defense of Hockney's smoking iPhone

Hollywood star Marlene Dietrich, who added to the perceived glamour of smoking. Photograph: PA

David Hockney:  The anti-smoking bigots should butt out | guardian.co.uk

Deborah Arnott is a professional anti-smoker. She makes her living from it. She thinks she can "save lives". Since we all get a lifetime and she is not offering immortality, what she means is you might have a longer life.

Given the choice of 50 years as a free person or 70 years as a slave, she would choose slavery. I wouldn't, and I suspect there are many like me, as most people seem to go for quality of life not quantity. Time, the great mystery, is elastic. Watch the kettle boil and it takes "a long time"...

This quantitative view of life seems dominant today among the medical profession and politicians – as though they can and should make these kind of choices for us. It seems a recent phenomenon, and not really very wise. On big issues it might be good, but on small ones it's tyrannical.

(Continue reading)

Filed under  //   art   politics   smoking   technology  
Posted October 21, 2009
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Dear Andy Love Allen

In this photo taken on Aug. 13, 2009, books and a note by Allen Ginsberg found in one of Andy Warhol's time capsules wait to be catalogued at the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

January 6 1978

Dear Andy --

Here's another big book Gordon & I manufactured -- with odd snapshots & Diary notes. See p 153 for Subliminal CIA-Iran story Oct 1960 -- No need to read this thru Just glance at it when you're too busy to remember what you're supposed to be doing.

Love Allen Ginsberg

via The Allen Ginsberg Project:  Warhol's Junk

+ The Huffington Post:  Naked Onassis Photo Found with Warhol's Junk

 

Filed under  //   art   books   history   photography   poetry   politics  
Posted October 16, 2009
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Who Made Who?

via No Sugar Added

I'm searching my storage facility this week for an old VHS dub of a former bank president who discloses information related to Chomsky's comments here.  As far as I recall the tape was copied and distributed to public access television stations around the country.  It's a hoot.  If I can't locate it, or the quality is lacking, I'll do my best to find a producer who has a better copy. 

Filed under  //   business   economics   language   politics   video  
Posted October 13, 2009
// 0 Comments

Christopher Columbus

"They willingly traded everything they owned…They were well-built, with good bodies and handsome features…They do not bear arms and do not know them, for I showed them a sword, they took it by the edge and cut themselves out of ignorance…They have no iron…Their spears are made of cane…They would make fine servants…With fifty men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want."

~ Christopher Columbus writing in his diary upon landing in Hispaniola, from A People’s History of the United States

Fuck him.

via Curate

via Unburying the Lead

Though the first recorded celebration of Columbus occurred in New York City 1792, during a 300th anniversary celebration of his landing in the New World, Columbus Day did not become a federal holiday until 1971, courtesy of President Richard M. Nixon. ...

Filed under  //   history   inverted commas   politics  
Posted October 12, 2009
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The more I see the less I know for sure

Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we're being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I'm liable to be put away as insane for expressing that. That's what's insane about it.

John Lennon : English, member of the Beatles

John Lennon (1940 - 1980)

Filed under  //   inverted commas   lennon   music   ono   politics   video  
Posted October 10, 2009
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The Aesthetic of Rebellion or Kanye West Got Me Thinking...

Excerpts from the aesthetic of rebellion or Kanye West got me thinking...

by Temporal Flush

Artists have something to accomplish in this society. Regardless of forms or media, our times require the presence of art and the commitment of artists to contest the values of this world. We need musicians and writers, painters and dancers, photographers and actors, web designers and dramatists… We need artists who speak truth to power, who connect us to human realities that technologies shroud and the prevailing forces of political and corporate power would have suppressed. But where are these artists?

Oh, there are an abundance of individuals trained and skilled in the arts. They rush stages and "networking opportunities" everywhere to showoff their chops, to promote themselves to the next level, to grab a headline, to meme their way into fame — or greater fame — and a millionaire lifestyle. They push, they tug, they bully, they whore themselves without limit, delivering work that is as tiresome and irrelevant and vapid as their ethics.

...what is clear is that West, Rhianna and Jay-Z would like us to see them as individualists and rebels. But they are neither. They are outlandish, I'll give them that. However, individualists and rebels don't contort and distort and exploit themselves in order to pander to markets and audiences, nor do rebels become millionaires. In fact I will posit an idea that should be obvious but may shock and, even, cause outrage: One cannot become wealthy or maintain wealth and be in rebellion against the forces and values of this society. To be rich, to even be merely "well off" in America today, requires a compromise of ones principles and identity to the point of irrelevancy. We may take this logic one step further: To be rich and powerful in today's America is to be a slave.

American culture is a wasteland of prosperous "artists" producing little of any enduring consequence. The corrupting influence is money. Whether we look at young successful "artists" or at the repackaging of old successful artists, it's all the same. Money is the single constant and degrading factor.

So what should the serious artist do? What position should that artist take when counterculture is mainstream and money is the single motivating force in that stream?

(Continue reading)

Filed under  //   art   business   music   politics   word  
Posted September 30, 2009
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The Men Who Stare at Goats

Based on Jon Ronson's Crazy Rulers of the World:  The Men Who Stare at Goats (Channel 4)

The three-part series begins with The Men Who Stare at Goats, which charts the history of a secret US Army unit founded in 1979 - the First Earth Battalion.

 The programme uncovers the startling truth about this unit's involvement with paranormal activities that defy all known accepted military practice, including mind reading, out of body experiences and 'thought-death' experiments carried out on goats at Fort Bragg.

The original documentary can be viewed in several parts on YouTube starting here.

Title: The Men Who Stare at Goats


Release Date: November 6th 2009


Director: Grant Heslov


Screenwriter: Peter Straughan


Starring: George Clooney, Ewan McGregor, Kevin Spacey, Jeff Bridges, Rebecca Mader, Terry Serpico


Genre: Comedy, Drama


Plot Summary: Based on true events described in Jon Ronson's 2004 book of the same title, "The Men Who Stare at Goats" involves a down-on-his-luck reporter (McGregor) who gets more than he bargains for when he meets a special forces agent (Clooney) who reveals the existence of a secret, psychic military unit whose goal is to use paranormal powers to end war as we know it.

Jon Ronson

Filed under  //   books   film   politics   video  
Posted September 10, 2009
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Chris Hedges on Michael Jackson & Celeb Culture

 

Chris Hedges on Michael Jackson & Celeb Culture

Man in the MirrorThe fame of celebrities masks the identities of those who possess true power—corporations and the oligarchic elite. And as we sink into an economic and political morass, as we barrel toward a crisis that will create more misery than the Great Depression, we are controlled, manipulated and distracted by the celluloid shadows on the wall of Plato’s cave. The fantasy of celebrity culture is not designed simply to entertain. It is designed to drain us emotionally, confuse us about our identity, make us blame ourselves for our predicament, condition us to chase illusions of fame and happiness and keep us from fighting back. And in the end, that is all the Jackson coverage was really about, another tawdry and tasteless spectacle to divert a dying culture from the howling wolf at the gate.

Read The Man in the Mirror

via | source: mirabile dictu 

Filed under  //   business   consciousness   music   politics   psychology  
Posted September 6, 2009
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