... is up on youtube. It's very difficult to find elsewhere, so I've posted it below, because that is the reason to have a blog. (It was never released theatrically, it seems, and like another of my favourites - Karel Zeman's "Baron Munchausen" - it's not available on DVD. Nor is Gilbert's Fridge. Posterity's taking the piss.) You should watch it. It's personal, like a dream, like someone's made a film just for you. By which I mean "me". Maybe its rarity explains why I'm so happy to call it the favourite - I won't have to defend the choice because who else will have seen it? But I've sat friends down in front of the VHS and they seem to have loved it, taped on a whim unseen when it played once on BBC2's Moviedrome over twenty years ago. Presenter Alex Cox's introduction is on that tape first, and I force them to watch that too, because I want them to have as great a time as I did. It all has to be done just right. In case I'm wrong. And that's why actually I'm going to shut up about the film now and instead put up a transcription of that perfect introduction. Then we can talk about it after, yeah? Here:
Tuesday 3 December 2013
My favourite film
... is up on youtube. It's very difficult to find elsewhere, so I've posted it below, because that is the reason to have a blog. (It was never released theatrically, it seems, and like another of my favourites - Karel Zeman's "Baron Munchausen" - it's not available on DVD. Nor is Gilbert's Fridge. Posterity's taking the piss.) You should watch it. It's personal, like a dream, like someone's made a film just for you. By which I mean "me". Maybe its rarity explains why I'm so happy to call it the favourite - I won't have to defend the choice because who else will have seen it? But I've sat friends down in front of the VHS and they seem to have loved it, taped on a whim unseen when it played once on BBC2's Moviedrome over twenty years ago. Presenter Alex Cox's introduction is on that tape first, and I force them to watch that too, because I want them to have as great a time as I did. It all has to be done just right. In case I'm wrong. And that's why actually I'm going to shut up about the film now and instead put up a transcription of that perfect introduction. Then we can talk about it after, yeah? Here:
Labels:
Alex Cox,
Baron Munchausen,
Clips,
Dreams,
Emotional Dev,
Film,
Scifi,
Telly,
Tom Schiller
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So glad you like "Nothing Lasts Forever" as much as I do. About a year or so ago I liked the You Tube link to Dennis Cooper's blog as part of my "Le Petit MacMahon de David Ehernstein" series. It's a lovely piece of American surrealism in the tradition of Joseph Cornell. No wonder it was never released. It's casual sophistication is too much for The Suits.
ReplyDeleteSad face. One day though... One day. Thank you, David E! (Ooh, Dennis Cooper's blog's changed.)
ReplyDeleteAs for the film's surrealism, watching it again, I'd forgotten all the nods to alchemy in it. Beckett's ascent to the scouring room just beyond the elevator, for example, is straight out of a Hermetic Library. Rather like Frida Kahlo's non-surrealism, it's a branch of surrealism that loops back happily to a more Medieval idea of dreams. Less about the Freudian oddness of objects, much more about getting a kick out of symbols.
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