mass i wasn't even aware that project even existed....how does one go about acquiring this
mass i wasn't even aware that project even existed....how does one go about acquiring this
funny you mention this one cause i just saw it on youtube a few weeks back
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMcf4O7B74Q
For some reason it came up in conversation yesterday that I had seen the movie "Zoo" at the IFC a few years ago, a documentary about a man who was literally fucked to death by a horse.
There's no graphic depictions and in fact I found the movie rather hypnotic and oddly soothing as it mostly consisted of slow moving shots of wide open country overlayed with the audio from interviews of friends/participants of the man who died recounting the story. I thought this juxtaposition was rather artful and allowed the story to be told without judgement.
Yeah, Zoo is actually a pretty damn good film. Really interesting people in the film and done quite well. Not some sensationalized "Mr. Hands" parody, but more the story behind his life.
Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde
StyleZeitgeist Magazine
Restrepo was good. Really showed the absolute waste that the Afghan war is.
How was The Cove?
Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde
StyleZeitgeist Magazine
We Were Here is a good documentary about AIDS in the early 80s in San Francisco.
It's a pretty touching film since some of the people interviewed still live here in San Francisco and you'll run into them from time to time.
Note By Note: The Making Of Steinway L1037
this should air again on pbs soon..
/\ I met a guy who builds violins. Sounds like the most fascinating job ever...
Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde
StyleZeitgeist Magazine
I found The Cove to be really captivating and an eye-opener as i feel the subject is not so much talked about these days. It really shows the cruelty of dolphin fishing (dolphin-genocide) and the political issues that surround it.
Also recommend watching The end of the line.
Some really interesting titles to look into here, gracias. But what is up with all that animal slaughterhouse cruelty? :-( I'm not a vegetarian myself but ow....when watching all these images...On one hand I like to tell myself that most of it is made by someone with a purpose of his or her own, which makes it a bit easier to just push it away as some sort of propaganda or what ever. But at the same time; its happening; today, right now as I sit here and write this. Ugh... I hate watching images like this.
.
Two that have stuck with me:
Life and Debt - A detailed look at the fallout of economic globalization on a developing country like Jamaica. There's a scene where you see Jamaican dairy farmers pouring out their fresh milk, forced to accept subsidies of American-made powdered milk under loan provisions set forth by the IMF. A lesson in global politics wrapped in an engrossing film.
I went to see this the day it hit theaters a decade ago, having spent time in the country 2 years prior, in 1999. I went again the same year this documentary was released. Unfortunately, I doubt very much has changed for the better since then..
Black Gold - Another reason to hate Starbucks, beside their coffee tasting like shit. An eye-opening expose showing what typically goes down halfway around the world because of our insatiable thirst for over-priced espresso drinks, and why the fair-trade coffee movement is as important as it is.
If you're wondering when Starfucks finally got serious about responsible coffee sourcing, it's largely after this little documentary came out. Great story on that HERE
I caught this film by total fluke at its very quiet premiere at Sundance FF, after scoring last-minute tix from a friend who couldn't make the screening. I'd no idea what it was even about until it began – yet by the time it was over, it effectively changed where & how I buy my coffee, once & for all.
.
sain't
.
BBC Documentary series on Savile Row. Each episode is continued in related videos.
Episode 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WD9XVpaRcZU
Episode 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDErT2qoK40
Episode 3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wszUr59cuIk
If you have Comcast, they now the the "Top 50 Documentaries" thing On Demand. Has a lot of these on there since I believe the list was created by film directors. Decent perk...
I really enjoyed this BBC 4 documentary on Krautrock -- it features all sorts of things I love like Neu!, Can, Faust, Popol Vuh and Kraftwork and directors Herzog, Fassbinder, and Wenders:
(four more segments on youtube...)
MBD
"To articulate what is past does not mean to recognize 'how it really was.'
It means to take control of a memory, as it flashes in a moment of danger."
-Walter Benjamin. Thesis VI, Theses on the Philosophy of History
My rarities and quotidian garments for sale thread. My tumblr and eBay page.