Saturday, April 25, 2009

Shadows and Light























How fascinating are airplanes?? They never fail in capturing my wonder and imagination, and is it childish of me to still get excited when boarding a plane? All that shiny, molded metal, full of people and objects, smoothly gliding across the blue sky and disappearing into fluffy white clouds. It's absolutely mesmerizing. Here's another perfect photograph by William Eggleston. It seems to perfectly encompass the beauty and anticipation of air travel. The colors of the light seen through the cocktail and the little clouds visible through the window...very nice.


(I'd love to find a more Hi-def version of this pic..)

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Rhyme or reason
















So what's the story? This was a rough week, in terms of newsworthy events, both national and international. I can't make sense of the shootings or the earthquake, of course not. I read somewhere a long time ago that the exact number of birds in the sky above you at any given moment portends to something or has some sort of meaning, maybe it was an old Greek philosopher who said so. Anyways, I saw this pic and it reminded me of a few things, like going to the deli on the corner as a kid, eating my chips and staring at the junk collected along the sidewalk, wondering where it all came from, whose fingers touched it last. It also reminded me of the idea mentioned earlier about birds, whether that logic applies to other objects that populate the landscape. In any case, the color here is striking and the photo altogether masterful. There is a lot to look at and wonder about.

Photo by William Eggleston. Click to enlarge.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Pasqualino Settebellezze





Here are two clips from one of my favorite films, Lina Wertmuller's "Pasqualino Settebellezze," titled "Seven Beauties" in English. It stars the great Giancarlo Giannini, who completely encapsulates the macho but lovable Italian male stereotype here. Wertmuller's direction is like Sergio Leone transferred to the Bay of Naples, overly-dramatic, operatic, sensuous. The first clip has no dialogue, only music, so it plays similar to how they used to display silent movies with an accompanying music section. The second clip, starting at minute 8:00 is one of my absolute most favorite scenes in film, does have dialogue, but no subtitles, only in Italian. Sorry! However, as I said, the acting, editing and direction in both clips is so good, you can follow along without really knowing the words. I love good movies.