Showing posts with label Reel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reel. Show all posts

Monday, 2 March 2015

Sound / Reel / The Arctic Monkeys - Cornerstone (Official Video)

Yo an awesome song for your Tuesday (I cannot believe it is Tuesday. It feels much more like a Thursday or perhaps Friday, no?)


Sunday, 15 February 2015

Perfume / Bois de Balincourt - Maison Louis Marie


The most beautiful short film...


Phenomenal Woman / Beyonce and Her Mother


Beyonce is just fabulous.  Here is a fabulous tune from her.  And don't just listen.  Watch the video as well.  Its full old old clips of her in her destiny's child and pre- Destiny's Child days.  Even when really young she is so empowered and confident in her own skin I feel like we could learn a lot from the way she is.  Also I want to acknowledge her mothers role in this.  Yes being empowered is grasping at freedom and life ourselves and also standing upright and proud in ourselves but in young girls and children the mother also has such an important role to play, the mother gives girls support and love and importantly the license to be empowered.  And that is something Beyonce's mother has definitely done for her.  What a fabulous, phenomenal woman and single mother. 

Saturday, 14 February 2015

Words / Waterloo Sunset

Waterloo Bridge - The Kinks, Monet, Cope and Film

I love The Kinks, always have always will but I wanted to share this one because of a, perhaps odd, obsession I have with Waterloo Bridge.  I don't know why but this particular bridge in London has always captured my imagination.  Its also captured the imagination of a great many musicians, poets and artists including Monet, The Kinks (as below), Mervyn LeRoy (the 1940 film Waterloo Bridge)  and Wendy Cope. 

Below is a video of The Kinks' classic with lyrics written underneath.  

Underneath this are some beautiful paintings by Monet.  Monet would often explore the same subject repeatedly, e.g. hay stacks, churches and finally water lilies.  These are known as his series paintings. We are lucky enough that in the early 20th century he chose to paint some of this captivating bridge.  

There are two films of Waterloo Bridge one produced in 1940 by Melvyn LeRoy staring Robert Taylor and Vivien Leigh as well as an earlier version from 1931 staring Mae Clarke and Douglass Montgomery / Kent Douglass (Douglass Montgomery was a stage name).  Watch both.  They are very different but equally magnificent.  The leading men and women are very different and create very different characters from each other, not to mention the important plot differences.  They are also fascinating as cultural documents.  The original film is  set during World War I, then, in 1940 with Europe in another war the film was reprised to tell the tale of new but similar lovers, people cast out of place by large events finding one another. 




Dirty old river, must you keep rolling, flowing into the night 
People so busy, make me feel dizzy, taxi light shines so bright 
But I don't, need no friends
As long as I gaze on Waterloo Sunset, I am in paradise 
Every day I look at the world from my window
But chilly, chilly is the evening time, Waterloo sunset's fine.

Terry meets Julie, Waterloo Station, every Friday night 
But I am so lazy, don't want to wander, I stay at home at night 
But I don't, feel afraid
As long as I gaze on Waterloo Sunset, I am in paradise 
Every day I look at the world from my window
But chilly, chilly is the evening time, Waterloo sunset's fine.

Millions of people swarming like flies 'round Waterloo underground 
But Terry and Julie cross over the river where they feel safe and sound 
And they don't, need no friends
As long as they gaze on Waterloo Sunset, they are in paradise
Waterloo sunset's fine.








And here are the film posters to get your interest. 



As usual I do not own or have the rights to any of the music, images, paintings or words or anything else.  



Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Reel / Art Direction in How to Marry a Millionaire

Lauren Bacall and at direction from LelandFuller and Lyle Wheeler.  A fabulous film from Jean Negulesco who deserves a post of his own, but he'll have to wait for another day.