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[personal profile] selenak
Due to the talented [livejournal.com profile] saava, I have a change of default icon. Having given Darla a Lady Lazarus quote as well in The Haunting, Hunted Kind, I couldn't resist. Servalan is not permanently retired, however. She'll probably return as Sleer soon.

Speaking of Lady Lazarus, seems the Sylvia Plath biopic got another good review, this one in The New Yorker; also, this time the screenwriter gets mentioned. The following quote might illustrate that the literary set is not that different from TV fandom, after all:

When I worked for the book-review section of a newspaper, we had a vague preminition that hardened into a single, inflexible rule of office procedure: Do not, under any circumstances, write or publish anything on the subject of Sylvia Plath, especially if it concerns her marriage to Ted Hughes. At the merest mention of his or her name in print, winged covens of family members or acquaintances, backed by defenders of either the Plath camp or the Hughes clan (but never both), would descend from the hills, baying for blood.

Anyway, I feel increasingly less nervous about watching this movie. Otoh, [livejournal.com profile] rozk's review of the massacre committed on The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen made me glad I remained firm despite having had the chance to watch it for free in Frankfurt. What I did watch, yesterday, was something [livejournal.com profile] kathyh taped for me a brief while ago - The Deal, a TV play directed by Stephen Frears, about... well, let me quote another review: The most heavily ploughed emotional furrow in British matrimony since Charles and Diana came to blows: Tony and Gordon. Tony Blair as Diana is inspired casting, I've got to say. You can read the entire review, which is full of good lines ("David Morrissey...gives us a very good Brown, gruffer and more gravelly than the great man himself, but conveying that reproachful intensity that makes us all feel we should be cleverer and work longer hours"), here. As for my own impressions, I enjoyed it very much and only wished it was longer, so that characters like Mandelson could have gotten fleshed out more. Though I did like [livejournal.com profile] rozk's interpretation on why he switched sides ("Gordon was more butch, but Tony was cuter"). Seriously now, it was good political drama, and made me wonder which writer, which director could possibly come up with something for that present-day odd couple, Tony Blair and George W. Bush. There is a scene in The Deal when young Blair wants to induce Gordon Brown to some talk about his private life, and Brown absolutely doesn't want to (a salute for the scriptwriter who thus neatly avoids the distraction from the main subject, btw), saying he finds it difficult to... "Share?" suggests wide-eyed Tony B., the bambi double. "That's what the Americans call it."
Well, they do, but I'm still at a loss to imagine a conversation between Dubya and Mr. Blair when no advisers are present. May a future scriptwriter be not so lacking of imagination. Because surely the utter bizarreness of the last year and the present day deserves some dramatization.

Next: a link mostly for [livejournal.com profile] raincitygirl who as I recall had a stupid teacher/lecturer who refused to see any sexual ambiguity in Twelfth Night. Here is a review of a current performance from the Globe Theatre of London, currently starting its American tour.

Lastly:

Vimes!
Discworld: Which Ankh-Morpork City Watch Character are YOU?

brought to you by Quizilla

Am I happy, or am I happy? Though on the other hand, considering what this says about my disposition, I clearly can't be...

Date: 2003-10-19 07:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] paratti.livejournal.com
Morrissey was uncany in how Gordon he was, I thought. It was a great piece of acting and evocation of an era of changes.

Era of changes

Date: 2003-10-19 09:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] selenak.livejournal.com
I thought Frears did a great job with the montages, too. It reminded me of how he used Thatcher TV footage for My Beautiful Laundrette.

I don't belong here.

Date: 2003-10-19 11:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cavendish.livejournal.com
Hi there!

The regular pace of your entries has left me somewhat behind , so this is a comment rather on the last several days than on this entry. Hope you don't mind

But some thanks are more than due, and I thought I'd post them here, and not in some "gone by" entry ;-).

1) Thanks to you I know now that I am a real TV fan. I have always considered myself rather liking TV, but not being a fan. Now things have changed: since 2003-10-17 I know that I belong to the "Humanista Apathica", at least as far as AtS is concerned (used to be different with BtVS). Hey, I belong to a real fan category. Must make mental note to tell the Yeti about it ;-)).
Hope you'll talk to me nonetheless ;-)

2) Thanks for posting the link to the great article by Steve Almond. Not only because of his comments on Bloom, but because of his comments on writers and society.
In my own view, it's NOT because Americans are dumb or lazy, but because they fear the chaos of their feelings. Our masters of commerce are quite happy with this arrangement. They want us in this state of terror, as it makes us more likely to obey their constant buy messages. The unexamined life, it might be said, offers an extraordinary profit margin. .
Indeed yes!
This may be somewhat generalized, but still, it seems like ot that the ideas of Horkheimer and Adorno expressed over half a century ago in the "Culture Industry" are not completely dead: This is good!

3) Thanks for leaving the Sunset B. DVD with [livejournal.com profile] bimo. I Saw the movie on Friday and greatly enjoyed it, especially after having read your analysis of the movie. Will post more on this in one of my next LJ entries ;-).

4.) and last (but by no means least): Thanks for befriending :-))

F.

Re: I don't belong here.

Date: 2003-10-20 12:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] selenak.livejournal.com
1) Of course I will. I treasure rare species.*g*

2) Horkheimer and Adorno and their ideas: ironically, Michael Moore made much the same point in Bowling for Columbine, and I don't think he read either gentleman. (Though I could be wrong.)

3) You're very welcome. And I'm very much looking forward to reading your thoughts on Sunset Boulevard.

Date: 2003-10-19 02:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] twistingflame.livejournal.com
Yay to [livejournal.com profile] saava. I gacked a bunch of her Darla icons too. So pretty.

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