Oct. 14th, 2007

fflo: (true too)
Lots of yer orphans aren't orphans until they're older. But it doesn't matter how old you are. And there are lots of ways of being orphanned.

Sometimes I feel like an orphan among orphans.

( -+-+- )

It's too cold to go outside. I'm not acclimated.
fflo: (Default)
Lots of yer orphans aren't orphans until they're older. But it doesn't matter how old you are. And there are lots of ways of being orphanned.

Sometimes I feel like an orphan among orphans.

( -+-+- )

It's too cold to go outside. I'm not acclimated.
fflo: (Default)
It was a beautiful thing that my favorite radical anticonsecutivist (yuk yuk) showed up tonight, wanting to hang with a friend and a movie---esp. cuz he brought a rough cut of Bastards of Utopia, a film, by an anthropologist he knows, about the organizing and activism/resistance of young Croatian leftists. It's an absorbing, personal movie, and it was just the antedote I needed tonight---along with the pausing every once in a while to kvetch to him.

Earlier I'd been watching all the Warner-Night-at-the-Movies contents of the DVD of All Through the Night--- a kind of comedy gangster film of WWII patriotism, with a hefty dose of xenophobia. That's not what I needed the antidote for, though the (Friz Freleng) cartoon had some cringe moments, too. About Chinese people.

All Through the Night opens with three comic actors who will later be B-I-G in TV---Wm Demarest, Phil Silvers, and Jackie C. Gleason (as he's credited)---getting laughs from one-upsmanship of blowhardy homefront anti-Nazi battle strategizing. We're in a restaurant on Broadway; shortly gangster Humphrey Bogart ("Gloves") will show up & complain that they don't have the cheesecake he insists on, and soon, through motherlove, he'll be ensnared in defeating a bunch of German spies, including Peter Lorre and Judith Anderson (Mrs. Danvers in Rebecca). Some great action stuff with an industrial elevator. Some jokes around movie gangster talk. But, too, and get this---the film was made in 1941, and Dachau is referenced (Bogie spelling it out, trying to figure out what it means) as the concentration camp in which the main dame's father was held (and has died)... [edited to say: Dachau, E tells me, had been a "regular" prison/concentration camp since the 1930s--- extermination and death camps didn't get going until 1942.]
fflo: (foot)
It was a beautiful thing that my favorite radical anticonsecutivist (yuk yuk) showed up tonight, wanting to hang with a friend and a movie---esp. cuz he brought a rough cut of Bastards of Utopia, a film, by an anthropologist he knows, about the organizing and activism/resistance of young Croatian leftists. It's an absorbing, personal movie, and it was just the antedote I needed tonight---along with the pausing every once in a while to kvetch to him.

Earlier I'd been watching all the Warner-Night-at-the-Movies contents of the DVD of All Through the Night--- a kind of comedy gangster film of WWII patriotism, with a hefty dose of xenophobia. That's not what I needed the antidote for, though the (Friz Freleng) cartoon had some cringe moments, too. About Chinese people.

All Through the Night opens with three comic actors who will later be B-I-G in TV---Wm Demarest, Phil Silvers, and Jackie C. Gleason (as he's credited)---getting laughs from one-upsmanship of blowhardy homefront anti-Nazi battle strategizing. We're in a restaurant on Broadway; shortly gangster Humphrey Bogart ("Gloves") will show up & complain that they don't have the cheesecake he insists on, and soon, through motherlove, he'll be ensnared in defeating a bunch of German spies, including Peter Lorre and Judith Anderson (Mrs. Danvers in Rebecca). Some great action stuff with an industrial elevator. Some jokes around movie gangster talk. But, too, and get this---the film was made in 1941, and Dachau is referenced (Bogie spelling it out, trying to figure out what it means) as the concentration camp in which the main dame's father was held (and has died)... [edited to say: Dachau, E tells me, had been a "regular" prison/concentration camp since the 1930s--- extermination and death camps didn't get going until 1942.]
fflo: (Default)
fflo

Hello.

CURRENTLY FEATURING
the
Postcard of the Day

(a feature involving a postcard on a day)

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

For another postcard thing, see
my old postcard poems tumblr or
its handy archive.

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I'm currently double-posting here & at livejournal. Add me and let me know who you are, and we can read each other's protected posts.

======================

"What was once thought cannot be unthought."

-- Möbius, The Physicists

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