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Journalist Jon Ronson was invited, more or less out of the blue, to visit the Stanley Kubrick archive at the filmmaker's home in Childwick Bury, outside of London. In today's edition of The Guardian, he describes what he found. His favorite typeface? Futura Extra Bold. Sillyest lawsuit? Against the makers of TV series Space 1999. Most-researched project? Probably Napoleon, which never got made. And if you ever sent the man a fan letter over the years, chances are it's meticulously filed to this day under "positive," "negative" or "crazy."
I'm not a huge Kubrick fanboy, I swear. But I certainly respect his achievement, and a story like this is fascinating for the glimpse it offers into the daily routine and mindset of eccentric, solitary genius. Those-wacky-filmmakers yarns do get a little stale, but this is a fairly good one.
Posted by Bryant Frazer at 03:58 AM | Comments (3) | TrackBack
There's an amusing conversation between Kevin Smith and David Ansen online at Smith's viewaskew.com site. I'm not a Kevin Smith fan -- I like his movies in concept, but rarely in execution. But it's sorta interesting to see a polite exchange between The Filmmaker and The Critic (Vincent Gallo v. Roger Ebert obviously doesn't count).
Posted by Bryant Frazer at 02:50 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
In New York next Wednesday, March 24? Feel like dressing up as a zombie and seeing the [i]Dawn of the Dead[/i] remake?
Posted by Bryant Frazer at 09:13 AM | Comments (2) | TrackBack
Yahoo! News - Spalding Gray's Body Found in East River
So that's it for Spalding. Obligatory remembrance: Spalding Gray represented my first-ever brush with celebrity (unless you count an even earlier interview I did with Stan Brakhage, which come to think of it I guess you should but whatever because Spalding was quite a bit more famous at the time). It was not too long after the success of the film version of Swimming to Cambodia, and he was coming to CU — Boulder, where I was working on the student newspaper, to perform his Monster in a Box monologue. I landed a phone interview and asked him a whole series of stupid questions, with which he was very patient. I remember laughing when he mentioned somebody whose name sounded like "Tommy Shlommy" just because I had never heard Thomas Schlamme's name pronounced that way before, and laughing again when I asked him what he liked about appearing in Hollywood films like Beaches and The Killing Fields and he responded, "Well, it's one way to get health insurance." Of course, I didn't realize at the time that in the world of grown-ups, even famous ones, health coverage was A Big Deal, and I credit Gray with cluing me in to the very ordinary, boring struggles that even successful artists had to contend with on a regular basis. (I grew up in a town that nobody famous ever visited, except Jesse Jackson on one notable occasion, and therefore had rather naive ideas about the nature of celebrities.)
I later saw the performance in person and thought it was just great, and it blows my mind that someone (anyone!) with that kind of legacy, that facility with ideas and communication, would be driven by whatever demons to off himself by, apparently, jumping into the East River. Contemplating that level of unhappiness certainly helps me put a few things about my own life in the proper perspective.
Posted by Bryant Frazer at 07:18 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Got a filmmaking jones and a hundred thousand bucks to spare? You might want to bid on the custom production package, including cameras, lenses, lights and sound, that Vincent Gallo assembled for The Brown Bunny. Also included is a zoom lens purportedly custom-built for Kubrick's Barry Lyndon.
Be sure to read far enough down in the description to see the potshots taken at some of Gallo's contemporaries.
Posted by Bryant Frazer at 09:56 AM | Comments (1) | TrackBack