Thursday, October 30, 2008

Philly !


2008 World Series Champions
-"nuff said"

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Best Goddamn Cup of Coffee YOU ever had ...

  Abraco Americano, what i get everytime.  Photo: EssG's Flickr                                  

                           Special Agent Dale Cooper

                                    Abraco storefront

What?  You live in the East Village and you still waste your time drinking that rotgut that MUD serves?  or your head is so far up your ass that you actually patronize Starbucks?  Gimme Coffee?  Gimme a break ... Well if you haven't been to Abrasco yet then your coffee world is about to undergo a major fucking revolution.  Abrasco is about the size of my living room but cranks out the boldest, richest, simplest coffee and espresso this side of an Italian train station.  It pains me to blow up this spot cause the weekend lines are already bad enough but you people need to recognize. Pedestrian coffee drinkers beware - High Octane.

The skinny:  Highly caffeinated, big, bold flavor, not watered down, no burnt beans.
                          
                         "The Best Coffee in NYC"
                                 -smilerwithaknife


Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Obama The Calypso Singer



Thats right folks Obama has been called alot of things lately, a socialist, a terrorist etc BUT ... what would McCain & Palin do if they ever got ahold of this???  The guy cut a Calypso record in his swingin youth!  Take a look at the pictures I've got to prove it.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Abel Ferrara: Criminal or Criminally Ignored? (part 1)


"Ed Pressman Sucks Cocks In Hell" 

"He (Werner Herzog) can die in Hell.  I hate these people" 

- Abel Ferrara

Juliette Binoche in Ferrara's Mary

   "Ed Pressman sucks cocks in hell", I was laughing out loud after reading this quote from one of our most important, yet underappreciated, living directors Abel Ferrara.  Ferrara was referring to Producer Ed Pressman's decision to allow Werner Herzog to remake Ferrara's indie-cult masterpiece Bad Lieutenant (1992).  You can read the complete interview here from Filmmaker Magazine.

   I was talking with Martim at the bar the other night and he brought up Rescue Dawn. Now why Wener Herzog would want to make a dramatized action-war movie based on one of his own, nearly flawless, documentaries is beyond me.  Herzog has always been a director I've had nothing but respect and admiration for.  Everyone seriously interested in cinema has their own favorite Herzog film; whether it be the brutally obsessive Aguirre, the terrifying Gulf War documentary Lessons of Darkness or the modern vampire film, his remake of Nosferatu .  So Herzog's got a history of remakes. But WHY in god's name would he attempt to remake one of the most important independent films of the 1990's?  

   I remember going to see Bad Lieutenant in the theater during its first run in 1992.  I was living in Boston at the time and was pretty obsessed with King of New York (1990).  I was greated by a ticker taker with a multicolored mohawk, and asked him how it was.  He flashed me an acid grin and said "you're gonna love it man!"  There were about 12 people in the theater and i think we all loved.   I certainly did and it has since led me to become something of a Ferrara completionist.    

   Ferrara should be revered as one of our greatest living directors, a true independent making difficult films under even more difficult circumstances.   Originally i used the phrase "true independent auteur", however since re-listening to his hilarious commentary on the King of New York dvd i decided that autuer wasnt the right moniker for Ferrara.  While discussing the film its like he isn't even a part of it, constant interjections of "look at that beautiful shot"  "that's the way you kill someone" "that gold light is fucking beautiful" make him sound more like a fan than the director.      And he is, and thats what sets him apart (again).  He's a fan of his collaborators and an admirer of their craft, and he doesn't take credit for their technical expertise.  He is an anti auteur, welcoming any and all onset ideas over ego.  
   
   Instead his films are forgotten, rarely distributed or released in the US and even here in his hometown of New York.   New Rose Hotel (1998) had a limited run at Cinema Village, Blackout (1997) was, to my knowledge, never released and Mary just had it's NY screen debut at Anthology Film Archives after winning the Grand Jury Prize at the Venice Film Festival in 2005.  Go-Go Tales (2007) still hasn't seen a release and was only marginally covered by the press around the time of the NY Film Festival.  I was fortunate enough to see it there with a guffawing, inebriated Grace Jones hooting and hollering a few rows behind me.  I was so irate about the lack of coverage for Go-Go Tales in NY Magazine's film issue, which feted the return of "The NY filmmaker" to the festival,  highlighting Wes Anderson(ugh), The Coen Brothers and Noah Baumbach(barf), that I wrote the editor a letter.

  Ferrara's work since his masterpiece Bad Lietenant has been a scattershot affair. Blackout, a trashy, cocaine feuled odyssey of marital infidelity; New Rose Hotel, a bizarre take on corporate espionage; Mary, a meditation on religion, redemption and the controversial "Jesus film"; and Go-Go Tales a degenerate screwball comedy about a compulsive gambler strip club owner all failed to even remotely interest audiences. But then again people never really had the chance to see these films.  The films that were accessible,  and in a way stylistically more controlled, did hit.  The Addiction (1995) and The Funeral (1996) were both genre pictures, horror and gangster respectively, that found their audiences and both ended up staying in the theaters for much longer than 2 weeks. 
   
   Part of Ferrara's success is that he's always been able to get great performances out of his actors.  Christopher Walken as Frank White in King of New York is legendary; Harvey Keitel's Bad Lieutenant is a "beyond Oscar" tour-de-force of modern acting; Lily Taylor in the Addiction, and the all star ensemble cast of The Funeral, with Chris Penn giving the performance of his career, all these films held up both critically and at the box office.  The one Ferrara film that is just too dark, merciless, and intense that it could never reach a mass audience, despite starring Madonna, is Dangerous Game (1993).  The film for me is Ferrara's criminally ignore other mid-90's masterpiece.  Dangerous Game, along with Michael Mann's The Insider (1999) is among the most visionary films to emerge from the 1990's.  Its a film that stars Madonna and Harvey Keitel in the most complex film within a film plot ever committed to celluloid.  Guess what?  It never came out, and the critics who did see it trashed the hell out of it.  It is, however ironically, Madonna's best performance although that's not saying much.  And it does give us insight into Ferrara's working method and his technique.  I'm currently working on a full length article on the merits of Dangerous Game so I'm going to cut this short.
   
   Ferrara's latest film to surface is Mary (thank you Anthology Film Archives).  Mary is Ferrara's attempt to deal with one of his oft revisited themes: redemption and Catholocism.  Matthew Modine plays a Mel Gibson with shades type director making a movie about the life of Christ influenced by the Gnostic Gospels in which Mary Magdelene is seen as not only a disciple of Christ but also the author of her own Gospel.  Julliette Binoche stars as the title character who becomes so obsessed with her role that she flees to the holy land in search of her own personal truth/religion.  The third concurrently running storyline is that of Forrest Whitaker's Charlie Rose esque religious talk show host who is questioning his own faith and relationship with his pregnant wife Heather Graham.
   Modine's character, Tony Childress/Christ, is sort of an amalgamation of Gibson and Ferrara.  You could also view it as Ferrara's response to, or attempt to, capitalize on the controversy and success of Gibson's film.  I see it more in the lineage of Scorsese's Last Temptation of Christ.  And others yet will link it to another, very different, blockbuster film based on the Gnostic Gospels, The DaVinci Code.  The film beings within the film until Modine interjects "cut!".  Ferrara constantly returns to the film within the film format in his work.  Dangerous Game, Blackout, and Mary all utililize this technique and, often it leads to a blurring of reality, especially so in Dangerous Game.  When the film reality begins we quickly realize that both Childress and Binoche's Marie/Mary are on their own trips.  Childress'  is a power one and an obsessive filmmaker, Marie's is an obsession with her own spiritual quest.  Childress can't wait to get off the set and cut the film, Marie can't wait to get off the set so she can go on her own personal spiritual quest.  

>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>TO BE CONTINUED >>>>>>>>>>>>

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Song of the Week + CMJ nonsense

Bruce Spingteen 
"DREAM BABY DREAM" (Suicide Cover)
2008
limited vinyl 10" ep (4000)


It's no secret that the Boss has been a Suicide admirer for some time now, just have a listen to State Trooper (Frankie Teardrop) off Nebraska (which he recorded in his fucking bedroom).  And on his 2005 Dust and Devils tour he took to showing that admiration live with his beautiful cover of the classic "Dream Baby Dream".  The version here is from that very tour.  The cover itself is a stripped down dream of a song with harmonium and Springsteen's cracklin', raspy vocals.  You can just hear the love for the song dripping off each word of his Jersey countrified phrasing. Its a drone, a repetive trance that builds to Springsteen's out of breath cresendo.  In other words - how fucking cool is this ?

Shout out to Paul Smith at Blast First for securing the rights and releasing this.  Check out Blast First's website for forthcoming releases of Suicide covers by established and emerging musicians like Grinderman, Spiritualized, Primal Scream and more. I should mention that the B side features a live version of "Dream Baby Dream" that Suicide performed for an NBC television show called "Midnight Special" in 1979 and another Suicide cover of "Mr Ray" by Brooklyn based band Beat The Devil.

Well not everyone seems to think this is as cool as do.  I ordered this from Amazon UK because i wasn't sure if this limited UK manufactured gem would make it over here, but on a recent trip to a crowded Other Music no one even touched it on the shelf.  "Sign of the times" one of my pals said ... probably true.

After all its music week in NYC - CMJ.  And what a lackluster line-up CMJ  has served up for us this year.  People were more interested in copping the latest Vivian Girls bore... I've lived in NYC since '93 and with the exception of very few NY based bands have i ever felt more disinterested with the current crop of "cutting edge music" ... blah ...

smilerwithaknife cmj recommended:

Crystal Stilts
Beach House
Psychic Ills

.... dream baby dream .....