OOPS! from one of my favorite movies

EDIT: I am very sorry! This posted as a “new” post, but it is an old post that I was trying to edit. It was a scene from a Peter Sellers movie, “The Party,” that I now find problematic in this day and age. I meant to take it down, not republish it! Sorry about that. I hope I have not offended anyone because that was why I wanted to take it off my blog.

NMWA News

I just sent out one of my newsletters announcing that my handmade Artists’ book, All Done But None was just accepted into the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, DC.

All Done But None

This was made possible by a generous donation from the Ann Savage Collection, THE original femme fatale of Detour, and my hero. Special thanks to Kent Adamson, and Sugar Brown, Director George Billis Gallery Los Angeles.

It’s pretty exciting news really.

Also, my new zine (chapbook), Sweetnsour Pie was released by Islands Fold in British Columbia, Canada. They sold like flapjacks, and are now OUT OF PRINT. As far as I knew, there are still a few available at Printed Matter in NY, but someone told me that those might be sold out too. All the proceeds for this have gone to Islands Fold to help fund their artist’s residencies. Good cause.

Right now I am in a Holiday Art Sale at Sabina Lee Gallery with some of my friends from San Pedro and Angels Gate. It’s still up until December 29th, located at 5365 Wilshire Blvd. in Los Angeles. Call for hours: (310) 935-9279 and collect some original art from artists: Edith Abeyta, Rob Abeyta Jr., Marshall Astor, Amy Caterina, davidmichaellee, Chris Elliott, Carol Es, Christopher Grinnell, Betsy Lohrer Hall, Roy Mafune, Kimiko Miyoshi, Lynne Mori, Jon Nakamura, Michael Shaw, Yong Sin, S. Ian Song, Deborah Thomas, Matthew Thomas, and Hoang Vu.

Okay, Happy Holidays. Bye

Recent films

I wanted to make a few comments about some recent films I’ve seen. I never seem to really go into depth about these things, but I am such a film junkie. I figured I should try to make recommendations, make an attempt to express, and give my .02. I have to go through an awful lot of mediocre/shitty films to get to the good stuff, but when it’s good, it’s oh so sweet.

I recently saw Margot at the Wedding (Noah Baumbach) and it was quite a great film. I LOVE films like these. Noah Baumbach also wrote and directed one of the greatest films ever called The Squid and the Whale (2005). I liked that one even more, but his new one hits it on many of the same levels with perhaps a little less tension than I like. Regardless, it is amazingly acted. Nicole Kidman does such a good job, as she always does. Jennifer Jason Leigh (Baumbach’s wife) is also great and plays super well with Kidman. As sisters, they do a few stellar dysfunctional performances together. I identified in how they loved each other, and hated each other. Really, under the face to face niceties, bad mouthing each other the moment other was absent… it’s was so true to life love.

Maybe my favorite acting + writing was between Kidman’s character and her teenage son, played by Zane Pais. We get to watch how the future damage is done for this kid, as his mother (who has Borderline Personality) scrutinizes nearly every move he makes, which in turn is obviously the result of her careful training since she is the archetype.

Jack Black is also in this movie, and I LOVE Jack Black. He is an excellent actor. Funny, yes, but he’s also great at the subtleties too. Brilliant, in fact. That’s not easy to do. He manages to be likable despite his relationship and occupational flaws. I don’t mean to compare the 2 movies so much, I like the differences a lot actually. Baumbach makes everyone in this film more likable than his last. If anyone is the villain in this, it’s Kidman, but she managed to play on my heart strings because of her beauty inside and out.

Another movie (on DVD) that was so incredibly awesome that it changed my life, was Danielson: A Family Movie (Or, Make a Joyful Noise Here), 2006 J.L. Aronson’s debut film about Daniel Smith’s band, which consists of his family and friends. I’d never thought I’d say this, but this documentary about creativity within the Christian faith inspired me more than most movies ever would. It’s the individuality that does it for me. This film is art all the way. As an eccentric musician and visual artist, I bow to him for his brilliance and courage. If you thought there wasn’t anything original left in the world, you need to see this film. Along the way Daniel mentors singer-songwriter Sufjan Stevens, and while very different musically, is just as beautiful. I’ve never seen such a great combination of music, animation, vision, and soul like this before. Additionally, the stage “act” is just flippin outrageous. You might think it’s ironic, but it’s just barely. This is for real visionary stuff like nothing you’ve seen or heard before.

The last time I was that inspired (in a completely different way) from a film was when I saw Tarnation.

shut up

kermit

I wish they would shut up, those talking heads, those jabbering radio mouths, those cluttered thinkers, predicting crap about the polls and what the elections are going to be like. They have hard-ons for liking one candidate, disliking another, backtalking and walking backwards, and contradicting and spitting. It’s all such a waste of air time and moving pictures to guess about what may or may not happen. Is this what it’s going to be like for a whole year? Yup.

welcome back to carol’s bloggie

Welcome back to the new blog. This new blog was over at Blogger for a while, but I decided to bring it back to the site and archive the old blog. So… how do you like it? It’s a new look, I know. And how was your Thanksgiving? I haven’t stopped eating.

An interview article I wrote about artist Mark Steven Greenfield is now featured on Whitehot Magazine’s cover for the Los Angeles section. Check it out.

mark steven greenfield

I’m going back to my weekend now.