Sunday 24 June 2012

Retronomicon #1

Vintage British Argos 1986 Catalogue
I want them all!
Wandering around the internet, my mind sometimes gets stuck in a nostalgia groove. Old cartoons dug up on youtube, background information to things from my childhood on Wikipedia, you get the idea. A particular favourite I came across recently was a series of scans of old argos catalogues from the eighties and seventies that trippyglitters had posted on Flickr.
It's fun to spot the toys that I had and the ones that I wanted, while looking at the price of these things and bemoaning my lack of a time machine to go back and buy these things. Must. Resist. Urge to go on ebay.
Have a look for yourself here:
Argos 1976 catalogue
Argos 1985 catalogue
Argos 1986 catalogue




Saturday 23 June 2012

Deep Cult #1



Miracle Mile (1988) dir. Steve De Jarnatt

Why haven't more people heard of Miracle Mile? A clue may be that I first heard about it in a list of 10 recommended depressing movies. Yet while the film is certainly dark (nuclear apocalypse anybody?), I don't think that is necessarily the reason. It seems more likely that this is simply a case of limited distribution combined with a lack of critical exposure. Which sucks.
An indie Cloverfield minus the found footage conceit with giant monster substituted for impending nuclear destruction plus awesome Tangerine Dream score equals relatively unknown cult masterpiece. Check it out (if you can).

http://m.imdb.com/title/tt0097889/

Tuesday 12 June 2012

Listomania #1

5 Recommended Books on Film

1. The New Biographical Dictionary of Film by David Thomson
I would hesitate to call this a reference book as such, but it can certainly be read like one. Thomson is somebody you might not always agree with but you have to respect his reasoning. He can be gloriously bitchy, fascinatingly wayward and always immensely readable. This book topped a Sight & Sound poll to find the best book on film and a recent new edition means I need to buy the damn thing again.

2. How To Read A Film by James Monaco
This is the one essential book for anybody that wants to start developing a critical insight into film. A film course in book form.

3. Spike Mike Slackers and Dykes by John Pierson
After I left school, I received a fair few book tokens for some reason (surely I could have done with them while at school?) and I used them to buy a selection of film books that I had my eye on for some time. I still had some money left over and I bought this book partly because I liked the title and also because I had recently seen Clerks and it included contributions from Kevin Smith. A study of the American independent film movement from the early-eighties to the mid-nineties, the book covers the films that John Pierson was involved with such as She's Gotta Have It, Roger and Me and Clerks, while providing a fascinating insight into the realities of low budget film-making and the business of independent film during a very interesting time in its history.

4. Herzog on Herzog edited by Paul Cronin
The Faber 'on' series were just brilliant books and I lament the fact that they seemed to have stopped producing them. Limiting myself to choose just one of them I would have to go for the Werner Herzog book, largely because his career is, shall we say, more unconventional than the other directors and his stories are so entertaining and....fuck it - ITS WERNER HERZOG! In conversation. You can read the book and hear his voice in your head! Awesome.

Sidebar: If Faber were continuing to produce this series, and apart from a second edition of Herzog on Herzog obviously, which directors should be included?

5. Nightmare Movies by Kim Newman
This was re-released last year in an all new expanded edition and what I loved about this book is that I would stop reading every few minutes to check the availability of a film I hadn't heard of but had to see as soon as possible. Kim Newman is a legend and Nightmare Movies is an essential book for every horror fan.

Sunday 10 June 2012

Getting Started

A look at some of the television highlights of the next week.

Sunday
Nina Conti - A Ventriloquists Story: Her Masters Voice
9pm, BBC4
"A genuinely astonishing, moving and honest piece of film-making" - The Guardian
Louis Theroux: Twilight of the Porn Stars
10pm, BBC2
A follow up to his previous Weird Weekends episode concerning the US porn industry.
The Testament of Dr Mabuse
11pm, Sky Arts 1
The second of the three Mabuse films from Fritz Lang.

Monday
Mirrormask
7.05pm, Film4
From the minds of Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean. 

Tuesday
Passport to Pimlico
3.05pm, Film4
Absolutely sublime comedy about post-war austerity from Ealing
Community
10.30pm, SonyTV
What do you mean you've never heard of Community? It's only the best American sitcom being made right now.

Wednesday
Bigger Than Life
11.35am, More4
Nicholas Ray film from 1956 starring James Mason
No Country for Old Men
9pm, Film4
Best Picture winner from the Coens.

Thursday
Senna
9pm, Sky Atlantic
Brilliant documentary about the life of Ayrton Senna
Dead Boss
10.30pm, BBC3 
New comedy series set in a women's prison from writers Sharon Hogan and Holly Walsh

Friday
The Thief of Bagdad
11.20am, More4
Michael Powell was one of the directors on this amazing Korda-produced fantasy.
Punk Britannia
9pm, BBC4
The final episode in this excellent series covers the post-punk years 1978-1982