Wednesday, 24 March 2010

Richard Hell trashes re-release of 'Blank Generation' movie

Richard HellSinger and bassist Richard Hell has accomplished much in his career. First he co-founded the Neon Boys in 1972 that later became the legendary punk group Television. He left the band in 1975 to join the Heartbreakers and then later became the leader of the Voidoids. In addition to releasing albums, most recently last year's 'Destiny Street Repaired,' Hell is a writer of several books.

Yet there is one project in Hell's resume that he is probably not excited about: his participation in the 1980 movie 'Blank Generation,' which shared its title with Richard Hell and the Voidoids' 1977 debut album. Directed by Ulli Lommel, it starred Hell as Billy, a New York musician engaged in an on-and-off romantic relationship with a television reporter from France named Nada, played by Carole Bouquet.
"Well, it's diplomatic to call my feelings 'mixed,'" Hell tells Spinner. "Apart from my biased appreciation of the movie for providing a unique record of my original band playing three or four songs live, the film is ridiculously, irredeemably bad."
However, the musician recently revisited the film for its DVD release, which came out last week, by participating in a new interview for a bonus feature. It was at the request of the film's rights owners.
"[I] told them I'd do an interview," Hell, who also co-wrote the film, says, "if they'd let me be honest in it. It seemed like fun to me to bring out a rerelease DVD, the main bonus feature of which was a relentless trashing of the movie itself by its main actor."
The film also contains footage of Hell and the original Voidoids -- drummer Marc Bell and guitarists Ivan Julian and Robert Quine -- performing onstage. "In my opinion, apart from my band, there's not a good scene in the film," Hell says, "though there are people it's a kick to look at."
One of the movie's highlights is an appearance by Andy Warhol as himself who takes a photograph of Bouquet. "Typically of Lommel, the director, he wanted Warhol for the marquee value, but he treats him disrespectfully in the movie," says Hell.
Still, in his DVD interview with the writer Luc Sante, Hell does pay compliment to Elliot Goldenthal's musical score as well as the cinematography. Because he liked the way 'Blank Generation' was shot, Hell suggests that the movie footage could perhaps be used for something else.
"It would greatly help to insert some naked body doubles for a little spice, but that might create legal problems," he says. "Whatever you did, it would end up a comedy. And if I took it on, I'd want a lot of money because it would be really hard to make it interesting. I'm available though! It would be cheaper than making a new 35mm color movie in 1978 with people as pretty as us."
Hell recalls 'Blank Generation' having a limited release in theaters back in 1980. "I can't remember anyone telling me they'd recognized me from having seen me in the film," he says. It didn't disrupt Hell's acting career as he would go on to star in the 1982 Susan Seidelman-directed film 'Smithereens.'
Asked what the legacy of 'Blank Generation' the movie, would be, Hell responds: "Legacy??? My interview on this [DVD] rerelease is its greatest legacy."

The War Next Door

The man on the screen wears a long black veil. His voice is penetrating, his hands are strong with thick fingers. He is telling of his work, killing people for money, a trade he pursued with some success for 20 years. Another man watches the film with rapt attention. He is a fugitive from Mexico who now lives in the United States. The reason he left is simple: He had to pay a $30,000 ransom for his 1-year-old son, this on top of the $3,000 a month he was paying for simple protection.

I don't ask him whom he was paying because he probably does not know. People with guns, maybe drug people or simple criminals, maybe the police or the army. People with guns inspire belief because he knows of others who failed to pay and then died.

He stares at the screen and says, "I know him. He's a state policeman."

He's right.
Read more...
Charles Bowden @'High Country News'
Charles Bowden is THE expert on what goes on at the Mexican-American border...

The fine craft of needles...


… for instance, in ‘Fibrilacija’, Tabar performed a medical procedure called fibrillation, where he, while fully conscious, pushed a catheter all the way to his heart so that the audience could see the moment when his heart trembled on a monitor.“ In another of Tabar’s pieces  ‘Luknjo v koleno’ (hole in the knee) he drilled though his leg with the aid of a ½ inch surgical drill in front of a live audience. (He’d had some practice – having previously drilled though some beef bones from a local butchers to perfect the technique.)

This guy sounds like the future of Monty Cantsin.

No superpowers yet? How about I throw a sun at you?


Or simulate it anyway. As in, multiple body problem + gravity + some programming = solar billiard!

Clinton pledges broader US effort on Mexico drugs gangs

REpost: I am 'verklumpt' too


Save yourself thousands of dollars & find out all about xenu...

Aboombong - Never Been To Konono

<a href="http://aboombong.bandcamp.com/album/asynchronic">Never been to Konono by aboombong</a>
Album available
HERE
jayrosen_nyu
Were it up to News Corp and the AP, not only would linking and aggregation be under assault, so would spreading the news. http://jr.ly/ybb4

The public wants HCR, USA Today finds


Mexico's drug wars rage out of control

sinaloa mexico drug war victims
Murders in the drug wars are becoming increasingly gruesome. Photograph: AP

Saturday: A shoot-out between rival cartels in the north-western state of Sinaloa leaves nine dead, including six peasant farmers caught in the crossfire.
Sunday: Gunmen burst into a wedding in a small rural town in the southern state of Guerrero, killing five.
Monday: Hitmen target two people driving in Ciudad Juárez. The scene recalls the murder of three people linked to the US consulate 10 days earlier.
Tuesday: Newspapers publish a photograph of an alleged drug dealer being arrested by marines next to pictures of a body dressed in the same clothes which was found dumped on Monday.
Just a small selection of incidents from the last five days of Mexico's raging drug wars that have left few parts of the country untouched over the last three years . A snap visit today by the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, is a sign of how concerned the US is getting about the spiralling violence just over its southern border.
With more than 2,000 people killed since the new year, 2010 is shaping up to overtake the record 6,500 drug-related murders last year, which topped the toll of more than 5,000 in 2008. The killings have happened despite an offensive against the cartels involving tens of thousands of soldiers and federal police launched in December 2006 by the president, Felipe Calderón. .
"We will not take even one step back in the face of those who want to see Mexico on its knees and without a future," Calderón said on Sunday. But such expressions of determination do little to counter the impression that the authorities are unable to deal with the killings, which are marked by ever more inventive cruelty and savage perversion.
International coverage focuses on the relentless violence in Ciudad Juárez, which has turned the city across the border from El Paso, Texas, into the deadliest in the world, with 191 murders per 100,000 citizens.
But this is a complex and multi-faceted series of regional conflicts involving at least six organised crime groups which use corruption as well as firepower to control territories.
"The federal government is too weak to control the state governments so it is crazy to think they can control organised crime in those states," says Samuel González, a former drug czar turned critic of Calderón's military-led strategy.
González says it is illusory to hope that the war will burn itself out through the emergence of a single, clearly dominant cartel. "Every organised crime group has some degree of protection from local authorities which makes it impossible that one can gain [national] hegemony."
Much of the violence has been between the Sinaloa cartel, led by the country's most famous trafficker, Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, and rivals vying for control of cocaine trafficking corridors across Mexico. The killing is also associated with growing cartel interest in other crime, from the growing domestic drugs market to kidnapping, arms dealing and people smuggling.
Some of the most vicious recent violence has been in the north-eastern state of Tamaulipas. The Gulf cartel and its military wing, the Zetas, had assumed terrifying and absolute control over the busiest commercial stretch of frontier in the world. A pax mafiosa – the mafia's peace – briefly reigned between the two gangs, with commercial and civic life subjugated by an omnipotent extortion racket.
But over the past month, an internecine battle has exploded in the Gulf cartel. According to reports reaching the Guardian from Reynosa, the epicentre of the fighting, 200 people were killed over three weeks in late February and early March.
In Reynosa, at least eight journalists have been kidnapped in recent weeks. Two were visiting reporters from Mexico City who were later released and are too frightened to talk about their ordeal. One other was found tortured to death and five are still missing.
Information from a journalist who must remain nameless for her own safety described armoured cars cruising through Reynosa marked CDG – Cartel del Golfo – or else with the letters XX to denominate the Zetas.
After one reported gun battle in Reynosa, the Gulf cartel hung a message from a bridge. It read: "Reynosa is a safe city. Nothing is happening or will happen. Keep living your lives as normal. We are part of Tamaulipas and we will not mess with civilians. CDG."
The government has sent in crack units of the marines but with little obvious success. A crime reporter from Ciudad Victoria, also in Tamaulipas, told the Guardian that he was on his way to cover a shoot-out last Thursday when traffickers called his mobile phone and warned him not to publish anything. "They know everything about you. I don't know how they do, but they do," he said. "If you publish anything about them they don't like, or somebody in the government who is protecting them, then you are going to regret it, big time."
The following day there were five gun battles across the city, and on Saturday there were a further three. Of these, only one was referred to by the state government website that promises reliable information about the violence. Local news outlets decided against publishing government promises to improve security after warnings from the traffickers. Publishers self-censor complaints of abuses by the army for fear of angering the third force also battling for control of Tamaulipas.
Meanwhile, the axis of the conflict in Juárez is the attempt by El Chapo to muscle in on the turf traditionally controlled by the Juárez cartel.
In the urban nightmare of Juárez, amid closed factories and abandoned homes, the pyramids of narco-cartel power have collapsed into a state of criminal anarchy. Here gangs fight a ruthless war for the local plaza, or dealing turf. Municipal and state police forces are infested by corruption, forming mini-cartels of their own. The role of the army in Juárez has also been called to account by a Chihuahua state human rights official, Gustavo de la Rosa, who accuses the military of playing a part in "social cleansing", as most of the dead are addicts and former users.
"The difference between Juárez and Tamaulipas is that in Juárez the state still has a degree of formal presence, however incompetent," says Edgardo Buscaglia, who specialises in comparing worldwide trends in organised crime. "In Tamaulipas the state is absent. It is like Afghanistan."
• Amexica: War Along The Borderline, by Ed Vulliamy, is published in September by Bodley Head, London, and Farrar Straus Giroux, New York.
Jo Tuckman @'The Guardian'

Destination Subconscious: Cary Grant and LSD

"I knew Cary Grant very well and he loved ... what did they call it? Acid! LSD. He said he liked to take the trip." - Debbie Reynolds
"I learned many things in the quiet of that room ... I learned that everything is or becomes its own opposite ... You know, we are all unconsciously holding our anus. In one LSD dream ... I imagined myself as a giant penis launching off from earth like a spaceship." - Cary Grant
It was 1943. Cary Grant was starring in the motion picture Destination Tokyo; an action-filled wartime drama co-starring John Garfield and a deluge of racial slurs. While America was embroiled in the intense fighting of World War Two, Axis powers had surrounded the neutral country of Switzerland. Deep within Nazi surrounded boundaries, Swiss chemist Albert Hoffman was busy toiling away in a dimly lit laboratory, about to study the properties of a synthesis he had abandoned five years earlier. Hoffman was trying to devise a chemical agent that could act as a circulatory and respiratory stimulant when he accidentally absorbed lysergic acid through his fingers. While Americans sat in darkened theaters enjoying Cary Grant's portrayal of a submarine captain, Hoffman was experiencing accelerated thought patterns, polychromatic visions and an unbearable onslaught of intense emotion. This was the world's first acid trip. The discovery was soon to transform the life of one of Hollywood's most glamorous stars.
Cary Grant was the first mainstream celebrity to espouse the virtues of psychedelic drugs. Whereas novelist Aldous Huxley's famous 1954 treatise The Doors of Perception recounted his remarkable experiences with mescaline, Huxley was hardly mainstream - a darling of intellectual circles to be sure, but a far cry from a matinee idol. Grant was one of the biggest stars Hollywood had to offer when he jumped headlong into Huxley's Heaven and Hell. His endorsement of subconscious exploration, arguably, created more interest in LSD than Dr. Timothy Leary who was largely preaching to the converted.1 Grant on the other hand was the fantasy of countless Midwestern women. He convinced wholesome movie starlets like Esther Williams and Dyan Cannon to blow their minds. When Ladies Home Journal and Good Housekeeping interviewed him, the topic of conversation wasn't Cary's favorite recipe or "the problem with youth today." Instead, Cary Grant was telling happy homemakers that LSD was the greatest thing in the world...
Continue reading @'WFMU'


(My thanx to HerrB!)

Eric Whitacre's Virtual Choir - 'Lux Aurumque'


Check the youtoob page for the individual singers videos.

日本仔好攪嘢


LOL!
(Thanx Dave!)

Obama Signs Landmark Health Care Bill

Wait, are you trying to tell me something?

I propose a toast to the universality of language. Have a sip! Czachy!

If my name was Kapitan Kamikaze, I'd be an electrifying superhero for sure.