Passages

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beamish14
Joined: Fri May 18, 2018 7:07 pm

Re: Passages

#10351 Post by beamish14 »

Aunt Peg wrote: Sat Nov 26, 2022 11:03 am Irene Cara has passed away aged 63 https://abc7.com/irene-cara-flashdance- ... /12495906/

She got an unbelievably raw deal from the music industry. It took her many years to recover the millions she was owed.
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dwk
Joined: Sat Jun 12, 2010 10:10 pm

Re: Passages

#10352 Post by dwk »

Albert Pyun
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colinr0380
Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 8:30 pm
Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK

Re: Passages

#10353 Post by colinr0380 »

dwk wrote: Sun Nov 27, 2022 6:25 amAlbert Pyun
That's really sad, but not too unexpected. The Red Letter Media channel did a video looking at Cyborg and Arcade last week in response to the news that he was apparently ailing and his relatives asking if anyone wanted to pay their respects to him whilst he was still around. It would be nice to think that he was able to see that tribute, at least. Pyun also made an early film version of Captain America, which is the one in which the character's primary trait is misdirecting people so that he can steal their cars and drive off in a cloud of dust! Including doing it to the heroine!

I keep meaning to track down his debut film The Sword and the Sorceror at some point, because that actually looks like it has the budget to match the ambition.
Last edited by colinr0380 on Sun Nov 27, 2022 2:12 pm, edited 4 times in total.
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Mr Sausage
Has Risen from the Grave
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 1:02 am
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Re: Passages

#10354 Post by Mr Sausage »

Pyun's Nemesis is not a good movie, but it does have one of the most creative and striking shots in action cinema.
beamish14
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Re: Passages

#10355 Post by beamish14 »

I’m a big fan of Pyun’s Dangerously Close (1986), which has one of the best “stinger” final shots that I’ve ever seen
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Michael Kerpan
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Re: Passages

#10356 Post by Michael Kerpan »

Japanese director, Yopichi Sai: https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2022 ... -dies.html

The two films of his I saw were Doing Time (about life in the Japanese prison system) and Blood and Bones (with Takeshi Kitano as a Korean-Japanese business owner who brutalizes not just "competition" but pretty much everyone around him). The former film was much lighter than the latter....
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colinr0380
Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 8:30 pm
Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK

Re: Passages

#10357 Post by colinr0380 »

I never got to see Blood and Bones - I remember back around 2005 Tartan Video announcing a DVD edition of it in the UK, which I excitedly pre-ordered (either through MovieMail or Bensons's World mail order! Those were the days!) but that was around the time that Tartan were beginning their troubles and the film never got released.

Doing Time on the other hand I have seen thanks to Finch selling me his copy of the US Parlour Pictures DVD, which even came with a reprint of a chapter of the autobiographical manga that the film was based on! Being based on that kind of slice of life manga is probably why it feels like it is broken up into episodic incidents of daily life behind bars for the group of men that we follow in their routines, which makes everything feel ordered and somewhat strangely comforting after the upheavals that have brought each of the men to the prison. There's another lovely nod to Kitano in this film too, with the treat for some of the inmates of being allowed to watch a film, which turns out to be Kids Return!

This also makes me hope that Impulse Pictures still have not finished with their long running series of releases of Nikkatsu's Roman Porno films, since one of Sai's earliest films was made under that rubric, 1983's Sex Crime (NSFW), that starred Yuki Kazamatsuri from Sailor Suit and Machine Gun! And Kazamatsuri also starred in Sai's debut (non-Nikkatsu) film from the previous year, Mosquito On The Tenth Floor, which features a cameo appearance from Kitano the same year he was in Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence! (Sai had been an assistant director to Oshima - and would also much later turn up in an acting role in Oshima's Gohatto - so that might explain the connection there)
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Michael Kerpan
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Re: Passages

#10358 Post by Michael Kerpan »

All Under the Moon is supposed to be one of Sai's best films -- but I've never seen it (and it certainly never got any subbed released -- not sure if it got an unsubbed DVD release long ago).
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Caligula
Carthago delenda est
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Re: Passages

#10359 Post by Caligula »

Clarence Gilyard, who many here will remember as Theo from Die Hard
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hearthesilence
Joined: Fri Mar 04, 2005 8:22 am
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Re: Passages

#10360 Post by hearthesilence »

Caligula wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 5:45 am Clarence Gilyard, who many here will remember as Theo from Die Hard
I had family members who watched Walker. Texas Ranger all the time - I never realized Gilyard was also the hacker in Die Hard, and had no idea he reprised the role in the final "installment" which was a bizarre two-minute commercial of all things.
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flyonthewall2983
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Re: Passages

#10361 Post by flyonthewall2983 »

The one black character in Top Gun
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Mr Sausage
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Re: Passages

#10362 Post by Mr Sausage »

Artist Tom Phillips, creator of A Humument.
beamish14
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Re: Passages

#10363 Post by beamish14 »

Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac

Arguably the nucleus of the group during its most commercially successful period. Songs like “Isn’t it Midnight” are among the group ever produced
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soundchaser
Leave Her to Beaver
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Re: Passages

#10364 Post by soundchaser »

Jesus, what??? I had no idea she was that old. Was just listening to the highly underrated Tango in the Night yesterday - "Everywhere" and "Isn't It Midnight," as you mentioned, are serious highlights.
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hearthesilence
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Re: Passages

#10365 Post by hearthesilence »

Sounds silly to call her underrated in some respects, but given how much attention's given to the others, she really is. After Green left and before Buckingham and Nicks joined, she was singing and composing by far their best material, and even when they blew up into superstars, she was still IMHO competing with Buckingham as the group's best songwriter. (I like Nicks, but she was a distant third to those two.)
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flyonthewall2983
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Re: Passages

#10366 Post by flyonthewall2983 »

This version of her song co-written with Buckingham “Mystified” was released a few years ago on the deluxe version of Tango in the Night, and sprang to mind after “Songbird”, melodies with their own memories behind them. She had a tremendous voice of course but I think what really gets lost is just how good of a musician and arranger she was too.
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hearthesilence
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Re: Passages

#10367 Post by hearthesilence »

Besides her big hits from the Buckingham/Nicks era ("Say You Love Me," "You Make Loving Fun"...), I love these numbers from the wilderness years:

Spare Me a Little of Your Love
Remember Me
Dissatisfied
Did You Ever Love Me
The Way I Feel
Show Me a Smile
Why
Heroes Are Hard to Find
Come a Little Bit Closer
artfilmfan
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 1:11 am

Re: Passages

#10368 Post by artfilmfan »

Very sad news. “Songbird” is one of my all-time favorite songs. May she Rest In Peace.
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joshua
Joined: Sat Jul 11, 2009 9:11 pm

Re: Passages

#10369 Post by joshua »

beamish14
Joined: Fri May 18, 2018 7:07 pm

Re: Passages

#10370 Post by beamish14 »

joshua wrote: Thu Dec 01, 2022 1:27 am Aline Kominsky-Crumb
Oh, wow. She was a remarkable artist
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Lemmy Caution
Joined: Wed Mar 29, 2006 7:26 am
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Welcome to Deng XiaoPing's China ...

#10371 Post by Lemmy Caution »

Jiang Zemin. China's leader during its early rise to global economic powerhouse. Head of the Shanghai technocratic leadership clique that pushed economic development over politics. Jiang was a grandfatherly face of a gentler more open China, with his goofy oversized glasses and penchant for reciting the Gettysburg Address in English. Of course, also able to play cut-throat one-party insider hardball, notably deftly sidelining the entire Beijing commie leadership cadre, sending the Beijing party head to jail and the dramatic suicide of the #2 BJ leader. One convenient aspect of a system based on corruption -- why else would communist officials cede their own power to businessmen? -- is that it's super-easy to sideline your political opponents with genuine indictments for taking bribes and abusing official positions for huge profits. And the Falun Gong movement was ruthlessly crushed -- despite seemingly embodying Jiang Zemin's call for a spiritual civilization -- essentially a dress rehearsal for the brutalization of the Uyghur Muslims the past 5+ years.

Genuine large-scale economic privatization occurred, such as slashing the bloated gov't SOE workforce, and transferring housing from govt ownership to individuals, providing ordinary Chinese with capital and triggering a massive housing renovation and building boom. (I advocate US public housing being given or sold very cheaply to current residents, to similarly give the poor significant assets and opportunity).
Real, albeit small and tentative, political reform occurred, including businessmen encouraged to join the communist party and national congress, while some multi-candidate elections were held in villages, a nascent small-scale democracy pilot project which was to be considered for cities later. It was a big deal when President Bill Clinton visited a top Chinese university, and his speech was broadcast live on Chinese national Tv (even if they failed to translate into Chinese the part about Tibetan repression -- remember when the US/West actually showed concern about Tibetan cultural genocide?)

Jiang's China was what the West thought they were getting when they welcomed China into WTO, wherein China would join the world economy and in the midst of growing wealth be able to gently slough off communism in favor of pluralism and democracy. Of course, things have taken a rather different path, where China's rise has led to increased authoritarian rule, political control over the economy, the revival of state-owned enterprise, wholesale surveillance and crackdowns on any dissent, military and economic aggression, super-rich businessmen being brought to heel, and even an unwillingness to follow WTO and other western-imposed rules (HK Basic Law, Law of the Sea, etc).

Jiang's legacy was somewhat thwarted by old school Deng XiaoPing favoring red princelings and party discipline over western-oriented technocrats. And in many ways, Xi JinPing's China is what Deng XiaoPing, a dedicated hard core communist since the 1920's, envisioned for China when in the span of a few years he both authorized the Tiananmen military crackdown and then pivoted to capitalist informed economic reform. Market-Leninism has transformed China into an increasingly wealthy communist nation, a hitherto unknown type of political entity (unless it has simply veered into fascism).

The timing of Jiang's death is also interesting, as historically Chinese have used an outpouring of support for a past leader as a means of challenging the current leaders. Will the current Covid protesters use Jiang's death and his preference for reform and openness to defiantly criticize the current policies? It's hard to stop folks from publicly mourning a renowned past communist leader ...
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Mr Sausage
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Re: Passages

#10372 Post by Mr Sausage »

Brad William Henke at 56. Apparently he's well known for Orange is the New Black, but I'll always remember him as Coover Bennet from Justified.
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Dylan
Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 1:28 am

Re: Passages

#10373 Post by Dylan »

Mylène Demongeot, who is perhaps best known outside of Europe for her role in Otto Preminger's Bonjour Tristesse.
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domino harvey
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Re: Passages

#10374 Post by domino harvey »

She was one of the titular apartment girls in Deville’s film, RIP
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Pavel
Joined: Fri Aug 07, 2020 6:41 pm

Re: Passages

#10375 Post by Pavel »

Issei Sagawa, famous cannibal and subject of the film Caniba
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