#robinson crusoe of clipper island
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
FLASHING! 💥
into this theatre
🎶🎺🥁🎻🎺🪈🎶
a Thrilling
fourteen chapter serial
🎶🎺🪈🎶
starring— 🌴
M A L A
The
Sensational
HERO of "ESKIMO"
in the
greatest
ADVENTURE PICTURE
of his daring career
"ROBINSON CRUSOE
of
Clipper Island"
🌊🌊🌊
with
🌺 MAMO CLARK 🌺
"Wife"
of
CLARK GABLE
in
"MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY"
REX, 🐎
KING OF
WILD HORSES
"Whinny!"
BUCK, 🐕
famous
movie dog hero…
"Woof!"
BILLY JOHN
NEWELL WARD
"Well, perhaps this is the impediment!"
"Gawd dang it, Tupper, I just fixed that!"
and
vast tribes
of
🌊🌴 South Sea Island 🌴🌊
natives
based
on a book
All Youth Loves
🌊!
Daniel Defoe's
GREAT ADVENTURE STORY
🥁"ROBINSON CRUSOE" 🥁
MADE GREATER,
MORE THRILLING,
MORE
MYSTERIOUS,
MORE PERILOUS
"As you leap into the fire pit, Princess Melani, remember the vengeance of a priest of Pele."
🔥🔥🔥
"Woof!"
💥💥💨
with
Trans Pacific Airships
brought
DOWN 🔥
🎶
Derelict
white men
scheming
with natives
Leading them into
dark plottings
🎶
Trapped by
VOLCANOES
and
EARTHQUAKES
💥
"Hold it!"
MALA
"Don't move."
Using submarines,
seaplanes, 🛩
radio stations,
secret caves
🎶
Let
MALA
lead you
through
FOURTEEN CHAPTERS
of
Tingling Thrills
🎶
COMING SOON
to this theatre
Watch
for it‼
🎶🎺🎶
A
Republic
SERIAL
#robinson crusoe#robinson crusoe of clipper island#30s film#racism#anti-native racism#watch for so much shirtless ray mala#native representation#alaska native representation#benevolent racism#period-typical racism#anti-pacific islander racism
1 note
·
View note
Photo
Mamo Clark with Ray Mala in Robinson Crusoe Of Clipper Island (1936)
61 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Bad movie I have The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe of Clipper Island 1936 (Last 7 episodes of the 14 episodes serial)
#The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe of Clipper Island#Republic Pictures#Mala#Rex the Wonder Horse#Buck the Dog#Mamo Clark#Herbert Rawlinson#William Newell#John Ward#John Dilson#Selmer Jackson#John Picorri#George Chesebro#Bob Kortman#George Cleveland#Lloyd Whitlock#Tiny Roebuck
1 note
·
View note
Text
HERBERT RAWLINSON.
Filmography
1911 The New Superintendent
1915 The Black Box
1918 The Turn of the Wheel
1919 The Carter Case
1919 A House Divided
1921 Cheated Hearts
1922 Man Under Cover
1923 The Prisoner
1925 The Prairie Wife
1925 The Flame Fighter
1926 The Belle of Broadway
1926 Trooper 77
1926 The Phantom Police
1927 Slipping Wives
1927 The Bugle Call
1936 Robinson Crusoe of Clipper Island Grant Jackson
1936 Let's follow the fleet
1936 Bullets or Ballots
1937 S.O.S. Coast Guard
1937 Back in Circulation
1937 Blake of Scotland Yard
1937 That Certain Woman
1938 Marie Antoinette
1939 Bitter victory
1940 Swiss Family Robinson
1940 King of the Royal
1940 Seven Sinners
1940 Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe
1941 King of the Texas Rangers
1941 I Wanted Wings
1942 Don Winslow of the Navy
1942 Perils of the Royal Mounted
1942 Perils of Nyoka
1943 The Masked Marvel Mr.
1943 Daredevils of the West
1948 Superman
1953 The Stranger Wore a Gun
1954 Jail Bait.
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Hyperallergic: How Pirate and Parrot (Mis)Understand One Another
In Eugene Ostashevsky’s book-length sequence of formally varied poems, The Pirate Who Does Not Know the Value of Pi, a pirate and his parrot go a-raiding, partying and punning their way across the high seas:
They raided packet boats, pedal boats and boats at once packet and pedal, palanders, pirogues, pontoons, and gondolas made of metal, dhows, dinghies, baidarkas, catamarans and clippers, feluccas, garrookuhs, tankers, bathtubs and bathroom slippers!
(“The Ballad of the Pirate and His Parrot,” 11)
“We’ll pester people for piasters, those irrational stars, As we sail seas unsoiled both near and far With our Jolly Roget and our fun pun 2πARRRGH!”
(“Pirate Parrot Love (feat. Israel Hands),” 46)
Like Robinson Crusoe (or the crew of the Minnow, from Gilligan’s Island), the pair find themselves shipwrecked on a deserted island – yet, as the Parrot points out to the Pirate, “It can’t be deserted if we’re on it.” (76)
Although he spins his tale in outrageous and hilarious rhymes across several languages, including English, Greek, sign, logic, math, and Russian, Ostashevsky is deadly serious. He’s a father of two young daughters and a fan of Dr. Seuss, and he no longer thinks it is “possible to write anything serious that is not funny.” The pun is one of his preferred tools:
For me, the heart of language is the pun. Puns are its opacity and materiality. They at once obstruct meaning and multiply it … Puns are about non-understanding and plural understanding, and understanding with unresolved contradictions. What they are not about is the one-truth model. (Interview, May 2012, with Jack Little. Ofi Press Magazine, Mexico City, No. 20.)
While we laugh as the piratical pair contemplate “whether booty actually is truth,” at the core of these poems lie the opacity, instability, and deep pleasures of language; the tragic and comic encounters between discoverer and “native” and between self and Other; and the unreliability of translation or communication. “Hello, nice weather we’re having, says the parrot. How do the grammatical structures of your language affect your experience of it?” (“The Island of the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis,” 111)
Eugene Ostashevsky (photo by Natasha Nisic)
These matters are the crux of Ostashevsky’s project. They were likewise central to his previous book, The Life and Opinions of DJ Spinoza (New York: Ugly Duckling Presse, 2008), in which our Pirate and Parrot made their first, brief cameo appearances. These questions also haunt the Russian OBERIU poets of the 1920s and ’30s, such as Daniil Kharms and Alexander Vvedensky, whose work Ostashevsky has edited and translated. If we speak different languages, if your native language is one I have acquired, do we experience the same thing in the same way? If, upon my arrival, you suddenly become “the other,” can we communicate at all? Does the effort to acquire and use another language change what we see? If the ultimate “other” is a member of another species, then can beasts reason? Do they have souls? How can you tell? In Ostashevsky’s book, Meliboeus and Tityrus (characters from Virgil’s Eclogues 1) debate the question here, and Descartes weighs in with a definitive answer (which Ostashevsky draws from a letter Descartes wrote to the Marquess of Newcastle on November 23, 1646):
The only way a man shows his body is not just a self-moving machine, but harbors a soul with thoughts, is by using words or other signs that stand for particular concepts and yet do not express any passion. A parrot can be taught to say hello to its master only by making the utterance of this word the expression of one of its passions. Thus if it is trained to say hello with a cracker, its hello will express its desire to eat one…. It is because animals have no thoughts but only passions that they cannot speak. Having no thoughts, they have no souls.
(“The Nudnik Who Became a Jihadnik: III. Cartesian Meditations,” 61)
Yet here’s a fragment of the conversation between our castaways, as they relax on the beach of their island:
Where does happiness come from, asks the parrot.
Where does your happiness come from, asks the pirate.
I feel happy when I am having an abstract thought, says the parrot. But that occurs very rarely.
Why, asks the pirate.
Because I’m not so intelligent, says the parrot. This is my Great Inner Grief.
You’re much more intelligent than me, says the Pirate Who Does Not Know the Value of Pi.
I know, says the parrot. But that’s not enough.
(“Happiness,” 86)
The existential difficulties rooted in language; the intimate but circular conversations fraught with gaps, frustrations, and misunderstandings; the risks and hope behind each attempt to communicate with another are present and enacted in the poems. We are faced with the loneliness of trying to make meaning in a world which, like the value of pi, is infinite yet offers neither pattern nor sequence. We can respond with both humor and beauty:
Of ARRRGHs and the pirate I sing and of the parrot and entailments.
The pirate tells a tale of great odds. The day ends. The nearsighted evening,
evening out all prizes, all signs of shipping, dissolves what cut on the horizon
harbors his pie. The parrot ponders what his tale meant.
(“Of ARRRGHs and the Pirate I Parrot,” 95)
In addition to fragments of Shakespeare, Poe, Keats, Stevens, Russian poets and Yiddish songs, embedded in the poems are texts of 16th and 17th-century explorers, describing their encounters with “natives” and “beasts,” both of which suddenly become “indigenous” upon the ship’s arrival. A glossary of words and phrases compiled in the late 16th century by explorer John M. Davis feels both utilitarian and utterly opaque, both languages unfamiliar to the modern reader:
Kesinyoh, Eate some.
Madlycoyce, Musicke.
Aginyoh, Go fetch.
Yliaoute, I mean no harme.
Ponameg, A boat.
Paaotyck, An oare.
Asanock, A dart.
Sawygmeg, A knife.
(“Particular Natives,” 117)
In this collection language is examined and experienced as a source of bafflement, tragedy, and pleasure. The poems are deftly woven from a variety of languages, traditions, and texts. Ostashevsky, whose first language is Russian, spins his song from the displacements and discoveries of his own voyages for our reading pleasure. Even the pirate and the parrot step out of the frame and away from the text to converse on matters existential:
“What a beautiful song,” said the pirate. “I wish I knew all the ship-names in it.”
“Shhh,” said the parrot. “We’ll look ’em up later.”
“Later when?” asked the pirate.
“When this book is over,” said the parrot.
The pirate fell into deep thought.
“Will we exist when this book is over?” he suddenly asked.
“If it’s a good book,” said the parrot.
(“The Ballad of the Pirate and His Parrot,” 12)
Despite being buffeted by storm and shipwreck and existential questions, our pirate and parrot never lose their balance. Neither does Ostashevsky in this hilarious, deeply serious, collection.
* * *
NOTE: In the interests of full disclosure, the author confesses that she has lived for 42 years with a yellow-naped Amazon parrot named George, who, upon hearing it read aloud, also fell in love with the book. He objects to the fact that Ostashevsky’s references to Hafiz, al-Ghazali, and parrots in Persian literature are excluded from this review. All his other suggestions have been incorporated.
Eugene Ostashevsky’s The Pirate Who Does Not Know the Value of Pi (2017) is published by New York Review books and is available from Amazon and other online booksellers.
The post How Pirate and Parrot (Mis)Understand One Another appeared first on Hyperallergic.
from Hyperallergic http://ift.tt/2opxnR2 via IFTTT
0 notes
Photo
Mamo Clark and Mala, Robinson Crusoe of Clipper Island (1936)
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Filmografía
Cine
1911 The New Superintendent
1915 The Black Box
1918 The Turn of the Wheel
1919 The Carter Case
1919 A House Divided
1921 Cheated Hearts
1922 Man Under Cover
1923 The Prisoner
1925 The Prairie Wife
1925 The Flame Fighter
1926 The Belle of Broadway
1926 Trooper 77
1926 The Phantom Police
1927 Slipping Wives
1927 The Bugle Call
1936 Robinson Crusoe of Clipper Island
1936 Sigamos la flota
1936 Bullets or Ballots
1937 S.O.S. Coast Guard
1937 Back in Circulation
1937 Blake of Scotland Yard
1937 That Certain Woman
1938 María Antonieta
1939 Amarga victoria
1940 Swiss Family Robinson
1940 King of the Royal
1940 Seven Sinners
1940 Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe
1941 King of the Texas Rangers
1941 I Wanted Wings
1942 Don Winslow of the Navy
1942 Perils of the Royal Mounted
1942 Perils of Nyoka
1943 The Masked Marvel Mr.
1943 Daredevils of the West
1948 Superman
1953 The Stranger
1954 Jail Bait
Televisión
1952 Aventuras de Superman
1953 The Burns and Allen Show
1954 Mr. and Mrs. North.
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_Rawlinson
#HONDURASQUEDATEENCASA
#ELCINELATELEYMICKYANDONIE
0 notes
Photo
Mamo Clark and Mala, Robinson Crusoe of Clipper Island (1936)
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
FLASHING! 💥
into this theatre
🎶🎺🥁🎻🎺🪈🎶
a Thrilling
fourteen chapter serial
🎶🎺🪈🎶
starring— 🌴
M A L A
The
Sensational
HERO of "ESKIMO"
in the
greatest
ADVENTURE PICTURE
of his daring career
"ROBINSON CRUSOE
of
Clipper Island"
🌊🌊🌊
with
🌺 MAMO CLARK 🌺
"Wife"
of
CLARK GABLE
in
"MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY"
REX, 🐎
KING OF
WILD HORSES
"Whinny!"
BUCK, 🐕
famous
movie dog hero…
"Woof!"
BILLY JOHN
NEWELL WARD
"Well, perhaps this is the impediment!"
"Gawd dang it, Tupper, I just fixed that!"
and
vast tribes
of
🌊🌴 South Sea Island 🌴🌊
natives
based
on a book
All Youth Loves
🌊!
Daniel Defoe's
GREAT ADVENTURE STORY
🥁"ROBINSON CRUSOE" 🥁
MADE GREATER,
MORE THRILLING,
MORE
MYSTERIOUS,
MORE PERILOUS
"As you leap into the fire pit, Princess Melani, remember the vengeance of a priest of Pele."
🔥🔥🔥
"Woof!"
💥💥💨
with
Trans Pacific Airships
brought
DOWN 🔥
🎶
Derelict
white men
scheming
with natives
Leading them into
dark plottings
🎶
Trapped by
VOLCANOES
and
EARTHQUAKES
💥
"Hold it!"
MALA
"Don't move."
Using submarines,
seaplanes, 🛩
radio stations,
secret caves
🎶
Let
MALA
lead you
through
FOURTEEN CHAPTERS
of
Tingling Thrills
🎶
COMING SOON
to this theatre
Watch
for it‼
🎶🎺🎶
A
Republic
SERIAL
#robinson crusoe of clipper island#robinson crusoe#aġnatchiaq#ray mala#mamo clark#is it good? no. do i rec it? yes.#30s film#film history#cw racism#benevolent racism#period-typical racism
1 note
·
View note