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Advent calendar, day 9!
Finally! I can show you my rope dancer Crowley, for my Good Omens Circus AU â¤ď¸ with this beautiful red by @le.pigmentarium
Aziraphale the magician is so secretly in love with him ^^
#advent calendar#aziraphale x crowley#good omens crowley#crowley#rope dancer crowley#good omens#good omens fanart#aziracrow#innefable husbands#good omens au#good omens circus au#good omens after dark#aziracrow circus au
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Oh my god, season 2 is The Tales of Crowley Hoffmann
I guess this has to be a series now too. Part 1 l Part 2
When Aziraphale wants to perform a show-stopping magic trick in S2E4, he is shown the "Professor's Nightmare," a rope trick, and references "Prof Hoff himself" at the end of the minisode.
Because we love double meanings so much around here, I decided to actually watch the Powell & Pressburger epic opera film "The Tales of Hoffmann," assuming it was the another P&P easter egg and the other Hoffmann (not the magician) that was being referenced.
One, this movie is unhinged. Two, this season IS The Tales of Hoffmann. Allow me to explain...
There are shot for shot quotes literally everywhere throughout the season.
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Automaton Ball) & Good Omens Season 2 "The Ball"
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Hoffmann watches Stella perform) & Good Omens Season 2 "The one with the zombies"
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Clerk in Automaton Ball) & Good Omens Season 2 "The Ball"
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Tale of Antonia, Hoffman & Antonia) & Good Omens Season 2 "The Clue Crowley & Aziraphale"
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Prologue) & Good Omens Season 2 "The one with the Zombies"
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Tale of Giulietta Banquet scene) & Good Omens Season 2 "The Clue Banquet scene" *By the way Hoffmann wears a goatee for this tale
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Prologue "Dragonfly dance") & Good Omens Season 2 Prologue "Before the Beginning" *This is Stella and un unknown devil drangonfly, NOT Hoffmann
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Tale of Antonia) & Good Omens Season 2 "The Clue"
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Tale of Antonia) & Good Omens Season 2 "The one with the Zombies"
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (Automaton Ball) & Good Omens Season 2 "The Ball"
P&P The Tales of Hoffmann (End credits through Hoffman's glasses) & Good Omens Season 2 end credit scene.
Stella & Aziraphale. This one makes me laugh.
There are SO MANY MORE, but tumblr has an image limit. Seriously, it's nuts.
2. It seems simple and straightforward, but it's not at all
" Why would ambitious filmmakers simply film an opera? Many admirers of the work of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger have assumed that their decision to make The Tales of Hoffmann (...) was in some way an admission(...) that they couldnât go on making their edgy, over-the-top melodramas after the rejection and interference theyâd suffered (but) thereâs a case for considering The Tales of Hoffmann as one of the finest and boldest works that Powell and Pressburger produced, so far ahead of its time as a wholly âcomposedâ film, combining visual and musical elements, that it has still not been fully appreciated... Late in his life, Powell himself said that he thought it was one of the best films that he and Pressburger had made. What makes the film so remarkable is a series of paradoxes: the fact that it virtually reinvented the freedom and fantasy of silent cinema while making full use of Technicolor and a stellar cast of dancers and singers..." - Criterion, The lives of marionettes
3. The structure of the story is the same as the show
Here is the story of the Movie** (Not really the Opera that inspired it) In the prologue, we see the dance of the dragonflies onstage at a ballet. Count Lindoff (very bad dude) is spying on both the principal dancer Stella, and the audience member Hoffmann (who's admiring her). Lindoff is behind the scenery. During her dance, Stella passes a love note to her assistant for Hoffmann. The bad dude intercepts it out of jealousy. During the intermission, Hoffmann goes down to the tavern next door, watched by his sort of buddy in red, Nicklaus. People ask him to tell stories to while away the time, and so he tells 3 stories (actually four but we'll get back to that).
We launch into 3 tales/minisodes in other times and places : 1. The Tale of the Ball of the Automaton where he falls in love with a robot. He is humiliated. 2. The tale of Venice (Giulietta) where he falls in love with a courtesan/double agent who crosses him. 3. The tale of Antonia, where he falls in love with a girl who feels trapped by her living dad, her dead mom and a mysterious bad dude (Lindoff). She is murdered in a ring of fire, but becomes a ghost and is resurrected and sent back to earth. At the end, we snap back to the tavern in the real world. Hoffmann reveals that these three women are all metaphors for how he feels about Stella, his true love. He's drunk and depressed now, thinking she never sent for him after the show. Stella arrives in the tavern looking for Hoffmann, ready to run away, but now accompanied by Lindoff (dressed as an angelic figure) who followed her. She looks to Hoffmann to save her, but he's too blinded by the fact that he doesn't think she loves him back to pick up on the signal. He gives up, and she goes back up the stairs guided by Lindoff. Her assistant (who was bribed by Lindoff at the beginning) is given the go ahead by Lindoff to go back to the tavern and taker over. They close the door to the tavern, while she walks up ethereal stairs with the bad dude. THE END.
The one story that doesn't fit into the minisodes and is told in the real world is Kleinzach. We understand by the end of this one that this is Hoffmann's self loathing about never being good enough for Stella, because Stella is perfect and Hoffmann is ugly and deformed. The main love interest attempts to steal Kleinzach's essence through a mirror by the end. 4. Powell & Pressburger recast four actors in new roles In The Tales of Hoffmann, P&P decided to recast four of the principal actors/dancers from the film The Red Shoes in new roles, wanting to recreate the magic that they brought to the first ballet film. Sound familiar?
5. Crowley is Hoffmann
"The Tales of Hoffmann" original 1881 costume concept for Hoffmann & Crowley costume sketch for S2E3 1827 Edinburgh. Glasses are a really important aspect for Hoffmann in both the opera and the movie versions of The Tales of Hoffmann. Hoffmann is gifted metaphorical magic glasses that he wears to be able to perceive his love in a way they aren't really in real life. In the opera, he wears dark glasses to shut out the real world, not just as a metaphor. Check out a modern day version of the opera's Hoffmann costume :
He's french and slamming a beer but you get it. Crowley also canonically loves watching movies. It would make so much sense that his minisode recountings with him and Aziraphale would resemble different styles of movie that he loves. Seeing as we see him drive away at the end as the last character, an argument could be made for him being the ultimate narrator of the story in season 2.
6. The original American release of The Tales of Hoffman had 14ish minutes cut out of it by the studio. So we all know by now that whole debacle about having the clocks jump 14-15ish minutes during the kiss?
"The Tales of Hoffmann found an audience far wider than expected, despite Kordaâs misgivings about the movieâs running time and his decision to cut 14 minutes out of the film for its American release." - Criterion, The Tales of Hoffman
I have been unable to unearth what the difference between the American & British versions of the P&P Tales of Hoffmann is, if you know let ME know. I want to know! _____________________________________
And I HAVE SO MUCH MORE. This is long enough already so I'll save the more detailed stuff for a new post.
**The opera is a whole other beast. You can read about it here, but basically there's a lot more going on in the opera because the composer died before finishing it, and multiple versions exist after the original uncompleted score got lost IN A FIRE. Anyway. Here's part 2
#good omens meta#good omens season two#art director talks good omens#go season 2#good omens 2#go meta#good omens season 2#go2#crowley x aziraphale#anthony j crowley#aziraphale and crowley#aziraphale x crowley#crowley and aziraphale
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The Night Raven Circus AU
"Come one, come all, to the most daring show in all of Twisted Wonderland! Witness spectacles beyond your imagination. Death Defying Aerial dances. Beasts from Hell tamed. Creatures from the depths. Dolls given life and fires run wild. I, Dire Crowley, will be your host this evening. Welcome the Night Raven Circus!"
â¨đŞâ¨
The Night Raven Circus is a famous show that travels all over Twisted Wonderland. With it's Whimsical and Gothic aesthetic, to it's large cast of performers and attractions, it has always stood out over the years and has earned its excellent reputation. And, befitting it's name, the circus is only open at night.
The Ring Leader, Dire Crowley, had hired the best performers he can find. From Lilia, the best swordsman around, known for his sword swallowing an knife throwing tricks and his son Silver who is also learning the act. The fire breather Malleus. Who due to his draconic heritage is able to command fire and control it, leading to a thrilling act that scares and excites the audience. Jamil the talented hypnotist that calls audience members to take part. Along with many more.
The newest addition to the cast being Isabelle, a Beast Tamer. But instead of working with your average circus animals, she tames monsters. Griffins, Hellhounds, and of course, Grim, a feline creature that can go from a kitten to a large fire maned beast.
Other recent additions to the performance lineup being Dires daughter, Darling. Where she controls her hand crafted and life like dolls to perform for the audience. And Dreary, who has a tent she tells fortunes out of. Though most of her predictions are fake, and all her real visions are only bad things to come.
However, with all the fame of the circus, comes those seeking to topple it. The rival Playfulland Circus is run by a man known as the Coachman. The inner workings of their business being shady at best. Whenever they happen to be in the same area as The Night Raven circus, little things tend to go wrong. A wardrobe malfunctions, a prop or two going missing. Giddel has even been caught sneaking around now and then and promptly scolded. However, lately things star to escalate. Equipment is being damaged, costumed shredded. Isabelle has found the cages of her beasts unlocked when she knows for a fact it was closed.
However things take a turn for the deadly when Clara, an aerial dancer, was performing when the rope holding up the hoop she was hanging from snapped and she fell. She walked away with only a few injuries, but now Dire was enraged and needed to find a way to get back at the Playfulland circus for this.
With Darling taking over the slot that was for Claras routine, the rival circus is now keeping a new eye on the new talent to see what else they can sabotage or even copy.
Au thought I talked with @marrondrawsalot (The owner of oc Darling Crowley) about.
@mangacupcake @writing-heiress @the-weirdos-mind
Feel free to add what your characters might be doing in the circus or as audience members. Or even which circus they're apart of.
#twisted wonderland#twst oc#twst yuu#miss yuu#isabelle rosa#not my oc#darling crowley#dreary crowley#clara cristalerĂa#malleus draconia#dire crowley#lilia vanrouge#twst silver#twst gidel#twst giddel#fellow honest#night raven circus au
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9/17 from the fanfiction tropes. And obviously, Ineffable Lovers. Have fun with that one
Dance AU and War AU
Crowley is a dancer in the 1940s. Heâs well-known in London by the time the war starts.
Then, he meets Aziraphale who isnât so well-known only because he refused to accept much fame through the Depression and war tensions. He never performed in shows that charged people for tickets. Dancing was an escape, he always thought, and it would be wrong to gatekeep art from people when they need it the most.Â
When the war starts, thereâs calls for entertainers to advertise the National Savings Movement. Aziraphale and Crowley get roped into doing a show together. At first, Crowley is kinda confused about what dancing is going to do to win the war, but he gives up on trying to figure it out when he sees Aziraphale because fuck heâs in love immediately.Â
end me two (2) tropes from this list + a ship and Iâll describe how Iâd combine them in the same story. Â
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WHAT TO WATCH THIS WEEKEND September 13, 2019 Â - ONE CUT OF THE DEAD, FREAKS, HUSTLERS, THE GOLDFINCH and more
Weâre well into September, and the Toronto Film Festival is slowly grinding to a halt as I continue to sulk for missing so many movies that I wonât be able to see until November or December. At least Iâll be at the New York Film Festival this month, and thereâs a little bit of overlap there.
Besides the wide releases, thereâs some really good limited releases this week, but I want to focus specifically on three movies that played at the What the Fest?! in New York City back in March:
The first of them is the Japanese zombie horror-comedy ONE CUT OF THE DEAD from director Shin'ichirĂ´ Ueda, which Shudder is releasing and streaming after it played a number of festivals including last yearâs Fantastic Fest. What can I say about this really innovative film? I guess I can tell you that itâs about a zombie attack on the crew of a zombie movie, but that wouldnât be the whole story. Honestly, itâs best to go in not knowing too much about it, other than itâs not your typical zombie movie. The complex intricacies of what Ueda does with his cast makes this one of my favorite recent zombie-related movies since the similarly great Korean film, Train to Busan. One Cut of the Dead will be released in New York (at the IFC Center) and in L.A. on Friday but then it will get special one-night screenings next Tuesday (Sept 17) in other citiesbefore premiering on the Shudder streaming channel sometime down the road. And if youâve been wondering why everyone who sees this movie keeps yelling âPom!,â well youâll just have to see the movie for yourself.
Another great movie from âWhat The Fest!?â is Zach Lipovsky and Adam Steinâs FREAKS (Well Go USA), which will open a little wider than some of the other limited releases this weekend. It stars relative newcomer Lexy Kolker as Chloe, a young girl living in a world where those with powers are considered âfreaks,â shunned and captured for experiments. Her father (Emile Hirsch) has been keeping her in hiding, but as Chloe gets older, she has questions about her mother, and also, thereâs that weird ice cream man (Bruce Dern) who seems to know about her. Freaksis really a fantastic film from these filmmakers, Lipovsky having directed Leprechaun: Originsa few years back. I was truly impressed with Kolkerâs performance opposite much more experienced actors, and Lipovsky/Stein find a way to build up the story to a satisfying climax.
Iâll have an interview with the directors over at The Beat later this week, as well.
I also want to call attention to DEPRAVED Â (IFC Midnight), the new film from director Larry Fessenden, which is his take on the Frankenstein mythos with David Call playing Henry, an army medic who decides to build a human being called Adam (played by Alex Breux), but finds his invention hard to control as Adam remembers his past. Another âWhat the Fest?â vet (actually, this yearâs opening night film), Depraved also stars Joshua Leonard, ChloĂŤ Levine and Ana Kayne, and itâs so nice to have Larry back making movies. You can read more with Larry in my interview over at The Beat.
And then of course, there are this weekâs wide releases, STXfilmsâ HUSTLERS and Warner Brosâ THE GOLDFINCH, which Iâm hoping I get to see one or both by the time this posts. If so, Iâll have review of both of these movies below. (Note: I did get to them, and theyâre both interesting movies in that neither of them was anything like I expected.)
Iâm really curious about HUSTLERS (STXFilms), because itâs the third film from director Lorene Scafaria, whose previous films, Seeking a Friend for the End of the World and The Meddler, I quite enjoyed, mainly because they featured actresses I like. I can take or leave Jennifer Lopez, but I genuinely love Constance Wu, and I really want to see what she can do in a more dramatic role. And then, of course, thereâs the premise of New York strippers scamming a bunch of sleezy rich men out of their money, which is based on a New York Magazine article. Thatâs just one of those great pitches that makes me think many will be interested in checking it out this weekend, and it might do better than expected.
Mini-Review: I honestly think Hustlers is going to be an interesting litmus test for whether people who usually frown or turn their noses at the very real adult entertainment business that permeates big cities and small towns alike will be able to look past the setting to appreciate it for the skillful crime-drama that it is.
The film begins in 2007 with Constance Wuâs Dorothy on her first day at a big New York City strip club where she has to deal with slimy Wall Street types and equally sleazy bosses who take a big chunk of her earnings. Things change when she meets Jennifer Lopezâs Ramona, the absolute queen of the strip club scene, which you can tell as you first watch her performing. Ramona knows the ropes and takes a liking to âDestinyâ (Dorothyâs stripper name) enough to befriend her and give her some tips.
After a bit  more shenanigans explaining how things work in stripping, the story then cuts forward years later after Dorothy has had a child and is a single mother needing money. She returns to the club but business isnât as good after 2008 as the Wall Street jerks arenât as anxious to throw their money around. When Ramona reenters her life, the two of them come up with a scheme to drug their marks and then empty out their credit cards of money. Itâs going well, and theyâre getting away with it to the point where they need to expand.
Although Scafaria uses a fairly standard format to tell this story in the screenplay â basically having Constance Wu telling Julia Stylesâ reporter the story as it plays out -- itâs the way she allows the story to unfold which allows the film to improve as it goes along. Sure, itâs a little predictable where and how things are going to go wrong, but the movie still works on quite a few levels beginning with the performances by Wu and J-Lo that a lot of people will be talking about later. When we first see Lopez dancing, she looks absolutely amazing, and it must be incredibly empowering for a former dancer now 50 years old to be able to get on stage with barely any clothes on and strut her stuff.
A lot of why the movie doesnât come across as sleazy as it might otherwise (such as in the hands of a male director) is the way that Scafaria focuses so much on the friendship between Ramona and Dorothy and what happens as things start breaking down between them, especially when Dorothy starts growing a conscience. The rest of the mostly-female cast is great, although most of the men in the movie are depicted as such slimy and disgusting pigs, itâs hard to feel sorry for them either.
Hustlers is the type of movie that we wouldnât blink if Scorsese or even producer Adam McKay had directed, but the fact that Scafaria can transition so smoothly from her light comedies to something so well-constructed is part of why the movie is so impressive.
Iâm not sure if women who see this movie will rush out to take stripping classes in order to fuel their sense of empowerment, but Hustlers is a genuinely enjoyable film that tells a fascinating story and Scafaria should get full credit for making another movie this good.
Rating: 8/10
I donât know nearly as much about THE GOLDFINCH (Warner Bros.) except that itâs based on a best-selling Pulitzer price-winning book by author Donna Tartt, and it has an insane cast that includes Ansel Elgort, Nicole Kidman and Jeffrey Wright. I know that reviews out of TIFF were not good, and Iâm not sure it will find an audience even with the popularity of the book.
Mini-Review:Â I havenât read The Goldfinch, and actually, Iâm kind of glad I didnât read it before seeing this John Crowley-directed movie, because it might have taken away from one of the main reasons I enjoyed it.
The basic premise is simple but the overall story and movie that tells the story is quite complex, maybe needlessly so, but if I didnât know this movie was based on a beloved book, I could totally have guessed that was the case since so much of what happens in the movie is more literary than cinematic⌠though not necessarily in a bad way.
The story revolves around Theo Decker, played as a youngster by Oakes Fegley and about ten years older by Ansel Elgort. We meet Theo shortly after his mother was killed in an explosion at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, after which heâs turned over to the wealthy Barbour family, his friend Andyâs mother overjoyed to bring Theo into their family of five. Just when things are going well, Theoâs real father (Luke Wilson) shows up and drags the boy back to his home in a desolate area outside Vegas with his white trash girlfriend (played by an unrecognizable Sarah Paulson). There, Theo makes a new friend in Boris (Finn Wolfhard), and the two of them get into trouble, smoking cigarettes, drinking and doing drugs. And then stuff happens. Â
If you havenât read the book, Iâm not going to do a play-by-play on the plot, because SO MUCH happens in this movie, and thatâs part of why itâs enjoyable because itâs such rich and dense storytelling ably pulled together by Brooklyn director John Crowley.
One of the things I will mention is the movieâs title âThe Goldfinchâ which is a priceless work of art that Theo takes from the Met after the explosion, and he holds onto it for years, for reasons we wonât learn until much later. Another piece of the puzzle is Jeffrey Wrightâs Hobie, who restores antiques into convincing fakes. Thereâs also Pippa (Ashleigh Cummings), the granddaughter of Hobieâs business partner who also died in the explosion.
There is a way that these people connect together, and a reason why almost all of them have an important place in Theoâs journey, but there is absolutely nothing predictable about how many of these pieces will come together. To say that The Goldfinch is full of unexpected surprises would be an understatement.
I generally liked Oakes Fegley better as Theo than Ansel Elgort, but Finn Wolfhard quickly steals the movie as Theoâs eccentric friend, who returns later in the guises of Aneurin Barnard. Both pairs of actors make their portions of the film particularly interesting. In fact, I thought that Nicole Kidman probably brought the least to her role as Theoâs adoptive mother.
Filmed by Oscar-winning cinematographer Roger Deakins, the movie looks absolutely gorgeous, leaving little question why he is considered the master. Every actor and location looks amazing, and thereâs a lot of variety in environments in which the story takes place. On top of that, the choices in music really helped me to enjoy this movie, even if itâs the choice of New Order to introduce Finn Wolfhardâs Boris, all dressed in black, to the rest of the score by Trevor Gureckis that helps bolster the filmâs more dramatic moments.
Yes, the movie does feel long at times and maybe a little slow, but itâs also quite captivating because you never know where things are going, and everything is so unpredictable. You have to give props to screenwriter Peter Straughn for tackling such difficult material in such a fluid way. (I will mention that thereâs at least one aspect of the filmâs big plot twist that is almost impossible to believe, but I wonât ruin it.)
In my opinion, all of these seeming tangents that take Theo on this wild journey does pay-off with an ending that got me quite teary-eyed. Sure, itâs long at 2.5 hours but Theoâs story is a complicated one to tell, and it all adds up and pays off eventually.
Rating: 7/10
Amazon Studios has been advertising that Paul Downs Collaizoâs BRITTANY RUNS A MARATHON nationwide this Friday but that could mean anywhere between 500 and 1500 theaters or more. I hope itâs somewhere in the middle, as Iâd like to see it make a play into the top 10 like The Peanut Butter Falcon did last weekend. Itâs a terrific film and Jillian Bell is quite wonderful in it, oh, and if you havenât read my interview with her, you can find that over at Next Best Picture. Itâs a fun interview and a fun movie, so I hope people make an effort to check it out.
LIMITED RELEASES
One of the more interesting releases of the weekend is the Colombian film MONOSÂ (Neon /Participant Media) from director Alejandro Landes that centers on a pack of wild gun-toting teenagers living on a mountaintop in the South American jungles where they run sort of wild but also are well-trained as a fighting unit. They actually have taken a hostage, a doctor played by Julianne Nicholson, who is just great in this role, continuing to show off how sheâs one of the most underrated actresses working today. Thereâs definitely a âLord of the Fliesâ feel to Landesâ film which has been submitted by Colombia as its Oscar submission for the newly-labelled âBest International Film Festival,â and I wouldnât be surprised if it finds enough fans to get into the short-list, at least. Not sure about the nomination as this is already a tough year with high-profile submissions like the new Almodovar and Bong Joon-hoâs Parasite. Still, I think this will find its share of fans, and I can recommend it for its artistry more than as something you must rush out to see.
GKIDSâs latest animated release is ANOTHER DAY OF LIFE, based on the book by journalist Ricardo Kapuscinski that looks at the outbreak of civil war in Angola after being freed of its independence from Portugal in 1975. The autobiographical film follows  KapuĹciĹskiâs search for the rebel leader Farrusco through wartorn Angola, so this is very much an animated documentary similar to Waltz with Bashir. It will open in New York at the IFC Center and in L.A. at the Laemmle Glendale this Friday.
And then thereâs Michael Tyburskiâs THE SOUND OF SILENCE (IFC Films), which stars Peter Sarsgaard, an actor I generally like, as a âhouse tuner.â Basically, he goes into peopleâs apartments and find out what notes or tones are causing them anxiety or preventing them from sleeping. One of his clients is a woman, played by Rashida Jones, and they sort of have a thing going, but Sarsgaardâs character is so strange and the movie is so slow, I didnât really get more than an hour into this before I gave up. Â This was based on a short film called âPalimpsest,â and while âThe Sound of Silenceâ is a much better title, this is a concept that probably works best as a short, since as a feature, itâs boring as fuck.
Another Friday the 13thhorror release is Scott Becks and Bryan Woodsâ HAUNT (Momentum Pictures), which follows a group of friends who go into an âextreme haunted houseâ on Halloween in a night that turns deadly. Unlike the movies mentioned above, I feel that this really should have been held until next month, because itâs just going to get lost in the shuffle of all of the releases this weekend.
Since this column doesnât post until Wednesday, I should probably mention that Rob Zombieâs new movie 3 from Hell will get a three-day wide release on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in about 500 theaters, each day offering another bonus. Itâs a direct sequel to The Hellâs Rejects, a movie I actively hated, and this one is more of the same, so I canât recommend it at all. I hated this movie, and itâs use of violence for entertainment. UGH.Â
Letâs get to a few documentaries, a few of which Iâve seen...
Opening at the IFC Center is Michelle Esrickâs Cracked Up, a movie about âSaturday Night Liveâ vet Darrell Hammond and the history of childhood trauma he kept locked up for 40 years. I missed this at Doc-NYC last year but both Hammond and Esrick will be at the IFC Center Friday evening to answer questions.
Irene Taylor Brodskyâs Moonlight Sonata: Deafness in Three Movements (Abramorama) opens at New Yorkâs Landmark 57 Friday and in L.A. at the Lammle Royal on Friday, Sept 20, and itâs an interesting film for the director of Beware the Slenderman, an excellent doc from a few years back. It looks at three people dealing with deafness, a young boy, an aging grandfather and no less than Ludwig van Beethoven, their stories weaved together to explore what it means to be deaf.
I had mixed feelings on Liam Gallagher: As It Was (Screen Media), which will be in theaters this Friday, available via Digital Download Sept. 17 and on VOD platforms Oct. 8.  I saw and liked the Oasis doc Oasis: Supersonic a few years back, but Gavin Fitzgerald and Charlie Lighteningâs doc focuses on the former Oasis frontman and his fall from grace after his very public feud with his brother Noel Gallagher put the spotlight on a singer who I personally feel is an egotistical prat⌠and he goes about proving that in every scene of this movie. The movie covers how the break-up of Oasis led to Liam immediately starting Beady Eye, which proved to be a failure before he decides to go solo. Maybe it isnât a coincidence that this is being released a week before Gallagherâs new solo album âWhy Me? Why Not.â
After playing last yearâs Fantastic Fest and the recent Fantasia and BAMCInemaFest, Aaron Schimbergâs Chained for Life will be released at the IFC Center on Weds and at the Landmark Nuart in Los Angeles on Friday. The movie stars Jess Weixler as movie star Mabel, who has been slumming it in art-horror film being shot in a hospital opposite Rosenthal (Adam Pearson), a gentle young man with a severe facial deformity, as their relationship grows.
Elise Duranâs high-concept rom-com Can You Keep a Secret? (Vertical) is based on Sophie Kinsellaâs novel and it stars the super-cute Alexandra Daddario as a New York woman who is having troubles in life and when turbulence hits her plane, she confesses all her secrets to her neighbor, who turns out to be the companyâs CEO.
Next up is a bunch of odds and ends including some VOD specials. Opening in New York and L.A. is Larry Clarkeâs comedy 3 Days with Dad (Unified Pictures), starring Tom Arnold who returns home to deal with his dying father. Thereâs also the Bollywood courtroom drama Section 375 (Reliance Entertainment), directed by Ajay Bahl.  Jim Gaffiganâs second movie of the year, American Dreamer (Saban/Lionsgate), co-written and directed by Derrick Borte (The Joneses), has him playing a ride-share driver who kidnaps the child of a drugdealer. It opens at New Yorkâs Cinema Village Friday and in L.A. and VOD next Friday. Thereâs also Garrett Battyâs Out of Liberty (Purdie Distribution), and Iâm not even sure what to say about Seth Pricesâ Redistribution, opening at the Metrograph, except that itâs a âreflexive work on art and interpretation.â Make of that what you willâŚ. Or just check out the weird trailer.
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LOCAL FESTIVALS
On Thursday begins the Tribeca TV Festival, which will showcase some of the newest and most anticipated television shows of the fall season including ABCâs Bless This Messwith Lake Bell, Dax Shepard and Pam Grier in attendance; the Apple+ series Dickinson, starring Hailee Steinfeld and Jane Krakowski; the CBS series Evil; and much more. Click on the link above to see whatâs going to be screening, but itâs a pretty impressive line-up if youâre an avid TV watcher.
REPERTORY
METROGRAPH (NYC):
The Welcome To Metrograph: Redux series continues this weekend with Andrei Tarkovskyâs Andrei Rublev (1966) and Felliniâs Amarcord (1973), while Late Nites at Metrograph  will screen BuĂąuelâs Belle du Jour (1967) and Playtime: Family Matinees  will screen Charlie Chaplinâs 1931 film City Lights.
ALAMO DRAFTHOUSE BROOKLYNÂ (NYC)
Monday night is Franc Roddamâs 1979 film Quadrophenia, based on The Whoâs concept album, while this weekâs âTuesday Terrorâ is Dario Argentoâs 1975 film Deep Red, which ironically, Italian rockers Goblin will be in town playing the score for LIVE at the PlayStation Theater on Friday in case you miss it at the Alamo. (Although tickets are obviously much more expensive for the concert.) Next weekâs âWeird Wednesdayâ is the Rutger Hauer movie Split Secondfrom 1992.
EGYPTIAN THEATRE (LA):
Thursday will be a 40thAnniversary screening of Breaking Away with some of the cast in person, while Friday is a hockey double feature of Slap Shot  (1977) and Sudden Death  (1995). Saturday is a 70mm screening of Paul Thomas Andersonâs The Master, while Sunday is a double feature of The Godfather  (1972) and The Godfather Part II  (1974). Also Sunday, the George Lucas Family Foundation sponsors a screening of the 1919 silent film The Son-of-a-Gun (in 8mm!!!)with musical accompaniment, as well as some of Gilbert Andersonâs other shorts from the time.
AERO Â (LA):
Wednesdayâs Greg Proops Film Club will screen Fritz Langâs Ministry of Fear (1944) in 35mm, while Thursday begins a series of âAnime Double Featuresâ of Ninja Scroll (1993) with Vampire Hunter D (1985). Friday is a Satoshi Kon anime double feature of Millennium Actress  (2001) and Perfect Blue  (1997). Saturdayâs Anime double feature isRedline  (2009)and Ghost in the Shell (1995), while Sunday is a Studio Ghibli double feature of Grave of the Fireflies (1988) and Only Yesterday  (1991).  Tuesdayâs âHeptember Matineeâ is a new 4k restoration of Katherine Hepburnâs Holiday from 1938.
BAM CINEMATEK (NYC):
BAM begins an awesome appropriate series called âPurpose and Passion: The Cinema of John Singleton,â showing a lot  (if not all) of the late filmmakerâs work, including Boyz in the Hood, Poetic Justice, Higher Learningand even more recent movies like Four Brothers, Abductionand his 2000 Shaft, starring Samuel L. Jackson. This weekâs âBeyond the Canonâ offering on Saturday is a double feature of Valie ExportâsInvisible Adversariesfrom 1977 and Invasion of the Body Snatchersfrom 1978. Itâs also showing Craig Brewerâs Hustle and Flow, starring Terrence Howard, which Singleton produced.
FILM AT LINCOLN CENTERÂ (NYC):
On Thursday, Film at Lincoln Center begins a short series called âTwo Free Women: Lily Tomlin & Jane Wagnerâ which should be fairly self-explanatory, focusing the spotlight on the actor/comedian and her life partner, which will include a conversation with the two women on Saturday evening. The series will open with John Baileyâs The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe (1991) on Thursday night with a QnA  with the two women. The rest of the series includes All of Me (1984), 9 to 5 (1980), Big Business (1988), Nashville (1975), the recent Grandma  (2015) and many more films, including Nick Broomfieldâs doc Lily Tomlin.
IFC CENTER (NYC)
Weekend Classics: Staff Picks Summer 2019 is Sean Râs pick Labyrinth (1986) while Waverly Midnights: Staff Picks Summer 2019 is the GREATEST STAFF PICK OF ALL TIME⌠Alex Coxâs 1984 classic Rep Man, picked by Jeff!  Late Night Favorites: Summer 2019 is a 35mm print of Scorseseâs Mean Streets. (As far as I can tell, the 4k restoration of David Lynchâs Blue Velvet is ending on Thursday.)
FILM FORUM (NYC):
This weekendâs âFilm Forum Jr.â is three Laurel and Hardy shorts and on Monday is a screening of Preston Sturgesâ 1941 film The Lady Eve, starring Barbara Stanwyk, with a QnA and signing with Sturgesâ son Tom. Joseph Loseyâs Mr. Klein will continue running through Thursday, Sept. 19.
MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE (NYC):
Not really repertory but MOMI is playing the directorâs cut of Ari Asterâs Midsommar this weekend as well as Makoto Shinkaiâs amazing 2017 film Your Name, the latter on Saturday and Sunday at noon.
ROXY CINEMAÂ (NYC)
On Weds., Thursday and Sunday, the Roxy is showing a 35mm print of David Byrneâs True Stories from 1986, which seems to have found new life over 30 years since its debut.
LANDMARK THEATRES NUART Â (LA):
This weekâs midnight movie on Friday isJohn Cameron Mitchellâs Hedwig and the Angry Inch from 2000!
THE NEW BEVERLY (L.A.):
Sorry, Quentin, but as long as you use your excellent rep theater just to show Once Upon a Time ⌠in Hollywood, the New Bev will remain at the bottom of this section. The Wednesday matinee is Possessed (1947), starring Joan Crawfors, while the weekendâs âKIddee Matineeâ is a classic⌠1965âs The Sound of Music! Thereâs a special Cartoon Club on Saturday morning and Pulp Fiction is the Saturday midnight and then Mondayâs matinee is Fast Times at Ridgmont High (1985) in 35mm.
STREAMING AND CABLE
Probably more than anything, Iâm excited for the return of Jon Favreauâs The Chef Show this Friday, but thereâs also a new original film called TALL GIRL, directed by Nzingha Stewart and starring Ava Michelle as the tallest girl in school (hence the title), who deals with being so tall until she meets Luke Eisnerâs Stig, a Swedish foreign exchange student who is even taller than her. Itâs another cute teen-targeted rom-com from Netflix that Iâm not sure Iâll ever see.
Next week is a mix of stuff including James Grayâs Ad Astra, starring Brad Pitt; Sylvester Stallone is back as Rambo: Last Blood and Downton Abbeyr eturns⌠but only in theaters.
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Aaaand this is the first finish one of my Dancers Dreamling!
I'm obsessed with this AU right now, I want to read a full story with them maybe hating each over at first, and then fall in love so hard they can't spend a minute without the other...
I love drawing bodies, and I love anatomy, even if I got some work to do about it to understand how some muscles are moving (the shoulder blades are hard, believe me^^) and drawing ballet dancers is such a pleasure... I can't stop drawing them^^
I hope you like them and I hope you're ready to follow me with them^^
On the same time, I may have an idea about a Good Omens rope dancer Crowley/ Magician Aziraphale AU... (Can someone stop my brain, please??)
#dream#my art#the sandman dream#sandman dream#dream of the endless#dreamling#dream x hob#sandman hob gadling#hob gadling#dreamling au#Dreamling ballet AU#sandman dreamling#Dreamling dancers AU#dancing men
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Helloooo
So today is the 1st of december, and I'm starting my watercolor advent calendar. And I had an idea... since I don't know what color I'll have every day, I wanted to add some challenge... (because I'm a little crazy... and obviously, I want to stop sleeping...) Soooo, every day, I'll open my calendar, and when I'll know the color, I'll start to draw a character: if it's blue/purple/black I'll draw ballet dancer Dream, if it's green/Brown/ocre I'll draw dancer Hob, if it's red/orange I'll draw rope dancer Crowley (because I want to do a circus GO AU ^^), and if it's yellow/beige I'll do a magician Aziraphale (because of course, in a circus AU, he would be a magician ^^)
Here is day 1! With l@epigmentarium lovely color "Machaon", I made a dancing Hob Gadling^^
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