12.9.11

Tom Waits For No Man - animation short

I just discovered this really nice animation of a Tom Waits song. The information after this clip is copied from the youtube page and there's a link to go to as well: http://www.tomwaitslibrary.com/filmography/animation.html
It's fascinating that it was never released but the filmmaker, Lyon Lamb, received an Academy Award for this impressive rotoscoping work. The vibe is right in tune with Mr. Waits. I think this was done before his role in Jarmusch's Down By Law.



Tom Waits performed in 1978 live at the La Brea stage in Hollywood, photographed and rotoscoped.The original live action was shot with 5 cameras - 2 high, 2 low and one hand held.. shot by Dan O'Dowd and crew..The music from "The One That Got Away" blared in the background as Tom sang the lyrics. Donna Gordon is the dancer performing as the stripper, 6 takes and 13 hours of video footage were edited to make a 5 1/2 minute live action short which we turned into animation. A total of 5,500 frames were captured, re-drawn, inked and painted by hand onto celluloid acitate to create this film. Produced by Lyon Lamb Video Animation Systems and directed by John Lamb, the film bore some cool new technology and talent ..and was created specifically for a burgeoning video music market that didn't yet exist and arguably may be the first music video created for the MTV market.However, a series of unfortunate events prohibited the film from ever
being released or sold commercially, consequently catapulting it into obscurity.
In 1979, an Academy Award was presented to Lyon Lamb for the technology used in this short.
More about this amazing lost film can be found @ ....TomWaitsLibrary.com and Wikipedia.


The One That Got AwaySmall ChangeDown by Law (The Criterion Collection)

16.8.11

The Big Red One - the novel

I realized I hadn't posted anything for a while so. Well I finished reading Sam Fuller's The Big Red One I've never been big on war books, but I trusted Sam Fuller to take me on a trip. I knew he wouldn't let me down. Sure he's not Faulkner but then again Faulkner wasn't Fuller when it came to the camera. Now I have to re-watch the film, and Lee Marvin is perfect for the Sergeant.

(I'd add a clip from the movie but like I said I read the book not watched the movie... I've seen the movie I just finished reading the book)


The Big Red One - The Reconstruction (Two-Disc Special Edition)A Third Face: My Tale of Writing, Fighting and FilmmakingThe Big Red OneThe Films of Samuel Fuller: If You Die, I'll Kill You (Wesleyan Film)Dark PageMerrill's MaraudersPark Row

12.7.11

An Evening with Groucho




from:
http://www.archive.org/details/OTRR_An_Evening_With_Groucho_Singles

An Evening with Groucho is a look at the life of Groucho Marx and the Marx Brothers, as told by Groucho.

Groucho Marx Biography:

Born: October 2, 1890 in New York City, New York
Died: August 19, 1977 in Los Angeles, California

Groucho was born Julius Henry Marx on October 2, 1890 in New York. He was the third of the five surviving sons of Sam and Minnie Marx. He was the first of the brothers to start stage career aged 15 in an act called The Leroy Trio. Other acts followed, but none of them was a great success. Twice the other members of the act disappeared overnight and left him penniless in a town far away from home.

When his brothers came on stage, they finally had a success with the musical comedy called I'll Say She Is. It was at one of the performances of this show that Groucho got his painted moustache. He arrived late at the theater and used greasepaint to create a moustache. He found this so much easier than a glued on moustache that he insisted on using this technique from then on.

Always being a liberal, Groucho sometimes made critical remarks about politics and had friends which were regarded as communist by the US of the 1950s. This led to Groucho being investigated by the FBI.

When Marx Brothers became popular again in the last sixties/early seventies Groucho made a comeback with a show in Carnegie Hall in 1972. At the film festival in Cannes in 1972, he was made Commandeur des Arts et Lettres and in 1974 he received a special Academy Award for the achievements of the Marx Brothers.

Groucho died on August 19th, 1977 at Cedars Sinai Medical Center. His ashes are at Eden Memorial Park, San Fernando, California.




Groucho And MeThe Groucho Letters: Letters from and to Groucho MarxThe Essential Groucho: Writings by, for, and about Groucho MarxGroucho: The Life and Times of Julius Henry MarxHello, I Must Be Going: Groucho and His FriendsMemoirs Of A Mangy LoverThe Marx Brothers Collection (A Night at The Opera/A Day at The Races/A Night in Casablanca/Room Service/At the Circus/Go West/The Big Store)Groucho Marx and Other Short Stories and Tall Tales: The Selected Writings of Groucho MarxHarpo Speaks!The Marx Brothers Silver Screen Collection (The Cocoanuts / Animal Crackers / Monkey Business / Horse Feathers / Duck Soup)TCM Greatest Classic Films Collection: Marx Brothers (A Day at the Races / A Night in Casablanca / Room Service / At the Circus)A Night at the OperaComediantes judíos: Woody Allen, Groucho Marx, David Schwimmer, Barbra Streisand, Los tres chiflados, Bette Midler, Hermanos Marx, Curly Howard (Spanish Edition)