Interview with Roman Polanski: From Holocaust Survivor to Hollywood Scandal

bodies: carol lynley (1942–2019) was an american actress and child model. she is best remembered for her starring role as the ship’s singer in the 1972 disaster classic the poseidon adventure and for her groundbreaking performance in the controversial 1959 film blue denim.

 

nastasia kinski aka nastassja kinski born january 24, 1961 is a celebrated german actress and former model who gained international fame in the late 1970s and 1980s. the daughter of the notoriously intense actor klaus kinski, she has appeared in over 60 european and american films.

roman polanski

if link is missing try this: roman polanski dinner interview with clive james

ah yes roman was a favorite of ours…. but you had to go and fuck things up didn’t you? roman unfortunately liked them very young too. i actually think he was not as nasty as harvey weinstein and jeffrey epstein but then there are degrees in hell or so we are told. the point is you can be talented but not a good person. that was the case with harvey and roman… jeffery on the other hand was just an ass hole – he is def in the deepest dens of that hell that doesn’t exist. by dd

if you are going to just shoot the script then why bother? jim jarmusch on dead man

dead man: a film by jim jarmusch featuring johnny depp music by neil young…

english poet, painter, print maker, william blake (1757–1827). largely unappreciated in his own lifetime, he is now celebrated as a visionary genius of the romantic era. apparently big with the ravers in the uk… who knew…

nobody tending to johnny depp in dead man,,,

 

below: interview with jim jarmusch Q&A dead man lincoln center NY.

below: neil young score – genius 10 out of 10… cinematography by robby müller… id give it 7 out of 10 – robby… comparing it to your other work. excellent film non the less.

below interview with “nobody”

dead man interview with jim jarmusch and also gary farmer “nobody”. if you’ve seen the film watch this Q&A… if not, watch the film, then watch this Q&A… and tim, you are william blake in this film my boy… by uh

ferruccio bertoluzzi and concretism

Composizione n. 317. 1979

composition no. 438, 1988

composition no. 327. 1979

composition no. 327. 1975

composition no. 163. 1968

i stumbled across ferruccio bortoluzzi’s work in my last year of high school and randomly found myself thinking about it again this morning. everything feels worn down and weathered, almost like it’s been through something, but the compositions still feel surprisingly modern. there’s a really nice balance between rough surfaces and structure that keeps the work from feeling dated.

i think that’s what i’ve always liked about concretism in general… how much it can do with so little. it’s mostly shapes, lines, structure, and composition, but somehow it never feels boring when it’s done right. everything just clicks into place. there’s something simple to it but not in a lazy way. his work is built on strong compositions rather than trends, and that’s probably why it holds up so well… definitely in my books of cool shit. by tnt