Archive for September, 2008

The 50 States of Literature: Family Ties in Oregon


Melanie Jones continues her series The Fifty States of Literature with Oregon and Ken Kesey’s classic novel Sometimes a Great Notion.

Best known for One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Ken Kesey’s under-recognized Sometimes a Great Notion chronicles the times and misfortunes of the hard-headed Stamper family of Wakonda, Oregon. When union loggers go on strike, the Stamper family’s independent company not only continues production but attempts to make up the difference at the regional logging company, incurring the ire of union organizer Mr. Draeger and the ostracism of the town at large. The history behind this decision, and the politics within it, make up the bulk of Kesey’s novel, exploring this family of stubborn “migrants… a clan of skinny men inclining always towards itchy feet and idiocy [and] toward foolish roaming”. The Stamper obstinacy, illustrated by their family motto “Never Give an Inch”, is combated by a river that both gives life and is the greatest threat to the logging community. Swallowing up everything in its path but the Stamper homestead, patriarch Hank fights the current with an arsenal of broken planks, cables, and sand bags.
(more…)

Posted by

spectacle

September 30, 2008

Trailer Tuesdays: New Oscar Categories Edition

Trailers

For all the new trailers that came out in the past week, I think there should be some new Oscar categories just to reward the strange oddities of these films.

Best Picture for the Wrong Time—W.: You got to hand it to Oliver Stone for having some balls to make a comedy about the presidency of George W. Bush. You especially got to hand it to him for making it an over the top comedy. This film continues to look better and better with each new preview, and Josh Brolin looks damn good as the president. Stone’s latest works, Alexander and World Trade Center, were two of the worst films of his career, but this looks like the film to turn it around. (October 17th)

See the trailer here
(more…)

Prepare to Have Seizures

Strap on your seatbelts, WipEout HD is here! And in glorious 60 frames per second with 1,080 progressively-scanned velvety lines of graphic goodness, you’re going to have a seizure– either because it’s so freaking good or because you’re going to be having an epileptic reaction. (more…)

Posted by

Kevin Ciok

September 29, 2008

Keeping It Clean

Beginning of the new trailer.

Beginning of the new trailer.

Last week, a countdown that had been running on Bungie.net, the website of the developer of the popular Halo video game franchise, ran out and revealed a new trailer for a mysterious project called “Keep It Clean”. Though we now know that the trailer is for a new expansion to the Halo 3 single player campaign, little is actually known about the expansion. However, looking at the trailer, there is much to be inferred about where and when the game will take place.

(more…)

Posted by

imuhammad

September 29, 2008

NYFF Diaries: Sheer Brutality, Sheer Brilliance

Hunger

Steve McQueen is known as one of the best visual artists in the United Kingdom. Maybe that’s why his first feature film, Hunger, is such a powerful, brutal, and brilliant film. Combing the shot composition of Stanley Kubrick, the patience of Jean-Pierre Melville, and the visual violence of Park Chan-Wook, McQueen’s film will shock you, make your stomach hurt, but ultimately make you question the importance of a political statement.

  Hunger is a look at the 1981 Hunger Strike led by Bobby Sands in the Maze Prison. Under the cruel rule of Margaret Thatcher, political prisoners from the IRA had been classified as criminal prisoners instead, and denied many rights. This led to extreme measures from the prisoners, including refusing the bathe or wash, and wiping their excrement across the walls. Trust me—if you thought our own hunger strike for the Core was a brilliant piece of political expression, these guys gave it all, ending with 10 dead.

More after the jump…
(more…)

Posted by

Peter Labuza

September 28, 2008

Edward Said Memorial Lecture Tonight!

said
The fourth annual Edward Said memorial lecture is tonight at 7pm in Miller Theater! Commemorating the fifth anniversary of the legendary professor, it will feature Arabic poet Adonis reading his poetry, with C.K. Williams translating.

Edward Said Memorial Lecture
Miller Theater
Tonight, Sunday September 28
7pm
Free!

Posted by

Ginia Sweeney

September 28, 2008