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The Tilda Swinton Checklist
After a pretty random decision to see all films Tilda Swinton had appeared in, and a basic run-through and then a mopping-up weekend, and then doing a Swinton week every summer every since, I’ve basically seen all the Swinton films that are kinda available. (In some form or other.)
This post is a place-holder article I’ll just be editing to keep track of what films I still have to seek out. Because it makes more sense to do that on a blog than in a text file.
You know.
The films with “-” in the first column are the ones I’ve yet to watch. “=” is “ordered” and “+” is arrived.
* 1986: Caravaggio
* 1986: Zastrozzi: A Romance
* 1986: Egomania
* 1986: Caprice
* 1987: Aria
* 1987: Friendship’s Death
* 1988: The Last of England
* 1988: L’ispirazione
* 1988: Degrees of Blindness
– 1988: Das andere Ende der Welt
* 1989: Play Me Something
* 1989: War Requiem
* 1989: Cycling the Frame
* 1990: The Garden
* 1990: Your Cheatin’ Heart
* 1990: Fruits of Fear
* 1991: Edward II
– 1991: The Party: Nature Morte
– 1992: Man to Man: Another Night of Rubbish on the Telly
* 1992: Orlando
* 1992: Shakespeare: The Animated Tales
* 1993: Wittgenstein
* 1993: Blue
* 1993: Das offene Universum
+ 1994: Remembrance of Things Fast: True Stories Visual Lies
* 1994: Visions of Heaven and Hell
* 1994: Glitterbug
* 1996: Female Perversions
* 1997: Conceiving Ada
* 1998: Love is the Devil
* 1999: The War Zone
* 1999: The Protagonists
* 2000: The Beach
– 2000: The Dilapidated Dwelling
* 2000: Possible Worlds
* 2001: The Deep End
* 2001: Vanilla Sky
* 2002: Teknolust
* 2002: Adaptation.
+ 2002: Tilda Swinton: The Love Factory
* 2003: Young Adam
* 2003: The Box
* 2003: The Statement
* 2004: Derek Jarman: Life as Art
* 2005: Thumbsucker
* 2005: Constantine
* 2005: Constantine (Video Game)
* 2005: Broken Flowers
* 2005: The Absent Presence
* 2005: The Somme
* 2005: Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe
* 2006: Stephanie Daley
* 2006: Galápagos
* 2006: Deep Water
* 2007: Sleepwalkers
* 2007: Faceless
* 2007: Strange Culture
* 2007: The Man From London
* 2007: Michael Clayton
– 2007: Schau mir in die Augen, Kleiner
* 2007: Hitler’s Favourite Royal
* 2007: Derek
* 2008: Julia
* 2008: The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
* 2008: Burn After Reading
* 2008: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
– 2008: Requiem for Jarman
* 2009: The Limits of Control
* 2009: The Invisible Frame
* 2009: Io sono l’amore
* 2010: The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Trader
* 2010: Climate of Change
* 2010: Spur der Bären
* 2011: Genevieve Goes Boating
* 2011: We Need To Talk About Kevin
* 2011: Women War & Peace
* 2011: Cinema is Everywhere
* 2011: Making it In Hollywood
+ 2013: Amore carne
* 2012: Moonrise Kingdom
* 2012: Getting On
* 2012: Radioman
* 2013: The Stars Are Out Tonight
* 2013: Only Lovers Left Alive
* 2013: When Björk Met Attenborough
* 2013: Snowpiercer
* 2013: Death for a Unicorn
* 2013: The Zero Theorem
* 2014: The Grand Budapest Hotel
– 2014: Antarctica 3D: On the Edge
* 2014: Travelling at Night with Jim Jarmusch
* 2014: The Gospel According to St. Derek
* 2014: Trainwreck
* 2015: Dreams Rewired
* 2015: A Bigger Splash
* 2015: B-Movie: Lust & Sound in West-Berlin 1979-1989
* 2016: Hail, Caesar!
* 2016: Letters from Baghdad
+ 2016: Phantom of the Universe: The Hunt for Dark Matter
* 2016: Doctor Strange
* 2016: The Seasons in Quincy: Four Portraits of John Berger
* 2017: async – first light
* 2017: Okja
* 2017: Letters From Generation RX
* 2017: War Machine
* 2017: Last and First Men
– 2017: Tania Libre
+ 2018: Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema
* 2018: Isle of Dogs
* 2018: Suspiria
* 2019: The Souvenir
* 2019: Avengers: Endgame
* 2019: What We Do In The Shadows: The Trial
* 2019: The Dead Don’t Die
* 2019: The Personal History of David Copperfield
* 2019: Uncut Gems
* 2020: Story and the Writer
* 2020: The Human Voice
* 2021: Memoria
* 2021: The French Dispatch
* 2021: The Souvenir: Part II
+ 2021: The Dong with the Luminous Nose
+ 2021: The Storms of Jeremy Thomas
* 2021: What If… Doctor Strange Lost His Heart Instead of His Hands?
= 2022: Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
* 2022: The Eternal Daughter
* 2022: Three Thousand Years of Longing
= 2023: The Killer
+ 2023: Some Thoughts on the Common Toad
+ 2023: Asteroid City
+ 2023: Problemista
+ 2023: All Kinds of Love
= 2024: The Room Next Door
= 2024: The End
+ 2024: The Boys
+ 2024: Fantasmas
– 2024: Impulse: Playing with Reality
– 2024: The Hexagonal Hive and a Mouse in a Maze
– 2024: A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things
OpenLibrary, LibraryThing, Books and Emacs
A commenter on my previous post about this stuff suggested using LibraryThing to deduplicate editions, so I thought I’d give it a go. I’m using Amy Hempel as the test case, because she’s only published a handful of books.
Or as OpenLibrary says: 27.
Let’s have a look at, say, the collection from 2006:
The documentation says that it’s supposed to return a list of “works”, not editions, but of course the data here doesn’t have much quality control. So here we have "The Collected Stories of Amy Hempel", "The collected stories of Amy Hempel", and finally "Collected Stories of Amy Hempel". For these, we have in total three different ISBNs (ISBN-10 and ISBN-13 are both listed in the output, apparently).
Let’s look up one of these in the LibraryThing API:
And actually… it looks like LibraryThing does ISBN-10 only? But it kinda looks like the LibraryThing de-duplication would work for that book. So that’s promising, even if it means doing a whole bunch of calls to LibraryThing.
Hm… Oh, OpenLibrary also lists this:
Which is a translated edition, but would also have gotten caught by the LibraryThing de-duplication. OK, I think I’m going to code up something and see what I get.
type type type
Viola!
That’s actually a pretty good list! OpenLibrary returned 27 publications, and after 17 LibraryThing API calls, we’re down to 12 works.
(There’s only five-ish of these that are “books by Amy Hempel” by any reasonable measure, but the rest are chapbooks, collections and collaborations, so it’s OK that they’re listed.)
Now, the number of LibraryThing API calls would make it pretty abusive to use this on a more prolific author, but as a proof of concept, it works.
(LibraryThing publishes data dumps of all this stuff, which would be more sensible to use, but that apparently costs $$$.)
So… uhm… could I use this to get “give all books published by the fifty authors I follow published since 2023”? I think that would be possible: For each author, ask OpenLibrary for the list, and then for each book published after 2023, do the LibraryThing deduplication to see whether it’s a book that also appears earlier on the OpenLibrary list? Yeah, I think that could work, but I guess the proof is in the programming.
Anyway! Since I’m blathering on about this here, amusingly enough the previous post landed on “Hacker News”. But it didn’t get enough points to get high enough on their home to totally ruin my statistics chart:
The last time Hacker News happened, there were so many visits that the “normal” days were just a single line of green pixels at the bottom, making the chart useless. I know, I know, I should use a logarithmic chart, but I just don’t like those.
(Or a discontinuous chart, even.)
There’s the expected interactions on Hacker News:
I like the idea of adding trigger warnings on non-hype LLM articles.
But also some useful stuff. For instance, there’s a real Emacs library to interact with the LLMs, so I didn’t really have to write my own shims. But it was trivial code (in my case; that project linked there looks quite ambitious), so whatevs.
And:
There’s an app that’s had to deal with the same issues.
So there you go.
Comics Daze
It feels like it’s been months since I last read some comics, but I see that it was just two weeks ago. Time doesn’t fly!? Anyway: Comics day. And for music today: Music from 1996 only. 1996 was a good year, I think.
Vinicius Cantuária: Sol Na Cara | ![]() |
13:23: The Test No. 68 by Blaise Moritz
So this is a long-running mini…
The format is unique — it’s printed on super thin paper, so you get tons of bleed through. So it’s only printed on every other page, which means that this is super duper brief.
I like it, though — it’s intriguing.
13:28: Holy Lacrimony by Michael DeForge (Drawn & Quarterly)
I’ve been pretty disappointed with DeForge’s last two books (which were, if I remember correctly, collections of strips from his Instagram page (they read like it, anyway)). This one is much, much more readable.
It does have the whiff of allegory, but it’s pretty good.
Arto Lindsay: Mundo Civilizado | ![]() |
13:58: One-Eyed Want by Michael Banas
I got this from here.
I should stop fiddling with the white balance settings on the camera, but the light keeps changing here, and everything looks wrong…
Anyway, I like the art here — the weird colouring technique for the forest is really appealing.
The funny bits are funny, but the story (which is a religion/druggie/therapy speak mash up thing) didn’t really do much for me.
Heidi Berry: Miracle | ![]() |
14:46: World Within the World by Julia Gfrörer (Fantagraphics)
I’ve got quite a lot of Gfrörer’s minis, so I guess I’ve some of this before, but it’s great that there’s finally a collection. And it’s a pretty hefty one, because there’s been a lot of those minis.
Gfrörer’s pacing is just amazing. Love the artwork, too.
Most of these were originally printed on coloured paper, and they copy that here (but print the colour instead of using coloured paper).
Most of these stories deal with witches and stuff, and most are deeply unnerving.
Pet Shop Boys: Bilingual | ![]() |
Gfrörer also has an amazing ear for dialogue — it flows so well.
Anyway, this is a fantastic collection of incredible work.
Arto Lindsay: O Corpo Sutil | ![]() |
16:20: Convert by John Arcudi/Savannah Finley (Image Comics)
This, on the other hand, is just kinda awkward. The artwork is just a bit odd, and the storytelling is awkward, and the narration (it’s mostly narration) is clumsy.
And it’s a particularly interesting story, either.
So I guess it’s a typical Image book.
Laurie Freelove: Songs From The Nineline | ![]() |
16:52: Du må ikke slukke lyset! by Thomas Bugge (Cobolt)
Oops! This is a book for small children, I guess.
But it’s good. I really like the freewheeling artwork.
16:55: Roomies 1 by Lina Nordskjold (Cobolt)
And this is for older children. The artwork is very er computerey.
The story is pretty original — a kid is miserable at the boarding school, but then is taken by some aliens (by mistake), and then… and then things get kinda messy, storytelling wise, because there’s little plot development for like three quarters of this book. Instead we just spend most of the book learning about these aliens — it feels like the author wants to just tell us everything she’s invented about them instead of telling a story, really.
Perhaps a reader from the intended age group will find this enthralling, but it’s not really my thing.
Oval: Systemisch | ![]() |
17:15: Solace County vol 2-3 by J. Marshall Smith
I got these from here.
This is a series of yearly collections of work, so we get a mix of diary comics…
(Heh heh.)
… and other bits, including longer works.
It’s a compelling read — these pieces have a unified mood, even if they deal with many different subjects. It’s good.
17:48: Good Girl Laika by J. Marshall Smith
This is a really sweet book.
It’s funny and affecting.
Oval: 94diskont | ![]() |
17:52: Mörkt album by Coco Moodysson (Galago)
This is presented as autobiography — I mean, the protagonist’s name is the same as the author’s, and the protagonist is a cartoonist, and so on.
But I guess it’s not? The scenes seem too… er… too too… to be factual, and things end with (oops spoilers) the husband getting a lobotomy (because he was depressed), so I’m guessing it’s all fiction? Or perhaps just a bit exaggerated.
But it works from a storytelling point of view. The artwork’s basic, but expressive.
Cat Power: What Would The Community Think | ![]() |
19:18: This Beautiful, Ridiculous City by Kay Sohini (Ten Speed Press)
This is extremely computerey… I mean, it’s not just drawn on a tablet but apparently 3D modelled (but with exaggerated foreshortening). It’s not very attractive, in my opinion.
And oh my god. It’s like reading a Powerpoint presentation, but bound into a book.
OK, I couldn’t take it any more, so I skipped ahead, and it’s just more of the same. The book is about how awesome New York is, and I’ve also got a very romantic view of Manhattan, so this should be a shoo-in for me, but it’s deathly dull. So I abandoned it.
19:37: Bottlecaps & Breadcrumbs by Travis Head
Oh, I really like this artwork. It’s got a 70s pop art thing going on, and also an underground sensibility… like Skip Williamson or something. Very attractive.
Oh, and this style is also wonderful! And the storytelling on this piece is unlike anything I’ve ever seen before, and it totally works — it’s an incredibly gripping read.
This is an amazing book — it’s autobio, but totally original.
19:56: Rivers of London: Action at a Distance by Cartmel/Williamson/Renne (Titan Comics)
I quite like Ben Aaronovitch’s novels, but I haven’t read any of the comics. I assumed they were adaptations of the novels, but then I read somewhere that they were original works, so I’m sampling one, and this is apparently one of the newer ones?
Oh, I assumed this was going to be written by Aaronovitch, but it’s not. So it’s basically just a comic book set in the Aaronovitchoverse…
The artwork here is also very computerey, and quite bizarre. Everybody has staring eyes, but what they’re staring at never seems to make sense. It’s like random clip art of staring people that has been drawn over in Photoshop.
And things rarely seem to make sense one a graphical level — like what is that door in the third-to-last panel attached to?
OK, this is just insufferable. *ditch*
Everything But The Girl: Walking Wounded | ![]() |
20:10: The End
And I think that’s enough comics for today.