Eclipse 1965: 悦楽

I absolutely adore the cinematography on this. The angles, the framing, the colours.

This is the most rational crime ever.

Oh my god. This movie just doesn’t go where you expect it to. It’s either amazingly brilliant or just… odd? I’m not quite sure.

I lost the thread here for a second, and now I have no idea what’s going on.

I think I must have missed the segue to the flashback?

It’s safe to say that I didn’t quite understand the plot here? But I was still riveted. So:

Pleasures of the Flesh. Nagisa Ôshima. 1965.

This blog post is part of the Eclipse series.

Eclipse 1962: All Night Long

It’s one of those funny cigarettes, see?

Anyway, next on the schedule was Victim, but it turns out that I watched it a couple months ago.

It was OK.

So I’m onto the final Basil Dearden movie instead.

They’re getting hooked on the reefer!

Patrick McGoohan drums up a storm very convicingly, I must say.

Oh! I thought this movie was really odd, but I didn’t make the connection:

This movie, based on William Shakespeare’s Othello, is neatly positioned as a vehicle to showcase some of the best jazz musicians of the period, including Dave Brubeck and Charles Mingus.

Herp derp, I eat paste.

Then again, I don’t really remember the plot of Othello.

There’s bits of this movie that’s fantastic. But overall I’m just not feeling it.

I’m probably totally wrong, and this movie is pure genius. And I mean that.

But this is what I’m feeling right now:

All Night Long. Basil Dearden. 1962.

This blog post is part of the Eclipse series.

The Best Albums of 2021

Once again, Emacs has kept careful track of what I’ve been listening to this year, so I can scientifically give a list of what’s the best albums this year. And by amazing coincidence, the world’s very best album is by a Norwegian band and I’m Norwegian, but I’m sure that’s totally coincidental and fair.

Lost Girls

Menneskekollektivet
Lost Girls - Losing Something

SOPHIE

BIPP (Autechre Mx), UNISIL
SOPHIE - BIPP (Autechre Mx) (Official Stream)

The Notwist

Vertigo Days
The Notwist: Al Sur (feat. Juana Molina)

Aksak Maboul

Redrawn Figures 1
Eyelids and Phosphenes (Aksak Maboul Reconstruction)

Insides

Soft Bonds
The Softest Bonds Resist Resistance

Leslie Winer

When I Hit You, You’ll Feel It
Leslie Winer - In 1 Ear

Xeno & Oaklander

Vi-deo
Xeno & Oaklander - "Gain" (Official Audio)

Alasdair Roberts og Völvur

The Old Fabled River

Caroline Shaw & Sō Percussion

Let The Soil Play Its Simple Part
Caroline Shaw & Sō Percussion - To the Sky (Live)

David Allred

Smells Like Everyone’s Watching
David Allred - Smells Like Everyone's Watching (full album)

Herbert

Musca
Herbert feat. Mel Uye Parker - Hypnotised

Irreversible Entanglements

Open The Gates
Irreversible Entanglements - "Open The Gates" | Music Video

Mia Doi Todd

Ten Views of Music Life
Wainiha Valley (Julia Holter & Tashi Wada Remix)

Snapped Ankles

Forest of Your Problems
Snapped Ankles - The Evidence (Official Video)

Alice Coltrane

Kirtan Turiya Sings
Alice Coltrane - Kirtan: Turiya Sings (Visualizer)

That David Allred album up there has my favourite lyric. It goes like

You said “wow you must be fun at parties”
And I said “That’s not true”

I feel seen.

But I bought a lot of older stuff, too. Here’s the objectively best older albums, and coincidentally the winner is another Norwegian. It cannot be!

Espen Reinertsen

Nattsyntese
Betenkningstid med trommesolo

Gary Panter

Precambrian Bath

Mimi Goese and Ben Neill

Life You Are
Cuckoo (Official Video) Mimi Goese and Ben Neill

Laura Jean

I’m A Rabbit, I’m A Fox
Laura Jean - I'm a Rabbit, I'm A Fox (with Strings)

Bertine Zetlitz

Beautiful So Far

SOPHIE

OIL OF EVERY PEARL’S UN-INSIDES

Espen Reinertsen

Forgaflingspop
Tilpasninger Hos Prestekrage

Hexting

Post Post Rock Rock
Video Waves 1803: Hexting - Post Post Rock Rock

Shopping

Consumer Complaints
Shopping - Long Way Home

Various

Mutant Disco Volume 2
I Know What Boys Like - The Waitresses (HQ Audio)

Arthur Russell

Sketches For World Of Echo (June 25 1984 Live At Ei)
Arthur Russell - Tone Bone Kone

That’s it.

Comics Daze

I have totally fucked up my sleeping patterns again, so I’m now up in the middle of the night.

Brr.

But I’ve got candy and comics, so let’s get readin’ until morn. And nothing but 80s music, because it’s that kind of night.

Joe Jackson: Mike’s Murder

02:50: Too Tough To Die edited by Haleigh Buck and J T Yost (Birdcage Bottom)

So this is a collection of punk nostalgia comics? It starts off swell with a great Hyena Hell story…

And then Casanova Frankenstein! Whoo!

But then it… tapers off. There’s so much stuff in here, and while a sizeable number of the contributions are fine, about half the stuff in here feels so… unnecessary. It’s like an anthology without editors: It feels like nothing offered was excluded, no matter how tedious.

Was this book kickstartererd? Yes indeed. I wonder whether anybody’s done an analysis of kickstartererd (that’s a word) anthologies? They all have the same feeling of … a lack of urgency. I have no idea what’s up with that; why an anthology being financed via Kickstarter should affect the contents. But let’s just… guess… Is it because you reach into a different talent pool; one that’s already on the intertubes, and are used to putting their stuff on instagram, so the ambitions are already low? Or… is it because there’s nothing financial at stake, so the editors just find it easier to say “yes” to all contributions instead of being the asshole who goes “we don’t have room for that”, and instead pad the book with 150 pages of nothingness?

I mean, I don’t mean to sound too down. There’s good stuff in here! Like this Fred Noland thing. It’s just not a very good anthology.

Eurythmics: Touch

04:32: No One Else by R. Kikou Johnson (Fantagraphics)

I rather liked R. Kikou Johnson previous books, but this… it seems so calculated. It’s hitting all the notes for getting on Publisher’s Weekly Best of 2021 list. (Or something.)

It’s got no air. All the lines are trite and seem like they were written with an indie movie adaptation in mind. And I was holding out for there at least not being a death/birth thing, but even that hope was scuppered by the final scene.

Depeche Mode: Construction Time Again

04:58: I See a Knight by Xulia Vicente (Shortbox)

It’s got nice colours. The storytelling is a bit on the choppy side.

And it was expanded from an 8 page mini?

05:09: Moving by Luis Yang (Shortbox)

This is a spooky, mysterious little book. Excellent.

05:16: Bun’s Comfort Food Corner by Chu Nap (Shortbox)

This is quite cute. About half the pages are comics…

… and the rest are recipes. I gotta try a few of those.

05:26: Gristle by Lily Blakely (Shortbox)

Love the artwork.

It’s very body horror and it’s got the proper mood. It’s disappointing in that what happens is just what you expect to happen.

Still a good read.

05:33: Temple by Jack T. Cole (Shortbox)

Oooh, this is gorgeous.

It’s a bit reminiscent of those Prophet comics, I guess? But it’s really good; it’s got a solid mood and a great flow.

Longer book next time, please.

Richard Horowitz: Eros in Arabia

05:39: The Strange Death of Alex Raymond by Dave Sim & Carson Grubaugh (Living the Line)

Well, here’s something I’m not really looking forward to reading, but since I bought it, I guess I have to.

I read most of this back in the Glamourpuss days, I guess? And it was the usual Simian twaddle — he promises a lot of woo-woo at the start, telling us all the mysteries he’s going to reveal to us, and then everything dissolving into a mound of stupidity. Sim’s an expert on over-promising and then not even attempting delivery.

Well, it doesn’t start off that badly… Grubaugh’s artwork is really busy and somewhat headache inducing, but it’s OK. And the reproduction is fantastic.

I like the technical bits about drawing and stuff.

But as the book progresses, the… stupid just piles up. Sim repeats “Layers upon layers upon layers” for just about any sort of silly… “connection”… between the comics and what happened. For instance, here we have a character with … distinctive ears, so therefore that’s a … “layer”… to Stan Drake getting his ears ripped off some years later (which apparently didn’t actually happen anyway).

It just gets worse and worse. It’s exhausting twaddle. I had to give up about two thirds in, because it’s mind-bogglingly boring.

David Bowie: Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars (2)

07:51: Unimpressed by Miranda Tacchia (Fantagraphics)

What the fuck… of all things I hate most in the world, collections of insta jokes is er one of them?

Oh! But it’s December, right? So ’tis the season to be giving people collections of shitty jokes.

The artwork does have a certain charm, though.

(I skipped this after reading about 30 of these totes hilair pages.)

The Cure: Japanese Whispers

07:58: The Waiting by Keum Suk Gendry-Kim (Drawn & Quarterly)

The Korean memoir genre is really popular these days. (This is fictional, though.)

But, wow, such artwork. Gorgeous.

The storytelling is top notch — it’s got great pacing; it’s very pleasant to read. But remember to have some hankies ready, because it’s very moving.

*sniffle*

Colourbox: Colourbox (PolyGram)

09:07: Ex Libris by Matt Madden (Uncivilized)

This is very meta — it’s a pretty goofy thing about somebody locked (?) in a room with comics.

And all the comics are about comics and stuff. And then everything connects up!

It’s all a very mid-80s post-modern novel kind of thing, which I like. It’s fun. But… I think it’d got pacing problems? I think you could basically drop out a third of the pages in the middle and it’d make absolutely no difference.

But the bits that work are really quite a lot of fun.

Various: It’s a Crammed, Crammed, Crammed, Crammed World!

09:48: Tunnels by Rutu Modan (Drawn & Quarterly)

Whaa… this wasn’t what I expected from Rutu Modan at all. I really enjoyed her previous books, but they were very serious indeed. This basically reads like a Tintin album. Or rather… a Blake and Mortimer album? It’s fun, anyway. Lots of funny little gags everywhere, but with a very strong narrative.

But… while it starts off brilliantly, and lands the ending, there’s a stasis to the middle bit that’s not totally … thrilling? I zoned out during some of the back-and-forth that seemed to happen a few too many times.

Still, it’s pretty unique and a lot of fun.

The Style Council: Cafe Bleu

11:23: Lure by Lane Milburn (Fantagraphics)

Hm… kinda Dash Shaw-ish artwork?

Anyway, this is about some animators who go to Dubai to do some lame corporate event animation.

It turns out that the evil corporation is evil! Oops spoilers.

There’s scenes in here that’s fascinating, but it’s mostly rather by the numbers.

This Mortal Coil: It’ll End In Tears

12:14: The End

And I think I’m all comicsed out, and it’s time to go to sleep.

This was not the best batch of comics ever… to put it mildly. Oh well, can’t win all the dazes.

Eclipse 1960: The League of Gentlemen

This is quite amusing.

It’s like a classic heist movie. It’s probably not the original one? But it’s got all the bits that later heist movies have. And fascinatingly enough, it doesn’t work at making the criminals sympathetic?

That said, this thing has got really weird pacing issues. I realise that they’re going for knuckle biting tension, but they’re rather over doing it? Or perhaps that’s just me; it’s good stuff.

Darn. The actual heist was rather underwhelming. After all that planning, I thought it was going to be intricate and fun, but… it was so basic? It was like… nothing?

That’s a downer.

The League of Gentlemen. Basil Dearden. 1960.

This blog post is part of the Eclipse series.