sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2012-10-08 11:43 pm

You won't shoot your own brother, Carla

Tonight was an inadvertent Fritz Lang two-fer: I went to see Ministry of Fear (1944) at the Brattle and then I came home and Fury (1936) was playing on TCM. I'd always thought of a sharp break between his earlier Expressionist work and his American films, but I had no idea what I was talking about. Blackout in London (as Powell and Pressburger proved four years earlier) is a beautiful playground for all sorts of strange light and shadow. Lang was a year out of Nazi Germany when he filmed small-town togetherness as a lynch mob, mothers lifting their children on their shoulders to watch a man burning to death behind bars. I knew I wanted to see You and Me (1938), but I might as well stick the whole catalogue on the list now.

I am ignoring Tiny Richardson (except for when he revs his bike threateningly at T. Witt.) and posting some of the photos from yesterday's parade. All by [livejournal.com profile] nineweaving unless otherwise credited.



I'd forgotten I was wearing earplugs until I saw this picture. I said there was a lot of brass!



I also said Dr. Alberts' sign kept getting him stopped for photo ops. That's a cathode ray tube from the RCA Victor 6T87 we didn't quite salvage in June he's holding. I believe he is demonstrating the "radio wave."



It was a really good sign.



I had a sign with much smaller print, but I also had a vest pocket full of cards, which I handed out to anyone who looked sufficiently intrigued or confused. I went through three pocketfuls. I consider that pretty decent advertising.



Speaking of which! (Photo by David Kessler. Hand by Lily Grodzins.)



[livejournal.com profile] audioboy already posted this one on Facebook, so I don't feel too bad about reproducing it.



Ditto David Kessler and this one.



And this one was taken by my mother, who insisted on an after-the-ball-was-over shot. I've uploaded the one where my eyes are actually focused. It was only about five o'clock.



Bonus! The Mari-bison-thing. On wheels. You can't really see them, but the eyes were made out of bottle glass. It certainly looked from certain freakish, decaying angles as though there was real bone inside. I approved so much and I hope it never comes by my house on New Year's and clacks its jaws.

Eagle-eyed readers may remember the flat cap from the last round of picspam. It's been in regular rotation ever since. The suit was the first one my father ever bought; the shirt is the one decent white shirt I still own, but I abstracted it from one of my parents years ago. I'd still like to have been wearing suspenders, but as it was I didn't have to buy a single article of clothing in order to dress like I worked in radio in 1938—or at least a lot closer to 1938 than now—and I'm actually rather proud of this.

Still want a pocket watch, though.

[identity profile] ethelmay.livejournal.com 2012-10-11 01:27 am (UTC)(link)
I know a guy who's almost six-four who wears a 30-inch inseam. I don't know how he does it -- his legs don't look that short.