sovay: (Morell: quizzical)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2017-09-25 01:22 am

Just to be a normal man, just to go out shaking hands

I don't understand Facebook's algorithms. Independent of any pages shared by my friends, it keeps presenting me with this photo of violinist Gil Shaham, upcoming guest of the BSO, and I cannot tell if it thinks that I am the sort of person who listens to classical music (true) or the sort of person who thinks this particular musician is great-looking (also true) and in either case I have no money for the symphony and extant commitments on one of the days he's playing anyway, but I still want to know which data they were farming to produce this result. Seriously, it's been every time I go to check in on the news. I'm not complaining, but I am impressed.

Gil Shaham


(I did not make it to the Brattle's screening of A Matter of Life and Death (1946), so the question of whether I find David Niven as beautiful in that movie as Andrew Moor does will have to wait for another time.)
boxofdelights: (Default)

[personal profile] boxofdelights 2017-09-25 06:14 am (UTC)(link)
Facebook knows you a little too well.
nineweaving: (Default)

[personal profile] nineweaving 2017-09-25 06:27 am (UTC)(link)
I did not make it to the Brattle's screening of A Matter of Life and Death (1946)

I did. Excellent short speech by Thelma Schoonmaker (filmed earlier today in New York): she said she would have gone up that stairway for Michael Powell, as he would have for her. She said that the war freed Powell and Pressburger to do as they wished: all they were asked, she said, was to make something good for morale; and in this case, something good for Anglo-American relations, which reaction to the war had soured. ("Over-paid, over-sexed, and Over Here.") The black-and-white of heaven, she said, was actually monochrome: clever Jack Cardiff filmed it in technicolor, then printed it without dye. If you see a good print, she said, it's pearly.

Well, this wasn't a print, but 4K.

The restoration did look gorgeous, though——especially the beach. All beautifully acted, wittily written, and Archerly askew. No one else would have thought of those lovely mischievous bits: the goat boy; Conductor 71; the great theatre of heaven dwindling into a galaxy, tinting as it shrank; and the vicar rehearsing A Midsummer Night's Dream with GIs; and the camera obscura, with our doctor as benevolent spy. The Archers always were drawn to the act of gazing. And of course, the--what do you call a freeze-frame that ghosts can walk around in?--the stopped tsble-tennis match, the stopped neurosurgery is form of spying. It turns humans into art, at once vulnerable, comic, and unsettling. An artform for the dead to smile at.

I think their brief from the government, to bring England and America “into a mountain of affection th'one with th'other" did make the trial scenes rather too preachy. But when the lights went up, I found the young couple behind me blown away. "Seventy years old!" she said. I told them to go out and watch them all.

Nine
nineweaving: (Default)

[personal profile] nineweaving 2017-09-25 07:59 am (UTC)(link)
I hope when the time comes he's waiting at the other end to greet her, as I hope Pamela Brown was there for him. (Kathleen Byron and Deborah Kerr will be somewhere in the constellation. If it was complicated on earth, in heaven it shouldn't be so.)

Constellations fit rather well in heaven.

That's one of the reasons I want to see a print!

I hope you will.

What I don't remember so fondly is the Other World itself, except for the galaxy and the stairs.

Except for Marius Goring (as trickster and fop), and the coke machine, it's all a bit chilly and regimented, yes. But then, it's a place you don't want to go. Earth is gloriously messy and contingent.

This is an awfully Ptolemaic cosmos: there are the unmoved movers in heaven, and the whole sublunary world. Niven should have been a meteor, but he fell without burning. Someone else had to flame out.

...cinema is twenty-four death masks a second.

Oh, that's really good.

So what do you think of David Niven?

I'm not usually one for charming rogues, but in this his roguery is tempered by memento mori.

Nine







thisbluespirit: (Default)

[personal profile] thisbluespirit 2017-09-25 08:08 am (UTC)(link)
LOL, well, it could be worse! ;-D
cmcmck: (Default)

[personal profile] cmcmck 2017-09-25 11:30 am (UTC)(link)
Shaham is a genius and as you say, a nice looking guy, so I can certainly think of worse things to pop up on your pages! :o)
sartorias: (Default)

[personal profile] sartorias 2017-09-25 01:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I watched it while exercising, after your mention the other day. Niven is gloriously splendid early on, quoting poetry madly as he chooses his moment to die. There are some other lovely moments too, his voice and demeanor so light I think it's easy to misjudge him and say he's one note.

It's an odd film, with a naked goat boy whose body language screamed discomfort, and a very regimented heaven.
ashlyme: Picture of me wearing a carnival fox mask (Default)

[personal profile] ashlyme 2017-09-25 01:57 pm (UTC)(link)
I can't speak for Niven's beauty, but Gil Shaham is pretty. Also I covet his jacket. That's all the Mattie-cliche-boxes ticked!
gwynnega: (Leslie Howard mswyrr)

[personal profile] gwynnega 2017-09-25 08:27 pm (UTC)(link)
I covet that jacket too.
ashlyme: Picture of me wearing a carnival fox mask (Default)

[personal profile] ashlyme 2017-09-25 02:24 pm (UTC)(link)
*I also covet his jacket. I worry that Facebook could tell.*

So far I've not been graced by the velvet algorithm. Jacket timeshare?
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2017-09-25 10:46 pm (UTC)(link)
That is a snazzy jacket and lovely smile.
rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)

[personal profile] rosefox 2017-09-26 06:29 am (UTC)(link)
I bet it's because he looks like you.
rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)

[personal profile] rosefox 2017-09-26 06:51 am (UTC)(link)
Just the right amount. :)
asakiyume: (definitely definitely)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2017-09-26 04:25 pm (UTC)(link)
A-plus reply ;-)
asakiyume: (definitely definitely)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2017-09-26 04:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Doesn't he?! I was going to say he looks like [personal profile] sovay's brother.
asakiyume: (more than two)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2017-09-26 07:46 pm (UTC)(link)
LOL, I was forgetting that you have a brother. So yeah, your, um, other brother.
rinue: (Default)

[personal profile] rinue 2017-09-27 02:56 am (UTC)(link)
Nice! I keep getting ads for the audobon society - well-photographed and beautifully plumed birds, notes about habitat. I'm impressed because I am exactly the right person to target, given that I don't belong to that society but could possibly be persuaded to join if somebody bugged me about it enough times. Which they seem to be trying to do. It needs to be a lot of times, though.
rinue: (Default)

[personal profile] rinue 2017-09-27 02:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I don't love having that information collected. But given that it is collected, I'd rather at least it be used to show me things that are obviously targeted at me than either (1) continue to be bombarded with stuff I've said I don't want, a la junk mail, or (2) have the information be collected but stay invisible to me, where I think I'm seeing the same stuff as everybody else but it's a manipulative illusion.