Innovations in Entertainment
FILMS / ART / STUFF / REPEAT
Friday, 12 September 2025
Wednesday, 10 September 2025
Sunday, 7 September 2025
WAR OF DREAMS
Judex, d. Georges Franju (1963)
Thirty years ago, when I was a film student, I'd spend my down days lying on the bed in my little room and watching film after film I'd taped off the telly over many years, sometimes all day until it was dark and time to go to the pub. I watched everything I could, but I had a somewhat self-conscious bias for 'the pantheon': Truffaut, Godard, Bergman, Bunuel, Kurosawa, Hawks, Hitchcock, Cocteau, Franju.
Hitchcock, Cocteau and Franju provided the most watched films - Vertigo, Orphee and Judex, respectively. Whatever criteria of film art I currently possess was largely formed by repeat exposure to these three masterpieces.
Judex has, over the years, become my favourite, not least because its wears its brilliance so lightly. Franju's homage to Louis Feuillade's seven hour crime serial from 1914* is a hugely engaging 90 minute film that moves quickly but smoothly, as if on castors, from one striking scene to another until it ends (the transitions sometimes take the viewer by surprise, and it takes a minute to become reoriented). Franju is an inventive and stylish director, but not a flashy one: his greatest skill here is in creating a wholly believable secret dream world where people with incredible talent (for good, for evil) are conducting an epic running battle while everyone else goes about their boring business.
Judex has an incredible internal integrity: everything is off by a few degrees, but it is never weird or outlandish - the settings and the situation and the people all makes sense, they are recognisably real. There is something of the 'uncanny valley' in it, i.e. the discomforting feeling real humans get when confronted with something almost but not quite human-like, here extended to a world which is familiar in most ways but simultaneously slightly askew. The viewer is not uneasy, however, instead they are intrigued and, besides, Franju does everything he can to entertain: a non-stop plot, crisp cinematography, wonderful visuals, convincing and attractive characters, and a great score of music and composed sound by Maurice Jarre.
Towards the end, the absurdities begin to pile up to almost delirious effect. The mysterious crimefighter Judex, who so far has been presented as an almost omniscient mastermind and technical genius, is reduced to sending the comic relief detective and his street urchin sidekick to a local bar to make a phone call to get help. From nowhere, a passing Circus provides a hitherto unknown beautiful acrobat (the wonderful Sylvia Koscina) who is immediately caught up in the action. Ironically, it is her, not Judex, who hastens the conclusion, becoming engaged in a life or death struggle on a Parisian rooftop with the delightfully evil, catsuit clad supervillain(ess).
The heroic acrobat Daisy also has the best line in the film (perhaps any film), when she meets up with her old flame, quite by chance: 'Remember my Uncle, the evil lion tamer? The lions ate him! We are free to be together!'
I've probably seen Judex forty times. I never tire of it, I hope I never will.
* an end title states that the film is 'in memory of an unhappy time', but then 1914 did mark the beginning of the slaughter of WW1, in which 1.3m French soldiers were killed along with half a million civilians.
Thursday, 4 September 2025
SNAPS I
I'm not an unhappy or cynical person, but I am something of a nihilist: I struggle to get the point of it all. That said, I am moral and law-abiding and absolutely fascinated with the world, particularly the world we humans have made for ourselves to see out our meaningless lives. As I stumble around I try to record as much surface detail as I can. I'm not a particularly good photographer, but I am persistent, and the world presents a never-ending cavalcade of stuff - here is just some of it.
Friday, 29 August 2025
Monday, 25 August 2025
Friday, 22 August 2025
COOL LOOKING PEOPLE
Dancer, choreographer, teacher, artist and rule breaker Anna Halprin (1920-2021).
I'm not really an envious sort of person: there are things I've got and things I'd like, but I'm not usually bothered about what other people have. The exception that proves the rule, however, is Halprins 'Dance Deck' at her Mountain Home Studio in Kentfield, California.
I seethe with burning envy about her wonderful dance deck and, for that matter, about her mountain home studio, her brilliance at dancing and her very long and extremely fruitful creative life, so I'm obviously not quite as chill as I make out. Please send money or, at the very least, several hundred planks of wood.
Tuesday, 19 August 2025
VISTAMATIC
I've always had a soft spot for Studio Vista / Dutton Picturebacks: the 'comprehensive pictorial surveys written by experts for laymen' on a wide range of topics: cinema, art, crafts, antiques, architecture, ballet, cars, cybernetics, guns, etc. so I thought I'd share some of my (far from complete) collection. Yeah, it's no problem, really, please don't mention it.
This pictureback covers Andy Warhol (his paintings, films and everything else) and was published in 1971, a great time to review the career of an artist who had been both brilliantly creative and incredibly influential in the sixties, but whose subsequent work was far less daring in comparison for all sorts of reasons, including being shot and nearly dying, then, later, totally dying.
Sunday, 17 August 2025
STOP! HAMMER TIME
Friday, 15 August 2025
BRIGHT STAR
Fear No Evil, d. Frank LaLoggia (1981)
An atmospheric, slightly hysterical movie teling the hitherto untold tale of the son of the Devil's troubled teenaged years in in the suburban hell of Rochester, New York, Fear No Evil has a great punk / new wave soundtrack, an often unwholesome blend of sex and violence, and a genuinely exciting, partially animated climax in which Lucifer Jr. is destroyed by the coruscating, cleansing light of a processional cross to semi-psychedelic and eye rubbing effect.