09.23.07

Restored 1897 Films of Palestine & Middle East to Debut at Pordenone Silent Film Festival

Posted in Cinema, Silent Films, Cinema History, History at 4:49 pm by Spencer

As first reported here in July, 93 reels of motion picture film footage shot in 1897 in Palestine and other Middle Eastern locations were recovered earlier this year by Lobster Films from an antique shop in Amsterdam. Despite being 110 years old, the camera negatives are reported to be in excellent condition.

It was recently announced that the restored films will be publicly exhibited for the first time at the 2007 Pordenone Silent Film Festival (Le Giornate del Cinema Muto) in Italy, running October 6 through 13. The program will be titled “Incunabula: Bible Land Films.”

In an email message sent to Festival organizers in March, 2007, and excerpted on the Pordenone web site, Lobster Films co-founder Serge Bromberg said:

…this year, we have something very special to show. In an antique shop, we have discovered 93 wonderful little camera negatives from c. 1897, all shot in the Middle East (Jerusalem, Palestine, Egypt, Tibériade, etc.), that would form an ideal 80 [minute] program of what could be among the earliest films shot in the region still in existence. … They are in wonderful condition … Not a scratch, no decomposition, and those little sprocket holes typical of the films of that year.

The Festival web site includes several photographs of the recovered films, which are included below. No further information about the films is currently available, but watch this space for updates on this historic find.

Image of an 1897 motion picture shot in the Middle East. Photo courtesy of Lobster Films and the Pordenone Silent Film Festival.

Image of an 1897 motion picture shot in the Middle East. Photo courtesy of Lobster Films and the Pordenone Silent Film Festival.

Image of an 1897 motion picture shot in the Middle East. Photo courtesy of Lobster Films and the Pordenone Silent Film Festival.

Canisters holding pristine motion picture camera negatives shot in Palestine in 1897. (Photo courtesy of the Pordenone Silent Film Festival web site - cinetecadelfriuli.org)

Indianapolis Greyhound Bus Terminal, circa late 1940s

Posted in Indiana, History at 3:51 pm by Spencer

The Indianapolis Greyhound Bus Terminal, circa late 1940s (thumbnail)

09.22.07

In Memoriam: Tom Phalen, Oct. 10,1948 - Aug. 27 2007

Posted in Music, Friends and Family at 8:26 pm by Spencer

Tom Phalen (photo by Lora Gastineau)

09.18.07

Jewish Neo-Nazis In Israel

Posted in News of the World, Politics, Reality is Weird at 10:15 pm by Spencer

Wow. Words pretty much fail me.  So here are someone else’s.

Israelis shocked as first neo-Nazi cell arrested
By Eric Silver in Jerusalem
The Independent (London), 10 September 2007

Six decades after Israel was founded to ensure that Jews would never suffer another Holocaust, the Jewish state has smashed its first cell of neo-Nazis. The idea was so unthinkable that the country has no law against neo-Nazi activity.

Eight Russian immigrants, aged 16 to 21, were remanded in custody in the Ramleh magistrates’ court, near Tel-Aviv, yesterday. They covered their faces with their shirts, baring arms tattooed with neo-Nazi insignia and slogans, and protested their innocence. A ninth suspect has fled the country. They are to be charged tomorrow with causing bodily harm, illegally possessing weapons and denying the Holocaust.

Superintendent Revital Almog, who headed the investigation, said: “The level of violence was outrageous.”

One of the young men was Jewish. The rest were admitted under Israeli legislation, which grants citizenship to anyone with at least one Jewish grandparent and entry permits to the families of gentiles married to Jews. About one million immigrants, many with tenuous ties to Judaism, moved to Israel in the early 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The cell’s alleged leader was named as Eli Buanitov. Detectives said they found an email message on his computer saying: “I won’t have kids. My grandfather is half Yid, so that this piece of trash won’t have ancestors with even the smallest percent of Jewish blood.” In another file, he was quoted as writing: “I will never give up. I was a Nazi and will remain a Nazi. I won’t rest until we kill them all.”

Undercover police began tracking the cell after two synagogues in the Tel-Aviv satellite town of Petah Tikva were desecrated and yeshiva students were beaten. Internal and external walls were spray-painted with swastikas, as well as “Heil Hitler” and “Death to the Jews” graffiti.

The religious community in the town has complained of a reign of terror. “There are people here who simply hate Jews,” said Nahum Taub, a synagogue sexton. Rabbi Yigal Rosen, who heads a yeshiva, reported that three of his students were ambushed as they walked through a local park.

The assailants beat them, called them names and held a knife to the neck of one student before stealing their mobile phones.

Inspector Micky Rosenfeld, a police spokesman, said the suspects had filmed themselves beating 15 ultra-Orthodox Jews, foreign workers, homosexuals, homeless people, drunks and drug addicts. In one particularly brutal assault, the whole group set about a Thai worker in the old Tel-Aviv bus station. He had to be treated in hospital.

Detectives who raided their homes found the films and a photograph of one of the group brandishing an M-16 assault rifle. They also confiscated knives, an improvised pistol, TNT, wires and detonators.

Some of the footage was shown at yesterday’s cabinet meeting. Ehud Olmert, the Prime Minister, said: “We saw the appalling documentation of violence for its own sake. We as a society have failed in educating these youths and distancing them from crazy and dangerous ideologies.”

Inspector Rosenfeld said the eight had neo-Nazi tattoos on their arms. They would meet every few days and decide who and where to attack next. Searches of their computers and video cassettes revealed links to racist groups in Germany and the United States.

The case has shocked Israelis and prompted calls for the government to reconsider its immigration policy and to outlaw neo-Nazi and other hate crimes.

Efraim Zuroff, who is still hunting Nazi war criminals for the Simon Weisenthal Centre, said: “The writing was on the wall. This is what happens when you have laws that allow immediate citizenship to people with little connection to Jewish history, the Jewish people, the Jewish religion and Jewish culture.”

Avner Shalev, the chairman of the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial authority, said: “Neo-Nazi activity, wherever it appears, must be treated with the utmost seriousness and the perpetrators prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

“While this is a marginal and extreme case, it is nevertheless intolerable. It must be combated and addressed in the legal and educational systems.”

Colette Avital, a Labour MP, leads a group of about 20 legislators from all parties who have been pressing for a ban on neo-Nazi symbols and neo-Nazi activities. She was confident that their private members’ bill would now pass.

Ms Avital, who was a child fugitive in German-occupied Romania, urged the government to examine revoking the citizenship of anyone convicted of such crimes. “Neo-Nazism is a terrible thing. Israel is the one country where this shouldn’t happen,” she insisted. “But it’s not enough to ban it. You have to look at the root of things. What kind of education did these people receive? Kids like this don’t come from nowhere.”

PKD’s Third Wife Responds to The New Yorker

Posted in What I'm Reading, Books at 9:56 pm by Spencer

In case you missed it, The New Yorker recently ran a litcrit piece about Philip K. Dick, one of the acknowledged giants of science fiction. While fairly lengthy, Adam Gopnik’s piece was less than effusive and at times arguably borderline insulting — resorting to olde anti-sci-fi canards about “adolescent” readers and suggesting that the French’s allegedly pivotal adoration of PKD had more to do with the books reading more beautifully in the translation (and, I daresay, more than hinting that PKD is the Jerry Lewis of science fiction literature).

Some PKD devotees have taken to eviscerating Mr. Gopnik, which I feel to be predictable, perhaps even understandable, but ultimately unfair. If nothing else, he’s allowed to his opinion. He does (rightly) call Ubik a “beautiful and hallucinatory” novel, and gives props several other landmark works (including The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldrich, which he — I think rightly — calls a turning point in Dick’s writing). And he rightly acknowledges Dick’s considerable impact on the genre, both in literature and in film.

That said, I also feel Gopnik seemed to lack a broader understanding of PKD’s work and its broader context. For example, he takes PKD to task for recycling ideas and stories. “He once wrote eleven novels in a twenty-four-month stretch. But one thing you have to have done in order to write eleven novels in two years is not to have written any of them twice.”

This is a fundamental misapprehension of PKD’s milieu, especially during the middle period of his career. In those days, like all other sci-fi writers except perhaps Asimov and Bradbury, he was being paid by the word and working under extraordinarily tight deadlines. Put simply, he did not have the luxury of numerous drafts. The uncharitable might say he was merely “recycling,” but to my eye a closer reading is much more nuanced. Often, I think, he was trying to find the correct form for the stories he wanted to tell, but the deadline pressures dictated that he simply deliver product. Reading his middle period novels, you will indeed find the same plot surfacing here and there. But the key is to read them in order of publication. In the earlier incarnations, you can almost identify the paragraph where he thought to himself, “Ah shit. I took the wrong fork two chapters back. But I gotta deliver this fucking thing, so I’ll just wrap it up and try it again next time.” And so he does, gradually honing until he hits the mark he was aiming for, at which point he moved on. Or evolved the meme to the next step.

As a result of pulp novel economics, we as readers have been given something of a treasure — the ability to watch a novelist craft a tale over time, in published works, without having to haunt musty archive bookshelves hunting for this or that draft. It’s a little like watching a jazz musician week after week at a standing gig at a local club growing from a mere talent to a true artist. This is, I think, borne out by his later works, which became increasingly focused and less “recycled.”

Was Philip K. Dick a Shakespeare? No. Gopnik is right (if unduly harsh); Phil was not a poet. But I defy anyone to read VALIS and Radio Free Albemuth (the latter published posthumously) back to back and not walk away marveling at the depth and complexity of the ideas he made manifest for us.

Aaanyway, there is much else I could say. But the whole point of this post is simply to point out that Mr. Dick’s third wife, Anne, who was married to him during the late ’50s and early ’60s, wrote a letter to the editors of The New Yorker rebutting Mr. Gopnik’s piece. The editors declined to run the letter in its entirety, but it was posted in full at David Gill’s blog.

I strongly recommend you read both pieces in their entirety.

(Thanks to Hell’s Donut House for the tip.)

09.06.07

Visitation

Posted in Whatever, Seattle Stuff, Reality is Weird at 9:23 pm by Spencer

A friend of mine arrived at home tonight in the University District, when someone flew close over their head and landed on a nearby fence.

Owl, photographed Sept. 6, 2007 in the University District, Seattle, WA