Love being in New York again! Just saw the Ingmar Bergman show at the April Dårarna Gallery in Chelsea with my cousin, Jennie and am feeling super inspired, alive, energized, humanized, awake and yet helpless and, um, Bergmanized.

The photos in the show been taking on the sets of Wild Strawberries, and The Seventh Seal. There were some Polaroids from Autumn Sonata and Fannie and Alexander as well but the main focus was definatly his black and white phase.

Bergman’s long time cinematographer, Sven Nyquist was given equal credit for all the photos. Because the two of them had collaborated so closely for so long, their visions were “interchangeable,” the April Dårarna Gallery curator told me. I wondered whether those two alpha visionaries would have ever characterized themselves that way. Perhaps some weird Swedish legal battle is going on?

The April Dårarna Gallery curator also said that Liv Ullmann and Bibi Andersson would not allow the Bergman estate to release any of the photos taken on the Persona set due to the interchangeable aspects of his simultaneous relationships with both actresses.

The photos I’m posting –my personal favs– are apparently now being contested based on the fact that both Bergman and Nyquist loathed dogs. (this is from the April Dårarna cuator, not me) No surviving cast or crew member can recollect a canine presence on the set so that particular argument might have some merit. Bergman had allergies and Nyquist, evidently, was a cat person.
Archive for the 'Film' Category
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| From Susannaspeier.com |
Saint Valentine
St. Valentine’s Day –the day originally established to commemorate a priest who defied Claudius II to perform marriage ceremonies against the explicit orders of the tyrannical Emperor’s ruling that young men remain unmarried in order to maintain a strong army –is political in origin.
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| From Susannaspeier.com |
Sex and Politics
The connections made between politics and Valentine’s Day in 2010 however, brings sex scandals to mind. The public needs to know whether or not their elected officials are having extra-marital affairs as it could reveal a greater history of corruption. A sex scandal will affect public trust and and sometimes, as in the case of John Edwards, even destroy a political career. Should politicians who are no longer even on the federal payroll continue to get this much media attention, though?
Former Rep. Charlie Wilson (D-TX)
Earlier this week, Amy Anderson, a high school friend, who I recently reconnected with through Facebook, posted Charlie Wilson’s obituary on her Facebook wall. The retired Congressman’s heart gave out just four days before Valentine’s Day.
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| From Susannaspeier.com |
Photo of the real Charlie Wilson taken a couple of years ago
Wilson, known as much for his womanizing as for his controversial politics, was played by Tom Hanks in the 2007 movie, “Charlie Wilson’s War.”
Mike Nichols’ and writer, Aaron Sorkin’s work on the film was nothing less than sublime in the way it rose above and beyond Hollywood’s pedantic tendency to enlighten the public with pre-packaged moral high ground conceits, wrapped in red tin foil and placed in heart shaped boxes with ribbons around the edge.
Amy, who had interned for Charlie Wilson a decade after events portrayed in the film took place, however, called my attention to other areas that had been, well, Hollywoodized. The buxom secretaries who were referred to as “Charlie’s Angels,” for example, were actually, “really smart” unlike the bubbleheaded bimbos Hollywood had taken the liberty to inflate.
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| From Susannaspeier.com |
The Hollywood and the real Charlie Wilson story.
In honor of the late Saint Valentine as well as the late Charlie Wilson I am featuring Amy’s Politiku in this Valentine’s Day Politiku post.
Amy Anderson Politiku
known for his tales of
too much whiskey and women
but he did much more
Good Time Charlie drank
whiskey and fought soviets
Hanks played him too sweet
tall in suspenders
wearing a crooked toupee
a real deal Texan
Amy Anderson has had many jobs, but her first was an Intern for Charlie Wilson.
Love and politics
accommodate the extremes.
What is your safe word?
Rebecca Lieb Politiku
Strippers and whores aren’t
on the valentines day tab
this year, Blackwater.
Brandon Ruckdashel Politiku
Obama and John
Were two sides of the same coin
A Hope turned to naught
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| From Susannaspeier.co |
Mistress with child and John Edwards
Melissa Parrish Politiku
roses a good choice
for wife of an official.
what to get mistress?
Ken Wheaton Politiku
VD also stands
for venereal disease
so back off Cupid.
Wei Shin Politiku
South Carolina?
Nay, Sanford’s Valentine’s in
South America.
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| From Susannaspeier.com |
Governor Mark Sanford
Much as I find the actions that brought about the sex scandals distasteful, I also fear the obsessive public fixation on them might be harming us more than we realize.
I wont pretend that sex scandals are less interesting than a 2,000 word health care overhaul bill. I will, however stipulate that if we recognize the collective tendency to turn sex scandals into media magnets and then make an active choice to only follow subsequent investigations if they serve the public interest, we could find a better use for our time and attention.
Susanna Speier Politiku
Okay, Congressman…
…bring back the Public Option
and I’ll sleep with you.
Pending approval by The Huffington Post’s editorial staff, the complete version of this article and several other fabulous Politiku on this topic will post on my Huffington Post Column as “Sex Scandal Politiku.”
Please follow @Politiku on Twitter, as well.
What I do Get -or- Ontology of Swoonie Films That Actually Work for Me
Okay, so starting with what I do get about it. I get the Romeo and Juliet scenario. It’s clever. A teen vampire movie would, in fact, have the swoonability to pull it of, most likely. Would, being the operative word here.
See, the Luhrmann film adaptation of Romeo and Juliet is actually an all time fav of mine. Symbolic imagery rose to meet the language. They fell in love cause of an Ecstasy trip. It somehow all made sense to me. Enough willing suspension of disbelief to justify a self-contained world of heightenedness.
Felt the same way bout the swimmingly deliriously romantic Richard Linklater Before Sunrise film as well as its decade later follow, up Before Sunset. It’s instalove pulsebeat that drives you there whether you wanna be swooshed in or not.
Romantic love is legitimately discovered, fought for and successfully and believably secured in the form of loyalty and lifetime commitment over the course of Richard Linklater’s two films and this is exactly that those two Twilight movies are striving to obtain through swooshy surprises and twists of fate. The swooshes of Twilight Saga: New Moon, however, are just not hitting me.

Sickly, Unworthy Bloodsucker vs Buff, Worthy Wolf Dude
Edward’s entire persona literally pales in comparison with buff wolf dude. Like his Biblical namesake, Jacob is the Bella’s perpetual beta-contender. Nothing he can do, in fact, will ever win him Edward’s place in Bella’s heart. And he’s soooo much more compelling –not to mention worthy– on all fronts.
Love the connection w/ Pacific Northwest landscape and of the Earth and what girl wouldn’t love having a pack o’ Native American wolves protecting her. And yes, I realize that part of the intrigue as exploited by Twilight franchise launched branding –I mean beverage– campaign.
Now that I think about it, Jacob as embodiment of Native American spirituality, jeans, pick up truck/motorcycle repair and perpetual Pacific Northwest drizzle and the clangs of his Vampire clashes is the movie’s only salvation.
Why Would Edward or Anyone Else Want to Read Bella’s Mind?
There’s no way I’ve been the only one wondering this. And its been going on since the first Twilight movie when Edward got all emphatically hot and bothered about it during science class. Only this time, it’s the Vampire Vatican getting all miffed and ruffled about not being able to read Bella’s mind. So what, though! So what if they can’t use their mind reading powers on her! Only thing she’ll be thinking about is Edward, anyway. At least, that’s all she seemed to be thinking about last I checked.
New Moon – The Twilight Saga Politiku
She’s uninteresting.
Who cares what she is thinking.
Did I miss something?
I asked my friend, Cathy, to tell me why Googletrends reports a steady drop in screensaver searches. The decline dates from 2004 to the present. Cathy, a friend I’ve known since Hampshire College days, is a Screensaver Auteur.
Idle Time Software
In 2008, Cathy’s company produced “Holding Pattern” a screensaver that simulates the experience of intermittently gazing out of an airplane window and snoozing. Apple praised the work for its creativity and lauded Idle Time Software for its programming integrity. Eventually David Byrne bought a copy from Cathy’s website and invited her collaborate with him on a photography project using the original software she developed to create Holding Pattern.

Cathy Creating Idletime’s Sunset 23
Photo by, Susanna Speier
Deluge of the Anti-gadget
The reason people hate screensavers, Cathy explained, is because skanky software scumbags load them with spyware, adware and viruses. Screensavers –especially those free screensaver downloads people get online — are often the epitome of skank.
The Great Google Has Spoken
I went to GoogleAdWords to figure out what screensaver keywords have surged over the internet last month.
1,220,000 users trawled the internet using the word “screensaver” and the same number searched for the plural form. “Free screensavers,” came in third, and “Halloween screensavers” was right after at 135,000.
There was no data available for look-ups of “search engine scam,” and fewer than 1,000 were savvy enough to specifically search for “screensaver spyware.” Legit as the fear of bogus downloads may be, the search patterns indicate that the fear is based more on conjecture than research and analyses.
Figuring Out Whether or Not Screensaver = Oxymoron
Cathy takes pride in Idle Time’s technical integrity. She does not sell ad space or generate income through site referral, and she even posts a personal disclaimer officiating the fact she does that she does not add spyware.
And in case you’ve been wondering, the reason Cathy could spend a year developing a technically, creatively and conceptually sophisticated screensaver is revenue generated from the deluxe versions of her free software enables her to do so. Cubicle Flood was therefore made possible by Holding Pattern’s success.
Despite Cathy’s disclaimers, getting people to trust a free screensaver download is increasingly challenging. Could the Googletrends be winning?
Cubicle Flood – The Waters are Rising
The generic grey cubicle office where Cathy used to work inspired the brand new screensaver, “Cubicle Flood.” “It was an emotional response to the deadening work environment,” she says. “You see a workspace that’s been generated for you by a Human Resources Department.”
Cathy’s Katrina survivor friends do not like the feeling that the new screensaver evokes. “Water is incredibly strong and it creeps in,” Cathy says. The office depicted in Cubicle Flood, however, “isn’t affected the way a real space would be. Cubicle Flood is a dream of a flood and not a real flood.”
Daniel Alcheh’s Soundtrack
Daniel Alcheh, masterfully composed the original soundtrack of Cubicle Flood. His music complements the flood’s progression over time without overpowering the visual elements.
One wouldn’t think that a disasterscape like a hurricane, tsunami or flood– with rising waters and rising music– would have a tranquil and meditative effect, but in Cubicle Flood, that peacefulness prevails as water and music gradually fills an otherwise sterile and impersonal office environment.
Composer, Daniel Alcheh in His Studio
Photo by, Susanna Speier
The music and the water move through time together. The collaborative success is evident in the fact that sound and image inform one another without imposing narrative and context.
Transcendance
“Its a really transcendent environment, but I see it as a beautiful state, a transcendence over what the office looked like previously,” Cathy says.
The soon to be released deluxe version of this production will fill your screen at different speeds and in different office environments. You can flood an office several times a day or spend an entire day, flooding one.
Talk to Me – Fodder for Your Commentary
What sort of screensaver do you use?
Where did it come from?
How do you know whether or not a screensaver is safe?
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| From Blog Archive |
The Fog of Chronology
What year was Kennedy assassinated? After tossing and turning over the fog of chronology half the night, I needed to know.
Lay awake thinking after finding out. 1963. That was 20 years after the end of World War II — the same distance between now and the first Gulf War.
Will distances between historical events preceding my existence always seem greater than distances between historical events I can recollect?
The Demographics of AMC’s Character Driven Mad Men
I’m actually not sure what the Mad Men demographics are but going by the disproportionate percentage of air time devoted to Lipitor, Viagra and Clorox, I’ll guess that the majority of Mad Men watchers remember where they were when Kennedy was assassinated.
“The Grown Ups,” Mad Men’s Kennedy assassination episode
Sunday, November 1st, Mad Med episode, The Grown Ups, was the penultimate finale of Season Three and I can’t help wonder how next Sunday’s season finale will get anywhere close.
We have the satisfaction of knowing the historic outcome and significance of Mad Men’s chronological collisions in advance of the characters knowing. This gives us access to their losses and their misunderstandings. Their discoveries and their disconnects.
I just can’t get enough David Carbonara’s music, by the way. Those melliflous counterpoint that begin a pause and a heartbeat after a clipped stream of dialog ends. Why isn’t more television like this?
The Mad Men show I watch is different from the Mad Men show that Mom watches
Mom insisted on replaying the two Mad Men Season 2 episodes that I was featured and uncredited in –Three Sundays and Six Month Leave– over and over in a way that only a mom can.
Mad Men is the black and white television screen I never had
Mad Men is the corridor to those custom framed, soft toned hand painted photographs on the wall of the guest room that my Bubby once had. Mad Men is a photo album full of square shaped black and white snapshots of my newlywed collegiate parents holding a simese cat.
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| From |
From Susannaspeier.com
Mad Men is the font of the copper colored “flour,” “tea” and “sugar” canisters that once lined my Buby’s kitchen countertop and now lines the countertop of my mom’s kitchen.
Mom insists television receptions were not all that bad. In fact, all her friends seem to agree they were actually quite sharp. Does the distortion came from Mad Men creator and writer, Michael Weiner’s own fog of chronology, then?
Click here if you’d like to submit a Mad Men Politiku to my Huffington Post column
Click here for reviews of other blogs following Mad Men Season Three
Click here for a babbley but well intended (was new to blogging and didn’t get how spacing for the web and headers worked) and comprehensive description of my experience working as a featured background performer on the Mad Men, Season 2 episodes Three Sundays and Six Month Leave.
Go figure! Here’s the linkie – http://www.networkedblogs.com/topic/Film/Have no idea how they decide on these things but I guess I’ve made it to Networked Blogs’ (part of Facebook) Top 50 Film Blogs.
Defining a Multi-Topical Blog
Film might not be the focus of most of my posts but when I weighed the options: Do I write a political blog? No, not really. All the real-deal political writers wouldn’t think so, anyway. Politiku is politics, yes, but fancified. And I only post my Politiku on Huffington now anyway, for SEO purposes.
And, yes, I write a lot about science. I’m not a scientist, though. Nor am I a Search Engine Optimizer, though I write about Search Engine Optimization.
Embracing Hot Topics
Boring as this may be, I simply write about about whatever inspires me. New hot topics like SEO, yeah, I’m into it. Into it in so far as I’ve been doing it for almost a year now and am just starting to embrace this particular “hot topic” as a new direction in which to take my freelance writing. What prompted me to embrace it was not the “hotness,” so much as it was the pragmatic simplicity of gaining a skill that there is an abundance of demand for. Well, okay, that is “hotness” maybe?
Film vs Optimized Content
Unlike film –in which, content is an end in and of itself– the SEO stuff I write about creates content based on trending terms. In other words, content is determined by the swarm rather than from within.
Thank you, Networked Blogs
So, thank you, Networked Blogs, for putting my ‘Film Blog’ in your top 50. Glad to hear you like what I have to say about film. Back to trying to find an agent to represent my unsold screenplays and back to trying to find new clients while seeking out a real job to get me by. And yes, perhaps a real job that would involve writing in some capacity but I’ll take a permanent position with health insurance over that, any day. In other words, if you –yes, you the reader– need someone to create Search Engine Optimized, keyword rich content, even better!
So…ya wanna read more of my SEO stuff? Click here.
Stumbled across a Mad Men Season 3 Newsweek review that I found particularly lively, in that it gently interweaves the obvious and un-obvious allegorical nuances of the epic. Decided to further investigate. Blogger Dan O’Brien, understandably, prob gets a zillion times as much traffic as I do and his “Why You are an Idiot for Not Watching Mad Men” shows why. I’m cheating a bit by adding my friend Hollie’s blog entry about MM, since it’s actually about Season 1 and not 3 but truth to be told, Hollie’s blog is well worth reading in its entirety. Not only has she gone from being an actor to being a staffed writer on Cold Case in a period of a little over a year due to sheer determination, dedication and talent, but her insights about on-screen chemistry (which come from her acting talent and training) are actually applicable to all seasons, not just 1 or 3. In fact, while we’re backpedaling, I’d have to say that New York Magazine’s patented Don Draper Likability Index covering seasons 1 and 2 is still pretty fresh. Finally, please forgive my laziness (I’m not really lazy but I do really have to get started on my job hunt now, being that its a Friday and everything) if you really want to read Mad Men reviews, this metacritic link’ll be you there is no time flat. If I had more time, I’d try and dig up commentary on the music and on the cinematography and set design but that’d be another entry, I guess. Okay, so one more thing before signing off. For those of you wondering, why –despite the fact I can’t remember being this far gone over a show since Commander-in-Chief (which is actually what got me to start watching television for the first time since I was a teenager) there is a very specific reason that I don’t “Mad Men” myself on Facebook,
here goes: while I loved working with this creative powerhouse during Season 2 and am not at all surprised to see Janie’s vision going viral in the form of the Mad Men Yourself phenom, I am apprehensive about embracing avatar altering fan rituals because, I dunno. It’s not really where or who I’m at, I guess. Then there are also those articles my dad forwarded me about virused Flash downloads and finally, because I’ve already got pics of my Mad Men’d self from the two Season 2 episodes I was in and I got em w/out downloading problematic software!
Click here to read my post about the Mad Men Season 3, episode 12 Kennedy Assassination episode titled “The Grown Ups.”
Click here for a bit of a babbley thought well intended (was new to blogging and didn’t get how spacing for the web and headers worked) and comprehensive description of my experience working as a featured background performer on the Mad Men, Season 2 episodes Three Sundays and Six Month Leave.
Although John Hughes’ films’ kinda began their downhill descent after Pretty in Pink and then careened into eminent demise after Some Kind of Wonderful, yesterday’s twinge of sadness (upon first learning of his sudden death) was made all the more acute by today’s radio retrospective. And what, besides soundtrack, could have possible succeeded in summoning up a melancholic parade like that. The outcast characters of his mythical Sherwood, Illinois all somehow managed to elevate the atmospheres’ around them through the soundtracks that their seemingly unaware characters, lived, breathed and moved within, thereby elevating the outcast experience right along with them. What was amazing was how, at the time, they seemed to resonate with absolutely everybody. At the time the phenom of the universality of an emotionally honest script, eluded me on a conscious level, while The Breakfast Club, his masterpiece, might well have been the most memorized screenplay since, well, okay, since Sixteen Candles. And even today, can anyone truly disassociate Ben Stein’s talk show appearances with his “anyone? anyone?” lecture in Ferris Beuller’s Day off? In those awkward and isolated early adolescent years, the Walkman & Echo and the Bunnymen/ Suzanne Vega/ OMD/Psycadelic Furs/ Simple Minds combo was the emotional subtext I moved through the world with. John Hughes and his characters seemed to always understood that, somehow.
When I was told I was about to watch a movie about a college professor from the late Paleolithic Era I rolled my eyes, anticipating some new Geico commercial spin-off. The opening had me chucking at it as opposed to with it. The script was way hokie. Plot points seemed planted and contrived and dialog silly. Then somewhere along the way, whoosh—sucked through the wormhole—there I was loving it. Was like the ultimate ‘what if’ fantasy for History Channel (without the annoying flashbacks), National Geographic and Scientific American junkies all swirled. Brought me back to those exhilarating brainstorming session I’d have with Brian Greene while writing Calabi-Yau. Anything was possible. Was using Aristotleian clues and formulas to speculate on how it’d end and got the rug pulled out from under, anyway. Thinking back through the craftsmanship, nothing was arbitraty, though I couldn’t have possible anticipated the outcome. Senses greater forces at play, I researched the writer, Jerome Bixby after watching it and discovered he’d work on numerous Twilight Zone and Star Trek Episodes during his lifetime. A TV show Bixby created in the 60s even inspired an Asimov story…whoa!
Saw Anne Waldman read Manatee/Humanity. Brunch on the patio with my friend, Jill and discussed what sort of work environments we should look for, according to the Myers Briggs. Finished watching season 2 of Mad Men, watched a one-year old discover birthday cake, realized that the camera that I thought was broken wasn’t. Night walk with boyfriend to look at flowers and swans and ducks and lake in moonlight. Some wealthy company is throwing all of their money at trying to get advertising on the moon, he said. We swiftly concluded that the likelihood of that occurring during our lifetimes is…not very. Cleaned and organized stuff a little bit but not too much. Didn’t solve and didn’t break anything. Took a bubble bath. Learned that my super supportive, inspiring and hyperprolific friend Hollie Overton just officiated her WGA membership and interpreted it to mean that, despite what it can sometimes seem, Hollywood does reward talent and hard work. Watched 15 minutes of that new King Arthur show on TV only to realize that the only ones who ever succeeded in adapting anything Arthurian were Monty Python/Terry Gilliam and Eric Rohmer Managed to actually get a little bit of work done. Live broadcast of Leonard Cohen’s London concert. Time isn’t moving too quickly or too slowly. Now, through open windows, breathing in the August night. Still thinking about the moon. Remembering the Smashing Pumpkin’s Tonight, Tonight video. What was that old silent movie they were referencing in the video? Loved how they created a video to rise to the level of the music’s fantasticalness. Wanted to see it; figure out more about the history Went foraging. Didn’t find it but found something else instead. A treasure in its own right. History of Moon movies presented as an Apollo 40th retrospective, no less. Windows are still open. Check out:








