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THE TURNING POINT: GEORGE ROMERO’S LAND OF THE DEAD

By Adrian Martin

Land of the Dead (2005) is, at every moment, a jaw-droppingly audacious film. In fact, it is Karl Marx’s Capital on the multiplex screen. George Romero’s anti-Bush (indeed, anti-American) rhetoric is fearless and unrelenting: the embodiment of evil capitalism, Kaufman (Dennis Hopper), announces, “We don’t negotiate with terrorists”; and his opponent, the heavily ethnic Cholo (John Leguizamo), later responds with: “I’m gonna do a Jihad on his ass.” Only a supposedly trivial zombie horror movie – dismissed, overlooked or treated summarily by many mainstream, middlebrow critics – could manage to fly under the ideological radar so completely to work its savage, subversive mischief.

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Artículos

FIGURAS EN UN JARDÍN: EL EFECTO DOMINÓ. SOBRE ÚLTIMO DÍA CADA DÍA, DE ADRIAN MARTIN

Por Cristina Álvarez López

Tras una primera lectura, uno puede pensar que Último día cada día es, fundamentalmente (y como su subtítulo parece indicar), un recorrido por el pensamiento figural a partir de una serie de autores clave. En efecto, el libro dibuja un trayecto que puede leerse como un intento de historización, pero uno que no pretende ser exhaustivo, cerrado o cronológico. La historia que esboza Último día cada día es solo una de las muchas posibles; una historia muy personal y, en cierto modo, única; una historia que toma como base una serie de fragmentos de textos que, tal y como Martin reconoce, están “dispuestos, más o menos, en el mismo orden en que llegaron a mí, el orden en que me encontraron” (pp. 1-2).

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RE-AGITATOR: A DECADE OF WRITING ON TAKASHI MIIKE BY TOM MES

By Claudia Siefen

Mes’s sort of narrative history of Miike’s filmography gestures at its philosophical dimensions, and is also interested in coupling the director’s biography with the wider aesthetic and japanese society contexts of that decades, too. His book is gripping, as he is dipping from time to time in self-forgotten sentences but never pedantic or even worst: embarrassing. The book’s expansive, full-coloured pages (a ballanced range of unique set photos and film stills by long-time Miike collaborator Christian Storms) and generous margins render that volume a world unto itself, while emphasising the issues Mes addresses in his tale.

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MEMORIES OF MURDER BY BONG JOON-HO

by John A. Riley

A body found in a ditch in a remote rural area. Violent cops with no qualms about roughing up suspects. Rivalry between the rural cops and the big city detective who’s assigned to the case as it becomes clear there’s a serial killer on the loose. The well-worn tropes of the detective and police procedural genres are, in Memories of Murder, reinvigorated and fashioned into something sly and critical that retains a hard-hitting power.

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LOST HIGHWAY BY DAVID LYNCH

By Sarah Nichols

In looking for a way to write about David Lynch’s Lost Highway, I found myself going back to the 1955 essay “Towards a Definition of Film Noir” by Raymond Borde and Etienne Chaumeton. They were, of course, looking at those films from what we think of as the classical period of noir, and realizing that “one could simplify the problem by assigning to film noir qualities such as nightmarish, weird, erotic, ambivalent, and cruel” (1).

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THE END OF THE WORLD AS A PROTOCOL: 4:44 LAST DAY ON EARTH (ABEL FERRARA, 2011)

By Nicole Brenez

The burst of apocalyptic works that swept the big screen in 2012 did not owe as much to the Mayans, as to two films whose main contribution was to erect two, symmetrical peaks in the history of the simulacrum. The first was titled An Inconvenient Truth (Davis Guggenheim, 2006), a histrionic slide-show about global warming that garnered two Academy Awards and a Nobel Prize for its protagonist, Al Gore.

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MEKONG HOTEL BY APICHATPONG WEERASETHAKUL

by John A. Riley

The cinema of Apichatpong Weerasethakul is, amongst many other things, a cinema where ghosts, past lives, dreams and possibilities are all layered upon one another, flowing at a supine pace, with sodden atmosphere – like the Mekong river that forms the impassive centerpiece of this film. Many – if not most – of the film’s shots take place on a balcony overlooking the river, while everything else takes place in and around a hotel on the riverbanks.

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Q&A

PUNK INTERVENTION: A CONVERSATION WITH F.J. OSSANG

Interview by Michèle Collery, Mina Blumenfield and Mónica Delgado

Only rockers love poetry and literature – sometimes you wonder! We speak about rock and roll, I told him that I want to make a film of the classic punk age, haunted by Arthur Craven, the boxer, who traumatized Breton, who also was Oscar Wilde’s nephews . And it all melt between The Clash, the Sex Pistols, Vince Taylor, Arthur Cravan: it all enchanted Strummer. We had drank champagne in a pizzeria and I don’t know what and then he said “Now, we go to the pub.” So here we are, ordered in speed, the producer drank vodka on the rocks, I was gin and tonic, 3 or 4, I don’t remember what he took -we had to ordered fast because they didn’t served after that – thus, we each had our 3 or 4 glasses, we play darts and he says “Ok Ossang, I’ll do your movie!”

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AS IF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY HAD NEVER HAPPENED: HAUNTING THE DOCUMENTARY FORM WITH ROBINSON IN RUINS AND THE ATTIC

By John A. Riley

Adam Curtis and Patrick Keiller are two makers of idiosyncratic documentaries who have carved out unique careers over the past few decades, stretching the documentary form to breaking point in the process. In this article, I’ll argue that haunting is one particular theme that not only unites the two filmmakers, but goes a long way to explaining their respective warpings of the documentary form. What emerges from their use of the haunting motif is a critique of the prevailing political status quo in Britain

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AUDITION BY TAKASHI MIIKE

By John A. Riley

In The Pursuit of Happiness, the American philosopher Stanley Cavell outlines a blueprint for the comedy of remarriage. In Audition, genre-bending director Takashi Miike unveils his tragedy of remarriage, a radical inversion in which Aoyama, a middle-aged film producer is persuaded to remarry. His desire to find a wife is staged, with the help of another film industry professional, as an audition for a part in a nonexistent film. The film will never materialise but Aoyama’s new bride will. But where Cavell found fables of change and growth in his remarriage movies, Miike fashions his visceral tragedy from myopia, vanity, wealth and status, insecurity, and a long legacy of abuse.

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