The Brownie of Blednoch (1889) by Edward Atkinson Hornel.
• “None of the theatrics of most films are available in Bresson, because in some ways Bresson’s characters, along with Dreyer’s and Cassavetes’s are the most inscrutable in motion pictures—maybe since their creators are the best believers in suggestion.” Greg Gerke explores the later films of Robert Bresson.
• Iizuna Fair is a short animated film by Sumito Sakakibara that will be viewable at Vimeo for the next few months.
• Occult scholar Mitch Horowitz returns to the Aquarium Drunkard podcast for a wide-ranging discussion.
Marty [Scorsese] went to the Edinburgh Film Festival in 1974 to collect an award for Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore. They asked him who he wanted to present it to him, and he said Michael Powell. They had no idea who he was. No one did, but I found an American doing publicity for Kubrick’s 2001 who knew where he was. He introduced Michael to Marty at a lunch where Marty bombarded Michael with questions about how he did this and how he did that. Michael writes in his autobiography that the blood started to run in his veins again, it had been so long that he and Emeric had been living in oblivion.
Marty brought Michael to America, where we had already started working on Raging Bull. Marty had been educating me about Powell and Pressburger’s films, sending me home with VHSs. I had fallen in love with them, and then he said that Michael Powell was coming for dinner one night and asked if I would like to meet him. That’s how we met and eventually became involved, all thanks to Marty.
Thelma Schoonmaker remembering her husband, Michael Powell, and discussing the ongoing restoration of his films. Good to hear that plans are afoot to resurrect Gone to Earth
• Whole Earth Index is a near-complete archive of the Whole Earth Catalog and its related publications.
• At the Daily Heller: David Byrd, the East Coast’s psychedelic poster man.
• See the winners of the Nikon 2023 Photomicrography Competition.
• New music: Golden Feelings by Better Weather.
• Mikrostruktury (1963) by Wlodzimierz Kotonski | La Chasse Aux Microbes (1977) by Michael Bundt | Microscopic (1995) by Gas
A project 2 years in the making. I hope you like it.
Peter
Thanks, Peter. That link in your name doesn’t work the way you posted it. I had to copy and paste half of it into a browser in order to open the relevant website.