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A Bonanza of television goodies, John Wick 4 and Time Bandits make their 4k debuts and tributes to two departed icons of the 70s… only on DigiGods! DigiGods Podcast, 07/11/23 (M4a) — 49.5 MB right click to save Subscribe to the DigiGods Podcast In this episode, the Gods discuss: Criminal Minds: Evolution - Season 16 (Blu-ray) Criminal Minds: Evolution Season 16 (DVD) Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (4k UHD Blu-ray) Enter the Video Store: Empire of Screams (Blu-ray) The Event – The Complete Series (Blu-ray) Evil Dead Rise (4k UHD Blu-ray) Guy Ritchie's The Covenant (Blu-ray) Insidious (4k UHD Blu-ray) Jesus Revolution (Blu-ray) John Wick: Chapter 4 (4k UHD Blu-ray) Kubrick by Kubrick (DVD) The L Word: Generation Q - Season Three (DVD) La Brea: Season Two (Blu-ray) A Life's Work (DVD) Living (Blu-ray) Lord of War (4k UHD Blu-ray) Love and Sunshine (Blu-ray) Love, Fall & Order (DVD) Magic Flute (Blu-ray) Magic Mike's Last Dance (Blu-ray) Maria Bamford Stan-up Spotlight (DVD) Matter Out of Place (DVD) Medicine for Melancholy (Blu-ray) Moving On (Blu-ray) National Lampoon's Vacation (4k UHD Blu-ray) One Day as a Lion (DVD) Parenthood: The Complete Series (Blu-ray) Pasolini 101 (Accatone, 1961. Mamma Roma, 1962. Love Meetings, 1964. The Gospel According to Matthew, 1964. The Hawks and the Sparrows, 1966., Oedipus Rex, 1967, Teorema, 1968, Porcile, 1969, Madea, 1969) (Blu-ray) Quantum Leap: Season One (2022) (Blu-ray) Rain Man 35th Anniversary Edition (4k UHD Blu-ray) Renfield (Blu-ray) Rules of the Game (4k UHD Blu-ray) Seal Team: Season 6 (Blu-ray) The Servant (Blu-ray) Signed, Sealed, Delivered: The Complete Series (Blu-ray) Sky+Med: Season One (DVD) Speak (DVD) The Super Mario Bros. Movie (4k UHD Blu-ray) Taking a Shot at Love (DVD) Time Bandits (4k UHD Blu-ray) To Her, With Love (DVD) Transformers 6-Movie Steelbook Collection (4k UHD Blu-ray) Transfusion (Blu-ray) The Truman Show 25th Anniversary (4k UHD Blu-ray) Tulsa King Season 1 Steelbook (Blu-ray) V/H/S/99 (Blu-ray) The Wedding Veil Expectations (Blu-ray) Please also visit CineGods.com.
Gasten: Yolanda Bloemen, literair vertaler en Floris Meens, cultuurhistoricus. In deze aflevering* spreekt Robert van Altena met Yolanda Bloemen en Floris Meens over de betekenis van de poëzie in het oeuvre van Pier Paolo Pasolini. Dit gesprek is opgenomen bij gelegenheid van de publicatie in 2017 van de tweetalige bundel 'De nachtegaal van de katholieke kerk' (uitgeverij Huis Clos), ontwerp Piet Gerards. Pier Paolo Pasolini heeft internationaal grote bekendheid verworven met memorabele films als ‘Accatone' (1961), ‘Theorema' (1968) en ‘Medea' (1969) met operagrootheid Maria Callas. Toch wordt hij in zijn moederland Italië misschien allereerst gezien als een van de grote dichters van de 20e eeuw. Yolanda Bloemen maakt al decennia Russische en Italiaanse literatuur toegankelijk voor een Nederlands lezerspubliek. Zij maakte gerenommeerde vertalingen van o.a. Tsjechov, en het monumentale ‘Oorlog en Vrede' van Lev Tolstoj (met Marga Wiebes). Ook is Bloemen werkzaam als uitgeefster van voornamelijk poëzie en toneelteksten met uitgeverij Plantage. Foris Meens is cultuurhistoricus (19e en 20e eeuw). Hij is als universitair docent verbonden aan de Radboud Universiteit, Nijmegen. In 2006 werd Meens bekroond door het Koninklijk Nederlands Instituut in Rome (KNIR) voor zijn onderzoek naar het werk van Pier Paolo Pasolini. *Dit gesprek werd voor het eerst uitgezonden op 2 mei 2017 SPRINGVOSSEN redactie + presentatie: Robert van Altena contact: springvossen[at]gmail.com www.instagram.com/springvossen www.facebook.com/springvossen www.amsterdamfm.nl/onderwerp/springvossen Voor een speellijst met de Springvossen uitzendingen: www.soundcloud.com/amsterdamfm2/sets/springvossen Foto: Pier Paolo Pasolini met zijn moeder (1965)
Ideas & Insights Thoughts out loud. A way to think ideas into solutions. Experiments Book Report: The History of Music: A handbook and guide for students by Waldo Selden Pratt Movie Overviewed: https://boxd.it/lZV42 Be kind - Stay in control Read more books, stay amazing Be Thankful - Be Grateful podcastjebuth.com #podcast #VLOG #Talkshow
This episode I've got a mix of pretty straight forward Deep House vinyl for you featuring cuts from Theory of Movement, Accatone, Flaze, Jean Bressan and more. Full Tracklist: https://undergroundvinylsource.com/blogs/news/uvs-podcast-ep031
Coincidiendo con el centenario del nacimiento de Pasolini, Documentos RNE dedica un programa al cineasta y escritor italiano, homosexual y comunista, que marcó una época de la vida de su país, años difíciles conocidos como los años de plomo. Pier Paolo Pasolini nació en Bolonia en 1922, hijo de un militar del ejército fascista, con el que nunca se entendió, y de una madre con la que mantuvo una estrecha relación hasta su muerte. Estudió Letras en la prestigiosa universidad boloñesa y parecía destinado a enseñar Arte y Literatura, pero las circunstancias le llevaron por otro camino. Durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial se trasladó a la aldea materna de Casarsa, en la región del Friuli, donde desarrolló sus ideas políticas. Pasolini se definía como un intelectual marxista independiente y mantuvo una relación de amor-odio con el Partido Comunista. Le votaba siempre, pero, a la vez, criticaba su burocracia y sus consignas. En Casarsa también explotó la atracción que, desde muy pronto, sintió por los jóvenes de su mismo sexo, lo que la traerá múltiples conflictos. Uno de esos escándalos le obligó a abandonar Casarsa en 1950 y trasladarse a Roma con su madre. En la capital los apuros económicos se mezclan con una sexualidad más libre. En este ambiente, comienza a desarrollar su carrera literaria. Publica novelas como Chicos del arroyo, donde presenta a jóvenes pobres de los suburbios que sobreviven con pequeños robos, pero sin conciencia de clase. También poesía, una práctica que desde niño le sirvió para expresar, con cierto desaliño estético, su conciencia social. En 1957 publica Las cenizas de Gramsci, quizá su poemario más importante, donde hace un homenaje al político marxista italiano. Buscando un lenguaje con el que llegar a más gente, se encontró con el cine. A los cuarenta años, sin apenas formación, se lanzó a dirigir películas. Su filmografía contiene importantes títulos que, como sus artículos, no dejaban indiferente a nadie: Accatone, Mamma Roma, El Evangelio según San Mateo, Teorema, El Decamerón, o la última, Saló o los 120 días de Sodoma. Buscaba la provocación y tuvo que afrontar 33 procesos judiciales a lo largo de su vida. Sus críticas iban contra la sociedad italiana de su época que, en su opinión, había cambiado sus costumbres por el consumo desenfrenado capitalista. Atacaba a la televisión por haber acabado con la cultura, a la religión, a los políticos, a la mafia… todo el poder era objeto de sus dardos. Por eso, a muchos no les extrañó cuando apareció muerto en la playa de Ostia, la madrugada del 2 de noviembre de 1975, en lo que pareció un peligroso encuentro homosexual. Sin embargo, su muerte dejó tras de sí muchos puntos oscuros. La Pasión según Pasolini, con guion de Modesta Cruz y Samuel Alarcón, cuenta con una importante exclusiva, el testimonio de la escritora italiana Dacia Maraini, quien compartió con él sesiones de cine, viajes, tertulias, confidencias. Además, nos ayudan a desvelar sus claroscuros uno de sus últimos biógrafos, Miguel Dalmau; el experto en su poesía, Martín López Vega; y el especialista en cine italiano, Ángel Quintana. Escuchar audio
MP3 Link Play via Mixcloud Dave and John at the helm for this week's show with a killer selection of funk, soul, jazz, disco, boogie, house, and loads more. Featuring tracks by Sven Van Hees, Caldera, Craig Bratley, Jeremy Steig, the Ananda Project, Lady Blackbird, Stimela, Ryo Kawasaki, Accatone, Lay-Far, Venus Dodson and many, many more. Enjoy. RSS Feed: 6MS Sessions
Subscribe to Quotomania on Simplecast or search for Quotomania on your favorite podcast app!One of Italy's most famous and controversial filmmakers, Pier Paolo Pasolini was also a novelist and poet. Born in Bologna to a military family that moved frequently, Pasolini began writing poetry at age seven, attended the University of Bologna, and was eventually drafted to serve in World War II; his regiment was captured by the Germans after Italy's surrender and Pasolini escaped and fled to the small town Casarsa where he lived for years. His first book of poetry, Poesie a Casarsa, published in 1942 before his war experiences, was written in Friulian, his mother's dialect. Many of Pasolini's later works, for the screen and page, bring together different orders of experience—folk, suburban, biblical—and attempt to find forms that might encompass proletarian themes, the fringe cultures of Roman prostitutes and pimps, and radical utopianism. According to Adam Thirlwell, “In his movies, he loved fusing the hieratic with the everyday. And in his writing, too, he liked combining two things that don't usually go together: a classical form or tone that could absorb its squalid subjects.” Pasolini joined the Communist party in 1946 but was soon expelled for being a homosexual. Nonetheless, inspired by the writings of Antonio Gramsci, Pasolini remained loyal to the Party for the rest of his life, attempting to fuse Marxist tenants with radical Catholicism. In the 1950s Pasolini moved to Rome to be a teacher. In Rome, he became involved with the working classes, fringe subcultures, and criminal underworlds that feature in so many of his films. During this period he also wrote his most famous novels: Ragazzi di Vita (1955) and Una Vita Violenta (1959). The last book became the basis for Pasolini's first movie, Accatone (1961), which followed the life of a pimp in Rome. Pasolini's films from the 1960s and early 1970s gained him worldwide recognition: Mamma Roma (1962), Il Vangelo Secondo Matteo (1964), Teorema (1968), and a series of films based on medieval tales, Il Decamerone (1971), Racconti di Canterbury (1973), and Il Fiore Delle Mille e una Notte (1973). Pasolini became famous for his radical methods, including hiring nonprofessional casts, and his films' overtly political and often scandalous content. His last film Salò, o le Centoventi Giornate di Sodoma (1975), for example, adapts a novel by the Marquis de Sade, setting the action in Nazi Europe. Jason Ankeny in The New York Times noted the film is generally “[d]eemed one of the most disquieting motion pictures ever filmed.”Pasolini published over ten collections of poetry during his lifetime. His collection Le Ceneri di Gramsci (1957) won the Viareggio Prize, and he continued to publish poetry even at the height of his filmmaking career. Pasolini once stated that he made films “as a poet,” adding, “I think one can't deny that a certain way of feeling something occurs in the same identical way when one is faced with some of my lines and some of my shots.” Pasolini was violently murdered in 1975. Although a male prostitute was charged with the murder and the case officially closed, speculation about the murderers and motivation behind the killing continues.From https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/pier-paolo-pasolini. For more information about Pier Paolo Pasolini:“An introduction to Pier Paolo Pasolini”: https://www2.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/news-bfi/features/introduction-pier-paolo-pasolini“Interview: Pier Paolo Pasolini”: https://www.filmcomment.com/article/pier-paolo-pasolini-interview/“Behind the Myth of Pier Paolo Pasolini”: https://www.thenation.com/article/culture/pier-paolo-pasolini-against-avant-garde-review/
Être à Venise et y voir l’architecture de New York, percevoir dans un tableau du Tintoret la naissance des images animées, regarder le burlesque Cretinetti comme l’ancêtre du montage – autant de glissements, de déplacements, et de percutants télescopages que propose Philippe-Alain Michaud dans ce film qui lui est consacré. Suivre cet historien de l’art, conservateur aux collections cinémas au Centre Pompidou, c’est passer du tapis d’Orient à la pellicule de film, ou des premiers feux d’artifice à la salle de cinéma. Et partout l’animation des images – projections d’Antony McCall, ou de Paul Sharits, Colonne sans fin de Brancusi, Accatone de Pasolini – tout bouge !Sous la tutelle d’Aby Warburg, grand historien de l’art du début du XXème siècle, précurseur de l’iconologie et des rapprochements d’image auquel Philippe-Alain Michaud a été le premier en France à consacrer un important essai, onze images viennent se déposer sur la table pour décrire le singulier parcours de cet historien de l’art
Bart and Jenna play Kiss Marry Kill with the year 1961. Including discussion on Les Godelureaux, Girl with a Suitcase, The Innocents, Splendor in the Grass, Accatone and Something Wild.
In this month's Cinefile, RFI's Rosslyn Hyams meets artists from two French feature films. Both stories about the rougher or tougher side of life: Shéhérazade and Sauvage. Shéhérazade In the sunny port of Marseille, director Jean-Bernard Marlin sets a true-story based on the experiences of teenagers who roam the streets in less salubrious areas and hang out with local, and barely older gang-leaders in housing estates near the city limits. Marlin cast Dylan Robert who'd just been released from a deliquent's centre in real life, as his hero, Zac. Not a professional actor, but with charm and vitality, able to convey different emotions from joy to anger to love and Robert should be well on his way after this first on-camera try. Marlin's leading lady, Kenza Fortas who plays the title role, makes a huge impact in her debut role. She incarnates a street-wise character, forced to grow up before her time, who after cracking tough deals in exchange for her body, falls asleep in Zac's arms like a baby. With the city by night and by day as a backdrop, these unbridled youths seem to take possession of the streets, becoming involved in violent as well as petty crime. The camera seems to be constantly on the go. Marlin stays close to Zac and Shéhérazade as they take on eastern European gangsters, local gangsters and disinterested parents. The story could take place in any other city or any other region says the director, "I researched the background to the true love story that took place in Marseille between a very young prostitute and the boy who became her pimp. That was just the starting point. Afterwards I went to the areas where the prostitutes were. I talked to many of the yong girls, and then I dramatised the situations for my screenplay." Marlin, admits an affinity with the films of Pier Paolo Pasolini, "especially his first two films, Amaroma and Accatone where he worked with actors who had no previous experience, and people we don't often see in cinema. Also Elia Kazan, for his ambiguous relationships and contradictions in the characters, like in America, Amercia or On the Waterfront... I think my main character is not so dissimilar to the main character in On the Waterfront [Marlon Brando]. Without giving the game away, one reason he chose a happy ending was to prevent his first feature (after an award-winning short called Fugue or Runaway) falling into the banality of real-life.
This week with Accatone from Portugal. Most people know him from releases on Piston Recordings, Apparel Music, Hudd Traxx, Dabit Records, One to One and Roots & Wings. Enjoy the mix!
Apparel Music is happy to present the first South-Africa Tour, with Kisk and Accatone. (2/ 12 october 2014) Tracklist: Sarp Yilmaz - Tango For The Lonely WOMO - Destiny Close Drehwerk - Mecca Calling Sarp Yilmaz - Nightrain Stefano Esposito - I Want You It To Go Kerem Akdag - A Good Play Vid Vai - Deep Diver (Huxley Remix) Sek - Suspicious Mindz (Domy Remix) Jerikon - Twisted Mind Echonomist - Midnight Talk (Ali Kuru Remix) Sarp Yilmaz & Macit Kimyaci - Kajal feat Coni Kisk & Roy Gilles pres. DA.JE - OneHundredAndEighteen Roy Gilles - There’s No Business Drehwerk - Never Let The Party Stop Ekkohaus - Jazzy Caravan feat Oneboy
Track List: 1. Oleg Poliakov - Intro [Circus Company] 2. Art Of Tones - Take Me Higher (Dub) [We Play House Recordings] 3. Wouter De Moor, Mulder (NL) - Rubato (Original Mix) [Get Physical Music] 4. Kisk & Accatone – 2Friends [APPAREL MUSIC] 5. Stevie Wonder - Superstition (Yare Bootleg) 6. Twinpeaks - Not That Tech House DJ Tool Dropped by Paris Hilton You Were Searching For [OneOffs] 7. A. Filippucci - Lost_4_The_Music (Memoryman Remix) [Paul's boutique] 8. Patrick Topping - Holiday 9. NiCe7 - Bassline Soldiers (Luke Solomon Remix) [DFTD] 10. Javier Carballo - Snake_City_Adam_Shelton_Remix 11. Detlef - Hey ho [D-FLOOR] 12. Cesare vs Disorder - Karaoke Tokyo (Original Mix) [Serialism Records] Biography: NiCe7 is a deejay and production partnership between Italy-based Nicola Daniele and Cesare Marocco. Cesare and Nicola started spinning in their teens, and joined forces in 2005. For almost a decade now, they have been releasing original tracks and put out various remix works for labels such as Noir Music, Suara, and Great Stuff. Their track "Point" on Gruuv Rec. was hailed as the best tech house record of 2011 at the Beatport Music Awards. The five-track Back to Basics EP, published by Noir Music in June 2012 and soon-to-be re-released on Defected with new mixes, and ensuing remix works on Kittball, Noir Music, and D-FLOOR, propelled NiCe7 into the international music scene, and earned them support from acclaimed artists including Jamie Jones, Seth Troxler, Luciano, Richie Hawtin, Marco Carola, Carl Cox, Solomun, and Dennis Ferrer, just to name a few. Their 2013 remix of the classic track "it's yours" by Jon Cutler was at the top of the deep house Beatport chart for months, and has been smashing dancefloors across the globe since the summer. D-FLOOR is NiCe7’s record label, co-founded with Pirupa and Leon at the beginning of 2013 to release their own productions and showcase some of the best newcomers and established producers from the underground scene. NiCe7 performed at major electronic music events including Miami Winter Music Conference, Amsterdam Dance Event, and Berlin Music Days. Throughout the year, you can groove to the sound of their house music – an original mix of techy, darker, and more funky tunes – at venues around the world.
Kisk west mix on Apparel Music Radio show! West London, Deep House, Jazzy and all the eclectic vibe selected by Kisk. With Lady Alma, The Politik, Kisk, E-dward!, Studio Bruno, Steffen Bennemann, Johannes Beck, Nachtbraker, Kerem Akdag, Dam Paul, Accatone, Zoobof, George G and Oneboy.
1° Durerstuben - Sonnenblut Am Platz Der Perlen (Original Mix)2° Dinky - Sealed (Original Mix) 3° Coat Of Arms- Lovin Together (Original Mix) 4° Alex Niggemann - Boujuma (Original Mix) 5° Terrence Parker - Love's Got Me High (Jimpster Remix) 6° Ray Okpara - Blue Me Blues (Original Mix) 7° Agoria, Carl Craig & La Scalars - Speachless (Carl Craig Remix) 8° OBX - It's All I Know (Trippin On Air) 9° Dinky - Polvo (Original Mix) 10° Kevin Saunderson featuring Inner City - Future (Kenny Larkin Tension Mix) 11° Jimpster - Alsace & Lorraine (Josh Wink Interpretation #2) 12° Accatone - Your Smile (Original Mix) This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration
1° Durerstuben - Sonnenblut Am Platz Der Perlen (Original Mix)2° Dinky - Sealed (Original Mix) 3° Coat Of Arms- Lovin Together (Original Mix) 4° Alex Niggemann - Boujuma (Original Mix) 5° Terrence Parker - Love's Got Me High (Jimpster Remix) 6° Ray Okpara - Blue Me Blues (Original Mix) 7° Agoria, Carl Craig & La Scalars - Speachless (Carl Craig Remix) 8° OBX - It's All I Know (Trippin On Air) 9° Dinky - Polvo (Original Mix) 10° Kevin Saunderson featuring Inner City - Future (Kenny Larkin Tension Mix) 11° Jimpster - Alsace & Lorraine (Josh Wink Interpretation #2) 12° Accatone - Your Smile (Original Mix) This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration