POPULARITY
Jacob Geller and Blake Hester are joined by video game designer and consultant Julie Muncy to read the second half of Ryu Murakami's novel, "In the Miso Soup." This podcast discusses the entirety of the book. Content warning for severe sexual violence. Something Rotten is better on Nebula – sign up today and find the premium feed at https://nebula.tv/somethingrotten/Send thoughts and questions about this series to somethingrottenpodcast@gmail.comFollow Julie on BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/julie.radiantarray.ioFollow Jacob Geller on BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/jacobgeller.comFollow Blake Hester on BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/metallicaisrad.bsky.socialOpening song: 恋のバカンス by The Peanuts.MUSIC: https://somethingrottenpod.bandcamp.com/album/something-rottenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Jacob Geller and Blake Hester read the first half of Ryu Murakami's novel, "In the Miso Soup." This podcast discusses the first two "days" of the book. Content warning for severe sexual violence. Something Rotten is better on Nebula – sign up today and find the premium feed at https://nebula.tv/somethingrotten/Send thoughts and questions about this series to somethingrottenpodcast@gmail.comFollow Jacob Geller on BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/jacobgeller.comFollow Blake Hester on BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/metallicaisrad.bsky.socialOpening song: 恋のバカンス by The Peanuts.MUSIC: https://somethingrottenpod.bandcamp.com/album/something-rottenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
#KöşedekiKitapçı'da bugün
AVISO LEGAL: Los cuentos, poemas, fragmentos de novelas, ensayos y todo contenido literario que aparece en Crónicas Lunares di Sun podrían estar protegidos por derecho de autor (copyright). Si por alguna razón los propietarios no están conformes con el uso de ellos por favor escribirnos al correo electrónico cronicaslunares.sun@hotmail.com y nos encargaremos de borrarlo inmediatamente. Si te gusta lo que escuchas y deseas apoyarnos puedes dejar tu donación en PayPal, ahí nos encuentras como @IrvingSun https://paypal.me/IrvingSun?country.x=MX&locale.x=es_XC
LiteraturPur #41: Ein brutaler Bandenkrieg in Japan, der fast wie in einem Splatter-Film daherkommt, dann unheimliche Geister der Vergangenheit in Russland und eine Meditation über Kunst und das Leben in den USA und Nigeria. Drei ganz unterschiedliche Bücher und drei Meinungen dazu. In einer Spezialausgabe von LiteraturPur sind die Literaturkritikerin Sieglinde Geisel und der Kulturjournalist Julian Schütt zu Gast. Wir diskutieren folgende Bücher: «Titan oder die Gespenster der Vergangenheit» von Sergej Lebedew, «Superhits der Showa-Ära» von Ryu Murakami und «Tremor» von Teju Cole. Sieglinde und Julian sind ein eingespieltes Team, das gerne lustvoll über Bücher debattiert und manchmal auch streitet. In dieser Ausgabe sind sie sich ausnahmsweise oft einig.
Matías Rivas, Arturo Fontaine y Sofía García-Huidobro recomendaron la serie inspirada en el libro de Patricia Highsmith, y textos como "Baumgartner " y "Sopa de Miso".
Matías Rivas, Arturo Fontaine y Sofía García-Huidobro recomendaron la serie inspirada en el libro de Patricia Highsmith, y textos como "Baumgartner " y "Sopa de Miso".
STAY TRUE by Hua Hsu IN THE MISO SOUP by Ryu Murakami Lads episode! Andrew and Toby take the wheel this week and it is as ROWDY and CHAOTIC as you would expect a book review podcast recorded by two men in their 30s to be! So, pretty normal and chilled out! Andrew reviews Hua Hsu's Pulitzer-Prize-winning memoir Stay True and flirts with a band that threatens to dominate his aesthetic and Toby, seemingly influenced by Ryu Murakami's sex-thriller In the Miso Soup, can't stop saying things like ‘School is a seductive place.' Plus, the boys discuss their holiday shame, share their Goodreads goals of the past year and the year to come, and play a game with REAL FINANCIAL CONSEQUENCES.
On this episode, we ring in the New Year with the Winter-Spring 2024 Books & Bites Bingo reading challenge! From now through June 30, 2024, keep track of books you read or listen to by writing the title and author in the matching bingo square. Complete all 25 squares for a chance to win a $100 Joseph-Beth gift card or an Amazon Kindle. You'll also earn an enamel pin (while supplies last). Ease into the challenge with our suggestions for books you can read in one sitting. Grab a cozy blanket to read under, and you'll be able to check off two prompts on your bingo card. Carrie's PickFoster by Claire Keegan is about a young Irish girl sent to live with distant relatives while her mother prepares to give birth to yet another child. The Kinsellas give the girl the care and attention that is sometimes lacking in her own chaotic home. But there are details to suggest that the couple has their own sadness.This is a quiet, spare story full of tenderness and the solace these three bring to one another.Pairing: Rhubarb Tart, the first dessert the girl eats in the Kinsella home. Watch the video How to Make Traditional Irish Rhubarb Tart, read "How to Make the Perfect Rhubarb Tart and the Common Mistakes to Avoid," or make an Easy Rhubarb Jam Tart.Michael's PickIn the Miso Soup, by Ryu Murakami and translated by Ralph McCarthy, begins with narrator Kenji, a Tokyo "nightlife guide," recalling his encounter with an American client, Frank. As he leads Frank through the seedier parts of Toyko nightlife, Kenji begins to feel there's something off about Frank. Is he the serial killer roaming the streets?Pairing: A bowl of miso soup from a recipe found in the Gaijin Cookbook. Jacqueline's PickThe Course of True Love (and First Dates) by Cassandra Clare is an account of Magnus Bane and Alec Lightwood's romance told from Magnus's point of view. Magnus is an immortal, and an immensely powerful warlock, and Alec Lightwood is a Shadowhunter. Before their alliance, many Shadowhunters killed Downworlders for any small infraction. So, Magnus is taken aback when Alec asks him to go on a date.If you want to learn more about Alec's and Magnus' relationship or are just looking for a book filled with humor and romance, you should read this short story.Pairing: Ethiopian Beef Tibs, which Alec and Magnus share on their first date.
Cities are that miraculous technology that bring people together to make us all better, richer, happier. But bad planning, or even too much planning, can turn them into hellholes. Pritika Hingorani joins Amit Varma in episode 361 of The Seen and the Unseen to share her insights on how we should think about cities, how governments do policy, and what economics can bring to urban planning. (FOR FULL LINKED SHOW NOTES, GO TO SEENUNSEEN.IN.) Also check out: 1. Pritika Hingorani at Artha Global and Twitter. 2. The Importance of Cities — Episode 108 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Reuben Abraham & Pritika Hingorani). 3. Global Health Impacts for Economic Models of Climate Change -- Pritika Hingorani and Vaidehi Tandel. 4. Financing urban infrastructure for an evolving India -- Pritika Hingorani, Sharmadha Srinivasan & Harshita Agrawal. 5. Reforming Urban India -- Pritika Hingorani et al. (Page 14 of this report has the map Pritika mentions in the episode.) 6. India Infrastructure Report: Making Housing Affordable -- Various authors. 7. Bombay: The Cities Within -- Sharada Dwiwedi and Rahul Mehrotra. 8. Order without Design: How Markets Shape Cities -- Alain Bertaud. 9. The Death and Life of Great American Cities -- Jane Jacobs. 10. Norwegian Wood -- Haruki Murakami. 11. Absolutely on Music -- Haruki Murakami and Seiji Ozawa. 12. Haruki Murakami and Ryu Murakami on Amazon. 13. Piercing -- Ryu Murakami. 14. Pranay Kotasthane Talks Public Policy -- Episode 233 of The Seen and the Unseen. 15. Population Is Not a Problem, but Our Greatest Strength — Amit Varma. 16. Miniature early episodes of The Seen and the Unseen on FSI and Rent Control with Alex Tabarrok, and Slums with Pavan Srinath. 17. The Mystery of Capital — Hernando De Soto. 18. The Incredible Insights of Timur Kuran — Episode 349 of The Seen and the Unseen. 19. The Power Broker -- Robert Caro. 20. Urban expansion: theory, evidence and practice -- Shlomo Angel. 21. Atlas of Urban Expansion. 22. Islamic Empires: Fifteen Cities that Define a Civilization -- Justin Marozzi. 23. The City and the City -- China Miéville. 24. The Faltering Escalator of Urban Opportunity -- David Autor. 25. The Shane Parrish tweet on WFH. 26. Securing the Home Market -- Alice Amsden. 27. The Elusive Quest for Growth -- William Easterly. 28. Participatory Democracy — Episode 160 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Ashwin Mahesh). 29. Cities and Citizens — Episode 198 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Ashwin Mahesh). 30. Helping Others in the Fog of Pandemic -- Episode 226 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Ashwin Mahesh). 31. Parkinson's Law. 32. Karthik Muralidharan Examines the Indian State -- Episode 290 of The Seen and the Unseen. 33. We Are Fighting Two Disasters: Covid-19 and the Indian State — Amit Varma. 34. Urban Governance in India -- Episode 31 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Shruti Rajagopalan). 35. The Loneliness of the Indian Woman — Episode 259 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Shrayana Bhattacharya). 36. The Skeptical Environmentalist — Bjorn Lomborg. 37. London 1870-1914: A City at Its Zenith -- Andrew Saint. 38. Modi's Lost Opportunity — ep 119 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Salman Soz). 39. Wanting — Luke Burgis. 40. Luke Burgis Sees the Deer at His Window — Episode 337 of The Seen and the Unseen. 41. We Should Celebrate Rising Divorce Rates (2008) — Amit Varma. 42. Lady Doctors: The Untold Stories of India's First Women in Medicine — Kavitha Rao. 43. Kavitha Rao and Our Lady Doctors — Episode 235 of The Seen and the Unseen. 44. The Memoirs of Dr Haimabati Sen — Haimabati Sen (translated by Tapan Raychoudhuri). 45. Living London History -- The blog Pritika mentions. 46. Good Bye, Lenin -- Wolfgang Becker. This episode is sponsored by the Pune Public Policy Festival 2024, which takes place on January 19 & 20, 2024. The theme this year is Trade-offs! Amit Varma and Ajay Shah have launched a new video podcast. Check out Everything is Everything on YouTube. Check out Amit's online course, The Art of Clear Writing. And subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free! Episode art: ‘These Are People' by Simahina.
This episode, Terrah Card, Kelli Green Ivy, and Langley Reynolds read her, "Audition" by Ryu Murakami. This podcast talks about explicit material involving abuse, so a warning is advised. Nonetheless, the three of them of a great time discussing the book. Listen and enjoy! Stay On The Line is a Horror Genre Podcast in which there are discussions on Thursdays about horror genre related things. Books, movies, games, and more, Terrah Card sits down with ghoulfriends and dissects the topics at hand. This is for entertainment purposes only. That being said we hope you enjoy! Let us know what you think of the episode! The video aspect will be available for the Missed Caller and Pee Pee Poo Poo Tiers on Patreon.com/StayOnTheLine Thank you for the support and let us know what you all think! We hope you enjoy this episode as well. If you love the episode, make sure to share, rate, and review it on your listening platform. Please leave a rating and a review on your podcasting platform and please subscribe to the podcast for a new episode every Thursday! If you would like to follow the podcast for more info, @StayOnTheLinePodcast on Instagram and @TerrahCard on Tiktok You can find Terrah under @TerrahCard on most platforms. Transition by StanLexie on Twitter aka Intern Paula If you would like to follow Kelli you can on all platforms under @KelliGreenIvy Kelli's Podcast: Pick It Apart Pick It Apart • A podcast on Anchor Kelli's Writing: Author link: https://www.amazon.com/kindle-dbs/author/ref=dbs_P_W_auth?_encoding=UTF8&author=Kelli+Green&searchAlias=digital-text&asin=B085KWMRT4
Join hosts, Aleece and Tony as they spill their guts on the 1999 proto-torture classic, Audition, directed by Takashi Miike and written by Ryu Murakami and Daisuke Tengan. In this SPILL YOUR GUTS episode, will Audition "GET the PART" on our Staff Pick Shelf? Or will it end up on the "CUTTING ROOM FLOOR?"Have you seen Audition? Where does it rank in your top horror movies?? Let us know below!And, if you want to support the podcast, please check out our Patreon page:Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GuttedHorrorPodcastAlso find us here: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/guttedhorrorpodcast/Linktree: https://linktr.ee/guttedhorrorpodcast?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=10ebd0a0-36d8-4d5e-995b-ade06ec03f30Or Listen to us:Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/gutted-horror-podcast/id1558950151Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/775EZGCuXHfKw1mJddgCei?si=8c946c9c59be48efAmazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/1e1a50de-33be-4056-89b8-a57063bb3b4c/gutted-horror-podcastMANY THANKS, LOVE, & GUTS to all of our listeners and followers for your support!!!
Joe and Graham from Films at First Sight join Caitlin to cover 1999's Audition. Takashi Miike is a memorable director, and Audition is an unforgettable movie. Some view it as a feminist take on revenge; others view at as misogyny put to screen. Regardless of where you land, we can all agree that Asami is an iconic figure within the monstrous feminine and that Audition is damn scary. We expound on the film's themes of love, loneliness, depravity, and surrealism, and we like that we've grown to see the movie with new eyes. And we can't believe Joe's parents watched it. Tangents include: Joe's 40th, hair cuts, the "male loneliness epidemic," mojo dojo casa houses, rock stars, TV, sandwiches, morning vs night showers, choppable toes, crackers, and Daphne du Maurier. Full review starts around 25:30.
The task of nation-building did not end with our founders, and does not stop at our politicians. It's up to us to build the India we want to see. Nitin Pai joins Amit Varma in episode 318 of The Seen and the Unseen to talk about his life, his learnings and his liberal nationalism. (FOR FULL LINKED SHOW NOTES, GO TO SEENUNSEEN.IN.) Also check out: 1. Nitin Pai on his own website, Mint & Mastodon . 2. The Nitopadesha -- Moral Tales for Good Citizens. 3. The archives of The Acorn, Nitin Pai's blog. And its current avatar. 4. Nitin Pai's ideas, notes and current research and teaching. 5. The Takshashila Institution. 6. Seven Tenets of Indian Nationalism -- Nitin Pai. 7. In support of a liberal nationalism -- Nitin Pai. 8. A republic - if we can keep it -- Nitin Pai. 9. Saving the Nation From Nationalists -- Nitin Pai. 10. The real problem is that we have too little republic -- Nitin Pai. 11. The operating system of liberal democracy needs a major upgrade -- Nitin Pai. 12. Social harmony is a matter of national interest -- Nitin Pai. 13. Liberal democracies must protect their citizens' minds from being hacked -- Nitin Pai. 14. Understanding Foreign Policy — Episode 63 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Nitin Pai). 15. Russia, Ukraine, Foreign Policy -- Episode 268 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Pranay Kotasthane and Nitin Pai). 16. The City and the City — China Miéville. 17. The State of Our Economy -- Episode 252 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Puja Mehra and Mohit Satyanand). 18. The Tragedy of Our Farm Bills — Episode 211 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Ajay Shah). 19. Who We Are and How We Got Here — David Reich. 20. Early Indians — Tony Joseph. 21. Early Indians — Episode 112 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Tony Joseph). 22. The Moral Arc: How Science Makes Us Better People — Michael Shermer. 23. History of European Morals — WEH Lecky. 24. The Expanding Circle: Ethics, Evolution, and Moral Progress — Peter Singer. 25. How the BJP Wins — Prashant Jha. 26. The BJP's Magic Formula — Episode 45 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Prashant Jha). 27. Caste, Capitalism and Chandra Bhan Prasad — Episode 296 of The Seen and the Unseen. 28. Episodes of The Seen and the Unseen w Pranay Kotasthane: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. 29. Rohini Nilekani Pays It Forward -- Episode 317 of The Seen and the Unseen. 30. Samaaj, Sarkaar, Bazaar : A citizen-first approach — Rohini Nilekani. 31. The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind — Gustave le Bon. 32. Crowds and Power — Elias Canetti. 33. EO Wilson on Amazon, Wikipedia and Britannica. 34. Narendra Modi takes a Great Leap Backwards — Amit Varma (on Modi, Mao and locusts). 35. FAQ: Why Anna Hazare is wrong and Lok Pal a bad idea -- Nitin Pai. 36. Sadanand Dhume on Twitter -- and this podcast! 37. Social media is an existential threat to civilisation -- Nitin Pai. 38. Reframing the social media policy debate -- Nitin Pai. 39. The coming regulation of social media is an opportunity for India -- Nitin Pai. 40. The Double ‘Thank-You' Moment — John Stossel. 41. Thinking Fast and Slow — Daniel Kahneman. 42. Human — Michael S Gazzaniga. 43. The Interpreter — Amit Varma. 44. The Elephant in the Brain -- Kevin Simler and Robin Hanson. 45. Freedom to Think -- Susie Alegre. 46. Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas — Natasha Dow Schüll. 47. The Importance of the 1991 Reforms — Episode 237 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Shruti Rajagopalan and Ajay Shah). 48. The Forgotten Greatness of PV Narasimha Rao — Episode 283 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Vinay Sitapati). 49. The Life and Times of Montek Singh Ahluwalia — Episode 285 of The Seen and the Unseen. 50. The original Takshashila. 51. Understanding Gandhi. Part 1: Mohandas — Episode 104 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Ram Guha). 52. Understanding Gandhi. Part 2: Mahatma — Episode 105 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Ram Guha). 53. Hind Swaraj — MK Gandhi. 54. Nikita -- Elton John. 55. The Importance of Cities — Episode 108 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Reuben Abraham & Pritika Hingorani). 56. The Gentle Wisdom of Pratap Bhanu Mehta -- Episode 300 of The Seen and the Unseen. 57. The Arthashastra -- Kautilya 58. On Exactitude in Science — Jorge Luis Borges. 59. Emergent Ventures. 60. Friedrich Hayek on Wikipedia, Britannica, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and Econlib. 61. Milton Friedman on Amazon, Wikipedia, Britannica and Econlib. 62. Arshia Sattar and the Complex Search for Dharma -- Episode 315 of The Seen and the Unseen. 63. Every Act of Government Is an Act of Violence — Amit Varma. 64. The Generation of Rage in Kashmir — David Devadas. 65. Counterinsurgency Warfare — David Galula. 66. We Won't Need To Fight A War If We Can Win The Peace — Amit Varma. 67. Kashmir and Article 370 -- Episode 134 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Srinath Raghavan). 68. Think the Unthinkable (2008) -- Vir Sanghvi. 69. Independence Day for Kashmir (2008) -- Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar. 70. The Anti-Defection Law — Episode 13 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Barun Mitra). 71. Our Parliament and Our Democracy — Episode 253 of The Seen and the Unseen (w MR Madhavan). 72. Abby Philips Fights for Science and Medicine — Episode 310 of The Seen and the Unseen. 73. Why Read the Classics? — Italo Calvino. 74. History Of Western Philosophy -- Bertrand Russell. 75. Ideas: A History from Fire to Freud -- Peter Watson. 76. Arthashastra -- Kautilya (translated by Shama Shastri). 77. The Upanishads. 78. The Mahabharata -- translated by Bibek Debroy. 79. Brihatkatha, Kathasaritsagara, Panchatantra and Hitopadesha. 80. Charvaka and Jayarāśi Bhaṭṭa. 81. Tattvopaplavasiṃha -- Jayarāśi Bhaṭṭa. 82. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy -- Douglas Adams. 83. Catch 22 -- Joseph Heller. 84. Commanding Hope -- Thomas Homer-Dixon. 85. Paul Auster, David Mitchell, Haruki Murakami, Ryu Murakami and Terry Pratchett on Amazon. 86. Piercing -- Ryu Murakami. 87. 2021 - The Year in Fiction -- Nitin Pai. 88. Bhimsen Joshi, Kishore Kumar, Hemant Kumar, Radiohead, Norah Jones, Louis Armstrong, Nina Simone, Himesh Reshammiya and Yehudi Menuhin on Spotify. 89. Take Five -- The Dave Brubeck Quartet. Check out Amit's online course, The Art of Clear Writing. And subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free! Episode art: ‘The Bigger Picture' by Simahina.
Title: Audition (オーディション, Ōdishon) [Wikipedia] [IMDb] Director: Takashi Miike Producers: Satoshi Fukushima, Akemi Suyama Writer(s): Daisuke Tengan (screenplay), Ryu Murakami (original novel) Stars: Ryo Ishibashi, Eihi Shiina Release date: March 3, 2000 (JP) PROMO: Shocked & Applaud (@ShockedApplaud) ORIGINAL EPISODE: Ep 00: Takashi Miike's Audition (1999) SHOWNOTES: We hope our listeners had an enjoyable Valentine's Day, and just in time: we've got a special episode for you lovebirds out there... As part of our Anniversary Special this season, we're celebrating over 5 years of podcasting with a redux of our original pilot: Audition. This 1999 horror film from Japanese icon and movie Chad Takashi Miike is known among the annals of disturbing cinema for its graphic depiction of torture just prior to the 2000s, and out of all the films we've covered so far, it's definitely worthy of a re-analysis. Stay tuned for more #Miikeversary content this month as Collateral Gaming joins us for a look at Miike's Ace Attorney movie! Collateral Cinema is on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, and is on Podbean, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, iHeartRadio, Chill Lover Radio, and wherever else you get your podcasts! (Collateral Cinema is a Collateral Media Podcast. Intro song is a license-free beat. All music and movie clips are owned by their respective creators and are used for educational purposes only. Please don't sue us; we're poor!)
Poet, novelist, translator, journalist, crime fiction writer, children's book author, teacher, math tutor: now here is a man who contains multitudes. Jerry Pinto joins Amit Varma in episode 314 of The Seen and the Unseen to talk about his life and learnings. (FOR FULL LINKED SHOW NOTES, GO TO SEENUNSEEN.IN.) Also check out: 1. Jerry Pinto on Instagram, Amazon and his own website. 2. Em and the Big Hoom -- Jerry Pinto. 3. The Education of Yuri -- Jerry Pinto. 4. Murder in Mahim -- Jerry Pinto. 5. A Book of Light -- Edited by Jerry Pinto. 6. Baluta -- Daya Pawar (translated by Jerry Pinto). 7. I Have Not Seen Mandu -- Swadesh Deepak (translated by Jerry Pinto). 8. Cobalt Blue -- Sachin Kundalkar (translated by Jerry Pinto). 9. The Life and Times of Shanta Gokhale -- Episode 311 of The Seen and the Unseen. 10. ‘Sometimes I feel I have to be completely invisible as a poet' -- Jerry Pinto's interview of Adil Jussawalla. 11. A Godless Congregation — Amit Varma. 12. The Rooted Cosmopolitanism of Sugata Srinivasaraju — Episode 277 of The Seen and the Unseen. 13. The Big Questions — Steven E Landsburg. 14. Unlikely is Inevitable — Amit Varma. 15. The Law of Truly Large Numbers. 16. The Gentle Wisdom of Pratap Bhanu Mehta — Episode 300 of The Seen and the Unseen. 17. Young India — Episode 83 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Snigdha Poonam). 18. Dreamers — Snigdha Poonam. 19. The Loneliness of the Indian Man — Episode 303 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Nikhil Taneja). 20. The History Boys -- Alan Bennett. 21. The Connell Guide to How to Write Well -- Tim de Lisle. 22. Thinking Better: The Art of the Shortcut -- Marcus Du Sautoy. 23. Dead Poet's Society -- Peter Weir. 24. A Mathematician's Apology -- GH Hardy. 25. The Man Who Knew Infinity -- Robert Kanigel. 26. David Berlinski and Martin Gardner on Amazon, and Mukul Sharma on Wikipedia.. 27. Range Rover -- The archives of Amit Varma's column on poker for The Economic Times. 28. Luck is All Around -- Amit Varma. 29. Stoicism on Wikipedia, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and Britannica. 30. House of the Dead — Fyodor Dostoevsky. 31. Black Beauty -- Anna Sewell. 32. Lady Chatterley's Lover -- DH Lawrence. 33. Mr Norris Changes Trains -- Chistopher Isherwood. 34. Sigrid Undset on Amazon and Wikipedia. 35. Some Prefer Nettles -- Junichiro Tanizaki. 36. Things Fall Apart — Chinua Achebe. 37. Jane Austen and Thomas Hardy on Amazon. 38. Orientalism -- Edward Said. 39. Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Kurt Vonnegut on Amazon. 40. Johnny Got His Gun -- Dalton Trumbo. 41. Selected Poems -- Kamala Das. 42. Collected Poems -- Kamala Das. 43. In Which Annie Gives It Those Ones — Pradip Krishen. 44. Dance Dance For the Halva Waala — Episode 294 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Jai Arjun Singh and Subrat Mohanty). 45. Tosca -- Giacomo Puccini. 46. Civilisation by Kenneth Clark on YouTube and Wikipedia. 47. Archives of The World This Week. 48. Dardi Rab Rab Kardi -- Daler Mehndi. 49. Is Old Music Killing New Music? — Ted Gioia. 50. Mother India (Mehboob Khan) and Mughal-E-Azam (K Asif). 51. A Meditation on Form — Amit Varma. 52. Sara Rai Inhales Literature — Episode 255 of The Seen and the Unseen. 53. Collected Poems — Mark Strand. 54. Forgive Me, Mother -- Eunice de Souza. 55. Porphyria's Lover -- Robert Browning. 56. Island -- Nissim Ezekiel. 57. Paper Menagerie — Ken Liu. 58. Jhumpa Lahiri on Writing, Translation, and Crossing Between Cultures — Episode 17 of Conversations With Tyler. 59. The Notebook Trilogy — Agota Kristof. 60. Amitava Kumar Finds the Breath of Life — Episode 265 of The Seen and the Unseen. 61. The Blue Book: A Writer's Journal — Amitava Kumar. 62. Nissim Ezekiel on Amazon, Wikipedia and All Poetry. 63. Adil Jussawalla on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poetry International. 64. Eunice de Souza on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poetry International. 65. Dom Moraes on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poem Hunter. 66. WH Auden and Stephen Spender on Amazon. 67. Pilloo Pochkhanawala on Wikipedia and JNAF. 68. Arvind Krishna Mehrotra on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poetry Foundation. 69. Amar Akbar Anthony -- Manmohan Desai. 67. Ranjit Hoskote on Amazon, Instagram, Twitter, Wikipedia and Poetry International. 71. Arundhathi Subramaniam on Amazon, Instagram, Wikipedia, Poetry International and her own website. 72. The Red Wheelbarrow -- William Carlos Williams. 73. Mary Oliver's analysis of The Red Wheelbarrow. 74. A Poetry Handbook — Mary Oliver. 75. The War Against Cliche -- Martin Amis. 76. Seamus Heaney on Amazon, Wikipedia and Poetry Foundation. 77. The world behind 'Em and the Big Hoom' -- Jerry Pinto interviewed by Swetha Amit. 78. Jerry Pinto interviewed for the New York Times by Max Bearak. 79. Salman Rushdie, Amitav Ghosh and GV Desani on Amazon. 80. Episodes of The Seen and the Unseen on the creator ecosystem with Roshan Abbas, Varun Duggirala, Neelesh Misra, Snehal Pradhan, Chuck Gopal, Nishant Jain, Deepak Shenoy and Abhijit Bhaduri. 81. Graham Greene, W Somerset Maugham and Aldous Huxley on Amazon. 82. Surviving Men -- Shobhaa De. 83. Surviving Men -- Jerry Pinto. 84. The Essays of GK Chesterton. 85. The Life and Times of Nilanjana Roy — Episode 284 of The Seen and the Unseen. 86. City Improbable: Writings on Delhi -- Edited by Khushwant Singh. 87. Bombay, Meri Jaan -- Edited by Jerry Pinto and Naresh Fernandes. 88. The Life and Times of Urvashi Butalia — Episode 287 of The Seen and the Unseen. 89. Films, Feminism, Paromita — Episode 155 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Paromita Vohra). 90. Wanting -- Luke Burgis. 91. Kalpish Ratna and Sjowall & Wahloo on Amazon. 92. Memories and Things — Episode 195 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Aanchal Malhotra). 93. Ashad ka Ek Din -- Mohan Rakesh. 94. Anna Karenina -- Leo Tolstoy (translated by Constance Garnett). 95. Gordon Lish: ‘Had I not revised Carver, would he be paid the attention given him? Baloney!' -- Christian Lorentzen.. 96. Sooraj Barjatya and Yash Chopra. 97. The Life and Times of Mrinal Pande — Episode 263 of The Seen and the Unseen. 98. Don't think too much of yourself. You're an accident — Amit Varma. 99. Phineas Gage. 100. Georges Simenon on Amazon and Wikipedia.. 101. The Interpreter -- Amit Varma on Michael Gazzaniga's iconic neuroscience experiment. 102. The Life and Times of Abhinandan Sekhri — Episode 254 of The Seen and the Unseen.. 103. Madame Bovary -- Gustave Flaubert. 104. Self-Portrait — AK Ramanujan. 105. Ivan Turgenev, Ryu Murakami and Patricia Highsmith on Amazon. 106. A Clockwork Orange -- Anthony Burgess. 107. On Exactitude in Science — Jorge Luis Borges. 110. Playwright at the Centre: Marathi Drama from 1843 to the Present — Shanta Gokhale. 111. Kubla Khan -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge. 112. Girish Shahane, Naresh Fernandes, Suketu Mehta, David Godwin and Kiran Desai. 113. The Count of Monte Cristo -- Alexandre Dumas. 114. Pedro Almodóvar and Yasujirō Ozu. 115. The Art of Translation — Episode 168 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Arunava Sinha). 116. The Lives of the Poets -- Samuel Johnson. 117. Lives of the Women -- Various authors, edited by Jerry Pinto. 118. Lessons from an Ankhon Dekhi Prime Minister — Amit Varma. 119. On Bullshit — Harry Frankfurt. 120. The Facts Do Not Matter — Amit Varma. 121. Beware of the Useful Idiots — Amit Varma. 122. Modi's Lost Opportunity — Episode 119 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Salman Soz). 123. Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala. 124. The Importance of Data Journalism — Episode 196 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Rukmini S). 125. Rukmini Sees India's Multitudes — Episode 261 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Rukmini S). 126. Pramit Bhattacharya Believes in Just One Ism — Episode 256 of The Seen and the Unseen. 127. Listen, The Internet Has SPACE -- Amit Varma.. 128. Fixing Indian Education — Episode 185 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Karthik Muralidharan). 129. The Reflections of Samarth Bansal — Episode 299 of The Seen and the Unseen. 130. The Saturdays -- Elizabeth Enwright. 131. Summer of My German Soldier -- Bette Greene. 132. I am David -- Anne Holm. 133. Tove Jannson and Beatrix Potter on Amazon. 134. The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings -- JRR Tolkien. 135. Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness -- William Styron. 136. An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness -- Kay Redfield Jamison. 137. Searching for Swadesh -- Nirupama Dutt.. 138. Parsai Rachanawali -- Harishankar Parsai. 139. Not Dark Yet (official) (newly released outtake) -- Bob Dylan.. 140. How This Nobel Has Redefined Literature -- Amit Varma on Dylan winning the Nobel Prize.. 141. The New World Upon Us — Amit Varma. 142. PG Wodehouse on Amazon and Wikipedia. 143. I Heard the Owl Call My Name -- Margaret Craven. 144. 84, Charing Cross Road -- Helen Hanff. 145. Great Expectations, Little Dorrit and Bleak House -- Charles Dickens. 146. Middlemarch -- George Eliot. 147. The Pillow Book -- Sei Shonagon. 148. The Diary of Lady Murasaki -- Murasaki Shikibu. 149. My Experiments With Truth -- Mohandas Gandhi. 150. Ariel -- Sylvia Plath. 151. Jejuri -- Arun Kolatkar. 152. Missing Person -- Adil Jussawalla. 153. All About H Hatterr -- GV Desani. 154. The Ground Beneath Her Feet -- Salman Rushdie. 155. A Fine Balance -- Rohinton Mistry. 156. Tales from Firozsha Baag -- Rohinton Mistry. 157. Amores Perros -- Alejandro G Iñárritu. 158. Samira Makhmalbaf on Wikipedia and IMDb. 159. Ingmar Bergman on Wikipedia and IMDb. 160. The Silence, Autumn Sonata and Wild Strawberries - Ingmar Bergman. 161. The Mahabharata. 162. Yuganta — Irawati Karve. 163. Kalyug -- Shyam Benegal. 164. The Hungry Tide -- Amitav Ghosh. 165. On Hinduism and The Hindus -- Wendy Doniger. 166. I, Lalla: The Poems of Lal Dĕd — Lal Dĕd (translated by Ranjit Hoskote). 167. The Essential Kabir -- Arvind Krishna Mehrotra. 168. The Absent Traveller -- Arvind Krishna Mehrotra. 169. These My Words: The Penguin Book of Indian Poetry -- Edited by Eunice de Souza and Melanie Silgardo. This episode is sponsored by CTQ Compounds. Check out The Daily Reader and FutureStack. Use the code UNSEEN for Rs 2500 off. Check out Amit's online course, The Art of Clear Writing. And subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free! Episode art: ‘He is Reading' by Simahina.
In this episode, we are doing something different. We're playing a game! More specifically, Name That Author! The rules of the game are simple. Caleb has given Spencer a long list of authors and as he reads a random excerpt from the work of those authors, it's up to Spencer to see if he can guess who wrote what. If you'd like to play along, here is the list: Kurt Vonnegut, David Foster Wallace, Haruki Murakami, James Joyce, Anthony Burgess, Yukio Mishima, Cormac McCarthy, Natsume Soseki, Stephen King, Ryu Murakami, Neil Gaiman, Alan Moore, Paul E. Cooley, Bram Stoker, J.D. Salinger, Chinua Achebe, Andy Weir, Walt Whitman, H.P. Lovecraft, H.G. Wells, Edgar Allan Poe, F. Scott Fitzgerald, J.R.R. Tolkien, Máirtín Ó Cadhain, Nicolás Obregón
Elwood and Stephen look at this tale of revenge and Karaoke based on the novel by Ryu Murakami as a group of idle teens find themselves in an escalating battle of revenge against a group of middle aged women
On this episode we bring Zach Langley Chi Chi of the I'm So Popular podcast to talk about 1980's Coin Locker Babies by Ryu Murakami. This one is an all-timer. We talk about: Horror drag, the conciseness of the Japanese language, white space on the page, visceral writing, retarded people who rate this book low for being gross, Murakami's influence on Miike and Tsukamoto, how to make a truly nasty novel through having good characters, businessmen beating off on the subway, voices that can destroy the whole world, flies with human faces, parental neglect, Tokyo as a city at war with the swamp it's built over, unique cultural phenomena, the glamor of mass acts of terror, bullying as a love language, outlets for human violence, art as a cage for violent impulses, homophobia, enjoying freaks, Otessa Moshfegh, and real-life Datura experiences.
On this episode, we invited Adam Lehrer (Safety Propaganda, System of Systems, Communions), to talk about Ryu Murakami's Piercing and In the Miso Soup. Topics discussed include obssessive compulsion, perversion, creativity requiring sacrifices (being sacred), and lots of other shit. We had a lot of laughs on this one. But at what cost. I wasn't close enough to my mic in this one, sorry about that.
Fiends of the pod and boutique film distributors UNEARTHED FILMS provided us with two new releases, and we're here to tell you all about them! First up is an Italian movie made in English, the extreme gore film XPIATION (2017), where a mysterious woman and bonkers man torture a captive naked punk to grim effect! Following it up is the re-release of the American cut of TOKYO DECADENCE (1992), novelist and AUDITION (1999) scriptwriter RYU MURAKAMI's brilliant and infamous S&M slice of call-girl life picture! We tell you all about these out-there flicks on this review episode of CULT and CLASSIC Podcast! Listen wherever pods are found, and at https://cultandclassicpodcast.com/! Get the flicks and many more here at https://www.unearthedfilms.com/ (https://www.unearthedfilms.com/) ! Reviewer: Nate Wyckoff
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://forthenovellovers.wordpress.com/2020/04/26/almost-transparent-blue-by-ryu-murakami/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://forthenovellovers.wordpress.com/2020/04/27/piercing-by-ryu-murakami/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://forthenovellovers.wordpress.com/2020/04/28/audition-by-ryu-murakami/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://forthenovellovers.wordpress.com/2020/04/30/in-the-miso-soup-by-ryu-murakami-2/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This month on the Big Screen Book Club, we're taking a look at Audition, the unsettling and icky horror cult classic written by Ryu Murakami, and directed by Takashi Miike. We chat about all the invasiveness of needles, how yoghurt is actually much worse than seeing a man's foot cut off, and how Asami has earned her right to sit atop the pile when it comes to Good For Her cinema. Follow us on Twitter and Instagram! @BSBookPod Support us on Patreon! Theme music - Why But by Grandma Futters? Art by 82palette
India's Maharajahs get a bad rap. Both the British empire and our freedom fighters pushed wrong stereotypes about them. Manu Pillai joins Amit Varma in episode 244 of The Seen and the Unseen to chat about the multitudes of our maharajahs -- and much else that matters. Also check out: 1. Manu Pillai's Website, Twitter and Instagram. 2. False Allies: India's Maharajahs in the Age of Ravi Varma -- Manu Pillai. 3. Ivory Throne: Chronicles of the House of Travancore -- Manu Pillai. 4. Rebel Sultans: The Deccan from Khilji to Shivaji -- Manu Pillai. 5. The Courtesan, the Mahatma and the Italian Brahmin -- Manu Pillai. 6. Kerala and the Ivory Throne -- Episode 156 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Manu Pillai). 7. Our Colorful Past -- Episode 127 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Manu Pillai). 8. The Deccan Before Shivaji -- Episode 98 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Manu Pillai). 9. Sudhir Sarnobat's epic tweet summing up the first 200 episodes of The Seen and the Unseen. 10. The Hunter Becomes the Hunted -- Episode 200 of The Seen and the Unseen. 11. A Matter of Rats -- Amitava Kumar. 12. Piercing -- Ryu Murakami. 13. Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil -- Hannah Arendt. 14. SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome -- Mary Beard. 15. The Mapilla Rebellion of Malabar -- Manu Pillai. 16. The many shades of the Mappila insurrection -- Manu Pillai. 17. Malevolent Republic — Kapil Komireddi. 18. Who Broke Our Republic? -- Episode 163 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Kapil Komireddi). 19. Religion in India: Tolerance and Segregation -- The Pew Center Research survey of religion in India. (Also: 1, 2.) 20. A Meditation on Form -- Amit Varma. 21. Naoroji: Pioneer of Indian Nationalism — Dinyar Patel. 22. Dadabhai Naoroji and the Fight for India -- Episode 187 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Dinyar Patel). 23. Understanding India Through Its Languages -- Peggy Mohan. 24. Young India -- Episode 83 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Snigdha Poonam). 25. Royals and Rebels: The Rise and Fall of the Sikh Empire -- Priya Atwal. 26. VP Menon: The Unsung Architect of Modern India — Narayani Basu. 27. India's Greatest Civil Servant -- Episode 167 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Narayani Basu). 28. India's Security State -- Episode 242 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Josy Joseph). 29. Lessons from 1975 -- Amit Varma (2015 piece). 30. There Comes Papa. Please subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free! And check out Amit's online course, The Art of Clear Writing.
AUDITION Secuelas: NA Presupuesto: ¿? Año: 1999 Director: Takashi Miike Actores: Ryo Ishibashi (Shigeharu Aoyama), Eihi Shiina (Asami Yamazaki) Calificación: Google users -x%, RT - x%, IMDB - x, Personal - x SinopsisTras la muerte de su esposa, Shigeharu dedica su vida a la crianza de su hijo Shigehiko.Pasan los años llevando una vida solitaria, hasta que su hijo Shigehiko ya adolescente, le pregunta a su padre porque no se casa de nuevo.Esto hara que Shigeharu inicie con ayuda de su amigo Yoshikawa un productor de cine, una audicion para una falsa pelicula, y asi encontrar a su futura esposa.¿Cuál fue la contribución de la película al cine de horror?Considerada la obra maestra de Miike, y cinta que le dio la fama internacional, Audition no es cualquier pelicula de horror que hallamos visto antes.Sin duda, esta muy elaborada, cuidando todo detalle, una historia de amor que poco a poco se prepara para el final lleno de violencia y gore.Se manejan varios temas: La soledad, por un lado el personaje masculino, ya en sus 50s y que ha dedicado completamente a su trabajo y su hijo sin pensar en el. Y por el otro, el personaje femenino, que por abusos en la infancia, el abandonar un sueño, hizo que Ayasami tuviera una vida solitaria, donde estos abusos le crearon una idea distorsionada de las relaciones con los hombres. Tambien los temas del misoginia y feminismo estan presentes. La busqueda de Shigeharu por una mujer joven y sumisa, educada y con clase. Y por el lado de Asami, la idea que solo el hombre debe de amarla solamente a ella, ni si quiera a un hijo o mascota, son radicales por creer que "todos los hombres son iguales y buscan solo sexo". El metodo empleado por el protagonista de buscar esposa, se puede considerar como cosificacion a la mujer. La venganza, desde luego es uno de los temas principales, aunque aqui si remarco una contradiccion del lado del personaje de Asami. Ella busca vengarse de aquel que no la ame en su totalidad, al conocer la gran mentira de Shigeheru acerca de la falsa pelicula y audicion (y hasta considerar un engaño el no contarle sobre su hijo). Pero recordemos que ella tambien mintio desde un inicio, en estas citas que tenian ambos y ella no le contaba la verdad. CURIOSIDADES Esta en la lista de las 1001 peliculas que debes de ver antes de morir. Fue inspiracion para el director Eli Roth para realizar su pelicula Hostal. Tambien inspiro a las directoras Jen y Silvia Soska en su film American Mary Esta dentro del top 20 de peliculas de Quentin Tarantino. FRASES"Nunca me sentí infeliz, porque nunca dejé de ser infeliz".CONTEXTOLa película está basada en la novela de Ryu Murakami y aborda el género violencia melancólica. El autor enfoca sus obras en la dificultad de Japón en encontrar una identidad cultural y además, busca mostrar el lado de Japón que por lo general es escondido. Es por este motivo que sus libros en una mayor parte incluyen temas de sexo, violencia y drogas.El tema de identidad en los 90s es claramente criticado a lo largo de la novela y lo podemos ver en la película en frases y acciones como las siguientes: Un hombre necesita una mujer porque si no se acaba. La descripción de la mujer ideal: contraste con un grupo joven de chicas que están en el bar: "todas estúpidas, ¿donde estan las buenas? Japón está acabado. tiene que ser hermosa, joven pero madura, con carrera y logros, saber baile tradicional, debe saber tocar el piano. ¿tu esposa era así? - se quedó mudo. Una mujer con confianza en sí misma puede alcanzar la felicidad, y de otro modo son dependientes e infelices. La descripción de Asami: dócil, sumisa, 12 años de practicar ballet, toca el piano, muy propia al hablar, dulce, inocente, pura (siempre de blanco) Aplica para el rol de actriz, ella misma dice que no sabe si lo puede obtener. El productor hace un comentario: Una mujer infeliz es mejor actriz porque tiene más "material" para expresar Por lo tanto, Aoyama se llevaría a una mujer feliz (prejuicio es que no es buena actriz), que no le tocaría el papel principal en la película. La pre-seleccion - 30 chicas, ¿por qué Asami salió a relucir?No solo cumplía con las condiciones mencionadas antes, su ensayo demostraba la parte "madura" que buscaba: La escena de la audición - crítica al sistema actual y maltrato a la mujer profesionalmente La película era un romance, sin embargo, las mujeres les preguntaban de todo excepto su capacidad para actuar. Es un reflejo del prejuicio hacia la mujer y el abuso de poder. Creo que la crítica que hace Miike al sistema es muy buena, porque hasta ofende ver eso, uno como audiencia. Yo creo que en ese entonces y ahora, muchos de los problemas siguen y mucha gente puede empatizar con ese tipo de entrevistas. He conocido a chicas que en la entrevista de trabajo les preguntan: ¿y quien va a cuidar a tus hijos cuando estés trabajando? ¿estás casada? ¿cómo vas a balancear el trabajo y la familia? Cuando la invita a salir - hacen referencia a esta idea de "cachar al pez" del inicio. Es una relación muy sutil, pero básicamente Asami está esperando a que llame, esperando a que pique. Cuando llama, sonríe malvadamente. Esa escena es muy buena. Red Flags Desaparición del Sr. Shibata de Ace Records hace 18 meses Siempre se baja en un lugar de la calle, no sabe donde vive Las referencias que dio, ninguna parece llevar a ningún lado No saben donde trabaja No conocen a una sola persona que la conozca Donde dice que trabajaba: The Stone fish - el vecino chismoso nunca falta: Cerrado más de un año La dueña asesinada, descuarizada, tres dedos extra, una oreja y una lengua Salía con un director de música. ¿Qué sabemos de Asami? La forma en que cuentan su historia es la de un narrador no confiable (sueños de Aoyama o fantasías), por lo que las ideas a continuación son especulación: Asami desde niña practicaba ballet, el tutor la maltrataba y posiblemente abusaba. Entra el tema que muchas mujeres viven sobre abuso infantil o en pre-adolescencia. A los 18 años, pudo ser que cuando ella planeaba irse a Londres, el tutor le haya causado el daño irreparable para evitar que se fuera. Aquí hay un tema de sabotaje hacia mujer a realizarse profesionalmente. Cuando dejó de bailar, sintió que estaba muerta en vida. Considera que "vivir significa acercarse a la muerte lentamente". En el hotel, ella lo invita a él a acostarse, pidiendo que le vea el cuerpo. Atención a su cicatriz. ¿hay más cicatrices que no nos muestran? Le pide que la ame como es, le dice que es hermosa y ella dice "todos dicen eso, pero realmente lo harás?" En uno de los recuerdos o sueños de las pláticas en el restaurante aparece Asami diciendo su vida de niña: Sus papás se divorciaron Se fue a vivir con su tío y su eposa - ambos la maltrataban La madrastra la metía en baños helados, le dio neumonía. También la aventó por las escaleras y se dislocó el hombro. Regresó a vivir con la mamá a los 7 años, ya se había vuelto a casar. El esposo era paralítico, la maltrataba también y vivía escondida en un cuarto oscuro. El profesor de ballet abusaba de ella (escena masturbándose mientras bailaba) Comentario de Miike sobre Asami:"Su amor [por Aoyama] se volvió su obsesión. Pensó que el amor y la tortura eran lo mismo. Así lo veo." AOYAMA La esposa fallece al inicio, cuando el hijo era muy pequeño. Su vida laboral parece tener un puesto ejecutivo (poder) La asistente parece tener un crush con el o quizá tenían algún amorío. Ella le dice que se va a casar El solo la ignora Después revela en un sueño o recuerdo que tuvieron relaciones una vez. También aparece la colegiala tratando de tener sexo con él. No le importa cometer fraude, abuso de poder Dice que una mujer dependiente no es bueno, pero Asami parece bastante dependiente diciéndole que gracias a que lo conció, su vida cambió, se siente feliz, nucna conoció alguien como él, lo hace sentir especial. ¿Qué te gustó de la película?Los personajes principales nunca llegan a conocerse bien y ese fue el error que inclusive en la vida real muchos cometemos.Desde que el personaje de Asami aparece en pantalla, nunca sabemos nada de ella, y hay una serie de advertencias donde Miike manejo de una forma excelente para que como espectador tengamos esa curiosidad sobre quien es ella.Advertencias como su reciente trabajo, sus referencias laborales, su familia, la escuela de ballet.Shigeharu, al estar perdidamente enamorado, ignora todo esto e inicia una relacion hasta el grado de pedirle matrimonio, ¡SIN SABER NADA DE ELLA!La genialidad del final, el climax, la revelacion es magistral.Créditos:Radio Horror es producido por Caro Arriaga y Rael Aguilar.Edición por Matías Beltrando desde Destek Soporte.Música Closing Theme Hounds of Love por Dan Luscombe (Intro)Insiders por Joe Crotty (Intro)Patchwork por Patchworker f.k.a. [friendzoned] (Spoilers)Nightlong por FSM Team (Outro)★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Hablamos del otro Murakami, de expresiones japonesas y homenajeamos a Sabato.
L'épisode où M. Roud va explorer les terres nippones aux travers de livres et de photos (et aussi il nous met de la bonne zik comme a son habitude) Pop Crimes - There were smiles Whispering Sons - Heat Territory - Decide The Haunted Youth - Teen rebelLa pinte et la plume : direction Tokyo et le japon !!!!!1er livre : Les bébés de la consigne automatique de Ryu Murakami aux éditions Picquier.2ème livre : Voitures de nuit de Nagai Kafu aux éditions Cambourakis. Para One - La musique du futur : mon coeur3ème choix : l'exposition photo Tomatsu-Moriyama : Tokyo à la Maison européenne de la photographie. Bertrand Burgalat - Rêve caîtal Grandaddy - Levitz Johnny Mafia - Trevor Philippe
A estas alturas nadie lo esperaba, pero vuelve Takashi Miike a Aguas Turbias con dos de sus películas más emblematicas, Dead or Alive y Audition. La primera una historia sobre policías y criminales intentando sobrevivir en las calles del barrio rojo de Tokyo. La segunda, la adaptación de la novela de Ryu Murakami sobre el amor y el desencuentro amoroso. Ambas sorprendentes y extremas, no necesariamente en ese orden, ambas películas que muestras que Miike Takashi no es solo visceras y despiporre. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Munduko Zientzia-Fikzio Solasaldi bereziena dakarkizuegu gaurkoan, banakakoa!! Juanlu bere buruarekin Japoniako zientzia-fikzio (edo ez) liburu honi buruz arituko da. En la Tertulia Literaria de Ciencia Ficción más extraña del planeta, tertuliará Juanlu con Juanlu sobre este libro de ciencia ficción (o no)
Amy Chaez talks with Lena Baibikov who has translated Haruki Murakami’s non-fiction works from Japanese into Russian. Lena has translated What I Talk About When I Talk About Running, Radio Murakami and a book of Murakami’s short stories as well as works by authors such as Banana Yoshimoto, Ryu Murakami, and Yukio Mishima and several children’s book authors. This podcast recording takes place in Lena’s kitchen in Ashiya, just 100 meters from where Murakami’s parents lived until the Kobe Earthquake of 1995. Lena also took Amy on a tour of the neighborhood Murakami grew up in. She tells us how she got started translating and what it is that intrigues her about Murakami’s works. Recorded on December 15, 2019.See Books on Asia Issue 6: What you Don’t Know About Haruki Murakami https://booksonasia.net/category/issues/issue-6/Show Notes here: https://booksonasia.net/podcast/hon-podcast-6-lena-baibikov-translator-of-haruki-murakami-non-fiction/The Books on Asia Podcast is sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, publisher of fine books on Asia for over 30 years: https://www.stonebridge.com
In this episode, we discuss the Apple TV+ sleeper hit Ted Lasso and the feel-good, inclusive Christmas Special from Hulu - Happiest Season. To add some dark chocolate in this vanilla mix, we discuss Ryu Murakami's In The Miso Soup - a story about a potential American killer on the loose in Japan. Finally, we share our thoughts on Spotify 2020 Wrapped and our self-destructive music consumption habits. Some fun links to go through while you're here : An American Coach in London : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6KeG_i8CWE8&ab_channel=NBCSportsNetwork The Return of Coach Lasso : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRqypM7jb5Y&ab_channel=NBCSports
In this episode, hosts Jackie, Leigh and Mary talk about their current reads and you should be prepared: "Miss Cecily's Recipes for Exceptional Ladies" by Vicky Vimmerman, "Deacon King Kong" by James McBride, and "Audition" by Ryu Murakami.
Comenzamos el programa hablando con Rubén Almarza sobre el escritor Ryū Murakami, en concreto nos centramos en su libro: Azul casi transparente. Nuestro protagonista escribe sobre sexo, drogas y la presencia de los Estados Unidos en el país nipón. Una obra que escribió con 24 años y fue publicada en 1976. En el segundo tramo del programa, Alberto Venegas Ramos nos habla de la utilización de ciertos nacionalismos de los videojuegos. Uno de los puntos de inicio es la Segunda Guerra Mundial y el cambio de relato. En concreto vemos los casos de Polonia, Estados Unidos y China. Orden de intervenciones: Editorial: 5:00 Literatura japonesa: 10:06 Nacionalismo y videojuegos: 26:43 -- ¡Te necesitamos! Hazte socio/a de El Café de la Lluvia para permitir que nuestro medio de comunicación sea sostenible en el tiempo. Descubre todos los beneficios que tiene hacerse miembro de nuestra comunidad en: https://elcafedelalluvia.com/hazte-socio-a-de-el-cafe-de-la-lluvia/ -- Todo esto y mucho más en mucho más en nuestra web: https://elcafedelalluvia.com/ Síguenos en twitter: @cafelluvia | Facebook: Cafedelalluvia |Instagram: elcafedelalluvia - Enlace de telegram: https://t.me/cafelluvia - Newsletter: https://elcafedelalluvia.com/suscripcion-newsletter/
မူရင်း ဂျပန်စာရေးဆရာ Ryu Murakami ရဲ့ Novel တစ်ပုဒ်ဖြစ်တဲ့ Peircing ကို ဘာသာပြန်ထားတဲ့ ဆရာသင့်လူ ရဲ့ စူး ကို အသံထွက်ဖတ်ထားတာပါ. အစအဆုံး အပိုင်း ၉ ပိုင်း တင်ပေးပါ့မယ်. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rodney-sann-lwin/support
Haruki Murakami, Ryu Murakami, Sayaka Murata, Yukio Mishima, Hiromi Kawakami, Keigo Higashino und und und - sie alle werden von der wunderbaren Japanologin Ursula Gräfe ins Deutsche übersetzt. Und nicht nur wir sind Fans ihrer Sprachkunst: Im vergangenen Jahr erhielt Ursula in Japan den angesehen Noma-Preis für Übersetzung. Wir freuen uns riesig, dass die vielbeschäftigte Mittlerin zwischen den Literatur-Welten sich die Zeit genommen hat, unsere neugierigen Fragen zu beantworten.
Casting Director, Elsie Stark loves casting. Searching for the perfect actors thatwill bring to life her clients projects is a rush. She believes in diversity; diversityin the type of projects that she casts, as well as diversity in the kind of actors thatshe works with. It is what makes SNP one of the most successful, creative, cuttingedge and diversified casting offices in New York. It has been her manifesto sinceshe began casting.With many years of experience in casting she has attained extensive knowledgeof the unlimited talent pool in the U.S. and internationally. Her home base of NewYork gives her an endless creative pool of talent that can fill any casting need. Inaddition, Ms. Stark's expertise, background and language skills has made SNPthe premiere casting office for the exploding Spanish commercial market andother projects in many other languages.Film credits include the currently released in “America Adrift” with Loren LunaVelez, which premiered at the International Puerto Rican Heritage Film Festival.In 2015 multi-festival award winner “Cassanova Was A Woman”, 2014 film short,“Dollar Night”, NY International Latino Film Festival and 2002 ALMA Awardwinner, “Blue Diner” directed by Jan Egleson. “All Night Bodega”, directed byFelix Olivier which won Special Jury prizes at the LA Latino Film Festival as wellas the NY International Latino Film Festival. “Dance With Me”, written & directedby Ryu Murakami and “The Final Patient”, starring Bill Cobbs and the timelyindependent film “Ilegales” directed by Ric Dupont that deals with illegalimmigration in the U.S. For many years SNP cast for The Nuyorican Poets Cafe'sFifth Night series as well as the NYWIFT Screenplay Reading Series. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Reviews of In the Miso Soup by Ryu Murakami and Han Kang's Human Acts, as well as an idea of what to expect from this podcast.
Norbert Scheuer, "Winterbienen" / Sally Rooney, "Gespräche mit Freunden" / Barbara Pym, "Vortreffliche Frauen" / Ryu Murakami, "In Liebe, Dein Vaterland" / Gert Westphal liest Theodor Fontane
Welcome to Dev Game Club, where this week we take a bonus trip to discuss a more modern game in Devil May Cry 5. We especially note how much they capture the feeling of the original game, despite modernizing some aspects. Dev Game Club looks at classic video games and plays through them over several episodes, providing commentary. Sections played: The first few hours Issues covered: cramming everything Devil May Cry into Devil May Cry 5, iterating on a formula and delivering the same feel, pulling the Resident Evil series along, iterations in camera, having the same feeling of play but with lower effort, feeling cool even outside the cutscenes, the reward of spectacle, risk/rewards and timing and breakers, translating enemies to the modern era, the addition of the grapple action of a breaking arm, teaching you to grapple and incorporating it into a boss fight, the story catch-up at the main menu, going back and forth in time, fighting with a motorcycle, opening credits sequence, tight franchise identity, being happy with the sequel, high level of craft, lack of maturity in the women characters, Barbie-Dolling the bodies, being careless with stereotypes and archetypes, lock and key and self-awareness, Dante's styles, fan service, Brett's Book Minute, using difficulty to train the player for higher difficulty levels, different ways to address turn-based vs real-time goals, trading off the cerebral for the immediate or vice versa, being too nit-picky about the details. Games, people, and influences mentioned or discussed: William Blake, The Force Awakens, God of War, Resident Evil (series), The Raid: Redemption, A Star Is Born, Adam Driver, Hideo Kojima, Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance, Platinum Studios, Vanquish, Bayonetta, Ninja Theory, Metroid: Other M, Team Ninja, Heavenly Sword, Hellblade, Microsoft Game Studios, Diablo III, Kingdom Hearts 2, Jak & Daxter, Takashi Miike, Ryu Murakami, In the Miso Soup, Book Riot, Horrorstör, Grady Hendrix, Mike Vogt, Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice, Johnny, David Brevik, War and Peace, X-COM, Fallout, Final Fantasy 9, FTL, Into the Breach, Temple of Elemental Evil, Tim Cain, Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle, MYST. Next time: MYST (check Twitter for how much) https://twitch.tv/brettdouville, @timlongojr, and @devgameclub DevGameClub@gmail.com
A man kisses his wife and baby goodbye and seemingly heads away on business, with a plan to check into Castle Wolfenstein, podcast with his buddies, and threaten to kill them all! On Episode 347 of Trick or Treat Radio we discuss Piercing, the latest film from The Eyes of My Mother director, Nicolas Pesce. We will also discuss some of our favorite Giallo films, and discuss the genre’s origins! We find out the latest in Ravenshadow’s inept adventures with technology, Marz talks about his latest diet fad, and as usual, MonsterZero reveals far too much about his personal life! So grab your favorite Halcion-laced soup, put on your favorite pair of black gloves and strap on for the world’s most dangerous talk radio show!Stuff we talk about: Worcester Pulse Awards, Juggernaut, Flight of the Conchords, MZ’s tension build up, Honey Smacks, Giallo or Jello, The Goth Chic, Hot Topic, Spencer Gifts, Fundies, the 75% Veggie diet, Terror-dactyl, The Deadites 25th Anniversary Celebration, Live Trick or Treat Radio, Survival of the Film Freaks, Elm Park Raccoon, The Bull Mansion, Park View Room, Ravenshadow’s 22 pages, Rampant, Tiny’s surgery, VHS Nightmares, El Goro, E.L. Music, Promotions, Creators Unite Magazine, Kurando Mitsutake, Marz’s mixtape mastery, Gun Woman, the Insatiable Spider-Man, Asami, Back Issue Magazine, Weng’s Chop, “The Bald Adam”, Ares' Nascar like abilities, Netflix on Wii, Sonicare, Piercing, Only Lover’s Left Alive, Philadelphia Maryland, retro pastiche, Nicolas Pesce, Rear Window, Christopher Abbott, Mia Wasikowska, issuu.com, Baskin, Tenebre, model buildings, Mimsy Farmer, black gloves, Leonard Cohen, Rush, Brian DePalma, Ryu Murakami, Audition, C.M. Punk, Straight Edge Society, Halcion, The Grudge remake, Andrea Riseborough, Dario Argento, Cinestate, Dragged Across Concrete, Mel Gibson, Black Dynamite, S. Craig Zahler, Michael Jai White, Transformers Slingshot, buxom pair of breasts, favorite giallo films, Black Sabbath, Profondo Rosso, What Have You Done to Solange?, Torso, Suspiria, was OJ a fan of Giallo?, Bird with the Crystal Plumage, Mike Baronas, Troy Howarth, So Deadly So Perverse, Astron-6, The Editor, Spasmo, Straight Outta Compton, 2Pac is alive, trash or Trick or Treat Radio history?, Marie Kondo, Full Blooded Italian, and The Balls of My Father.Send Email/Voicemail: podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comUse our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TheDeaditesFacebook: http://facebook.com/TheDeaditesYouTube: http://youtube.com/TheDeaditesTVInstagram: http://instagram.com/TheDeaditesBuy our music on Bandcamp: http://thedeadites.bandcamp.comSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradio)
Reed (Christopher Abbott) is going on a business trip. He kisses his wife and infant son goodbye, but in lieu of a suitcase filled with clothes, he's packed a toothbrush and a murder kit. Everything is meticulously planned: check into a hotel and kill an unsuspecting victim. Only then will he rid himself of his devious impulses and continue to be a good husband and father. But Reed gets more than he bargained for with Jackie (Mia Wasikowska), an alluring call girl who arrives at his room. First, they relax and get in the mood, but when there’s an unexpected disruption, the balance of control begins to sway back and forth between the two. Is he seeing things? Who's playing whom? Before the night is over, a feverish nightmare will unfold, and Reed and Jackie will seal their bond in blood. Based on the critically acclaimed cult novel by Ryu Murakami, Director Nicolas Pesce (THE EYES OF MY MOTHER) talks about how he was able to blend psychological horror with comedy and stylish neo-noir, resulting in a sly take on the fantasy of escape and the hazards of modern romance. For news and updates go to: piercingmovie.com
Join Rachel Lousie Atkin and I as we discuss translations and African Psycho by Alain Mabanckou (translated by Christine Schwartz Hartley) Mentioned in this episode;The Book of Disquiet by Fernando Pessoa (translated by Margaret Jull Costa)Albert CamusJ.D. SalingerSamuel BeckettFyodor DostoevskyThe Catcher in the Rye by J.D. SalingerAmerican Psycho by Bret Easton EllisTaxi driverPerfume by Patrick Suskind (translated by John E. Woods)Perfume (2006) (staring Ben Whishaw not Eddie Redmayne)Black Moses by Alain Mabanckou (translated by Helen Stevenson)Scarface (1983)Kill Your Friends (2016)Huey Lewis and the NewsCrime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky (translated by Jessie Coulson)The Stranger by Albert Camus (translated by Matthew Ward)Dexter (2006-2013)Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata (translated by Ginny Tapley Takemori)The Wasp Factory by Iain BanksTime to Read!Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre (translated by James Wood)Haruki MurakamiRyu MurakamiIn the Miso Soup by Ryu Murakami (translated by Ralph F. McCarthy) Find Rachel Lousie Atken online YouTube: Rachel Louise AtkinTwitter: rachelatkin_Instagram: rachelatkin_ Support the show via Patreon Social Media links Email: losttranslationspod@gmail.comTwitter: @translationspodInstagram: translationspodLitsy: @translationspodFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/translationspod/
LOS ANGELES — Takako was born in Tokyo in 1955, teaches at a Waldorf school in California, and is also, turns out, my mother. She first read Almost Transparent Blue (1976) while still a student at Tokyo Daigaku, so at twentyish. I first read Almost Transparent Blue (tr. Nancy Andrew, 1976) maybe a month ago, and have reread it since. Ryu Murakami (b. Feb, 1952) was born and raised in Sasebo, Nagasaki Prefecture. He wrote Almost Transparent Blue while studying sculpture at Musashino Art University in Tokyo.
Filmspezial 69 Michael, Daniel (Altstadtkino) und Nenad (Bildnachwirkung) sprechen über Takashi Miikes wohl bekanntesten Film: Audition. Und was hört man nicht alles darüber: schockierend, sexistisch, feministisch, stumpf, dumm, clever, gut durchdacht, ekelig, pervers, romantisch, verstörend und eigentlich ganz schön. Es ist der Film, durch den Miike als Horrorregisseur gehandelt wurde, obwohl er es nicht ist und obwohl der Film vielleicht auch gar kein Horrorfilm ist. Eventuell ist es ja doch ein Drama, ein Liebesfilm oder ein Psychothriller. Was er definitiv ist, ist die Verfilmung des gleichnamigen Romans von Ryu Murakami und (ob man ihn nun mag oder nicht) ein überaus interessanter Film, der viel zu oft falsch eingeschätzt wird. Also schauen wir mal, ob sich die Rätsel klären lassen, ob der Film nun gut ist und was das eigentlich alles soll. Dabei wird jedes Detail verraten, diskutiert und mindestens 14x gewendet, damit wir auch alle Seiten begutachten können. Das alles dauert ein wenig länger, als der Film selber, wird aber hoffentlich unterhalten. Wir wünschen viel Spaß und esst nicht so viel Erbrochenes. Podcast herunterladen Trailer
Travis and guest Danielle Ryan dish their thoughts on the controversial live-action remake of the seminal cyberpunk anime. SHOW LINKS Danielle Ryan and Andrew Hawkins’s Podcast, Freaky Fandoms Duolingo ‘3WW’ by Alt-J on YouTube ‘In Cold Blood’ by Alt-J on YouTube Me and the Devil by Nick Tosches on Amazon In the Miso Soup by Ryu Murakami on Amazon
Quatre ans déjà, quatre ans des jeux ! Aussi fou que cela puisse paraître, nous avons en effet quitté la petite enfance. Et si 2015 fut une année de grands chamboulements – en témoigne, notamment, notre émission #37 enregistrée en public – et de remises en question au sein de notre projet, nous sommes heureux d'annoncer que Je Game Moi Non Plus abrite toujours une belle brochette de passionnés, bien décidés à s'exprimer sur les questions qui leur brûlent les lèvres. Comme chaque année, l'anniversaire est fêté en live (à Lyon, pour ne rien vous cacher) et, c'est la tradition, chaque participant s'attardera sur un jeu vidéo qui l'a marqué cette année, tout en présentant un objet culturel qu'il lui paraît pertinent de rattacher au jeu en question. Cette année, Antoine, Fred, Gaëtan, Julien, Mehdi et Olivier ont apporté beaucoup de littérature et un peu de cinéma dans leur hotte. Ce tour de table sera suivi d'une session de réponses aux questions posées par nos auditeurs. Bonnes fêtes de fin d'année à tous, à bientôt pour le podcast #39 et, promis, pour le lancement du Club JGMNP sous la direction de notre Julien national ! Oeuvres citées : Gaetan : Dark Souls 2 (PC, PS3, X360) et Les Livres dont vous êtes le Héros Julien : Bloodborne (PS4) et "La Charrette fantôme" (film réalisé par Julien Duvivier en 1939) Antoine : A Good Gardener (PC) "Le Vent se Lève" (film d'animation réalisé par Hayao Miyazaki en 2013) Fred : Yakuza 5 (PS3) et "Mémoires d'un Yakuza" de Junichi Saga (éditions Piquier) et "Miso Soup" de Ryu Murakami (éditions Piquier) Olivier : Crossy Road (iOS / Android) et "Hexagone : Sur les routes de l'histoire de France" de Lorànt Deutsch (éditions Michel Lafon) Mehdi : Guacamelee! (PC, OS X, Linux, PS3, PS4, PSVita, Wii U, X360, XBOX ONE) et "Los Tigres Del Ring" de Jimmy Pantera (éditions Ankama) Générique de l’émission : Lukhash – Beginning of Anxiety Illustration : Yakuza 5 © SEGA