This looks damn good.

kinski jesus1

I’m a longtime fan of Werner Herzog, and therefore of Klaus Kinski, as the two are inseparable in many ways. Jesus Christus Erlöser will make a nice companion to the excellent Mein liebster Feind: Klaus Kinski (My Best Fiend: Klaus Kinski).

From the official movie site:

Berlin, Deutschlandhalle, November 20th, 1971. Kinski emerges into a lone spotlight on an empty stage. Shoulder length hair, plain jeans, a shirt with flower and polka dot patterns. No set, no stage effects, no costume. By reciting his own version of the New Testament’s “Jesus Christ Saviour,” he realizes a project well over 10 years in the making.

Give me back my black dolls

October 18, 2009

From Kinski spricht aus der Amerikaballade und der Dichtung afrikanischer Völker.

Some additonal excerpts here.

In 2002, 826 Valencia was founded by author Dave Eggers and teacher Nínive Calegari in the Mission District of San Francisco. 826 Valencia began as a storefront for McSweeney’s with a free tutoring center for area students, and… a pirate store in order to appease local zoning ordinances. 826 National has since blossomed into more than a half dozen affiliates in the United States.

This excellent and amusing (mopheads!) video from TED in 2008 pretty much explains it all.

Bonus points for the 826 Valencia facade done by graphic artist-from-another-planet Chris Ware. Brosef K owns all of Chris Ware’s graphic novels in first printing, bitches.

Valentino Achak Deng and Tom Tykwer

Valentino Achak Deng and Tom Tykwer

One of my favorite movies of recent years is Tom Tykwer’s Der Krieger und die Kaiserin (2000), AKA The Princess and the Warrior in the United States. The film stars Franka Potente (hawt!) and Benno Fürmann as two dysfunctional vectors from very different worlds who awkwardly, violently come together for catharsis. Romance ensues. And a botched bank heist. It was Tykwer’s follow-up to Lola rennt (1998), AKA Run Lola Run in the states. The kineticism of Run Lola Run is not typical of Tykwer’s other films and many who enjoyed Run Lola Run jumped ship when the slightly more morose and measured pace of The Princess and the Warrior, a return to earlier works like Winter Sleepers (1997) in terms of tone and pacing, failed to deliver the exact same experience.

Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006), a tale of a savant/prodigy who turns to murder in the pursuit of the essence of olfactory perfection, and Heaven (2002), with Giovanni Ribisi and Cate Blanchett, continued that trend before The International (2009) went completely off the rails (in a good way) with a kinetic and suspenseful thriller starring Clive Owen and Naomi Watts. That 2009 film, sometimes compared to the Bourne films (which feature Franka Potente in a supporting role) or Demme’s The Manchurian Candidate (2004), is more subtle and compelling, in my humble opinion. Some might substitute “dull” for “subtle and compelling,” but it’s quite likely I’d kick them in their dick if they said it to my face.

One of Tykwer’s next projects (the other being Cloud Atlas) is an adaptation of Dave Eggers’ 2006 book What Is the What: The Autobiography of Valentino Achak Deng. The book tells the story of Valentino Achak Deng, a Sudanese refugee, and member of the so-called Lost Boys of Sudan. Not to be confused with the Lost Boys of Santa Carla, California.

Lost boys not of Sudan.

Lost boys not of Sudan.

Though, let’s get real here for a moment. I’d pay to see both of the Coreys in a Tykwer flick. Huh? Anybody else feel me on this?

Apparently, the film will feature Daniel Brühl from the also-excellent comedy Good Bye Lenin! (2003) which tells the tale of a young man (Brühl) who goes to extraordinary lengths to keep his socialist mother from finding out that the Berlin Wall has fallen and East Germany is essentially no more. Brühl read from Eggers’ book with Tykwer and Deng on June 12, 2009 at the Admiralspalast in Berlin. Here is a Flickr stream from that event.

Brühl, Deng, and Tykwer.

Brühl, Deng, and Tykwer.

Finally, please enjoy this exceptional clip of the Simpsons parodying Run Lola Run (in German).

Yes, this post is chock full of random goodness. Know why? Because at Brosef K’s blog, I will never leave coins in the sofa. That’s a promise.

O’Reilly Maker

September 17, 2009

It doesn’t take much to amuse me.

Also, I misspelled mascarpone. Sue me.

I made teh funny.

I made teh funny.

O’Reilly Maker