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WBGO 88.3FM | WBGO.org
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| WBGO Travel & Events Presents: A Musical Journey Around The World Travel with WBGO and enjoy first-class travel packages to stellar concerts, jazz festivals and deluxe tours across the globe. Music knows no boundaries, neither does WBGO! Montreal Jazz Festival | Montreal, Canada June 30 - July 3, 2013 Enjoy great concerts including tickets to see Gregory Porter. Take a walking food tour of The Jean-Talon Market, have breakfast with WBGO's Michael Bourne plus lunch at his favorite spot – Pizzedelic. Get access to Michael's interviews with festival performers and take a behind-the-scenes tour of the Montreal Jazz Festival. For details or to book your trip, call 1-855-288-7344 or wbgo.org/travel
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Umbria Jazz Festival | Perugia, Italy July 5 - July 10, 2013 Wine, dine and hear great jazz in Italy with WBGO celebrating the festival’s 40th anniversary. Take tours of Italy’s wineries and visit neighboring cities. Performers include Diana Krall, Keith Jarrett, Sonny Rollins, John Legend and more. For details or to book your trip, call 973-467-4418 or wbgo.org/travel Coming Soon Newport Jazz Festival Umbria Winter (Orvieto, Italy) Jazz on the Mountain at the Mohonk Mountain House Visit wbgo.org/travel or contact WBGO Travel and Events at 973-624-8880 ext. 269 and at events@wbgo.org. | ||||||
| See What Your Member Card Can Do
Members Discount: 54 Below Presents the WBGO Jazz Series
WBGO members can save 15% on cover charges in the main dining room.
To redeem, visit 54below.com or call 1-866-468-7619 and use code"WBGO54". 54 Below, which occupies the basement of the legendary Studio 54 nightclub, presents the WBGO Jazz Series on Tuesday evenings. The next two performances in the series are: Tuesday, May 7 at 7pm and 9pm: Nightsongs: An Evening with Janis Siegel from Manhattan Transfer Featuring a band of some of New York's most extraordinary and versatile musicians led by pianist John DiMartino, this ten-time Grammy®-winning vocalist will premiere new songs from her new, soon-to-be released cdPalmetto, as well as old favorites. Tuesday, May 14 at 7pm and 9pm: Sing! Sing! Sing! The 75thAnniversary of Benny Goodman's Historic Carnegie Hall Concert with Ken Peplowski, Jay Leonhart, Ehud Asherie, Willie Jones III, and more Ken Peplowski (clarinetist, sax player and entertainer) directs this show: a reinvention of clarinetist Benny Goodman's legendary Carnegie Hall Concert performed on January 16, 1938, one of the first public concerts featuring a racially integrated lineup. Restrictions apply. Know a business that would like to participate in WBGO’s members discount program? Contact Josh Rosenfeld at jrosenfeld@wbgo.org or973-624-8880 ext. 232. | ||||||
| Newark School of the Arts Gala Tomorrow's Stars Tonight 2013 On Tuesday, April 23, WBGO President & CEO Cephas Bowles served as Master of Ceremonies for Newark School of the Arts 18th annual fundraising dinner gala - Tomorrow's Stars Tonight, at New Jersey Performing Arts Center. Celebrating its 45th anniversary, the Newark School of the Arts honored Jacques Lacombe of New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, Dr. Clement A. Price of Rutgers University, and Mary Sue Sweeney Price of the Newark Museum. Proceeds provide needed scholarship assistance for individuals who wish to study music, dance, drama or visual arts at the school. | ||||||
| WBGO Programming | |||||||
| WBGO 2013 Jazz Appreciation Month (JAM)Live on-air performances weekdays from 2-3pm on WBGO 88.3FM andWBGO.org All month long, WBGO has featured live in-studio performances showcasing student jazz ensembles from the North East. Be sure to check out our final performance this week. If you missed them, you can visitwbgo.org/blog to listen to one of our past performances. Hosted by Michael Bourne, JAM presents some of the area's best student jazz ensembles. Tune in! JAM Schedule: Thursday, April 25 - The Queens College International Band | ||||||
| Jazz at Lincoln Center with Wendell PierceMondays at 6:30pm on WBGO 88.3 FM and WBGO.org Regina Carter | Monday, April 29 Jazz at Lincoln Center presents renowned jazz violinist Regina Carter and her all-new project, Southern Comfort. Carter’s latest endeavor delves into her father’s Alabama roots through the slide guitar and blues music which permeated her childhood. | ||||||
| WBGO Celebrates International Jazz Day Tuesday, April 30 on WBGO 88.3FM and WBGO.org April 30 is International Jazz Day, a day designed to show how jazz can promote peace, unity, communication and cooperation among peoples of the world. UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador Herbie Hancock says “On International Jazz Day, jazz is celebrated…and performed around the world for 24 hours straight.” This year’s main event is in the global host city of Istanbul, Turkey. To honor this occasion, tune in to hear WBGO’s Special Projects Producer, Josh Jackson as he reports LIVE from Istanbul throughout the day. Every hour from 10-2, Midday Jazz host Rhonda Hamilton will highlight artists performing in Istanbul and at other events in the more than 30 participating countries. This year’s main event includes performances by Hancock, Dianne Reeves, Eddie Palmieri, Hugh Masekela, Abdullah Ibrahim, Igor Butman, Jean-Luc Ponty, Anat Cohen and many other international jazz stars. | ||||||
| The Checkout with Josh Jackson Tuesday, April 30 6:30pm on WBGO 88.3 FM and WBGO.org Josh Jackson features interviews with pianist Craig Taborn and saxophonist Dayna Stephens. Also, hear a playlist by pianist Aaron Parks. During the program, Josh will tell listeners how they can stream the latest release by pianist Aaron Parks (his first as a band leader in six years), one day before its official release. WBGO has the exclusive rights to stream this new release. This will be the first of a new project for WBGO, WBGO Radar, which will present music not yet available to the public. Aaron Parks has been touring as the pianist in Kurt Rosenwinkel's Quartet. He has not led a recording in six years, but that's about to change. Hear a WBGO exclusive stream of Aaron Parks: Live in Japan. Then hear him pick a few songs from other musicians in his digital collection. Pianist Craig Taborn first came to international attention as a member of saxophonist James Carter's ensembles. Last year, WBGO featured Taborn's new trio on Live at the Village Vanguard. Hear an interview with Taborn about the group's first studio recording for ECM, Chants. Saxophonist Dayna Stephens has proven himself a master of composition and arrangement, a highly acclaimed band leader and an "in-demand" side-man for some of Jazz masters such as Kenny Barron, as well as Stephens' own peer group. Hear Dayna talk about his new recording, That Nepenthetic Place. | ||||||
| SportsJam with Doug Doyle Wednesdays, 7:30pm on WBGO 88.3FM and WBGO.org Mike Tyson | Wednesday, May 1 Former Heavyweight Boxing Champion Mike Tyson will be Doug Doyle's guest. Tyson just completed his one-man show "Mike Tyson: Undisputed Truth" at NJPAC and has two shows scheduled in New York. Tyson talks about his dark times and his new outlook on life. | ||||||
| JazzSet with Dee Dee BridgewaterSundays at 6pm, repeated on Wednesday at 6:30pm on WBGO 88.3FM and WBGO.org Allison Miller’s Boom Tic Boom Project from the Mary Lou Williams Festival at the Kennedy Center | Sunday, April 28 The drummer’s set became the hit of the 2012 Women in Jazz Festival. Miller is the engine with bassist Todd Sickafoose, Marty Ehrlich on reeds, and pianist Dan Tepfer spinning figures under and around the group. Rhonda Hamilton guest hosts our JazzSet, and Dee Dee Bridgewater is the onstage MC. | ||||||
| Live Studio Performance on Afternoon Jazz On-air at WBGO 88.3 FM and WBGO.org Terence Blanchard Quintet | Tuesday, May 28 at 2pm Trumpeter/composer Terence Blanchard Quintet visits with Josh Jackson and WBGO for a live in-studio performance from 2-3pm to kick off the release of his 20th album, Magnetic, which debuts on the same day of this performance. “I’ve always believed that in life, what you keep in your mind is what you draw to yourself.” That’s how he explains the title of his latest release on his return to Blue Note Records. This album finds a stunning variety of sounds and styles pulled together by the irresistible force of Blanchard’s vision. Magnetic is yet another genre-defying chapter in this innovative musician and film composer's life. This performance will be followed by a five-night run at Jazz Standard beginning May 29. | ||||||
| WBGO Events | |||||||
| WBGO Kids Jazz Concert Series See complete calendar online at WBGO.org Discover America's original musical art form at the WBGO Kids Jazz Concert Series - a free concert series bringing jazz culture and performance to your neighborhood. WBGO presents these concerts during the Spring and Fall on Saturday afternoons. These interactive, hour-long concerts give kids opportunities to learn about the distinct qualities of jazz, and why it's a reflection of our community, our nation, and our world! Q&A sessions with the artists, small gifts, and a chance to win a door prize are just some of the reasons to come out and join us! Lauren Hooker | Saturday, April 27, 12:30pm Music Legends Presents Jazz 4 Kids at Luna Stage, West Orange, NJ Lauren Hooker will lead audiences through the origins of Jazz including a participatory African “Call and Response” song, Slave songs and spirituals, improvisational Scat singing, and Jazz’s global influences on music like Calypso. Children will be exposed to jazz legends Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, and Miles Davis. Michael Wolff w/the Wolff & Clark Expedition & special guest Alex Wolff | Saturday, May 4, 12:30pm Blues is underneath Jazz at NJPACPianist Michael Wolff brings blues back to jazz exploring different styles of blues including old standards, rock and roll, Be Bop and beyond. Michael Wolff will be joined by special guests--his son, actor Alex Wolff formerly on the Nickelodeon sitcom Naked Brothers Band. Musicians are Michael Wolff /piano, Mike Clark/bass, Darryl Johns/bass, Rodney Jones/guitar, Alex Wolff/ vocals, guitar, drums. You don’t want to miss this! | ||||||
| WBGO & The Afro Latin Jazz Alliance present Música Nueva 6 Arturo O'Farrill and the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra | Friday, May 3 & 4 at 8pm Peter Jay Sharp Theatre at Symphony Space WBGO is proud to be partnering with the Afro Latin Jazz Alliance as a co-sponsor for two nights of performances by Grammy® winners Arturo O'Farrill and the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra. They will present their annual new music concert exploring fresh directions in Afro Latin Big Band Jazz. The evening will feature new works composed by Papo Vazquez, Pablo Mayor, Miguel Blanco, Arturo O'Farrill and Adam O'Farrill and includes performances by guest artists Cristina Pato, Antonio Lizana, Ximo Tebar and a new co-commissioned work by Papo Vazquez that focuses on the Latino contribution to the Harlem Renaissance. WBGO will be at the performances and invites you to stop by our table to enter a contest to win a special gift. Pre-performance discussion on Friday, May 3 at 7pm. | ||||||
| Pairings at Porter House Enjoy a three course dinner at Porter House New York followed by a great seat at Jazz at Lincoln Center for a special performance. Upcoming performances: Chick Corea | Thursday, May 16 Now in his seventies, the pianist-composer Chick Corea will be celebrated during JALC’s 25th Anniversary Season with a multi-venue “festival.” Eat dinner early and attend the pre-concert discussion at 7pm. 6pm dinner • 8pm performance Swinging with the Big Band w/ Michael Feinstein and Wynton Marsalis| Thursday, June 13 Band singers like Frank Sinatra, Billy Eckstine, Ivie Anderson, Dan Grissom, and Dick Powell inflamed hearts around the globe and was the soundtrack of the age. Michael Feinstein and Wynton Marsalis will celebrate their music over two nights as one of the most exciting and crucial crossover movements in the mix of jazz and American popular song. 7pm dinner • 9pm performance To purchase your package or for more information, please call Belinda at973-624-8880 ext. 283 or email at events@wbgo.org. More information on the wbgo.org/events. | ||||||
| Support for WBGO: | |||||||
| Jazz at Carnegie Hall Vijay Iyer | Saturday, April 27 at 9:30pm Vijay Iyer: Solo, Trio, Sextet Zankel HallGrammy®-nominated composer-pianist Vijay Iyer leads an evening of stunning music from his highly celebrated and award-winning solo and trio recordings, culminating in a rare set by his all-star sextet. Vijay Iyer's most recent honors include an unprecedented "quintuple crown" in the DownBeat Critics Poll, winning in the Jazz Artist of the Year, Pianist of the Year, Jazz Album of the Year, Jazz Group of the Year (Vijay Iyer Trio), and Rising Star Composer categories. This concert is part of Late Nights at Zankel Hall. Tickets and information at carnegiehall.org, CarnegieCharge 212-247-7800, or the Box Office at 57th Street and Seventh Avenue. | ||||||
|
Westchester Jazz Orchestra with
Paquito D'Rivera | Saturday, April 27 at 8pmMulti-Grammy® Winner Paquito D’Rivera The Westchester Jazz Orchestra, celebrated for “strikingly executed performances” (The New York Times) and a “nearly flawless” second CD (Downbeat), joins forces with 11-time Grammy® winner Paquito D’Rivera for a concert of Afro-Cuban and South American jazz. .....WJO is “absolute joy and musical inspiration at the highest level.” .....–Gary Walker, WBGO Music Director Tarrytown Music Hall 13 Main Street, Tarrytown, NY Just minutes from the Tappan Zee Bridge Reserved seating: $40 adults/$35 seniors/$15 students Click here to purchase tickets online or call 1-877-840-0457 For additional information email westjazzorch@hotmail.com or call914-861-9100 WBGO member discount: 10% off adult and senior advance purchase tickets. Enter code aprilgift (or aprilgiftsenior) when checking out. | ||||||
WBGO is a publicly-supported, cultural institution that champions jazz, an American art form, and presents news to a worldwide audience through radio, other technologies and events. Become a member today | |||||||
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B&W photography is the real thing.... "Color is a duplication, B&W is an interpretation," says the large-format B&W Master Clyde Butcher. We couldn't agree more! Join us for a fun exploration of the world of B&W.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Travel w/ Jazz 88 - WBGO-FM
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
B&W Master Sebastio Salgado
See it here.
From his new book and exhibit; gorgeous medium-format film work from the master.
From his new book and exhibit; gorgeous medium-format film work from the master.
Monday, April 22, 2013
Ultra-HDTV/4K Explained
Ultra HDTV, or 4k, the ultimate in home video viewing, so advanced there is no programming for it yet, is explained:
See it here.
See it here.
Ansel Adams-Interview w/ His Son
Here's a video about Ansel Adams with his son Michael, shot in Yosemite Valley.
It is a quite basic introduction to Adams and his work:
See it here.
It is a quite basic introduction to Adams and his work:
See it here.
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Help Digital Silver Imaging Go Bigger
Boston's Digital Silver Imaging has a Kickstarter campaign going so they can gear up to make bigger digital silver-gelatin prints:
Read about it here:
Read about it here:
Monday, April 15, 2013
The B&W Psychological Western: Mann’s “The Furies”
The B&W Psychological Western: (Part 2)
Anthony Mann’s “The Furies”
By Brian Zabawski
(Copyright 2013 Brian Zabawski)
(Frame stills used by kind permission of The Criterion Collection)
Freudian psychology first appeared as an overt theme or subtext in Hollywood movies in the 1940s. The most notable example -- and, likely the first and best known -- is Alfred Hitchcock’s “Spellbound” (1942), with Gregory Peck as a conflicted psychologist. Hitch employed a rare visual collaborator in Salvador Dali – who provided some mind-bending dream sequences to advance an exploration of a Freudian theme and plot mechanics.
By 1947 Freudian-influenced themes began to creep into more traditional and action-oriented genres, such as the western with Raoul Walsh’s “Pursued” (read about it here) starring Robert Mitchum.
“Pursued” was an original screenplay by the talented and prolific Niven Busch – whose credits at the time already included his adaptation of James M. Cain’s “The Postman Always Rings Twice,” and the Selznick produced, opulent color western “Duel in the Sun” (1946), based on a novel by Niven Busch. In 1948 Busch published “The Furies,” a novel featuring a psychologically-troubled woman as heroine of a somewhat traditional western story. Busch’s novel was adapted into a screenplay by Charles Schnee for nascent director named Anthony Mann. Mann, then basking in the acclaim for a couple of low-budget noir features, would be attempting to film his first western – a genre of which he was to become an acknowledged master.
The resulting film, Anthony Mann’s terrific 1950 B&W western “The Furies,” is perhaps an even better piece of entertainment for today’s audiences than “Pursued.” The psychological terrain is deeply Freudian and instead of the Greek tragedy of “Pursued,” the influences are the Shakespeare of “King Lear” and Dostoyevsky’s “The Idiot.”
The stars are Barbara Stanwyck, in a powerhouse role as the emotionally-volatile daughter to Walter Huston, both engaged in a struggle to control their vast cattle ranch, known as The Furies. Rounding out the ensemble are Wendell Corey as a gambler and banker who has a see-saw romantic relationship with Stanwyck’s Vance Jeffords; Gilbert Roland, as a Mexican with his own affections for Vance and Judith Anderson, in a pivotal role as a potential new wife for Walter Huston’s widower T.C. Jeffords. That role places Anderson’s character in a rivalry with Vance, who still can’t come to terms with her mother’s none-too-recent death, perhaps because she of her excessively close relationship with her father.
Plenty of Freudian ground for one ranch-opera to cover.
Anthony Mann is best known for his series of exceptional westerns, usually starring James Stewart. Although “Winchester ‘73” was the first of these to be released, “The Furies,” filmed in 1950, was his first western to go before the cameras. Coming off his acclaimed group of B-budgeted noirs, “T-Men,” ”Raw Deal” and “Border Incident,” “The Furies” was also Mann’s first chance to work with a higher budget and A-list cast.
It is, untypical of a Mann western, largely set in the interior space of the Jeffords’ ranch house. Pivotal scenes do take place on the ranch exteriors, however, offering Mann his first chance to place his characters among the vast and foreboding western landscapes that would be so prominent in his later films. The cinematographer is Victor Milner, whose lighting is excellent, but the studiously-balanced compositions are generally acknowledged to have originated with Mann – they are a signature of his work in all genres.
The action in “The Furies” is not exclusively confined to interiors, and several exterior sequences display what was to become Mann’s gift for defining character in relation to an exterior landscape. Mann advocated the use of rugged, pictorially-distinctive locations for his films – in spite of the difficulties filming in such locales could impart on cast and crew. He felt that his actors could deliver more convincing performances simply by placing them in real locations rather than in the artificiality of a studio. The result was a sense of heightened realism in both the quality of the performances as well as the photography. This can be seen in “The Furies” when Stanwyck and Gilbert Roland are placed in an intimate conversation in a picturesque mountaintop clearing. The faintly dangerous nature of the setting subtly underscores the forbidden nature of their relationship.
Mann places his characters in a more overtly dangerous landscape in a scene that is more typical of his later westerns. This is when he has the Herrera family clan of Roland and his mother (played by Blanche Yurka) pummel the advancing Jefford’s posse with boulders launched from their mountaintop dwelling - which appears to be constructed around the ruins of an old fortress.
Perhaps the most beautiful shots in the film occur when Stanwyck, on horseback, is repeatedly framed in a low angle, heavily-shadowed composition with a huge cactus prominent in the frame – strongly backlit by a setting sun.
But the most memorable scene in “The Furies” is a Mann-moment of unexpected, jolting violence. Upon learning that Judith Anderson’s Flo Burnett is set to marry Walter Huston’s patriarch T.C Jeffords, Stanwyck’s Vance picks up a pair of scissors and flings them blade first at her-soon-to be-stepmother’s face. She is horribly disfigured for the rest of the film, the violent outburst an explosion of the psychological underpinnings and jealousies of their father-daughter relationship. It is a moment that jolts the audience out of their comfort zone – and Mann would again use such moments – such as James Stewart’s torture-by-roped-horse scene in ”The Man From Laramie” - in an attempt to rouse his audience and provoke a sense of moral outrage. It compromises the audience’s feelings for Stanwyck’s character for the rest of the film.
Another violent outburst is the disturbing scene of Wendell Corey’s abusive behavior towards Stanwyck’s Vance. He shoves her face first into a water-filled washbasin.
The moment is drawn from Anthony Mann’s own childhood. In her authoritative interview, included as an extra in this Criterion Collection DVD Nina Mann, the director’s daughter, recalls her father suffered from the same abusive act during his upbringing at a San Francisco-based spiritualist commune.
And that is just one of the many extras in this extensive DVD package from Criterion. They include a complete copy of Niven Busch’s original novel, a booklet with an insightful commentary by noted critic Robin Wood, and, two interviews with Anthony Mann – one, in print – the other, on film -- from a British TV appearance late in the director’s life. Alas, “The Furies” is not yet available on Blu-ray, but the Criterion DVD transfer looks great – and, the generous package is worth seeking out.
Also included in Criterion’s booklet is a 1957 interview originally published in Cahiers du Cinema in which Mann illuminates the connection between “The Furies” and Dostoyevsky’s “The Idiot.” Mann explains to his interviewers Charles Bitsch and Claude Chabrol (the noted director): “In fact, Niven Busch began with Dostoyevsky’s novel, turned it into a western, and made a few changes, thinking nobody would notice. When he brought me his script, I told him that this was ‘The Idiot,’ and he had to admit it. So I told him that given a choice between ‘The Furies’ and ‘The Idiot,’ I would have rather made ‘The Idiot’!” This viewer is grateful Mann never had to make that choice.
I have not divulged much at all of the plotting and storyline of “The Furies.” One aspect, at least, has some unforeseen contemporary relevance. Walter Huston’s colorfully drawn T.C. Jeffords is in danger of losing his vast Furies ranch to the banker played by Wendell Corey (and also to daughter Vance), because Jeffords has spread his equity in the ranch in the form of self-created I.O.U derivatives, which are becoming all but worthless. Hence, “The Furies,” in addition to its simmering stew of Freudian psychological undercurrents, eerily echoes the recent worldwide financial crisis.
“THE FURIES”: Starring: Barbara Stanwyck, Walter Huston, Wendell Corey, Judith Anderson, Gilbert Roland. With: Thomas Gomez, Beulah Bondi, Blanche Yurka.
Directed by Anthony Mann. Screenplay by Charles Schnee – based on a novel by Niven Busch. Cinematography by Victor Milner. Music by Franz Waxman. Produced by Hal Wallis. Released by Paramount Pictures 1950.
Reviewed on DVD, released by The Criterion Collection, 2008.
Stanwyck and Gilbert Roland are placed in an intimate conversation in a picturesque mountaintop clearing. The faintly dangerous nature of the setting subtly underscores the forbidden nature of their relationship.
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The disturbing scene of Wendell Corey’s abusive behavior towards Stanwyck’s Vance; He shoves her face first into a water-filled washbasin.
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Stanwyck’s Vance picks up a pair of scissors and flings them blade first at her-soon-to be-stepmother’s face (above). She is horribly disfigured for the rest of the film (immediately below, and final picture, below), the violent outburst an explosion of the psychological underpinnings and jealousies of their father-daughter relationship.
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Perhaps the most beautiful shots in the film occur when Stanwyck, on horseback, is repeatedly framed in a low angle, heavily-shadowed composition with a huge cactus prominent in the frame – strongly backlit by a setting sun.
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Sunday, April 14, 2013
Enjoyable "Hitchcock"
Speaking of one of the great B&W movies of all time... (Psycho, of course...)
UPDATED:
We liked quite a lot about Hitchcock.
(Here's a fun piece about the film. Be sure to look at the slide shows, w/ fascinating details on the makeup/prosthetics.)
With Sir Anthony Hopkins and Dame Helen Mirren as the leads, how could it go too wrong?
Hopkins is amazing as Hitch. Same goes for Mirren. They are terrific together as well.
It is, to a great degree, a dutiful movie version of the source book, hitting the points like: what a pro and genial good-sport Janet Leigh was, and how well she and Hitch got on; how he hyped the movie so effectively, and so forth.
It has dutiful documentary aspects, but Hopkins is brilliant; his scene conducting the audience's reaction to the shower killing is a gem.
Great looking film too.
And...
...The movies would've been SO boring without Hitchcock.
We also just saw Strangers on a Train on Blu ray; long one of our favorites, in HD it is even more amazing. (Daughter Patricia Hitchcock is terrific in this brilliant film.)
Saturday, April 6, 2013
The New Home of www.bwphotopro.com
This is The New Home of the B&W photography WebZine www.bwphotopro.com;
Like to see your B&W work featured here?
Send us 4 images:
erudolph2@nyc.rr.com
Pls. do not ask us to see your work/portfolio online - just send us your 4 best images, and if they work for us we'll ask to see more.
B&W photography only, pls.
We love: straight photography; medium and large format. But we're open to all kinds of good B&W, analog and digital.
We're moving to a blog format as it is so much easier and faster to update.
We hope to hear from you soon!
Like to see your B&W work featured here?
Send us 4 images:
erudolph2@nyc.rr.com
Pls. do not ask us to see your work/portfolio online - just send us your 4 best images, and if they work for us we'll ask to see more.
B&W photography only, pls.
We love: straight photography; medium and large format. But we're open to all kinds of good B&W, analog and digital.
We're moving to a blog format as it is so much easier and faster to update.
We hope to hear from you soon!
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