Saturday, May 26, 2007

Let Them Eat Cake!



After watching Sophia Copola`s Marie Antoinette, I was curious about the real French Queen, and picked up the biography Marie Antoinette by Antonia Fraser. The movie is a bit fanciful, but is a mere pop version of this important historical personage (apparently the book was Sophia`s primary reference). I did enjoy it, but being a devotee of history, I longed for the actual dame of the Austrian court. I am only on page 51, but I detect that it is well researched, and am enjoying it immensely. "Let Them Eat Cake!" This is a phrase that echoes throughout infamy (prep schools, union halls, or menacing water holes mostly). There is not a shred of evidence that Marie ever said it, if you listen to scholars, but it has come to symbolize the contempt that the aristocracy of France had for the people of the lower estates. Just how over-the-top was the French court in the years leading up to the French Revolution? Was the atmosphere of the latter days of the ancien regime at Versailles as luxurious as it is depicted in books and films? I am hoping this book will perform surgery on some of the thick skins of exaggeration that have here-to-fore been the preponderance of portrayals for the Sun King court. A few years ago I got hooked on Francois Boucher simply because he was so frothy, so decadent-almost more so than one could believe? I visited a Kimball exhibition a couple of years back, and was befuddled by all the angels, cherubim, seraphim etc...How did the art develop such as this, to this silky silliness, with mountains of pinkish flesh in a transparent (or fake) religious theme? This astounded me, and made me want to study the period more to decode these aberrations. Too, the example of Fragonard`s The Swing is given, to slam home the point that mid-18th century France was a plump goose ready to implode with social/political mutiny! This was convincing, when I scribbled down these developments in my history notebooks. "Yea, there it is, the flagrant opulence of the ancien regime, no mercy dude!"



The above portrait by Louise Elizabeth Vigee-Lebrun, while very staged, gives you a good idea of what Marie was like; sumptuous, haughty, majestic, stoic, or maybe just downright in fruitcake city? Was this the real Marie, or just a facade for the public? I will probe for that as I read the book. Louise Vigee-Lebrun did many other portraits of the Queen, so they provide visual fodder for the mozaic of a gazillion words in Antonia Fraser`s text. There is a documentary on Madame Antoine too; I ordered it on Netflix, but it malfunctioned when I was playing it, so I intend to actually purchase it, because it is well done. Maybe some day I can go to France, so that I can visit the haunts of the aforementioned lady, then I will really sense the way it went down! "Let Them Eat Cake", in the meantime (you may want to view this slideshow as you contemplate this fallacious trigger for the Fall of the Bastille)!

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Fay Grim, Waitress, & 28 weeks Later

The Dobie Theater was a little too hot yesterday, but it got colder as the movie progressed. Fay Grim really got bogged down in silly, spy-chit chat that didn`t make any more sense than a fly that was flittin` `bout my nose! Read Roger Ebert`s piece, and boy am I glad he`s back. Parker Posey grimaces, snarls, winks, etc...and is reckless fashion-plate for this lunkey flick. But she can`t save it...this is Ian Fleming gone south. I know I need to see Henry Fool, but I`m reluctant to do so after this clunker! Loved the high-definition though and good shots of Istanbul.

Waitress was a very cute little film that recalls an easier, more innocent age, which would not be our own however. There was something untrue about it, and i don`t know just why? The pie-recipes in it were interesting. Andy Griffith is good as the bitter, wealthy owner. Keri Russel is good and Adrienne Shelly plays a dumb, nerdy flap-jacker strutter who hitches to a bad-poetry dork. It is tragic about her murder late last year.

My favorite of these three was 28 Weeks Later, especially because of the birds-eye shots of London, and the senseless slaugher by the government to annilhilate the carriers of the Rage virus. Because of the virus, people lose feeling for one another. Whenever a carrier tries to eat someone, they move real fast and snatch up their lunch before you can whistle dixie! Dark comedy really-modern George Romero. There is a real rockin` soundtrack-kind of sounded like King Crimson, but I`ll have to check it out! Just about everyone gets slaughtered, and you already knew that, but it`s still a big bummer. Wasn`t great, but it was the best of these three that i`ve seen the last two weeks. I want to see Away From Her today, but I`m not gettin` strongly behind it...

Friday, May 11, 2007

NEW ART FROM CLAUDE BOVEE!

The Triumph of Bacchus XI


Comic Mask


Tragic Mask


Victims of Vesuvius


Venus of the Fountain


Pyramus & Thisbe


The Sacrifice of Iphigenia