Silent Summer Nights 7 (ripped right from thier site)

Eye of Newt’s Silent Summer Nights is a Rumble/Radix co-presentation.

September 1 & 2, 2007 — 8:15 pm Free!
Grandview Park, Commercial Drive at William Street


Buster Keaton’s Steamboat Bill Jr. (1928)

Saturday, September 1

Set on the Mississippi River in the old side-wheeler days, Steamboat Bill Jr. follows the adventures of a spoiled young man forced by his crusty father to learn the ropes of river boating. The film’s crowning
achievement is its hurricane climax.

Eye of Newt provides a touching and beautiful live soundtrack that brings this comic masterpiece to life.


Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens (1922)

Sunday, September 2

Nosferatu is that rare creature, a truly frightening and disturbing horror epic. An unauthorized production of Bram Stoker’s work Dracula, the legal heirs didn’t give their permission so the names had to be changed. But this wasn’t enough: The widow of Bram Stoker won two lawsuits in which she demanded the destruction of all copies of the movie, however copies of it were already too widespread to destroy them all.

Featuring the renowned improvisational musicians, The Silent Summer Nights Monster Orchestra.

why it’s important to leave the house #45908

A patient’s self-rewired brain revives him after 19 years in a vegatative coma.

Minus Kyle, Duncan, & Grant, you people missed a fantastic show. Tigers crept off the stage, dreams of lights, lakes of visionary stormy weather. The Roman Empire shuddered and fell under the waves of Atlantis. Shane brought his mother back to life as the audience cried and his grandmother told us all to rise and shine, all to a really good steel string slide. I managed to film clips of most of the first act, but not all of it, only enough to give you the barest skeleton of what actually happened. In the end, I have shaky teasers, but no real trailers. Next time, you, be there. Get out your silver kitchen knife and go culture hunting when I tell you to.

So with only about a full day’s warning, we managed to get almost thirty people to Pirates of the Caribbean. An affable man sitting behind me noticed that our group took up two full rows and asked how much organization went into it. When I told him we hadn’t bothered with very much this time around, how it was entirely arranged through our on-line journals, he mentioned oh-so-fortuitously that he has an event coming up at the Planetarium. He handed me a cleanly designed flyer, the sort of thing I would notice on a table, and smiled when I said I would give him a plug. After a bit more conversation, he asked, “Will you really mention us?” Then handed me a free ticket.

UK scientists have developed technology that enables artificial limbs to be directly attached to a human skeleton.

I’ve been listening to the music The Beige have on their website for hours now and I’m going to leave one on when I finally go to bed. The flyer design made me ask if it was ambient, but though their songs powerfully insinuate Brian Eno leanings, they seem to play something else, a translucent mellow jazz with a delicate twist of quiet pop. I really like it. Stylistically, they remind me charmingly of Múm. The musicians, Andrew Arida, Geoff Gilliard, Mark Haney, Rick Maddocks, and Jon Wood, manage to dance the line between chill, softly effervescent, and catchy without being fluffy, bland or relying on hooks. I’ll have to remember to bring extra money when I go, because I want to buy the album.

The show is only an hour long because they have to vacate in time for the stoned kids to watch the resident Doors/Zeppelin/Hendrix/Pink Floyd laser show, but they’ll have drinks and mingling downstairs afterward and their own visuals projected on the ceiling during their set. I’m curious to see what they’re going to do with the space. It can be awkward to set up anything meaningful around a giant robot projector ant that rises from the floor, but already I can imagine how their melodies could transform awkwardness into underwater gracefulness, sort of how a good director cuts out the sound in moments of tension.

University of Alberta researchers have created an ultra-sound technology to regrow teeth, the first time scientists have been able to reform human dental tissue.

About half my books have been spoken for and some already bought.
a list of what’s left

better security

There’s a new GROW game! This one involves six little shapes interacting in a forest. It’s deceptively simple looking compared to the twisty frustration that’s the GROW Cube, but one of the trickier realizations was that some items can “level max” without fufilling thier final functions.

  • Rhizome.org: Geeks in the Gallery: An Interview with Artists Tom Moody and Michael Bell-Smith (Part Three of Three)

    The Spaces Between Working Group, that I blogged about yesterday, is showing films again tonight after Commercial Drive Car Free Day has packed up. The community cinema’s made under an overhang that’s part of an autobody shop at Third and Commercial. I really like it. The venue was perfect for watching Metropolis. Tonight they’re keeping to the theme of No Car Day and showing End of Suburbia at 5:50, a documentary that asks if the world can actually supply the demands of the suburbanite lifestyle and what can be done before it destroys what’s left, Ikiru at 7:15, Akira Kurosawa’s masterwork about a bureaucratic city planner who discovers he has terminal cancer and, without telling anyone, sets out to change his life, and Run Lola Run at 9:40, which I’m sure you’re all familiar with.

  • The freely downloadable spoken words of Japanese Cyberpunk Author, Kenji Siratori meets the harsh audio of Nimheil: Kenji Siratori – Gene TV / Neo Drugismo vs. Nimheil

  • phat friday

    Night Watch

    Friday a group of us are going to the opening of Nightwatch, an atmospheric Russian magic-realism horror film that’s more mythology than horror.

    WHERE: The Paramount, 900 Burrard Street, two blocks up the hill from the Burrard st. Skytrain station.

    WHEN: Meeting at 6:30, show at 7:20.

    WHO: You, if you live here in Vancouver.

    After, those interested will be heading down to the Waldorf for a live Funk/Motown night.

    WHERE: The Waldorf Hotel, 1489 Hastings Street East, two blocks west of Commercial on Hastings.

    WHEN: Approximately 9:30 until whenever.

    WHO: You, if you like funk and live in Vancouver.

    Feel free to cross-post this. (It would be appreciated).

    as an afterthought: we need a movie with tilda swindon AND adrian brody

    King Kong didn’t have enough Adrien Brody, dinosaur punching or kicking ass for the lord to excuse the length, let alone the blatant racism.

    It started out with a Al “blackface” Jolson singing I’m On Top Of The World, then moved onto an island, populated only by the darkest natives that special effects money could possibly buy, where all the ethnic characters conveniently died in less then ten minutes. I was amazed. Also, could she possibly scream a little more? I don’t think there was quite enough. Please, take yourself more seriously, because audiences don’t like 100 million dollars movies about giant apes that aren’t burdened with poignant scenes of ice-skating with toy women.

    rehashing dates

    Alright, let’s try to figure this out.

    Friday, July 15th, is Amanda‘s birthday party, a huge thing planned at Patti, Simon, Tyler, and Karen’s house.

    Saturday, July 16th, is Quicky Culture Night downtown at Jervis & Davie.

    Monday, July 18th., Korean Movie Monday, where we’ll be watching Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter…and Spring.

    Saturday, July 23rd, is Illuminares, the lantern festival at Trout Lake.

    Is there anything else of note?

    bring out yer dead

    Just in time to go with that previous post on Zombies, Vancouver is about to join the fun!

    Get out the oatmeal and liquid latex, ’cause the day of reckoning is nigh!

    That’s right! Zombiewalk Vancouver 2005! . . .!

    Tentatively Saturday August 27, 3pm
    Starting from “somewhere horribly frightening” a horde of living dead will stumble en masse towards Mountain View Cemetery on Fraser St.

    The zombie walk will end with a picnic in the graveyard – bring your friends and family and eat them in the park!

    There is possibility of a post-apocalypse zombie-jamboree hoe-down to follow.
    If you have the inclination to do so, please let me know of your zombie wants, needs, desires and offerings – contributions of ideas, zombie related music/films/performance (preferably from the brains of participating zombies), food (scavenged, hunted, incubated or otherwise), your presence (zombies are only really effective when gathered in
    large groups. everyone knows that), general good will, etc.

    Pass this on to anyone else you know who might be interested.

    More engaging imagery + useful information to follow.

    aarrgh,
    heather

    further reading:
    http://www.weeklyworldnews.com/features/politics/61270
    http://www.weeklyworldnews.com/features/politics/58975

    As well, the Media-splat night has been planned. Friday, July 22nd, 8:30 pm. Bring a short bit of visual media, something you really like, may it be a commercial or a music video of a scene from a film. Whatever. Drop me a line for directions.

    whipped cream with gasoline on top

    KOREAN MOVIE MONDAY

    This week we’re watching Attack the Gas Station.

    Directions: walk west along broadway from commercial along the south side of the street. When you come to the psychic lady building, knock on the lower left windows.

    note: Nicholas, Andrew wanted your manly emissions. He is sad that you have left. Also, David Byrne and Andrew W. K. should make an album together and call it House Party.