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Category Archives: Film
Do you miss your old typewriter
I don’t know about you, but I don’t miss my old typewriters at all. Still, I was intrigued by this video typewriter-centric performance. The Boston Typewriter Orchestra is a nostalgic combo that engages in rhythmic typewriter manipulation combined with elements … Continue reading
Dracula for laughs
I don’t care what some critics had to say about Francis Ford Coppala’s 1992 version of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. I thoroughly enjoyed the Grand Guigol meets Expressionist take on the iconic vampire tale. Sadly, I missed the 2022 theatrical re-release for the … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Film, movies, Theater
Tagged Bram Stoker, Dracula, Francis Ford Coppala, Gary Oldman
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On the Edge of Alchemy
I was intrigued by the wonderful collage animation (below) created by Stacey Steers. The 20 minute film presents a unique approach to collage animation by combining backgrounds, objects and creatures taken from engraved illustrations with characters lifted from early cinema. … Continue reading
How it was done
Regular visitors to this blog will be well aware that the entire crew here at Travel Between The Pages world HQ have great admiration for Japanese woodblock printing. We especially enjoy the well known style called ukiyo-e. I recently stumbled … Continue reading
Once Upon a Time in L.A.
Film director Quentin Tarantino has opened a coffee shop thematically based on the 1973 movie “Coffy” staring Pam Grier. True fans certainly remember that Grier played the lead role in the Tarantino movie Jackie Brown. The coffeeshop is attached to … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Film, Restaurants, Tourism, USA
Tagged Los Angeles, Pam Grier, Pulp Fiction, Quentin Tarantino
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NYC Postcard
‘New York Postcard’. A pocket sized film shot during a few days in NYC. Directed by the Mc Gloughlin Brothers.
Mainly Miscellany
Who knew that Edward Gorey designed the sets for the U.S. revival of the 1924 stage play Dracula ? I certainly did not, but this fascinating article on the terrific CrimeReads blog does a deep dive into the story. Andy Weir’s The Martian was … Continue reading
Posted in Animation, Art, Books, Film, Libraries, Music, Photography
Tagged Edward Gorey, Gwendolyn Brooks, Poetry, The Beatles, Theater
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Breakfast At Tiffany’s
If you were so inclined, you could pick up a signed first edition of Truman Capote’s novel Breakfast at Tiffany’s for $5000 or less. But why not spring for the artfully rebound version for $1.5 million. The new version sports more … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, Film, Maps, USA, Writing
Tagged Bookbinding, New York City, Truman Capote
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The Expressionist As Flâneur
I recently stumbled on the charming video below which led me to the story of the marvelous exhibition MAX GOES FOR A WALK . “A hand-drawn Max Beckmann walks through his collection of postcards, occasionally changing outfits or morphing into … Continue reading
Black History Month
Here in the former Colonies there has been an alarming campaign by reactionary racist groups to suppress the study of American History in general and the study of the oppression of Black Americans and slavery in particular. This is not … Continue reading
Posted in Africa, Film, History, USA
Tagged Boston, Florida, Massachusetts, Slavery, U.S. history
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