Template:News/Art and Entertainment/In Film and video: Difference between revisions
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*[[Review of Lunch with Elizabeth David]] | *[[Review of Lunch with Elizabeth David]] by Edmund | ||
::This is a review of Lunch with Elizabeth David by Roger Williams (1999), of possible interest to some here as a novel mostly about the boyloving writer Norman Douglas. | ::This is a review of Lunch with Elizabeth David by Roger Williams (1999), of possible interest to some here as a novel mostly about the boyloving writer Norman Douglas. | ||
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Revision as of 13:28, 21 January 2016
In Film and video
- Review of Spotlight, directed by Tom McCarthy, Open Road Films, 2015. (Movie review, Bernie Najarian, December 14, 2015 )
- A new documentary film by David Kennerly from the perspective of Tom O'Carroll is now finished.
Watch on YouTube!
- A new documentary film by David Kennerly from the perspective of Tom O'Carroll is now finished.
- Short YouTube Video. While women and gay's rights and influence have expanded dramatically during the last thirty to forty years, kids have suffered a dramatic decline in freedom. This corresponds precisely with both the ascendance of feminism as well as the ubiquitous technological mesh which has destroyed privacy and autonomy.
- In production from Noel Films, Rodillas Quemadas (aka:Burnt Knees)
- A new free adaptation of Turn of the Screw by Henry James - shows signs of pushing technical, artistic and social boundaries a little further still.
Books and reviews
- Review of Lunch with Elizabeth David by Edmund
- This is a review of Lunch with Elizabeth David by Roger Williams (1999), of possible interest to some here as a novel mostly about the boyloving writer Norman Douglas.
- Restored and retold by Andrew Calimach
- The chart that follows presents a global view of the surviving Greek myths centered on paederastic desire. They are grouped by categories named “scenarios,” of which four principal types are identified, “Hybristic erastes;” “Enkratic erastes and collaborative eromenos;” “Imprudent erastes and eromenos;” and “Hybristic eromenos.” Each scenario type is labeled according to the dominant dynamic of the stories in the group.