Thursday, November 30, 2006

Obsession of the Day, 11-30-2006

I love this -- the World of Wonder blog has posted a clip (an outtake? raw footage? not sure) from a RuPaul-hosted Christmas special, circa 1993, featuring an appearence by Nirvana. At a producers coaxing, the band sings "We Wish You A Merry Christmas", followed by warm Christmas greetings directed at Ru. Oh, 1993. I miss you so much.

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Wednesday, November 29, 2006

In a bout of insomnia, I've added some hand-coded additions to the blog roll. More to come, next time I can't sleep.

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Studio 60: The Flowchart

This explains why I like the show, but not why my boyfriend watches it with me without complaint.

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Leonsis on Nanking

Ted Leonsis, outgoing Vice Chairman of the company I work for, produced a documentary called Nanking which will be screening in competition at Sundance. He blogs about it here.

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Sundance Competition Slate

Highlights on first glance. I don't know why,but I'm drawn to the ghost movies this year...

Documentary Competition

Chasing Ghosts (Director: Lincoln Ruchti)—Twin Galaxies Arcade, Iowa, 1982: the birthplace of mankind's obsession with video games. The fate of this world lies in the hands (literally) of a few unlikely heroes: They are the Original Video Game World Champions and the arcade is their battleground.

Ghosts of Abu Ghraib (Director: Rory Kennedy)—This inside look at the abuses that occurred at the infamous Iraqi prison in the fall of 2003 uses direct, personal narratives of perpetrators, witnesses, and victims to probe the effects of the abuses on all involved. World Premiere.

Girl 27 (Director: David Stenn)—When underage dancer Patricia Douglas is raped at a wild MGM stag party in 1937, she makes headlines and legal history, and then disappears. GIRL 27 follows author-screenwriter David Stenn as he investigates one of Hollywood's most notorious scandals. World Premiere.

Zoo (Director: Robinson Devor)—A humanizing look at the life and bizarre death of a seemingly normal Seattle family man who met his untimely end after an unusual encounter with a horse. World Premiere.

Dramatic Comp

Rocket Science (Director and Screenwriter: Jeffrey Blitz)—A 15-year-old boy from New Jersey with a stuttering problem falls in love with the star of the debate team and finds himself suddenly immersed in the ultra-competitive world of debating. World Premiere.

Snow Angels (Director: David Gordon Green; Screenwriter: Stewart O'Nan)—A drama that interweaves the life of a teenager with his former baby-sitter, her estranged husband, and their daughter. World Premiere.

Teeth (Director and Screenwriter: Mitchell Lichtenstein)—Still a stranger to her own body, a high school student discovers she has a “physical advantage” when she becomes the object of male violence. World Premiere.

World Documentary

The Future is Unwritten Ireland/UK ( Director: Julien Temple)—An invitation from Joe Strummer, the Punk Rock Warlord himself, to journey beyond the myth to the heart and voice of a generation. His life, our times, his music. World Premiere.

A Very British Gangster / UK (Director: Donal MacIntyre)—Given his many contradictions, Dominic Noonan, head of one of Britain’s biggest crime families, is a man who defies stereotypes. This close up look at his life, from gun trials to the murder of his brother on the streets of Manchester, reveals a community struggling with poverty, violence and drugs. World Premiere.

World Dramatic

Ghosts UK (Director: Nick Broomfield; Screenwriters: Nick Broomfield, Jez Lewis)—Based on a true story, GHOSTS is the tragic account of an illegal Chinese immigrant woman as she struggles relentlessly for a better life in the U.K. North American Premiere.

Once Ireland (Director and Screenwriter: John Carney)—ONCE is a modern-day musical set on the streets of Dublin. Featuring Glen Hansard and his Irish band “The Frames”, ONCE tells the story of a busker and an immigrant during an eventful week as they write, rehearse and record songs that reveal their unique love story. North American Premiere.

More to come tomorrow, apparently...




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Four Eyed Monsters is finally getting its big, "real" theatrical opening in New York City this Friday. It's a big week for the duo, what with their Independent Spirit noms, and the always-welcome badge of legitimacy that is the NY Times review, which will probably be online by this time tomorrow. As much as I like the movie, I'm anxious to see how Arin and Susan are going to top it, so selfishly, I hope this is, as Susan puts it in the podcast below, their "final push" with this project, before moving on to new things:



I'm going to try to stop by one of the screenings on Friday, and even if you've seen the film already, I think you should, too -- I imagine watching the film in the wake of the spectre of the massive internet stardom Arin and Susan have created for themselves over the past year and a half will make for a pretty interesting experience.

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Sundance spelunking.

On Wednesdays, I get up at 5:30 am and work until noon-ish, and then have the afternoon off. Usually, I use part of the afternoon to take a nap, and today I'm really going to need one if I'm going to make it to the Indiewire anniversary party tonight. But, instead, I'm sitting here refreshing my Gmail and Bloglines over and over again, because today the Sundance Film Festival is supposed to send out their official press release announcing their 2007 competition slate. Of course, the lucky filmmakers have already been notified, so here I sit, searching blogs, hoping something will leak. So far, this is all I've found:

Security Cases, which examines the political activities of Palestinians incarcerated in Israel, will join a select club of other films to screen at the prestigious Colorado film festival. A co-production between French TV channel Arte and Israel's New Fund for Film and Television, Shimon Dotan's latest project focuses on three Palestinians in custody because of terrorist activities aimed against Israel.

Spotted anything else? Let me know.
Update: The press release has arrived. I'll write up a new post shortly.

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Above, a made-for-You-Tube Clara Bow clip reel. Below, selections from Film Forum's "Fox Before the Code" series that I'm going to try to attend, in order of priority. This is more of a "note to self" than anything else. For an actual summary of Film Forum's latest rep festival see Elliott Stein's take in the Voice. Cinematical's Ryan Stewart should have something soon, too.

SERVANTS’ ENTRANCE - (1934) "Bored heiress Janet Gaynor decides to “learn to be a housewife” on a lark (in a nightmare she’s put on trial by Disney-animated kitchen utensils), then meets Lew Ayres, a chauffeur with motor design ambitions, even as dad Walter Connolly’s fortunes yo-yo." Tuesday 12/5, 7pm

LILIOM - (1935) Fritz Lang. Saturday 12/16, 9:15 PM. With Zoo in Budapest.

CALL HER SAVAGE -- "Clara Bow returned to the screen with a vengeance (following a well-publicized nervous breakdown) as a Texas half-breed who takes a whip to childhood friend Gilbert Roland, brains the husband she married for spite with a stool, gets in a catfight with Thelma Todd, visits the screen’s first bona fide gay bar, and romps with an excited Great Dane — and we don’t mean Hamlet." Sunday 12/10, 1pm

AFTER TOMORROW - (1932) Frank Borzage. Thursday 12/7, 7:30 PM

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Sofia Coppola gives birth



It's a girl
! A half-French baby girl of 100% genetically pure hipster coding, named Romy. To celebrate, a horrible camcorder bootleg of one of my favorite sequences from Marie Antoinette, the masked ball/junior prom.

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Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Betty Comden dies



Asleep as I was through the weekend, I missed the news that Betty Comden died on Thanksgiving. Along with Adolf Green (who, like Comden, was a former cabaret partner of Judy Holliday), Betty wrote book and lyrics for modernist musical classics On The Town, It's Always Fair Weather, The Bandwagon and Bells Are Ringing. As not a single You Tube user has yet had the foresight to upload a decent clip of that boxing number Cyd Charisse does in Fair Weather, see "New York, New York" from On The Town above.

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Independent Spirit Noms Announced

Anne Thompson's got the full press release. A couple of thoughts right off the bat :

1. It would appear that Film Independent took last year's gripes, that the noms had become too mainstream, very, very seriously. The only film nominated in the Best Feature category that looks and talks like a Hollywood movie is Little Miss Sunshine; much to my chagrin, it's been so successful that I don't know if it can lose.

2. When did American Gun even come out?

3. I'm a moderate supporter of A Prarie Home Companion, but I've got to wonder: when was this list locked? Was Robert Altman's Best Director nomination guiltily slipped in at the last minute?

4. It's nice to see Wristcutters getting some attention. Why this film wasn't snatched up at Sundance, put into platform release in July, and made the sleeper hit of the year is beyond me. Oh - right.

5. The Road to Guantanamo qualifies as a documentary? Seriously?

6. Thank You For Smoking qualifies as one of the five Best Screenplays of the year? Seriously?

7. A logistic quibble: Four Eyed Monsters made its festival debut in 2005 and debuted theatrically this year. Stephanie Daley, as far as I know, has only screened at festivals in 2006, and will not debut theatrically until early 2007. I love both of these films and I'm happy to see them get this kind of attention, but how come both were eligible for nominations this year?

Update:
David Hudson is reliably collating responses at GreenCine Daily. I have my own round-up on Netscape here.

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A Saved By The Bell superfan's wet dream




Via The Daily Reel. Additional episodes can be found here.

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Monday, November 27, 2006


What is Kurt Loder doing?

I'm talking about the video clip on the top left, not the column that takes up the majority of the page, in which the aging founder of MTV News uses The Fountain as an excuse to fondly drift back to "the Roger Corman days," although that looks like a symptom of the same syndrome. But that's nothing compared to the horror of watching Loder (who apparently turned 61 this year) sit in the middle of a table full of 27-year-olds, nodding his head like he cares about Hostel.

It's not just that Loder himself has been pushed to the margins by several new generations of MTV Anchors; and it's certainly not news that the very concept of holding a mirror up to the culture, which MTV used to embody, has been literally pushed off the network by dating shows and frat parties, and dating shows about frat parties. What actually troubles me is that Kurt Loder, after 25 years with the network, has been relegated to silently condoning torture porn on a 2-inch-wide box on the internet, and he's still -- apparently -- not interested in looking for work elsewhere. What is he waiting for? Does his pension kick in when he hits 65?

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Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Long weekend, much needed.

In a couple of hours, I'll meet up with Nick and we'll head off to New Jersey for a long-awaited holiday weekend in the suburbs. But first, I'm going to head into the city and try to track down a copy of the Criterion edition of Secret Honor, which I've never seen, but which since the death of its director, I can't get out of my head.

While I'm gone, take a look at this short documentary I found on You Tube, in which Sonic Youth discuss their collaborations with filmmakers such as Spike Jonze, Richard Linklater and Harmony Korine on videos and features. Towards the end, Lee Ranaldo says the band is eager to explore more film work: "We still haven't been tapped to do that ultimate Sonic Youth-meets-film soundtrack." Consider that a call to arms, girls and boys...

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Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Altman's Dead. Long Live Altman Junior!

As Jeffrey Overstreet puts (via the comments of David Hudson's obit at GreenCine Daily), "Pass the mantle to Paul Thomas Anderson, Altman's disciple, who will carry on the style and improve upon it, as Altman himself admitted."

So, above and below, Altman and Anderson's take on the same (musical) theme. Skip to about 1:50 0n the video below, if you must.

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Robert Altman is DeadI'm working on something for Netscape; more later.

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My Favorite Response to Kramergate Thus Far:

Nikki Finke blames comedy clubs: "[M]any of today's comedy clubs have become a cesspool of hatred. Inside them, racism, ethnic prejudice, religious bigotry, homophobia and sexism all masquerade as humor. Anyone who's been to the clubs and heard the acts knows this to be true." She sounds as familiar with "the clubs" and "the acts" as Kramer did on Letterman, expressing his solidarity with "the blacks."

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Monday, November 20, 2006

Jeff Lipsky, writer/director of Flannel Pajamas, writes at indieWIRE about the real-life relationship that inspired the picture. It's a movie I'd like to see again, especially after reading the backstory, which includes a dose of Lipsky's indie film mogul history that didn't make it into the film.

The article mirrors what I remember of the picture: it's full of lovely anecdotes punctuated by uncomfortable nakedness. The emotional impact of Flannel Pajamas is undeniable, but I was unprepared to assess it critically when I saw it at Sundance. I was about six weeks into my current relationship; I walked out of the screening around 11pm after a long day of seeing films and, time difference be damned, dialed my boyfriend in New York. I said something along the lines of, "Honey, let's never break up, okay?" He responded, "Okay." Thus, I'm almost afraid to confront the movie again -- considering that it served as a kind of catalyst for my current happiness, I wouldn't want to revisit it with clear eyes and decide it's for whatever reason not that great.

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Netscape Stuff, 11-20-2006

Rather than clog my blog with posts linking over to my stuff on Netscape, I'm going to start aggregating most of them into a single post per day.

  • Happy Feet = leftist propaganda? "The film's abrupt third-act turn to environmental advocacy pops up in nearly every review listed on Metacritic, and responses range from hostile to incredulous."
  • Weekend box office: "A more productive gauge of Casino Royale's performance comes from looking at it in the context of other recent Bond openings... Casino's is comparable in scale to the opening of GoldenEye, Pierce Brosnan's first 007 outing after taking over the role from Timothy Dalton."
  • Sugarcubes reunion show: "The Sugarcubes are Iceland's second most famous cultural export...So far, all blogged reports of the show have been positive."

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Steven Boone on Iraq in Fragments at The House Next Door:

...transferred to 35mm and projected on the big screen, it is as beautiful to behold as Days of Heaven. As I ogled this beauty recently at New York’s Film Forum, I found my hands clasped in front of my chin as if in prayer. I could not believe that I was watching the product of a camera Uncle Lou might use to document his vacation sexploits... Iraq in Fragments is the first camcorder movie with no excuses.

Read on for Boone's argument as to why James Longley's documentary "represents the true beginning of The Future of the Movies." The essay is tech-heavy, but not intimidatingly so. Also, my interview with Longely can be found here.

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The endlessly prolific Joe Swanberg is readying his third feature, Hannah Takes the Stairs, for release. Billed as a collaboration between Joe and Greta Gerwig (LOL), Kent Osborne (writer for Spongebob Squarepants), Andrew Bujalski (writer/director/star of Mutual Appreciation), Ry Russo-Young, Mark Duplass (star/writer of The Puffy Chair), Todd Rohal, and Kevin Bewersdorf (star/composer of LOL), I can't wait to see it. In the meantime, I'm stalking the movie's progress here.

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A Spoonful of Sugar Helps The Gender Issues Go Down?


That Little Round-Headed Boy wonders whether or not Mary Poppins is our great lost Feminist fable:
"...the movie could be retitled THE FEMINIST RE-EDUCATION OF GEORGE BANKS. [...]Seeing it now, it's clear that George Banks is her primary reclamation project. He still believes in old school male supremacy, and Poppins is his Cassandra, offering up a dire warning of coming change that he doesn't want to hear. This also dovetails with a subtle message that England's days of world supremacy are soon to wane as well..."
I'm not sure the messages of Mary Poppins are all that subtle, but they're certainly discomfitingly mixed. It's a film that spends roughly 118 minutes presenting case studies to support a cache of radical theories: that women are smarter and althogether more capable than men; that hired parents are far more functional than biological mothers and fathers; that panhandlers and vagabonds are inherently more noble than men who handle other people's wealth for a living (and don't even get the movie started on the spoiled, fashionably political wives of said corporate moguls).

But then, like so many 50s-era stabs at the dominant culture, the movie pulls back from its insurrectionary impulses. Mary Poppins ends with the nuclear family (however improbably) reunited, and George Banks (though in some ways enlightened in a manner he was not at the beginning of the film) firmly re-ensconsed in corporate culture, and Mary Poppins herself, floating off alone, without saying goodbye. Not only does she abandon the Banks family (who she has ostensibly "fixed", and who apparently barely notice that she's gone), but if I remember correctly, she essentially leaves Dick Van Dyke's Burt (who we are to read is her on-again, off-again lover) in the middle of the night, without a clue as to where or when they might meet again.

If anything, I think we're suppossed to walk away with the idea that the feminist woman is a lone warrior; that it's her duty to go where she's needed to re-educate the masses behind the mask of domestic employment; that she must forgo binding emotional attatchments in order to get the job done; and she must then leave in the night with nary a goodbye, allowing the wind to carry her to her next engagement with no baggage holding her down (although, on that score, the fact that she can squeeze large items of furniture in her magic carpet bag surely helps). As a feminist fable, it's not so much about the feminist herself -- it's about the men she leaves behind.

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The Scourge of C-List Celeb - and Friend of Stamos:

Jonathan Bernstein's profile of Perez Hilton in The Guardian reveals the one shocking secret left about blogebrities -- they're fucking hard workers:
You might imagine that someone so skilled at promoting hate and fear among the C-list would live a shadowy existence. But at around 6.15 every morning, Mario Lavandeira, the beefy, 28-year-old gay Cuban-American who hides behind the pseudonym Perez Hilton, sets up his laptop on a table outside the Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf on the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue. Until 9.30 at night, when the club-hopping and whisper-gathering begins, he downs endless coffees and fires off endless malice-tinged posts.

Of course, it would be unwise to suggest that most professional bloggers -- hard-working though they might be -- are paragons of virtue, or even people you'd actually like to have a drink with:
He's even more incredulous when asked if he ever feels regret for anyone he might have wounded. "Not a single time. Not even when I put up the pictures of Princess Diana as she was dying. I didn't put it on my main page. I said, 'Click here to see the pictures', and even then people were outraged. But they made a choice to see those pictures and then they had the balls to fucking criticise me for it."
...unless, apparently, you're John Stamos:
"The people that last, the Tom Hankses, the Julia Robertses, my friend John Stamos, are the ones that are nice." I can't let that pass. What about Madonna - who's more horrible and unappreciative of her fans than her? Perez looks as if his head is about to explode. "Madonna's insanely talented!" But you said the people who last are the nice ones...It's almost endearing that this scourge of the C-list celeb who has Hollywood trembling is still so starstruck that he can come out with such a clueless statement.

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Friday, November 17, 2006

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Re: this? I know nothing. Sorry!

UPDATE: If Saul Hansell says it's true, then it must be. As of now, I still have a job. If that changes, the four people who read my blog will be the first to know.

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Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Dance Party, USA


I was planning to write (gasp! an original blog entry that doesn't involve reposting my work from Netscape) something today about Dance Party, USA, Aaron Katz's short-but-sweet first feature, which opens at the Pioneer Theater here in NY today. Watching it -- however ironically, from a screener, because I couldn't fit it into my schedule at last year's SXSW -- it seemed to fit so comfortably in the same pocket with other films that I've seen (and loved) over the past two years at that very festival: Kissing on the Mouth and LOL; Mutual Appreciation; Four Eyed Monsters; etc etc. I was *going* to write my first lengthy blog post since the day I relauched this blog all about all of that ... but then, browsing through GreenCine Daily, I discovered David Lowery had beat me to it.

At SXSW, Lowery writes, "a certain type of filmmaking seems to flower above all others, and the filmmakers, inadvertently or otherwise, form a sort of self-propogating clique." He goes on to reference this films I mentioned above (with The Puffy Chair in place of FEM, and then describes how though these films, though "all made independently of each other ... have a sort of shared formal aspiration, a blurring of form and content (or, rather, a crystallization of Susan Sontag's belief that form and content should be inseparable, indistinguishable) and an alluring, incisive sense of naturalism." He cites these films' common "disregard for overt incident" as their binding theme: though these are surely films that largely make use of low budgets and non-actors, more importantly they share a sense of "space": "They exist almost entirely between the beats of a 'traditional' narrative, finding their own three act structures entirely within these exploded moments."

I suppose this will teach me not to wait until my afternoon off to blog -- someone smarter will say what I'm thinking first, and in smoother words than I could ever produce. But, I will say that Dance Party is an exquisitely natural portrait of a 24 hour period in which a two teenagers make seemingly small moves that accidentally, potentially change their lives. Katz is exploring the aesthetic possibilities of cheap video in an interesting way, especially in terms of its ability to add an almost supernatural sheen to the mundane. And there were moments of Dance Party -- not whole scenes necessarily, or even individual scraps of dialogue, but small, perfectly formed moments -- that gave me a palpable sense of deva ju, and I find it hard to believe anyone who has ever woken up on the carpeted floor of somebody else's parent's house wouldn't feel the same. It's a homerun of a first feature and I'm excited to see what Katz comes up with next.

Seeing films like this really makes me long for the days in which I dictated the material i was able to cover at my day job. Someday I'll work out a way in which I can go to every festival and see every film and do everything in my power (which will hopefully be quite a bit) to make sure the good movies get the exposure they deserve. In the meantime, I'll pay my bills.

The Website
Screening info

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Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Accounting for the recent past...

Been too busy the past week or so to post stuff here, so here's a look at some stuff I've been working on:

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Friday, November 10, 2006

Oscar spelunking



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Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Aqua Teen: The Movie

"Though the Aqua Teen movie has allegedly been in the works for several years, its hypothetical theatrical release date keeps changing, and virtually nothing is known with total certainty about the project."
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Monday, November 06, 2006


Adrienne Shelly

"Adrienne Shelly was the kind of actress whose work was so candid and emotionally transparent, watching one of her films felt like spending time with a sister or a best friend."
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Friday, November 03, 2006

It's the most anticipated comedy of the past three weeks But is it funny?

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Thursday, November 02, 2006

Meet the new Douglas Fairbanks:

"About two months ago, amid news that Paramount had severed ties with Tom Cruise and Paula Wagner's production company, The Hollywood Reporter's Anne Thompson stepped away from the pack in order to argue that the divorce should hardly be assumed to represent hardship on the part of Cruise. After all, Cruise is getting older, and judging by the disappointing grosses of M:I:3, he can't play an action hero forever..."
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Wednesday, November 01, 2006


"The image contested by the Pitt camp was taken by artist and stage director Robert Wilson, on the set of a series of "video portraits" produced by the artist. The portraits, featuring stars such as Pitt, Sean Penn and Winona Ryder, are shot on high-def digital video and are intended to function as life-sized moving "paintings"..."
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