The Cosmopolitan Covers of Bradshaw Crandell


Bradshaw Crandell, who was known as the “artist of the stars” because of the many portraits he did of contemporary stars, was born in Glen Falls, New York and studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.  Though Crandell is best known for his portrait work, Crandell also did several covers for Cosmopolitan Magazine in the 30s and 40s.  Here are just a few of them:

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Music Video of the Day: Sun & Moon by Above & Beyond featuring Richard Bedford (2011, dir by Ferry Gouw)


This video, I have to admit, was a last minute selection for today.  The end of Sunday and the start of Monday managed to sneak up on me this week.  It’s odd how that can happen, especially considering that I’m usually hyperorganized.  Maybe it’s the heat.

Anyway, the main thing that appealed to me about this video is that it starts out wistful and kinda happy and then quickly gets rather ominous and kind of disturbing.  The club, to me, looks like it should be full of gangsters from a Martin Scorsese movie and once the dancing begins, it’s impossible not to be reminded of the Roadhouse scenes from Twin Peaks: The Return.  I assume the gentleman with the shaved head towards the end is either a football hooligan or a Kray brother.

Above & Beyond are the freaking best, aren’t they?

Enjoy!

(Incidentally, my supertalented cousin, Paulie Marchi, used to have a band called Sun & Moon.  They never made a music video, though.  It’s a shame.)

Lisa’s Week In Review — 5/28/18 — 6/3/18


What a week!  A news cycle dominated by Roseanne Barr, Samantha Bee, and Joy Reid served to remind us that we live in a world full of stupid people.  Meanwhile, down here in Texas, the temperature shot up to the triple digits and I’ve still got about 300 things on my To-Do list that I need to get done.  Bleh.

Oh well.  Here’s what I did accomplish this week:

Movies I Watched:

  1. An American Hippie in Israel (1972)
  2. The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
  3. Cry of the Werewolf (1944)
  4. The Falcon and the Snowman (1985)
  5. The Intern (2015)
  6. The Internship (2013)
  7. Just Like A Country Song (2014)
  8. Nightclub Secrets (2018)
  9. The Omega Code (1999)
  10. Peter Rabbit (2018)
  11. The Reptile (1966)
  12. Rome, Open City (1945)
  13. Solo (2018)
  14. Solomon and Sheba (1959)
  15. The Square (2017)
  16. Stalked By A Reality Star (2018)
  17. Suspect (1987)
  18. Vinyl (1965)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. The Americans
  2. Antiques Roadshow
  3. The Bachelorette
  4. Bar Rescue — Who is this schmuck and why does he have a show?
  5. Burning Love
  6. Children’s Hospital
  7. Dance Moms
  8. Evil’s Embrace
  9. Extreme Measures
  10. Genius
  11. Ghost Whisperer
  12. It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia — I saw the very first episode this week.  Charlie wasn’t quite as a dumb as he would later become.  In fact, in the beginning, Mac was the really dumb one.
  13. iZombie
  14. King of the Hill
  15. Legion
  16. Lucifer
  17. Master Chef
  18. Patrick Melrose
  19. Robot Chicken
  20. Sweetbitter
  21. Trust
  22. Twin Peaks: The Return — Showtime rebroadcast the entire series on Saturday!  Since it was 110 degrees outside, I was more than happy to stay inside and watch.
  23. Vida
  24. Westworld — William has got to be a host!  He’s been shot at least six times since the rebellion started and he’s still not slowing down.
  25. Your Worst Nightmare

Books I Read:

  1. Bob Honey Who Do Stuff (2018) by Sean Penn
  2. Fade to Black (2018) by David Rosenfelt

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Above & Beyond
  2. Blanck Mass
  3. Blondie
  4. Bob Dylan
  5. The Chemical Brothers
  6. The Crystal Method
  7. Confidence Man
  8. Damien Carter
  9. Dean Drouillard
  10. Dita Von Teese
  11. Fiona Apple
  12. Jakalope
  13. Kedr Livanskiy
  14. Lindsey Stirling
  15. Moby
  16. Radiohead
  17. Richard Bedford
  18. t.A.T.u
  19. Tomoyasu Hotei
  20. Trace Adkins

Links From Last Week:

  1. Over at Sleeping Lisa, I shared a dream about being lost in London and a dream about the Vatican.
  2. On her photography site, Erin shared a picture of a world in motion.
  3. At Jordan & Eddie, a look back at the films of 2006!
  4. From B Noir Detour: Ridin’ the Crime Wave with Gene Nelson!

Links From The Site:

  1. My sister Erin posted In Honor of Memorial Day and profiled Alan Bean and George Mayers!
  2. Gary was busy this week!  He reviewed The Devil’s Brigade, How To Stuff A Wild Bikini, The Killing, and His Girl Friday!  He also took a look at The Ballad of Green Berets and Josh Karp’s Orson Welles’s Last Movie!
  3. Ryan reviewed Somnambulance, Armenian Haunting, and Lovecraft: The Myth of Cthulhu, along with sharing his weekly reading round-up!
  4. I wrote about what lies in the future for The Walking Dead now that Andrew Lincoln is leaving!

(Want to see what I accomplished last week?  Click here!)

What Lisa Watched Last Night #181: Nightclub Secrets (dir by Joe Menendez)


Last night, I watched the latest Lifetime Movie Network premiere, Nightclub Secrets!

Why Was I Watching It?

Because it was on the Lifetime Movie Network, of course!

However, I also have to say that I really liked the title.  Usually, whenever the word “secrets” appears in the title of a Lifetime movie, it’s a good sign.  And, let us not forget, this title not only promised us secrets but nightclub secrets as well!  As anyone who has watched 54 can tell you, nightclubs are full of secrets…

What Was It About?

It’s the story of two sisters and their alcoholic mother.  Rachel (Rachel Hendrix) is wild and does mysterious things.  Zoe (Kate Mansi) reads mysteries and teaches a creative writing class, in which she encourages her students to be sadists when it comes to coming up with difficulties for their characters to overcome.

It’s also the story of a murder.  When Zoe is informed that Rachel’s been murdered, she decides to investigate her sister’s secret life.  It leads to the shy and repressed Zoe getting a job as a “bottle girl” at the same nightclub where her sister worked.  How many secrets can you fit in a nightclub?  It’s time for Zoe to find out!

What Worked?

I liked the sibling relationship between Rachel and Zoe.  It rang true and it’s authenticity provided some needed depth to the film’s plot.  Kate Mansi, who played Zoe, has done a quite a few Lifetime films and always does a good job of striking the right balance between emotional honesty and melodramatic fun.  As well, I thought Gigi Rice did a good job playing the alcoholic mother.

Towards the end of the film, there was an enjoyably absurd twist.  I won’t spoil it in this review but it was still fun, even if it did demand quite a suspension of disbelief.

What Did Not Work?

For a movie that was called Nightclub Secrets, the film really didn’t feature enough secrets about the nightclub.  I was hoping for something that would be a little bit more fun and sordid like Confessions of a Go Go Girl or maybe Babysitter’s Black Book.  Instead, this movie was a pretty much a standard Lifetime murder mystery that just happened to feature a nightclub.

“Oh my God!  Just like me!” Moments

I related to both of the sisters.  I can be wild like Rachel.  I can be shy like Zoe.  Zoe and I both love solving a mystery.  That said, I don’t know if I’d ever want to work in a nightclub, if just because I’m not a huge fan of crowds, drunks, or, for that matter, working.  So, if I got a job in a nightclub, I supposed it would have to be one of those struggling nightclubs that no one ever goes to.  Of course, those nightclubs always go out of business after a few weeks so it probably really wouldn’t be worth the trouble to even apply for the job.

On an unrelated note, I used to live near a nightclub where you were required to bring your tax return if you wanted to get inside.  If you didn’t make a certain amount of money, you weren’t allowed to enter.  Needless to say, on any given night, you could find the least likable people in the world standing in line outside of the place.  If any business was ever begging to be the target of a wacky, Ocean’s 11-style heist, it was that place.  Of course, the last time I drove by there, it had been turned into a Gold’s Gym.

Lessons Learned

It’s not easy being a bottle girl.

Music Video of the Day: Confidence Man — Out The Window (2018, dir by ????)


This song can be found on Confidence Man’s debut album, Confident Music For Confident People.

They’re a Melbourne-based band, one that recently announced that “There’s not enough dork in dance music nowadays.”  They’re absolutely correct.  Dance music should be fun and it should be random and it definitely shouldn’t take itself too seriously.  Read more about the wonderful dorkiness of Confidence Man by clicking here!

Enjoy!

 

Weekly Reading Round-Up : 05/27/2018 – 06/02/2018, Kalen Knowles And (More) Pat Aulisio


Ryan C. (fourcolorapocalypse)'s avatarRyan C.'s Four Color Apocalypse

Still firmly in catch-up mode (but with light at the end of the tunnel), this week’s grab-bag of items that arrived in my mailbox includes three self-published comics from Kalen Knowles, one of the most distinctive voices in the Seattle underground, and another from Philly’s Pat Aulisio, who continues to blow me away with his idiosyncratic visions. Why waste time? Let’s have a look at the good stuff, and this time out it’s all good —

Knowles’ Journal is like nothing else I’ve ever seen in my life, a densely-packed sketchbook diary (think the Wimpy Kid books and you’re getting warm) told from the POV of a young octopoid alien named Atticus that is almost disarmingly clever and imbued with a genuine sense of charm and wonder throughout. Atticus’ world — hell, his entire space/time continuum — bears certain similarities to our own, but rather than employing these as set-pieces…

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Stop the Presses!: Howard Hawks’ HIS GIRL FRIDAY (Columbia 1940)


gary loggins's avatarcracked rear viewer

In my opinion, Howard Hawks’ HIS GIRL FRIDAY is one of the greatest screwball comedies ever made, a full speed ahead movie that’s pretty much got everything a film fan could want. A remake of the 1930 Lewis Milestone classic THE FRONT PAGE (itself an adaptation of Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur’s Broadway smash), Hawks adds a delightful twist by turning ace reporter Hildy Johnson into editor Walter Burns’ ex-wife… and casting no less than Rosalind Russell and Cary Grant in the roles!

The two stars are in top form as the bickering ex-spouses, with their rapid fire banter nothing short of verbal dynamite. Grant in particular spouts off words quicker than a rapper (where did he get all that wind!) and his facial expressions and comic squeals (reminiscent of Curly Howard!) are simply priceless! Roz is more than his match as Hildy, with one lightning-fast zinger  after another. Miss…

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