Showing posts with label dvds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dvds. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

Meow-velous: Cats at the Library


DOMESTIC CAT. Photography. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/138_1073169/1/138_1073169/cite. Accessed 28 Oct 2017.
We're gutted to have missed National Cat Day on October 29th, but as Sandra Boynton pointed out on Facebook, "...March 28 is Respect Your Cat Day, May 30 is International Hug Your Cat Day, June 15 is World Catnip Awareness Day, June 25 is Take Your Cat to Work Day, August 8 is World Cat Day, Sept 1 is Ginger Cat Appreciation Day, Oct 16 is Feral Cat Day, and Oct 27 is National Black Cat Day," so we have plenty of other chances to celebrate our purry pals. Cats and libraries are a natural match! The tradition of having a cat in the library is allegedly dates back to the Egyptians, and there are cats in libraries worldwide. (There are also cats in the Hermitage Museum in Russia. Which has a library.) There are famous library cats - Dewey! Baker & Taylor! - and not so famous ones.

They have a job description:
  1. Reducing stress for all humans who pay attention to him.
  2.  Sitting by the front door every morning at 9:00 am to greet the public as they enter the library.
  3. Sampling all boxes that enter the library for security problems and comfort level.
  4. Attending all meetings in the Round Room as official library ambassador.
  5. Providing comic relief for staff and visitors whenever possible.
  6. Climbing in book bags and briefcases while patrons are studying or trying to retrieve needed papers underneath him.
  7. Generating free national and worldwide publicity for Library. (This entails sitting still for photographs, smiling for the camera, and generally being cute.)
  8. Working toward status as world’s most finicky cat by refusing all but the most expensive, delectable foods — and even turning up his nose at those most of the time.
Allergy complaints have made their positions more scarce recently. One cat was nearly banished, but ended up staying on the job after a petition was circulated and the city council voted to retain his services.

There's a stereotype of the cat-loving librarian. We don't know that all librarians love cats, but we sure do! Our library system does not have library cats, but we'd like to point out that even without a resident cat, the library catalog offers plenty of ways to enjoy felines - dander-free! Here's some standout items:

The Inner Life of Cats: The Science and Secrets of Our Mysterious Feline Companions by Thomas McNamee

The Dalai Lama's Cat and the Power of Meow by David Michie [eBook]

Shop Cats of New York by Tamar Arslanian

Cat Tales: True Stories of Kindness and Companionship With Kitties by Aline Alexander Newman

The Cat Whisperer: Why Cats Do What They Do-- And How to Get Them To Do What You Want by Mieshelle Nagelschneider

Men With Cats: Intimate Portraits of Feline Friendship by David Williams

Call of the Cats: What I Learned About Love and Life From a Feral Colony by Andrew Bloomfield

The Old Man and the Cat: A Love Story by Nils Uddenberg

Total Cat Mojo: The Ultimate Guide to Life With Your Cat by Jackson Galaxy

Lost and Found Cat: The True Story of Kunkush's Incredible Journey by Doug Kuntz and Amy Shrodes[eBook]

DVDs

The Story of Cats

The Secret Life of Cats 

Kedi

A Street Cat Named Bob

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Cult Film

Pythons In Armour. Photographer. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/115_2736202/1/115_2736202/cite. Accessed 21 Oct 2017.
Though many drive-ins have been shut down, and the practice of screening midnight movies in theaters has waned considerably from its heyday in the early 1970s, the thrill of sharing boundary-testing films in the dark can now be enjoyed just as well while curled up on the couch—no accompanying cult required... These films stubbornly refuse to be marginalized, lower budgets and lack of Hollywood gloss be damned.
~Themes: Cult Movies, from the Criterion Collection website 

The term “cult classic” gets thrown around a lot these days, usually to describe anything that wasn’t widely seen but has some vocal fans. There should be another word for that, because “cult” implies a whole other level of devotion. This list is about movies that inspire very unusual outpourings of support. Let’s put the “cult” back into “cult following.”
~Andy Hunsaker, "15 Movies With Crazy Cult Followings"

How do you define cult film? The two quotes above, the latter taken from the IFC website, seem to have a subtly different take on that question. Is a cult film just a B-movie or a midnight movie? Or is it something that has grabbed hold of at least certain moviegoers' imagination and become part of the culture of moviegoing, like The Rocky Horror Picture Show?

Criterion defines cult films from their own collection as Crumb, Eating Raoul, F for Fake, Fantastic Planet, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Eyes Without a Face, Harold & Maude, House, Koyaanisqatsi, Kiss Me Deadly, Man Bites Dog, The Man Who Fell to Earth, Monty Python's Life of Brian, Repo Man, and Slacker. The IFC article, which, granted, is just the opinion of a single author, is more inclined towards Star Wars, The Big Lebowski, Evil Dead, Repo: The Genetic Opera, Clerks, Fight Club, Labyrinth, Star Trek, Serenity, and Showgirls. (Both lists do include David Lynch.)

Rolling Stone is more closely aligned with Criterion's definiton, but allows a little lee-way - "There's no single way to recognize a cult movie other than the simple fact that it's developed a fiercely devoted audience that watches it over and over, preferably at midnight in a theater packed with other die-hards." The website i09 also recognizes that you can debate cult status,  but we like their definition best: "A great cult movie is like a weird underground discovery, that feels so strange and wonderful, you suspect that you're the first person ever to appreciate it properly. But certain cult films have acquired fame and influence to rival any blockbuster, and have become part of our shared vocabulary."

How do you define cult film? Do you lean more towards a blockbuster big enough to warrant its own convention, or something more arty and obscure, perhaps involving audience participation at a late-night showing? Regardless of definition, many films, both popular and niche, have made their mark on our cinematic landscape. Our list of cult films, below, leans a bit more towards the midnight movie definition of cult, but we've thrown some more popular titles into the mix. Hope you find something that strikes your fancy!










Thursday, October 5, 2017

Budget Cinema: Some Incidents in the History of B Movies


CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON (1954) - ADAMS, JULIE. Photography. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/144_1533771/1/144_1533771/cite. Accessed 13 Sep 2017.
B movies had their heyday during Hollywood's Golden Age (late 1920s-early 1960s). During the Great Depression, studios and movie theaters tried to entice moviegoers into the theater with a bill that could last more than 3 hours, with two features, cartoons, a newsreel, and previews of forthcoming films. The main attraction would be the A film, with the B feature being a lower budget genre film (often sci-fi, Western, or film noir) that was quickly produced, frequently using talent that was either waning or on the rise. The big studios had separate B-units to produce these films. These early B films were tied to the Big Five studio system - before 1948, major studios had their own theater chains, and there was a complicated booking system for A and B features.

In the 1950s, feature films got longer - 70 minutes or more, rather than an hour - and the double feature fell out of favor. B movie became a blanket term used for genre films with formulaic plots and cheap production values. These films helped create the drive-in cinema business, which skyrocketed between 1945-55, and launched the career of one of the most famous names in the history of B movies, Roger Corman, and another big name in B, William Castle, who specialized in gimmicks. "For The Tingler, which starred Vincent Price, the theater seats were wired with buzzers, which would make the seats vibrate when the tingler supposedly escaped into the theater," the website B-Movie Central reports.

In the 60s and 70s, B movies came to include exploitation films, as the film industry's adherence to the Motion Picture Production Code relaxed and finally ended in 1968. Major studios were no longer making B films, and these exploitation films - which often "graphically depicted the wages of sin in the context of promoting prudent lifestyle choices" - ultimately became the whole market, ranging from "sexploitation" to "blaxploitation" films, except for the rise of  kung fu (sometimes called "Brucesploitation") and "slasher" films in the 1970s. Some famous names came out this era - John Waters, Melvin Van Peebles, Brian de Palma, Russ Meyer, George A. Romero, Tobe Hooper, Francis Ford Coppola - with some later achieving mainstream fame and others becoming cult classics. Easy Rider, with its themes of hippies, drug use, and communal living, became the first movie under the exploitation umbrella to debut at the Cannes Film Festival. The Rocky Horror Picture Show is a spoof of B movie tropes.

As cinema moved into the 1980s, the era of the star-studded blockbuster began. There was still a lot of low-budget horror films being made, and Troma Pictures, which got its start in 1974, was still "disrupting media." But there were more independent films being made in the last years of the 20th century, and it's important to remember that an independent or arthouse film is not the same as a B movie.

It has been suggested that recent  technological advances have made it easy to make low-budget motion pictures again, and digital cameras allow any filmmaker to make films with reasonably good image quality and effects. Is the B-movie ready to make a comeback? Well,  The Guardian suggests:

So here’s a suggestion: a two-tier cinema system. Your blockbusters in one league, and a separate circuit for lower-budget movies, with much cheaper tickets. For a long time, this was how movies operated... Now it’s serious dramas that are the B-movies, pushed to the margins along with what we used to call 'arthouse' movies: challenging, non-mainstream, maybe foreign movies. These are cinema’s endangered species. So why not put them all in a separate type of cinema and charge half the price? It would be a cheaper night out for punters and a proving ground for new talent.

Or, do you agree with Wired that "In 2017, 'genre' is no longer a niche, and nearly *every *movie feels like a midnight movie—albeit the kind you no longer need need to stay up all evening to enjoy." Whatever your take on the subject, why not take a little time to delve deeper into B movies of the past? The library catalog is here to help, with some likely contenders listed below:


Hail to the Chin: Further Confessions of a B Movie Actor by Bruce Campbell with Craig Sanborn

Death on the Cheap: The Lost B Movies of Film Noir by Arthur Lyons

Opening Wednesday at a Theater or Drive-In Near You: The Shadow Cinema of the American '70s by Charles Taylor

The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, The Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made by Greg Sestero, Tom Bissell [eAudiobook]

Foxy: A Life in Three Acts by Pam Grier with Andrea Cagan

DVDs

The House on Haunted Hill

The Return of the Living Dead

Barbarella

The Blob

John Dies At the End

Evil Dead

They Live

Machete

Creature from the Black Lagoon

Brother From Another Planet

Tremors

Forbidden Planet

Schlock: Secret History of American Movies

American Grindhouse

Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel

The Ed Wood Awards: The Worst Horror Films of All Time


Links

The 100 Best "B Movies" of All Time [Slate]

15 Awesome B-Movies You Need To See [Screen Rant]

Attack of the B Movies! 50 of the Best Schlocky Titles of All Time [Hollywood Reporter]

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Beerstorming, One Draught at a Time


Five glasses of beer. Photography. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/156_2393568/1/156_2393568/cite. Accessed 9 Sep 2017.
The website for BeerAdvocate magazine lists 20 microbreweries in Albuquerque, and, frankly, we're surprised there's not more. There seems to be new breweries popping up all the time in the past few years! The ABQ Beer Week blog recommends "drinking local" - to support local economies, contribute to neighborhood revitalization, help the environment, and support local musicians - but we know everyone's taste is different, so we've compiled a list of books about the hoppiest drink around which includes guides, brewing information, cooking with beer, the history of brewing (did you know the pharaohs drank beer?), and even a couple of movies on the topic. We hope that whether you are a beer aficionado or not, whether you prefer craft beer, international or vintages brews, you will find something to whet your palate in the following offerings from the library catalog.

Beer Guides 

The Complete Beer Course: Boot Camp For Beer Geeks - From Novice to Expert in Twelve Tasting Classes by Joshua M. Bernstein

Vintage Beer: A Taster's Guide to Brews That Improve Over Time by Patrick Dawson

Beer For All Seasons: A Through-the-Year Guide of What to Drink and When to Drink It by Randy Mosher [eBook]

The Beer Geek Handbook: Living a Life Ruled by Beer by Patrick Dawson

World Beer: Outstanding Classic and Craft Beers From the Greatest Breweries by Tim Hampson

Great American Craft Beer: A Guide to the Nation's Finest Beers and Breweries by Andy Crouch [eBook]

Brewing 

So You Want to Start a Brewery?: The Lagunitas Story by Tony Magee

Craft Beer for the Homebrewer: Recipes From America's Top Brewmasters by Michael Agnew et al.

The Craft of Stone Brewing Co.: Liquid Lore, Epic Recipes, and Unabashed Arrogance by Greg Koch [eBook]

The Good Beer Book: Brewing and Drinking Quality Ales and Lagers by Timothy Harper

Beer Cookbooks

The American Craft Beer Cookbook: 155 Recipes From Your Favorite Brewpubs and Breweries by John Holl

The Brewmaster's Table: Discovering the Pleasures of Real Beer with Real Food by Garrett Oliver


Beer History

The Comic Book Story of Beer: The World's Favorite Beverage From 7000 BC to Today's Craft Brewing Revolution by Jonathan Hennessey and Mike Smith

The Search for God and Guinness: A Biography of the Beer That Changed the World by Stephen Mansfield

Brewed Awakening: Behind the Beers and Brewers Leading the World's Craft Brewing Revolution by Joshua M. Bernstein


Local Beer

New Mexico Beer: A History of Brewing in the Land of Enchantment by Jon C. Stott

Albuquerque Beer: Duke City History on Tap by Chris Jackson


DVDs

Crafting a Nation

Brew Masters

Brewmore Baltimore: A Full-Flavored History


Thursday, July 6, 2017

The Worlds of the New Norse

You could say we are fans of Norse mythology. We've watched both Thor and Thor: The Dark World, and we checked out the gender-bending Thor: Vol. 1, The Goddess of Thunder! But there are many other tales of Thor in the library catalog that we haven't read, because he's not our favorite Norse deity. Want to learn more about the Norse pantheon? Try Edith Hamilton's Mythology or, for kids of all ages, Treasury of Norse Mythology: Stories of Intrigue, Trickery, Love, and Revenge.










We have enjoyed Neil Gaiman's most entertaining Norse Mythology. Neil's pleasant narrative style and witty turn of phrase made this a fun read which discusses more of the Norse pantheon. We'd like to recommend the eAudiobook which is read by the author - Gaiman is a great reader. Consider giving his Odd and the Frost Giants a try, too, though it's technically a children's book, and of course American Gods. The library catalog also features Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, which was a primary source for Gaiman.



Want to see more of the Norse gods and goddesses explored, besides the ones touched on by Gaiman? One of our favorite television series is New Zealand's The Almighty Johnsons, wherein 4 brothers (and other relatives and various people they meet) discover on their 21st birthdays that they are the living incarnations of Norse deities. It's a great way to learn the stories behind Norse mythology (though this series is aimed at an adult audience), and features goddesses more prominently than some other tales - we were completely smitten with Iðunn,the keeper of the magic apples of immortality, and happy to learn to pronounce Sjöfn and Snotra.The library catalog features Season One.


Still want to immerse yourself in more Nordic culture? Here's a mixed bag of some other items you might enjoy - as refreshing as dipping your toe into the waters of a fjord, but definitely not  hygge, for those of you following Scanditrends. 

Fiction

Ragnarok: The End of the Gods by A.S. Byatt

Iron Axe by Steven Harper

Valkyrie Rising by Ingrid Paulson [YA eBook] 

Runemarks by Joanne Harris [YA] 

Triple Moon : Summer on East End by Melissa De la Cruz [YA]

Hammered by Kevin Hearne 

Vikings: The Complete First Season  [DVD]  

Valhalla Prophecy by Andy Mcdermott

Troll: A Love Story by Johanna Sinisalo   

Northmen: A Viking Saga  [DVD]

Non-Fiction 

Gods of Asgard: A Graphic Novel Interpretation of the Norse Myths adapted and illustrated by Erik Evensen

Vikings [DVD]


The Volsunga Saga translated by William Morris and Eirikr Magnusson [eBook]

Bulfinch's Mythology by Thomas Bulfinch  [eBook]

Viking Knits and Ancient Ornaments: Interlace Patterns From Around the World in Modern Knitwear by Elsebeth Lavold 

An Illustrated Viking Voyage: Retracing Leif Eriksson's Journey in an Authentic Viking Knarr photographs by Russell Kaye; text by W. Hodding Carter 

Beyond the Northlands : Viking Voyages and the Old Norse Sagas by Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough 

The Book of Runes: A Handbook For the Use of an Ancient Oracle, the Viking Runes commentary by Ralph H. Blum

D'Aulaires' Book of Trolls by Ingri and Edgar Parin d'Aulaire [J]

Viking War: The Last Battle of the Vikings [DVD]

Ivory Vikings: The Mystery of the Most Famous Chessmen in the World and the Woman Who Made Them by Nancy Marie Brown
 

Thursday, November 17, 2016

New & Novel: Cervantes and Don Quixote

2016 marks the 400th anniversary of the death of the author Miguel de Cervantes. We'd like to celebrate his achievements - Cervantes was a novelist, poet, and playwright, and is thought by many to be the greatest writer in the Spanish language. His best-known work, Don Quixote, is considered to be the first modern novel.

Here's a little list of some recent and interesting items from the library catalog related to Cervantes and Don Quixote that we hope you will find entertaining, whether you are a fan or are new to his work. Have you read Don Quixote? What did you think? Let us know in the comments!

Quixote: The Novel and the World by Ilan Stavans

50 different versions of the classic Don Quijote according to Borges, Arreola, Ana María Shua, Rubén Darío, and several others.

Man of La Mancha [DVD] 

Lost in La Mancha  [DVD]
This film tracks maverick filmmaker Terry Gilliam's madcap mission to film "The Man who killed Don Quixote". He struggles to complete his masterpiece, all the while beset by obstacles of such epic proportions that not even Hollywood could have concocted them.
  

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Staff Picks: Documentary Films

As long as there are action movies, animated fantasies, comedies and wish fulfillment onscreen, audiences will also yearn for the truth—or something close to it. In arriving at Time Out New York's favorite documentaries (from all eras and countries), we bumped up against some thorny questions: What makes a documentary essential? Is it the political or social import? Its popularity? Can we allow for staged scenes? Or must we insist on pure vérité? How "real" is reality? 
~




Looking for a good movie? People spend a lot of time browsing the fiction DVD section at the library, and new fiction DVDs tend to be very popular. But there is also a burgeoning section of non-fiction DVDs, many telling a tale as fascinating as any fictional movie, that you might not think to check out! We've compiled a list of documentaries recommended by staff which you might enjoy. Do you have any documentary recommendations? Let us know in the comments!

The Arts

Rivers and Tides: Andy Goldsworthy Working With Time

Art and Craft

Louvre City

First Position

The Art of the Steal

The Rape of Europa

Pina

Burroughs: The Movie

Marina Abramović: The Artist is Present

Mad Hot Ballroom 

The Hobart Shakespeareans

Rize 

Il Mio Viaggio in Italia

Simon Schama's Power of Art 

Bomb It 


History and Social Issues

The Look of Silence

The Hunting Ground

Dancing Boys of Afghanistan

Shoah

Blackfish


Fashion

Iris

Bill Cunningham New York

The September Issue


Music

Revenge of the Mekons

The Decline of Western Civilization Collection

The Wrecking Crew!

Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck

Amy

20 Feet from Stardom

Searching for Sugar Man

Touch the Sound: A Sound Journey with Evelyn Glennie

20,000 Days on Earth

The Punk Singer

Gypsy Caravan: When the Road Bends--

Soul Power

Wagner & Me


Pop Culture

Los Angeles Plays Itself

Terms and Conditions May Apply

Best of Enemies

Baraka

Samsara

The Qatsi Trilogy

Jiro Dreams of Sushi

Public Speaking

Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman

I'll Have What Phil's Having 

Afghan Star

Examined Life

Helvetica


Biography

A Man Named Pearl

The Wolfpack

Finding Vivian Maier

Man on Wire

Marwencol

The Up Series

Stories We Tell

Cutie and the Boxer

Grey Gardens

Seymour: An Introduction

The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl 

Sing Your Song

Eames: The Architect and the Painter


Don't forget to check out our New Non-Fiction and Documentary DVD page regularly! If you'd like a more scholarly approach to non-fiction, try the Great Courses series by the Teaching Company.


Links

Critics' 50 Greatest Documentaries of All Time [Sight & Sound/BFI]

Documentary Films [AMC Filmsite]

Why Documentary Films Are So Important [HuffPost]

Why Documentaries Matter [Reuters Institute]