Monday, December 24, 2012
The Hidden Fortress
Recently
my husband and I were able to watch Akira
Kurosawa's The Hidden Fortress during one of Hulu's “free” nights, and I found myself once again
entranced by this delightful tale.
I've
seen it perhaps 5 times in my life. The first time was in a revival
theater, the Valley Art. I was around 19 years old, and the other
people in the audience were mostly college students. As much as I
liked seeing it on my 28-inch screen at home, it's a powerful
experience on the big screen – so much so that, although the movie
was filmed in black & white, I remember parts of it in color.
Most of it was filmed at real, outdoor locations, but I suspect parts
were filmed in a studio, on lovingly detailed sets. Cecil B.
DeMille's got nothing on Kurosawa when it comes to gorgeous
spectacle. Another thing that impresses me is the number of extras
in the movie. It doesn't boast “a cast of thousands," but there are
sometimes a few hundred people on the screen, yet the main characters
never get lost in all that action.
The
big star in the film is Toshiro Mifune, who plays the stoic samurai
character, General Rokurota Makabe, with aplomb. When he wears a
mustache and beard, he looks just like the paintings of samurai on
silk screens, or like the masks in Japanese theater. He's wonderful,
but he's made more so by the character who steals the movie: Princess
Yuki. She is the reason I keep wanting to see this movie. She is
extraordinarily beautiful, as you pretty much expect a princess to
be, but it's actually her imperious-yet-socially-awkward personality
that steals my heart. She is the only child of Lord Akizuki, and the
sole survivor from an old and noble family. Because she had no
brother, her father raised her to lead the clan. She is fearless and
utterly imperial, well-trained in the art of giving orders that must
be obeyed. These are traits that inspire devotion and unquestioning
loyalty in the handful of servants that survived the massacre of her kin. She accepts this loyalty. But she is compassionate too – a
trait she must wrestle with if she wants to re-establish her clan.
You
might think Yuki and Rokurota are the glue that hold this movie
together, but that distinction goes to a couple of viewpoint
characters, the comical (but not always likeable) Tahei and
Matashichi, a couple of peasants who went to war in order to get
rich. This is not a scheme that works out for them, and things go
from bad to worse in the first five minutes of the film. From that
point forward, these two knuckleheads fall into one disaster after
another. Their own greed and moral ambiguities drive them to keep
making mistakes, but those are the traits Rokurota finds the most
useful as he tricks them into helping him and Yuki move the gold that
belongs to the shattered Clan Akizuki to safety.
Along
the way, Yuki insists on rescuing a slave girl, an act of compassion
that seems too soft-hearted at first, until this same girl manages to
save the day several times. Can this band of misfits get the gold
to safety so Yuki can rebuild her clan? The odds are stacked against
them, but they still have some tricks up their sleeves.
Each
time I watch this movie, I notice something different. This time it
was the fact that the hidden fortress sits in the middle of an odd
and other-worldly deposit of what appears to be volcanic tuff. I
can't help wondering if this site survives intact in modern Japan. I
hope it does. It was part of the magic of this movie, one detail in
a long list of wondrous sights and sounds.
I
love The Hidden Fortress.
Princess Yuki has won my devotion, too.
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Help The Artists You Love -- Give Them Good Reviews!
Here's
another link for a wonderful sample from Michael Levy. He makes an
excellent point in his announcement – good ratings and positive
reviews are essential for artists, musicians, and writers these
days. Don't feel that you have to wax poetic, just a few heartfelt
sentences will do the job (along with lots of stars).
The Podcast History of the World - The Ancient Hebrews
I am pleased to announce that a selection of my music from my Biblical lyre-themed albums is to feature in Rob Monaco's free iTunes "Podcast History of the World" series on the ancient Hebrews! Here is a link to hear the first episode of this fascinating historical series:
I am delighted at the recent unique opportunities I have been involved with, in my efforts to get my music "out there", to the rest of the unsuspecting world!
If any of you lovely subscribers to my mailing lists ever do decide to purchase any track from any of my albums on a major digital store such as iTunes, Amazon or CD Baby, do please, please also spare a few moments to rate/review the album from which the track comes from - as an unsigned artist, my precious little collection of album reviews are so far the best means of getting my "Musical Adventures in Time Travel" actually noticed & used in fabulous new opportunitues such as this one!
Thanks agin, for all your support, in my relentelss quest, to attempt to recreate the lost music of the ancient world...
Friday, December 7, 2012
Wayne Ranney: Geologist, Adventurer, and Mapmaster Flash
You
may recall that I mentioned, sometime in the recent past, the
paleogeographic maps are fabulous. Or you may not. But they are.
And what's even more wonderful is that Wayne Ranney, one of the guys
behind those afore-mentioned fabulous maps will be speaking at the
Heard Museum on Tuesday, December 11, at 1:30 p.m. To 3:00 p.m.
He'll be signing copies of his books in our book store afterward.
I've posted a review of the book he co-wrote with Ron Blakey, Ancient Landscapes of the Colorado Plateau,
which features maps that depict what the Colorado Plateau may have
looked like millions and even billions of years ago.
I will soon be
posting a review of Carving Grand Canyon: Evidence, Theories, and Mystery (2nd Edition) which casts light on past and recent arguments about when the Grand
Canyon began to form.
And I look forward to diving into Sedona
Through Time, which delves into
the formation of one of the most beautiful places on Earth: Oak Creek
Canyon.
We have all three titles available at the Heard Museum Book
Store, and Mr. Ranney will be signing there after his lecture. Don't
miss it!
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Those Darned Visigoths
Michael
Levy's video clip on BBC didn't go quite as planned, though he did
get some background music in (apparently while someone is holding
forth about Visigoths). But fear not, you can see the entire clip.
Just follow the link Michael sent along. Here's what Michael has to say about the experience:
I might not have had my tantalizingly close live TV performance moment yet, but in the meantime, here is a free download link to the actual HD video file of the bonus out-take of my lyre & I from the music shoot for the BBC 4 documentary series "The Dark Ages An Age of Light" - the clip that the editor decided to leave out of the actual documentary in favour of a relatively rubbish 43 second clip of barely noticeable background music (during incessant waffling monologue about the Goths & Visigoths etc, towards the end of epsiode 2!!):
http://www.mediafire.com/?
I will also be sending the link to everyone subscribed to my website mailing list. If you are able to "spread the word" about this free video download link, this would be greatlly apreciated - so that some day, somehow, my retro lyre & I will transform the miserable modern world into a whole new dimension of meaningful mellowness...BRING IT ON!!! ;o)
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