Nikita Mikhalkov
Burnt by the Sun
1994
Mikhalkov wrote, directed, and stars in this story of Stalinist Russia. Beautifully photographed, the film
manages to be simultaneously idyllic and ominous. Of course, the details of history dictate the outcome.
Nevertheless, watching Mikhalkov's aging war hero play gracious host to the agent of his eventual undoing, you
can't help but wish that history will be unwritten, if only for a few hours.
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Charles Bukowski
Love Is A Dog From Hell
1974-1977
Nobody could inject the sublime into the vulgar quite like Charles Bukowski. In Love is a Dog from Hell, as in
his previous collections, he documents love, sex, booze, classical music, and other basic human needs. Bukowski
died in 1994. Here's a snippet of what he left us:
call it love, you
skewer it good, add
cabbage and applesauce,
then heat it from the
left side,
then heat it from the right
side,
put it in a box
give it away
leave it on a doorstep
vomiting as you go
into the
hydrangea.
--from "it's the way you play the game"
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Dirty Three
Horse Stories
1996
When you come across an instrumental trio fronted by a violinist, you build up some expectations. Bluegrass.
Maybe a little Vivaldi. However, when that trio releases their records on Chicago's notorious Touch and Go
label, look forward to your expectations being smashed into itty bitty pieces. It's probably best to just put
them aside and enjoy the sonic landscape. The album's third track, "Hope," is a gentle and inviting place to
start.
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Roman Polanski
Repulsion
1965
Watch the carnage unfold as Catherine Deneuve, a young beautician harboring some serious psychosexual demons,
slowly and painfully goes out of her gourd. Ever had trouble at work? Ever been irritated with the opposite sex?
Let Roman Polanski offer you some perspective. Also keep an eye out for the original Decaying Rabbit Corpse, as
later seen in Eraserhead and Fatal Attraction.
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Reporting World War II
1938-1946
This two-volume set of wartime journalism features familiar names--Hersey, Murrow, Pyle, Bourke-White,
Steinbeck, Agee--and familiar places--the Sudetenland, Poland, Paris, Yugoslavia, Guadalcanal, the Phillipines,
Berlin. Documentary history is inherently fascinating, but when you add the global impact of the events covered
in these volumes you've got pair of books that are very hard to put down.
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John Sayles
Eight Men Out
1988
So you think free agency, skyrocketing salaries, and tantrum-prone players are ruining professional sports? You
ain't seen nothin'. The "Black Sox" scandal of 1919 had the Chicago White Sox throwing the World Series to
benefit gangsters and gamblers. In Eight Men Out, the underappreciated Sayles looks at baseball under the
influence of money, corruption, and gambling. While the film may appeal primarily to baseball fans, there are
also some fine performances from Michael Rooker and David Strathairn. Look for writer/director Sayles as
legendary sports writer Ring Lardner.
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Michael Byers
The Coast of Good Intentions
1998
Twenty-eight-year-old Byers writes about people plagued with disappointment and confronted with possibility.
Most of the stories take place among the rivers, mountains, and rainy streets of the Pacific Northwest, and
Byers' compact, able description of landscape is put to good use in service of his genuinely interesting
characters.
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Jitterbug
Godzilla vs. Tamagotchi
Shockwave
Considering the damage that tamagotchi have unleashed over the past few months--from causing traffic fatalites
in France to their TV counterparts inducing epilectic fits in Japan--it's no wonder than they're the frequent
target for satire. Here, you'll take the role of immense mutant reptile to stomp the bejesus out of the annoying
LCD critters. Ah, if only Mothra was this easy to squash.
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Creeper Lagoon
Creeper Lagoon
1997
Four of the five songs on this EP have been recast as the core of Creeper's upcoming I Become Small and Go.
Let's hope the Dust Brothers, the hot production duo behind the knobs on the new album, didn't screw around too
much. Songs like "Dear Deadly" and "Second Chance" sound pretty damn good on this first take.
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Donald Norman
Things That Make Us Smart
1993
Why is the Yahoo! directory better than a plain old search engine?
Well, even before Mosaic was a glimmer in Marc Andreesen's
eye, Donald Norman was laying out the ground rules:
"McGuckin's Hardware Store shows to what we might aspire:
efficient, intelligents agents, coupled with a functional
arrangement that makes browsing a pleasure and a source
of unexpected
finds...With modern tools, it is perfectly
feasible to develop artifacts for maintaining information
files without any particular ordering. That is, one can
store the information internally in any format one wishes
but reconfigure it in numerous flexible ways at the whim
of the user."
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