Tag Archives: interpretation

Director Of Von Trier’s Gesamt Says U.S Entries Express ‘Overwhelming Sense Of Estrangement And Anger’

Filmmaker Jenle Hallund has looked into the soul of America, and it sounds like we need a good shrink. Hallund is the intrepid soul who has spent the last weeks watching and, in some cases, listening to the 501 submissions that have come across her desk after controversy-courting Danish filmmaker Lars Von Trier invited the world to reinterpret one of six great works of art for a community film project that will be unveiled at the Copenhagen Art Festival on Oct. 12. Participants had to base their entries on one or more of six different works of art that Von Trier admires:  James Joyce’s Ulysses, “which once was banned in the United States because it was seen as obscene and lewd”; August Strindberg’s play The Father , “which still stands as a striking example of a dysfunctional family”; Paul Gaugin’s painting Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? French composer César Franck’s improvisations; or the music of the late Sammy Davis Jr., “who stepped himself into the hearts of people through song;”  and the Zeppelin Field grandstand in Nuremberg, Germany that Hitler’s main architect Albert Speer created. The project is being called Gesamt , which translates to “coming together” or “a joint piece of work,” as Hallund explained to us back in August, and the filmmaker, who is a script consultant on Von Trier’s 2013 project, Nymphomaniac , as well as co-director of Limboland (2010), is now in the process of culling, editing and shaping those submissions into a film that she says will be called Disaster 501 — What Happened to Man?  based on her interpretation and understanding of the material she received. “I think why I decided early on to make it a disaster movie was that most of the submission questioned the fundamentals of our humanity: love, morality and relationships,” Hallund wrote in email correspondence with me. “And nature was depicted as decaying and threatening.” But Hallund explained that now that she is “further in the editing process,” she has worked with “beautiful and tender moments and stunning visuals.  The ache for the sublime and the ideal is still the dream for us,” Hallund noted, adding:  “The most touching element for me is that all of these submissions, all of these people who bravely shared a piece of themselves all take part in creating the painting of the soul of our civilization.” Given this site’s U.S. roots, I asked Hallund what the American entries she received said about the soul of its civilizaton. “The American soul speaks and shouts fear and loneliness, and an overwhelming sense of estrangement and anger — of being disconnected from others and losing purpose and individuality,” Hallund wrote.  “The soul of America expresses  a rootlessness and a loss of humanity.”  And yet, she explained, “A tender but cutting longing for love and meaning,” is  also evident. Hallund, who received approximately 55 submissions from the U.S. and will use “visuals, stills, sound or music” from 10 to 12, said that, “overwhelmingly,” the themes of the American submissions “can be categorized into male and female.” “All the male submissions, regardless of which works of art they reference, are angry, desperate — full of malice and a sense of fear,” Hallund said. “The men address, either verbally or visually, a sense of being trapped inside their skin, of taking pleasure in hurting women.  They are very animalistic and afraid . We have the broken and humiliated man who can no longer walk or love. “The female American soul,” she continued, “is without love — almost resigned to the loss of it. The female voice is very tender and soft. They speak of the love of their fathers, the sadness of the pain they have caused, and their longing for a man to love them.” Or, she said, “it’s the voice of a woman lost and afraid of disappearing….Fighting to assert control over her sexuality.” “Depressing stuff, I know,” said Hallund. But fascinating as well. I asked the filmmaker if traveling to Copenhagen next month is the only way that Americans can see Disaster 501,  and she replied that she is exploring options to put it online. “I haven’t found the right solution yet,” she said. If she can turn 501 submissions of film, music and writing into a single film, she can do anything. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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Director Of Von Trier’s Gesamt Says U.S Entries Express ‘Overwhelming Sense Of Estrangement And Anger’

Gotye Changes Tune On ‘Glee’ Cover

Singer says the show’s version of ‘Somebody That I Used to Know’ was not ‘dinky,’ but ‘clever.’ By Gil Kaufman Gotye Photo: MTV News Did Australian singing sensation Gotye say he thought the “Glee” cover of his breakthrough hit “Somebody That I Used to Know” was “dinky and wrong” , “ultra-dry” and sounded like “it’s playing to you from a cardboard box?” Well, what he actually meant was that the version performed by Darren Criss and Matt Bomer on last week’s episode was “really clever.” According to The Hollywood Reporter , during a private performance at a Los Angeles club on Monday afternoon Gotye clarified his comments. He explained that, “The nature of using reverb and space in a recording can change your perception of how a sound appeals to you.” That was after he originally said, “They did such a faithful arrangement of the instrumentals but the vocals were that pop ‘Glee’ style, ultra-dry, sounded pretty tuned and the rock has no real sense, like it’s playing to you from a cardboard box,” which was actually meant as a compliment. See, what Gotye was referring to was, “This xylophone hook in my song — it’s kind of dinky not just in the cover version but the original song.” Aha! Furthermore, Gotye said he thought the interpretation of his hit on the choral drama was, “Really clever to transpose the song to two guys … It was a great idea.” Whatever Gotye thought of it, the cover was just what “Somebody” needed to get over the hump and top the Billboard Hot 100 chart. And Gotye wasn’t the first singer to slam the show (and/or creator Ryan Murphy), joining a list that includes the Foo Fighters 
, former Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash and Kings of Leon 
. Related Artists Gotye

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Gotye Changes Tune On ‘Glee’ Cover

Magazine Publisher: “There’s Nothing Wrong With Calling Rihanna A N***a B***h!”

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Just when people thought we were living in a post-racial climate, “N***agate” happens. There’s no possible way you don’t remember a Rihanna taking to Twitter to beast on a Dutch magazine for calling her a “n***a b***h.” Once the magazine received hella backlash, the editor-in-chief, Eva Hoeke , issued and apology and resigned from her position. Well, the publisher of the magazine, Yves Gijrath , decided to release his own statement. What it comes down to is the publisher is saying they didn’t print anything offensive because the article was meant as a joke. “[T]here is nothing wrong in the magazine,” he said. “[Hoeke] presented [the offensive article] as a joke, but it most certainly was not a joke. It was an interpretation [of a fashion style] … She should have said: ‘we did not realize this interpretation is such a touchy subject. We never meant any harm and offer our sincere and upright apologies.’” *blank stare* For real?! Spotted at Black Voices . RELATED POSTS: EIC Of Dutch Magazine Resigns After Calling Rihanna A “N***a B***h” Rihanna Was Cast In “Battleship” For Her “Urban Swagger” [VIDEO] Rihanna Booed In London For Being Too Raunchy!

Magazine Publisher: “There’s Nothing Wrong With Calling Rihanna A N***a B***h!”

Lady Gaga Cuts Ties With Laurieann Gibson

Gibson had been Gaga’s creative director for several years. By Gil Kaufman Lady Gaga Photo: Kevin Mazur/ WireImage After a long and fruitful creative partnership, Lady Gaga has broken ties with creative director Laurieann Gibson. The Hollywood Reporter confirmed the split, which came after reports that the two women had a serious falling out. Gibson has been part of Gaga’s inner circle since well before the singer became an international superstar, beginning with the choreography for the 2008 “Beautiful, Dirty, Rich” video and continuing through the soon-to-be famous steps in clips for “Just Dance,” “Poker Face,” “Love Game,” “Paparazzi” and “Bad Romance.” The pair were closely associated throughout Gaga’s rise to fame, with Gibson providing the choreography and artistic input on such landmark videos as “Telephone,” “Alejandro” and “Born This Way.” Gibson, who previously appeared on MTV’s “Making the Band” with Diddy and the “Starmaker” reality show, has been stepping out on her own lately, including a starring role in the BET dance competition show “Born to Dance” and another dance reality series, E!’s “The Dance Scene.” Gibson also co-directed the Gaga videos for ” Judas ” and “You and I,” (http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1669175/lady-gaga-laurieann-gibson-you-and-i-video.jhtml) but the women reportedly clashed on the set of the former, with Gibson expressing discomfort with the religious imagery in the clip. According to the Reporter, the tension was already showing during the filming of the “Judas” video, during which Gibson told the magazine, “At one point, there was two completely different views and after the third glass of wine, I was like, ‘Listen, I don’t want lightning to strike me. I believe in the Gospel and I’m not going there.” She was less adamant when talking to MTV News about the controversy, expressing pride in the final product. “I think the concept stuck with this one because, ultimately, there was a place where we wanted to leave the interpretation up to each individual and not take away [Gaga’s] power as a performer, as a dancer, as a star,” Gibson explained, alluding to the creative clashes the pair had about the “Born This Way” video. “And to leave the moments for you to interpret and be inspired by the fact that everyone has a Judas in their life and that there is a place of deliverance. For me, I interpret differently than her, and for someone else, they’ll interpret it differently.” A spokesperson for Gaga could not be reached for confirmation on the split at press time. Gibson also spoke out after she and Gaga failed to see eye-to-eye on the concept for the ” Edge of Glory ” video. After reports that video vet Joseph Kahn would be directing, Gaga instead went for a simpler cityscape treatment that drew some fire from fans. “Listen u disrespectful f–k they had an issue on set I don’t lie!!!!!”, Gibson tweeted at the time . “Creative Changes happen always educate ignorant Monster’s!!!” The Reporter noted that relations between the two continued to fray this summer over disagreements about the “You and I” video and Gaga seemed to confirm the end with a November 6 tweet in which she announced that Gibson’s former #2, Richard Jackson, is her new choreographer. Related Artists Lady Gaga

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Lady Gaga Cuts Ties With Laurieann Gibson

Eminem Takes His Own Life In ‘Space Bound’ Video

Em plays two versions of himself in eerie clip co-starring porn star Sasha Grey. By Rob Markman Eminem on the set of his “Space Bound” music video Photo: Eric Ford / On Location News Just when we thought Eminem had fully escaped his demons following the release of his multiplatinum 2010 album Recovery, Marshall Mathers takes his own life with a single gunshot to the head in his new “Space Bound” video, which is now available on iTunes. The video is a gut-wrenching look into another of Eminem’s tumultuous relationships, much like the one exhibited in the video for “Love the Way You Lie” — this time with deadly results. Filmed in Los Angeles in February, the Joseph Kahn-directed clip starts with our leading man walking down a foggy road in the middle of the night. Obviously perturbed, a sullen Em marches on, hands in his pockets, until a passing car picks him up. In the driver’s seat is the Detroit rapper’s love interest, played by porn star Sasha Grey. Things clearly aren’t all peaches and cream. Eminem jumps in the front passenger seat, with a pensive look on his face, while another, more cynical version of Em rides in the back. The differences between the two Shadys are apparent. The front-seat version is calm, with his eyes darting back and forth between his girlfriend and the gun that sits in the glove compartment. The other Em is riled up, hurling insults at Grey, though she is unaware of his presence. As the couple pulls up to a pit stop, Grey exits the vehicle first with a gun in her back pocket, while Em follows her. They enter a diner, Grey first and the rapper a few steps behind. Here, the director splits the screen and the two Eminems go their separate ways, one to the counter and the other to the booth where his girlfriend sits, texting on her cell phone. Eminem grows suspicious of the texts and checks his girl’s phone after she gets up to go to the bathroom. The rapper apparently finds what he has long suspected: His woman is cheating. Throughout the video, Eminem follows Grey like a lost puppy. It’s when they check into a motel room that the drama unfolds. Closing the door behind him, Eminem begins to attack his girlfriend before realizing that she wasn’t even there in the first place. Left at the end of his rope, Eminem pulls out the gun, puts it to his chin and fires a single shot through his own head. Blood splatters, and Shady falls to the floor. Simultaneously, the alternate Eminem, who is still seated at the counter, is struck by the bullet as well, falling back off of his bar stool before the clip rewinds back to the beginning of the 4:30 video, where we once again see our leading man walking down that foggy road in the middle of the night. Did Eminem imagine the entire ordeal? Or did his cheating girlfriend metaphorically kill the hopeless romantic, leaving only a distrustful version of himself? The image is jarring; the interpretation, however, is up to you. How did you interpret Eminem’s “Space Bound” video? Tell us in the comments. Related Artists Eminem

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Eminem Takes His Own Life In ‘Space Bound’ Video

Justin Bieber – Pray Piano Cover Instrumental w/ Lyrics & Tutorial Notes by Mike Bivona

youtube.com *IMPORTANT* My future videos will be posted to my new HD channel! Click the link above to visit and please don’t forget to subscribe! Thanks for your time, Mike Bivona Please share this video on twitter & facebook! This is my interpretation of Justin Bieber’s brand new song “Pray”. Instead of playing a straight “copy” version, I freestyled my own bridge and I played a different ending. Most of the song is the same, but I thought to make it more my own The video shows me playing the main piano part, but I later played 2 other background pianos, strings, and bass. I also added a drum beat that I made using FL Studio. This was the most complicated instrumental I’ve ever played. I knew I had to pull out all the stops to do this song the justice it deserves. Hope you like it! Notes: (**Note- I do not have sheet music. I play by ear. This is the best I can do. If you have any questions just message me and I will try to explain it more clearly. Your best bet is to write these notes down on paper and bring them to the piano with you!) Left Hand (Bassline Notes)——————————– Intro, Verse & Chorus___ G#, F#, E, B (Repeat) Pre-Chorus___ E, D#, A, E Right Hand (Melody Notes)——————————— Intro___ 1. B, B, B, C#, D# 2. (Same as 1.) 3. (Same as 1.) 4. B, E, D#, C#, B Verse___ 5. F#, C#, D#, B, C#, B 6. (Same as 5.) 7. F#, F#, F#, G# 8. C#, C#, C#, D# 9. B, B, B, B, C#, D#, D# 10. B, B, B, B, C#, B, B Pre-Chorus___ 11. B, B, B, C#, B … http://www.youtube.com/v/Sc30plHHs0c?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Read the original here: Justin Bieber – Pray Piano Cover Instrumental w/ Lyrics & Tutorial Notes by Mike Bivona

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Justin Bieber – Pray Piano Cover Instrumental w/ Lyrics & Tutorial Notes by Mike Bivona

Newsweek’s Alter Distorts Gingrich’s Ground Zero Mosque Opposition

You can agree or disagree about former Speak of the House Newt Gingrich’s view on the Ground Zero mosque, but is it fair to vilify him with a false characterization of his views? Newsweek columnist Jonathan Alter had a peculiar take on Gingrich’s point of view during a Sept. 13 appearance on Fox Business Network’s “Imus in the Morning.” He expressed his frustrations with the attacks on Islam, as it pertains to public discourse with not only the Ground Zero mosque, but also the idea of people burning Qurans, which has garnered a fair amount of attention from the left-of-center media . “[I]t’s insane,” Alter said. “And what are we supposed to have, a war with a billion people? So, this is out of control. And, it’s kicked off something pretty ugly.” But one of the lynchpins of his frustration were comments from Gingrich , which Alter took some liberties with his interpretation of the former House Speaker’s sentiments. “And when you have people like Newt Gingrich, I think, my big takeaway from this is that he’s just completely destroyed any — the last shred of legitimacy he had to comment about anything. My favorite line by Gingrich is he said, ‘You know, when Saudi Arabia allows us to build churches and synagogues there, then we’ll put mosques in the United States, and until then, other mosques should close, too.” But Gingrich’s statement about the mosque referred specifically to the Ground Zero mosque, not all mosques in the United States. He elaborated, “If the people behind the Cordoba House were serious about religious toleration, they would be imploring the Saudis, as fellow Muslims, to immediately open up Mecca to all and immediately announce their intention to allow non-Muslim houses of worship in the Kingdom.”

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Newsweek’s Alter Distorts Gingrich’s Ground Zero Mosque Opposition

‘Harry Potter’ Actor Tom Felton Sees Draco Malfoy As ‘Vulnerable’

‘Draco, he’s damned if he does, damned if he doesn’t,’ he tells MTV News. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Tom Felton Photo: MTV News “Harry Potter” star (and recent MTV Movie Awards winner ) Tom Felton has seen his star rise steadily since first gracing the big screen as Draco Malfoy in “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.” Fans have watched the young actor evolve from a one-note bully to a complicated and sometimes vulnerable villain. When MTV News caught up with Felton at the opening of Universal’s Wizarding World of Harry Potter theme park , we asked him about Draco’s growth over the course of the eight films, as well as whether he thinks his character is really all evil. “From my character’s point of view, a lot has been left to interpretation,” Felton said, pinpointing an important-yet-subtle moment from the final film, in which Draco is tasked with the painful decision whether to help or hinder his nemesis’ progress. “[There is] one take where you want to help Harry. The books, I think, kind of left it up to the interpretation of the reader, really, so one way you internally want to help him, the other side where you’re just confused, so I’m intrigued to see which bits David [Yates] cuts out of it.” Regarding Malfoy’s not-so-bad, tortured side, Felton said “Potter” creator J.K. Rowling helped him understand a softer side. “Jo always talked about him as being vulnerable,” Felton said. “Most bullies are. They’re actually hugely insecure and have their own problems, and he has the worst parental guidance of any child I’ve ever seen in my life.” Felton added that when he and Daniel Radcliffe have discussed their characters’ dynamics, they see them as two sides of the same coin. “Harry has these great influences, even though his parents have passed,” Felton said. “Draco, he’s damned if he does, damned if he doesn’t, really. He’s kind of stuck.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Videos ‘Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows’ Trailer Debuts Related Photos Scenes From The First ‘Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows’ Trailer

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‘Harry Potter’ Actor Tom Felton Sees Draco Malfoy As ‘Vulnerable’

Adam Lambert Recalls One-Night Stands With Help From Muse

Singer explains why ‘Soaked,’ written by Matthew Bellamy, resonated with him. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Jim Cantiello Adam Lambert Photo: MTV News Adam Lambert worked with everyone from Rivers Cuomo to Pink to the Darkness frontman Justin Hawkins to “Idol” judge Kara DioGuardi on his new album, For Your Entertainment. But one song, “Soaked,” written by Muse singer Matthew Bellamy, felt especially personal for the “Idol” runner-up.

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Adam Lambert Recalls One-Night Stands With Help From Muse

Ferret CPR

I'm not 100 percent sure what went on here, but my interpretation is that the ferret is OK and that the firefighter is a hero. ( Via Cynical-C .) Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment