I’ve actually been known in the past as something of a Greenaway apologist, but for whatever reason, I found Draughtsman’s ridiculously difficult to get through. I kept returning to a note that I jotted down within the first couple of minutes of the film: “What was Derek Jarman doing the year this film was made? What was Duran Duran doing?” It’s that axis of British culture of the early 1980s that Kevin and I ended up exploring in the above video. But if it was my idea idea to travel down this road, the brilliance of applying the video effects from Rio to footage of Margaret Thatcher on the eve of the Falklands War was all Kevin. Watch and discuss.
A court has ruled that Google must turn over logs containing the “log-in ID of users, the computer IP address (online identifier) and video clip details” of every single video watched by every user on YouTube. This is the result of a class action copyright infringement lawsuit, brought against the video sharing site by Viacom (parent company of MTV, VH1, CBS and Paramount) and the Premier League football association. Google will also be required to “disclose to Viacom the details of all videos that have been removed from the site for any reason.”
So what does this mean, beyond the fact that multi-national corporations will now have evidence every time you watch semi-dirty Duran Duran videos or footage of Margaret Thatcher asking the media to “rejoice” that British troops have taken back the Falklands (yes, these are my two most recent YouTube searches)? The BBC has posted a good decoding of the ruling. Takeaways after the jump.
In more proof that the cultural history of pre-Giuliani New York City is destined to be rewritten, Tony Scott and Denzel Washington are teaming up to remakeThe Taking of Pelham 123.
TV film critics Jeffrey Lyons and Alison Bailes will soon contribute to a “weekly blog” at ReelTalkTv.com.
Universal is launching a new website to distribute branded mobile marketing content, in an effort to “be master of our own destiny more,” says Universal Mobile senior VP Jeremy Laws.
We’ve had a bit of trouble getting this episode to go through the iTunes feed, so we hope this re-post will fix the problem. The original post, with episode description and embedded player, is here.
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