Sunday, November 11, 2012 Monday, October 1, 2012

Critically-acclaimed Gritty Crime Movies Streaming on Netflix

Friday, June 22, 2012

HBO’s THE NEWSROOM 

From the mind of Aaron Sorkin, creator of The West Wing and screenwriter of The Social Network and Moneyball, comes The Newsroom, a behind-the-scenes look at the people who make a nightly cable-news program. Focusing on a network anchor (played by Jeff Daniels), his new executive producer (Emily Mortimer), the newsroom staff (John Gallagher, Jr., Alison Pill, Thomas Sadoski, Olivia Munn, Dev Patel) and their boss (Sam Waterston), the series tracks their quixotic mission to do the news well in the face of corporate and commercial obstacles-not to mention their own personal entanglements.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

We have every right and should adapt tales because society changes. But the Grimms would flip over if they were alive today. They were better known during their time as scholarly writers; they were in the pursuit of the essence of story telling. By collecting different versions of every tale they published, they hoped to resuscitate the linguistic cultural tradition that keeps people together—stories that were shared with the common people.

—Jack Zipes, fairy tale scholar

Read his full interview about fairy tale adaptations with Smithsonian Magazine’s Reel Culture blog

[Illustrations: Hansel and Gretel: Kay Rasmus Nielsen / Little Red Riding Hood: Walter Crane]

Monday, May 21, 2012

picadorbookroom:

It shocks me that I had never heard of Martha Gellhorn until news of HBO’s Film “Hemingway & Gellhorn” (premiering on May 28th) reached Picador. The story of her life reads like a novel: passionate romances, foreign travels, trailblazing journalism. If you, like me, were woefully unaware of the awesome that is Martha Gellhorn, I present to you:

10 Things You Probably Didn’t (but Should) Know About Martha Gellhorn

1. She attended Bryn Mawr College (two years behind Katharine Hepburn) but left in 1927 (before graduating) to pursue her career in journalism.

2. Determined to become a foreign correspondent, she moved to France in 1930, where she worked at the United Press bureau of Paris for two years.

3. After returning to the United States, her coverage of the Great Depression for the Federal Emergency Relief Administration attracted the attentions of Eleanor Roosevelt. The two women became lifelong friends and correspondents.

4. Her first great love was Bertrand de Jouvenel, a married French journalist whom Gellhorn met when she was 22 after first arriving in Paris. Letters from this period are included in Caroline Moorehead’s Selected Letters of Martha Gellhorn, which Salon called some of the book’s most poignant “not just for their tales of impossible love (de Jouvenel’s wife would not divorce him) but also for the prescience with which Gellhorn already viewed her role in a world hostile to ambitious, self-reliant wome.”

5. Gellhorn first met Ernest Hemingway (who was still married to his second wife) in Sloppy Joe’s Bar in Key West, Florida in 1936 while on a family vacation.

6. She famously covered nearly every war and political conflict in the 60 years of her career including the Spanish Civil War, the rise of Adolf Hitler and World War II, and the Vietnam War, to name a few.

7. Because the US Army refused to allow female correspondents on the front lines during World War II, she escaped her chaperones by working with escorts from D-Day until the end of the war, avoiding deportation by seducing the squadron’s commander, James Gavin. (This affair was one of several infidelities in her marriage to Hemingway.)

8. Her son, Sandy, was adopted in 1949 from an Italian orphanage.

9. Open about her ambivalence toward sex, she wrote of herself in 1972, “I daresay I was the worst bed partner in five continents.”

10. She committed suicide in 1998 via drug overdose after a long battle with cancer. She was 89 years old.

For more amazing stories about this fascinating woman, Moorehead’s biography of Gellhorn is also available from Picador.

Saturday, May 12, 2012
Friday, April 27, 2012
picadorbookroom:

To kick off our monthly blogger interview series, Largehearted Boy’s David Gutowski answers some of our most pressing questions. You can follow him on Twitter at @largeheartedboy and on Facebook.  
PICADOR: Largehearted Boy features books, music, and film. If you could add one more medium from the art world, what would it be?
DAVID: Visual art, because it would give me an excuse to learn more about it.
 One book that should be assigned in high school but probably never will?
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh.
Which novelist from the past you wish were around to write modern fiction today?
Although she’s more known for her short stories, Flannery O’Connor.
 What is the first album you remember buying on your own?
Black Sabbath’s Sabbath Bloody Sabbath on vinyl, a bargain bin find financed, ironically, with tip money earned at a wedding (I was an altar boy for that reason alone).
 How did you find out about the book you’re reading now?
I generally have 10-15 books started at any time, but the one in front of me is Joshua Henkin’s new novel, The World Without You. In this case the author himself sent the book my way.

picadorbookroom:

To kick off our monthly blogger interview series, Largehearted Boy’s David Gutowski answers some of our most pressing questions. You can follow him on Twitter at @largeheartedboy and on Facebook.  

PICADOR: Largehearted Boy features books, music, and film. If you could add one more medium from the art world, what would it be?

DAVID: Visual art, because it would give me an excuse to learn more about it.

One book that should be assigned in high school but probably never will?

Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh.

Which novelist from the past you wish were around to write modern fiction today?

Although she’s more known for her short stories, Flannery O’Connor.

What is the first album you remember buying on your own?

Black Sabbath’s Sabbath Bloody Sabbath on vinyl, a bargain bin find financed, ironically, with tip money earned at a wedding (I was an altar boy for that reason alone).

How did you find out about the book you’re reading now?

I generally have 10-15 books started at any time, but the one in front of me is Joshua Henkin’s new novel, The World Without You. In this case the author himself sent the book my way.

Johnny Depp in the morning

Johnny Depp in the morning