[AGL] What are your favorite 10 films of all time? - How I metFrida Kahlo.

Wayne Johnson cadaobh at shentel.net
Mon Nov 27 19:33:06 EST 2006


Fabulous!!!

What an incredible experience.

Agree completely about your dad's movie, but it would have to be made by
someone who was truly sensitive to what all that meant...especially at that
time.

I can think of several possibilities but I won't discuss them here on the
List. Most of 'em you probably would reject out of hand anyway. (There
are certainly some "intriguing" issues like WHY was your dad visiting Diego
as DR was a very well known Marxist?)

Perhaps you could start by getting to know Richard Linklater.

wgJ


----- Original Message -----
From: "Clementine Hall" <chall at bsralaw.com>
To: "survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s"
<austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 6:57 PM
Subject: Re: [AGL] What are your favorite 10 films of all time? - How I
metFrida Kahlo.



> My father was military attaché to the American embassy through the 1940's

> into the 1950's. He had a passion for unsophisticated art - art outside

> the establishment - what they used to call "primitive art." He visited

> Diego Rivera on several occasions and took me with him. [He, by the way,

> deserves a movie of his own - career West Point officer of German descent

> with some of the most enlightened notions imaginable, an artist himself, a

> great cook, spoke Cuban, Mexican, Uruguayan and Catalan Spanish like a

> native of each country, raised in New Braunfels Texas, was totally

> sympathetic to migrant workers, I could go on and on. When Daddy visited

> Diego, I, in turn, visited with Frida. I have a couple of pictures taken

> of me with one of her baby goats and a little boy, one of the many

> children in her very large acquaintance of children, possibly a nephew.

> Anyhow, for me she was memorable for two traits - she fed us all

> incredibly delicious food and she put on wonderful puppet plays entirely

> acted out and sung by her. By the way, she was far prettier in life than

> ever on canvas or in photos. Her face was very pretty and expressive. If

> you see Frida, Vida Naturaleza, you can see what she was like with

> children and with food. The actor who plays her looks just like she did.

> BY THE WAY, THANKS FOR ASKING!!

>

> -----Original Message-----

> From: austin-ghetto-list-bounces at pairlist.net

> [mailto:austin-ghetto-list-bounces at pairlist.net] On Behalf Of Michael

> Eisenstadt

> Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 3:28 PM

> To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s

> Subject: Re: [AGL] What are your favorite 10 films of all time?

>

> Tina,

>

> How did you get to know Frida Kallo?

>

> I take it you're not referring to Frida Miller?

>

> Mike

>

> ----- Original Message -----

> From: "Clementine Hall" <chall at bsralaw.com>

> To: "survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s"

> <austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>

> Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 5:17 PM

> Subject: Re: [AGL] What are your favorite 10 films of all time?

>

>

> Please check out (you can get it on Netflix, I believe, or at the

> library): FRIDA, VIDA NATURALEZA. This is fictional, just like Cruz's

> Frida, but reads like a documentary. I knew Frida and this movie is so

> so so true. And the music there is also very nice.

>

>

>

> -----Original Message-----

> From: austin-ghetto-list-bounces at pairlist.net

> [mailto:austin-ghetto-list-bounces at pairlist.net] On Behalf Of Gerry

> Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2006 6:57 AM

> To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s

> Subject: Re: [AGL] What are your favorite 10 films of all time?

>

>

>

> After seeing your list I was in town yesterday and rented Frida which I

> watched last night. A pretty amazing flick alright with great music and

> costumes, amazing color, decent acting, etc. But in the end it is a

> woman's movie, an epic melodrama about the poor suffering wives of a

> charming philanderer, produced directed inspired and conceived by

> women--with a venegance. Must have been a joy to make. Must have cost a

> sum about equal to the gross national product of Peru and Ecuador

> combined...The singing voice was Lila Downs, very strong and fitting for

> the heroine of the movie but not so musical as a thousand other possible

> choices among the excellent bolero singers of Mexico.

>

>

>

> Anyhow, thanks for the tip. I had read reviews of it awhile back but had

> forgotten about it.

>

>

>

> A tip for the hearing impaired for whom watching movies has become a

> frustrating chore: get a good pair of earphones with a volume control

> and plug them into the sound outlet at the back of the computer. Makes a

> big difference. I am on the verge of trashing the TV as I did the stereo

> and making the computer the home entertainment center for all media.

>

> G

>

>

>

>

>

> ----- Original Message -----

>

> From: Fontaine Maverick <mailto:fmaverick at austin.rr.com>

>

> To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s

> <mailto:austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>

>

> Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2006 7:41 PM

>

> Subject: Re: [AGL] What are your favorite 10 films of all time?

>

>

>

> Cinema Paradiso, yes!

>

> ----- Original Message -----

>

> From: CAUS at aol.com

>

> To: austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net

>

> Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2006 7:59 PM

>

> Subject: Re: [AGL] What are your favorite 10 films of

> all time?

>

>

>

> May I add my favs? Il Postino, Shirley Valentine,

> LaStrada, Cinema Paridiso, Antonia's Line. Does anyone agree on any of

> these?

>

>

>

>





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