Teenage Fanclub performing The Concept live at Irving Plaza. This song is the best thing about Young Adult. Just be glad that there is something to like in a film written by Diablo Cody.

Walker Evans
Brooklyn Bridge, New York, 1929

Walker Evans

Brooklyn Bridge, New York, 1929

(Source: undr)

Salvador Dalí’s Real Masterpiece: The Logo For Chupa Chups Lollipops
Via

Salvador Dalí’s Real Masterpiece: The Logo For Chupa Chups Lollipops

Via

(via fastcompany)

Film for the weekend
Scarecrow (1973)

Max, an ex-con drifter with a penchant for brawling is amused by Lion, a homeless ex-sailor, and they partner up as they head east together. Not a wise ass orangutan in sight.

minimalmovieposters:
Drive by Ian Wilding
Prints available at Society6
Artist: Facebook | Tumblr | Twitter

minimalmovieposters:

Drive by Ian Wilding

Prints available at Society6

Artist: Facebook | Tumblr | Twitter

(Source: )

fotojournalismus:

Man painting the Eiffel Tower without a safety belt more than 900 feet above Paris, 1953. One of Riboud’s best known images is Eiffel Tower Painter, published in LIFE Magazine in 1953 (seen at right).  

“The painter, known as Zazou, is at ease, I felt dizzy and I closed my eyes every time he bent over to dip his brush.” - M.R

[Credit : Marc Riboud]

Video and Illustration by Fatti Burke

Via



John Waters’ Best Films of 2011
1 The Skin I Live In (Pedro Almodóvar) A dark, twisted, beautiful, and, yes, funny shocker from the greatest director in the world. God bless you, Pedro Almodóvar!
2 Mildred Pierce (Todd Haynes) This elegantly shot, pitch-perfect made-for-TV melodrama makes everyone who watches secretly yearn to be a woman with issues. The best period film in decades—period.
3 Justin Bieber: Never Say Never (Jon M. Chu) I’m not kidding. A well-made doc that proves the Bieb was a child prodigy. Wait until you see Justin stick his head into the audience and shake his hair in 3-D. I screamed.
4 Hadewijch (Bruno Dumont) In this grim, fiercely uncommercial movie, a fanatical Catholic young lady from a rich family hooks up with a handsome male Muslim terrorist, and together they blow up a commuter train. Love is strange, especially when God is involved.
5 Kaboom (Gregg Araki) A sexy, well-written, end-of-the-world comedy that succeeds beyond all expectation. Doomsday never looked so hot.
6 If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front (Marshall Curry and Sam Cullman) This sad documentary debates the regrets of radicalism as a pack of lunatic-kid tree huggers get caught up in frenzied activism and are suddenly accused by the government of terrorism.
7 The Tree of Life (Terrence Malick) You’d think I’d hate this film, and I almost did—until I realized it’s the best New Age, heterosexual, Christian movie of the year.
8 I’m Glad My Mother Is Alive (Claude and Nathan Miller) This beautifully acted French film is a tragic, harrowing warning to all adoptees: Finding your real-life birth parents isn’t always such a good idea.
9 We Were Here (David Weissman) Half my friends died of AIDS, so this simple and painfully told doc on the disastrous epidemic’s effect on San Francisco is personal. If you don’t sob watching, maybe you should be dead too.
10 Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (Apichatpong Weerasethakul) A spooky, witty, never pretentious meditation on the otherworldly lust of ghosts and wild animals. Aren’t you glad art films don’t get test-screened?

via bohemea:


John Waters’ Best Films of 2011

The Skin I Live In (Pedro Almodóvar) A dark, twisted, beautiful, and, yes, funny shocker from the greatest director in the world. God bless you, Pedro Almodóvar!

Mildred Pierce (Todd Haynes) This elegantly shot, pitch-perfect made-for-TV melodrama makes everyone who watches secretly yearn to be a woman with issues. The best period film in decades—period.

Justin Bieber: Never Say Never (Jon M. Chu) I’m not kidding. A well-made doc that proves the Bieb was a child prodigy. Wait until you see Justin stick his head into the audience and shake his hair in 3-D. I screamed.

Hadewijch (Bruno Dumont) In this grim, fiercely uncommercial movie, a fanatical Catholic young lady from a rich family hooks up with a handsome male Muslim terrorist, and together they blow up a commuter train. Love is strange, especially when God is involved.

Kaboom (Gregg Araki) A sexy, well-written, end-of-the-world comedy that succeeds beyond all expectation. Doomsday never looked so hot.

If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front (Marshall Curry and Sam Cullman) This sad documentary debates the regrets of radicalism as a pack of lunatic-kid tree huggers get caught up in frenzied activism and are suddenly accused by the government of terrorism.

The Tree of Life (Terrence Malick) You’d think I’d hate this film, and I almost did—until I realized it’s the best New Age, heterosexual, Christian movie of the year.

I’m Glad My Mother Is Alive (Claude and Nathan Miller) This beautifully acted French film is a tragic, harrowing warning to all adoptees: Finding your real-life birth parents isn’t always such a good idea.

We Were Here (David Weissman) Half my friends died of AIDS, so this simple and painfully told doc on the disastrous epidemic’s effect on San Francisco is personal. If you don’t sob watching, maybe you should be dead too.

10 Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (Apichatpong Weerasethakul) A spooky, witty, never pretentious meditation on the otherworldly lust of ghosts and wild animals. Aren’t you glad art films don’t get test-screened?

via bohemea:


Merna Kennedy in production still from Police Call (1933, dir. Phil Whitman)
Taken from Paper dreams:the lost art of Hollywood still photography by  Christoph Schifferli
via Old Hollywood

Merna Kennedy in production still from Police Call (1933, dir. Phil Whitman)

Taken from Paper dreams:the lost art of Hollywood still photography by Christoph Schifferli

via Old Hollywood

From Eat more Bikes by Nathan Bulmer

From Eat more Bikes by Nathan Bulmer

Music to wind down the week

Tarbox Ramblers-Ashes to Ashes

This version is taken from the season one finale of Sons of Anarchy. This is the second best song to feature in this episode after John the Revelator by Curtis Stigers (yes that guy,who according to wikipedia made Nick Lowe independently wealthy by covering (What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding on The Bodyguard soundtrack).

the-art-of-advertising:

A series of print ads for French radio station OUÏ FM.

(via mmsartdesign)