Posted by NLP on April 23, 2014 · Leave a Comment
Raphaël | Issy | Kathleen
Filed under Film, Opinion, Poetry · Tagged with 9/11, Alain Brigand, Alejandro González Iñárritu, Amos Gitaï, cinema, Claude Lelouch, Claudia Massie, Daisy Behagg, Danis Tanović, Don DeLillo, film, Franck Villain, Homi Bhabha, Idrissa Ouedraogo, Issy Houston, Kathleen Rocksavage, Ken Loach, Mark Cousins, Mira Naior, Poetry, Raphael Lambert, Samira Makhmalbaf, Sean Penn, Shohei Imamura, short films, Slavoj Žižek, transnational, Youssef Chahine
Posted by NLP on June 13, 2013 · Leave a Comment
Andrew Losowsky & Ewan Morrison Andy Powell Stewart Sanderson Martin Hall
Filed under Art, Fiction, Opinion, Poetry · Tagged with Andrew Losowsky, Andy Powell, Claudia Massie, Daisy Behagg, ewan morrison, film, martin hall, Poetry, short films, Stewart Sanderson, The Huffington Post, words
Posted by NLP on February 7, 2013 · Leave a Comment
Mark Cousins: The Interview Alastair Cook: The In-Between Christopher Smail on Tarantino’s Django Unchained Tracey S Rosenberg: Last Will & Testament
Filed under Film, Opinion, Photography, Poetry, Uncategorized · Tagged with Alastair Cook, Alexander Payne, Astrid Henning-Jensen, Éric Rohmer, Boris Barnet, cargo publishing, Carl Radford, Christoph Waltz, cinema, Djibril Diop Mambéty, film, Forough Farrokhzad, Goerge Cukor, Gutter, Herbert Lom, Italo Calvino, Jacques Rivette, Jamie Foxx, John Berger, John Brewer, Joni Sternbach, Katie Cooke, Kenneth More, Kerik Kouklis, Kerry Washington, Kill Bill, Lady Snowblood, Larisa Shepitko, Lauren Bacall, Lav Diaz, Leonardo di Caprio, Louise Brooks, Mai Zetterling, Mania Akhbari, Mark Cousins, Mohamed Ali-Talebi, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Pulp Fiction, Quentin Tarantino, Quinn Jacobson, Robert Bresson, Roland Barthes, Samuel L Jackson, Slavoj Žižek, Spike Lee, Steven Berkoff, Tilda Swinton, Tracey S Rosenberg, Truffaut, Walter Benjamin
Posted by NLP on December 8, 2011 · Leave a Comment
In NLP’s winter edition, we have found a league of spectres to accompany you amongst the silent shifting of the snowflakes. Don Paterson and Alison Watt’s recent collaboration at the Ingleby Gallery, where Watt’s artwork was accompanied by Paterson’s succinct verse, allowed Paterson to release the ghosts from Watt’s mesmerising pieces. In an attempt to … Continue reading →
Filed under Fiction, Film, Nature, Opinion, Photography, Poetry · Tagged with Alison Watt, Allan Cameron, Caledonia TV, Christopher Smail, Claudia Massie, David Groulx, Don Paterson, film, Ingleby Gallery, John C. Reilly, Les Wilson, Lionel Shriver, Lynne Ramsay, Poetry, The Lighthouse Stevensons, Tilda Swinton, Vagabond Voices, Walter Benjamin
Posted by NLP on March 13, 2011 · Leave a Comment
To paraphrase Ruth Gordon, octogenarian star of seminal 1973 film Harold & Maude, and with exactly the same sentiment, New Linear Perspectives greets the dawn of a new March with a breath of fire – HUH! This edition sees NLP editor Andrew F Giles travel to the central European city of Bratislava to interview co-founder … Continue reading →
Filed under Art, Film, Opinion, Poetry, Travel · Tagged with Andrew F. Giles, Blood of a Poet, Bratislava, Emily Wolahan, film, Jean Cocteau, Katy Karpfinger, Poetry, Silvio Berlusconi, Steven Severin, Willie Giles
Posted by NLP on February 11, 2011 · Leave a Comment
With a slew of submissions over the past couple of weeks, and a projected micropoetry night in Edinburgh next month, NLP has been happily busy. This post brings together film, art and poetry from far-flung corners of the planet to fit our focus on the global here in Scotland. Our film critic Katy Karpfinger takes … Continue reading →
Filed under Art, Film, Poetry · Tagged with Allan Harkness, Birol Unel, Blue House Studios, Chengdu, Chinese art, Fatih Akin, film, Gegen die Wand, Katy Karpfinger, Michael Pedersen, Poetry, Shu Hao, Sibel Kikelli, Yang Liming, Yang Mian, Zhou Chunya