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