Matthew Surridge
@fell_gard
Freelance writer and critic. He/his.
The Book of Days, a short fiction project about history, myth, empire, and other fictions:
patreon.com/BookOfDays
ID: 288390197
http://fellgard.com 26-04-2011 19:31:46
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Matthew Surridge Yep. First days on Shadows were a bit of a slog. And you're right about soap operas having to do a lot of plot recaps. Newspaper TV sections once helped out with day to day blurbs. As Shadows grew wilder and wilder so did the blurbs.
New Matthew Surridge: New bookΒ The Line: AI & the Future Of PersonhoodΒ by James Boyle explores the future of AI. splicetoday.com/digital/the-peβ¦
Russ Smith Matthew Surridge "How other societies think about AI and other future persons will come to affect how America does. I specifically suspect his chapter on non-human animals mightβve benefitted from looking at the experience of other places."
Russ Smith Matthew Surridge "... one way to look at science fiction is as a series of thought experiments, if experiments worked through in a particularly dramatic vein."
Via Matthew Surridge: In an interrelated world, how other societies think about AI and other future persons will come to affect how America does. splicetoday.com/digital/the-peβ¦
New Matthew Surridge: Richard Wright and Pierre Chenalβs imperfect 1951 adaptation of Wrightβs novelΒ Native Son. splicetoday.com/moving-pictureβ¦
Russ Smith Matthew Surridge "Thereβs a sense of honesty thatβs unlike contemporary Hollywood. Characters use slurs in casual ways that even bad-guy racists in mainstream American films wouldnβt."
Russ Smith Matthew Surridge "but a lot of the film works, especially its visuals. the lighting and set design is strong, thereβs an understated depth of field that makes the film feel bigger than it is, and some set-pieces and camera moves are lovely...."
Via Matthew Surridge: Native Son was also a novel about race in America from a Black perspective with a Black man as the lead character, meaning the mainstream American movie industry in the 1940s couldnβt imagine adapting the book faithfully. splicetoday.com/moving-pictureβ¦
Russ Smith Matthew Surridge "When seen as a whole its virtues become prominent. This is a good movie, and a fascinating document." π₯π€π§π¬ποΈπ½οΈ Splice Today
New Matthew Surridge: Never Open That DoorΒ (1952) is a fascinating if flawed anthology noir from Argentina. splicetoday.com/moving-pictureβ¦
Russ Smith Matthew Surridge "the conventions of the stories are pitched just far enough beyond the everyday that theyβre feverish without being strained."
Russ Smith Matthew Surridge "Weβre not told any more than we need to about the backgrounds of the characters. The sets and props and background details of their homes are what we know about them, and thatβs enough to make them live."
Via Matthew Surridge: The Criterion Channel began streaming a collection of Argentine 1950s noir movies , and as a result Iβve learned that Argentinians in the 1950s were remarkably good at making film noir. Consider the anthology film Never Open That Door. splicetoday.com/moving-pictureβ¦
Via Matthew Surridge: Thereβs a latent power to the film, like a dream of noir images, with an intensity to the visuals beyond what the plot signifies. The filmβs more irrational than most noirs. splicetoday.com/moving-pictureβ¦