Browsing Tag

mise-en-scene

Mise en Snap Visual Splendor

Mise en Snap: I Love You Alice B. Toklas!

08/10/2010

It’s about time I did another mise-en-snap!

I Love You, Alice B. Toklas is a deliciously tacky film from 1968 that parodies the 1960s counterculture. I watched it once and didn’t really pay attention.. the next time I saw everything and couldn’t stop laughing. (I always get a little mesmerized by 60s decor, trying to find ways to incorporate the hippie’s lounge pad into a family home.) The film is directed by Hy Averback and stars Peter Sellers and Leigh Taylor-Young (in her film debut). It features music by Harpers Bizarre, including the theme song that I still cannot stop singing — haha!

The title is a reference to writer Alice B. Toklas, who wrote a recipe for making cannabis Brownies released in 1954. I had the pleasure of learning about Alice B. Toklas and Gertrude Stein during a college Hemmingway class and trip to Paris — they were both pretty cool cats.

hippie market
everything = black&white
pschedelicar
the herse
holy herse!
pschedelicar
daisy wheels
big brother
nancy
nancy smoking
the butterfly
fudge brownies
alice b. toklas brownies
alice b. toklas brownie mix
groovy
flower car
technicandles
nancy's castle
kitchen cram
Mise en Snap Visual Splendor

Mise en Snap: A Woman is a Woman

08/04/2009

A Woman is a Woman (Une Femme est une Femme’) is a 1961 French new wave film directed by Jean-Luc Godard. It’s colorful, quirky and adorable in it’s imagery and story. I found the interior shots to be clean, bright and simple, yet quaint and kitshy-cool. Reminds me of the delicious interior eye-candy to be gorged on in each of the Jeu de Paumes books.

The film centers around the relationship of an adorable exotic dancer Angéla (Anna Karina) and her live-in boyfriend, Émile (Jean-Claude Brialy). This films requires little-to-no serious thought, all of the discussions are completely trivialized and cute to watch. For instance they use book titles to argue and debate issues, pointing to titles that communicate the response that they would like to give.

Angéla wants to have a child while Émile does not, all the while Émile’s best friend Alfred (Jean-Paul Belmondo), constantly insists that he is in love with Angéla. It must be that every woman’s biological urge to have (bear, adopt, get a cat or chihuahua instead of) children kicks in at some point in their lives (even if just by passing thought!) no matter how much fun they may be having. *wink*

Have a taste!

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman

a woman is a woman