Thursday, February 26, 2026
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Catfish Dudes and Doggone Bros: An Appreciation
It’s impossible to predict the fate of my film; people go to the movies to forget about themselves, and a sunset leans exactly in the opposite direction, it’s the moment when, perhaps, we see ourselves a little more naked, that happens to me in any case, and it’s painful and useful; maybe others can make use of it too, you never know.
- Julio Cortázar, A Certain Lucas
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Operator's Manual
A Fold-Up Sophia was the blockbuster supreme between June and July of 1983. To make use of the Sophia it is advised you back up fast like a horse to win perspective, letting dark clouds gather ominously over your intended, and then deflect or disperse the rebar coming at you, drunk on that damned Slivovitz and not sure what’s happening. Did we sign up for this? I don’t believe so. Or maybe it was a matter of legalistic jargon having been employed to hoodwink us. The Fold-Up Sophia in the billiard room heaves a great air pocket sigh and the floorboards groan like lecherous old crones. To the hacienda, Banquo! Do you have any more Percocets?! It’s said that when a Fold-Up Sophia goes berserk in your yard it’d be up to you to disperse the crowds and have Sophia removed before random sections of that crowd are mowed down. I tangle and shake my measuring tape in defiance of all unwanted ordinance and it can safely be said that I usually give an above average performance. Travesty is as vital to me as salt and, yes, that plainly is a sort of religious thinking. I kindly beg your pardon.
The Triple Echo (Michael Apted, 1972)
The Shout (Jerzy Skolimowski, 1978)
Vain but Not Shallow and Narcissus is Just a Greek Person
Buzzcocks, "Operators Manuel"
Monday, February 23, 2026
What Was Once All Threaded Together is No Longer So
Roma (Federico Fellini, 1972)
When I first got sober they told me I’d have to start working on my defects of character and that was easy because they were glaring. This work is aided by persistently reminding yourself, like the voice of a little bird perched on your own shoulder, that you are powerless over people, places, and things not engineered to satisfy your needs, however modest. Most who believe steadfastly in domination and control have no power or control. They have a control problem like the recidivist drunkard has a drink problem, though it is also true of course that what the drunkard really wants is to control how he feels…before ultimately becoming controlled by the bottle. Control uproots and finds no intelligible network or system. We cannot speak or spell and it’s why we’re going to hell. We failed to grab the baton and make a material futurity sufficient to frame our destiny as material reality. Not only are we powerless over people, places, and things, very often we are completely powerless also over our first reaction to something surprising or unexpected, but, with that being said, as the seconds continue to count down and everybody’s sort of standing there uncomfortably, you really do have to get your vessel stable pronto and yourself situationally reoriented such that the error or errors can be honoured with the proper (spiritual) interest. Other alcoholics do this work and I get along pretty good with most of them. We are testy and irritable as a rule, as you notice in big, loud colour if you ever attend an Alcoholics Anonymous convention. I know that a guy who runs his mouth can sink the whole fleet and I’m working on that but not perhaps all that successfully. I am scared only at this point of being buried alive or entombed by the lechery, populist authoritarianism, and willful ignorance all around me. I shouldn’t take it personally, though, because who the fuck am I in the greater scheme of things? Well, some of the winos call me Dirty Jake and I like that very much. That's actual righteous status. In the war of needs and wants there shall remain very little compassion and even less sense. Those who get defensive immediately are almost certainly never going to reorient, though I guess there are surprises. I run my life like a delinquent military operation and always have. It’s situational, scattershot, improvisatory, and fuelled in large part by the collection of actionable intelligence. I make sloppy mistakes and astonishing discoveries and that’s how it goes. As China Miéville observes in October: The Story of the Russian Revolution, the big powerful men in wars and revolutions very often find themselves in a cramped room with an excessive number of colleagues for weeks at a time with absolutely nothing happening. Even though that's a blatant index of an industrialized warfare mentality from which nobody will ever gain, I can see clearly that I need to work on battening down the hatchets...and probably swing a tad Bolshevik as well. Why not? Forever perched up in the cliffs and ready to throw down with the harbinger cry of the early morning owl.
The Dead (John Huston, 1987)
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
The Young One and Martha
Eroticism is a diabolic pleasure that is related to death and rotting flesh.
- Luis Buñuel
I detest the idea that love between two persons can lead to salvation. All my life I have fought against this oppressive type of relationship. Instead, I believe in searching for a kind of love that somehow involves all of humanity.
- Rainer Werner Fassbinder
The Young One (Luis Buñuel, 1960)
Martha (Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1974)
Monday, February 16, 2026
Philippe Garrel Redux
If 'proceeding toward the external is nothing but a fabrication,' one can only stop here and erode it from within. I learned that from Philippe Garrel.
- Jean-Luc Godard
In films, what is important is the point where the film no longer has an auteur, where it has no more actors, no more story even, no more subject, nothing but the film itself speaking and saying something that can’t be translated: the point where it becomes the discourse of someone or something else, which cannot be said, precisely because it is beyond expression.
- Jacques Rivette
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Everything is Trending Excellent: Personal Sunday Playlist [Philosophizing with a Hammer]
You call him Friedrich Nietzsche. I call him Jolly St. Nitch. We are not the same.





























