Quantcast

Video of the Day

Masthead

Editor-in-Chief
Alex Carnevale
(e-mail/tumblr/twitter)

Features Editor
Mia Nguyen
(e-mail)

Reviews Editor
Ethan Peterson

Live and Active Affiliates
This Recording

is dedicated to the enjoyment of audio and visual stimuli. Please visit our archives where we have uncovered the true importance of nearly everything. Should you want to reach us, e-mail alex dot carnevale at gmail dot com, but don't tell the spam robots. Consider contacting us if you wish to use This Recording in your classroom or club setting. We have given several talks at local Rotarys that we feel went really well.

Pretty used to being with Gwyneth

Regrets that her mother did not smoke

Frank in all directions

Jean Cocteau and Jean Marais

Simply cannot go back to them

Roll your eyes at Samuel Beckett

John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion

Metaphors with eyes

Life of Mary MacLane

Circle what it is you want

Not really talking about women, just Diane

Felicity's disguise

This area does not yet contain any content.

Entries in jude law (2)

Friday
Nov182016

In Which We Live Vicariously Through This Young Pope

The Royal Painter

by ALEX CARNEVALE

The Young Pope
creator Paolo Sorrentino
HBO

We all know someone who believes, with a certainty that never admits doubt, that the world revolves around them. These people float in and out of our lives. It is hard to begrudge them their views, in a way, since their deleterious attitude proves useful as a survival mechanism. They remind us of animals in that way, of beasts who can no more consider others' plight that they can leave their bodies and travel as spirits. At some point they are rewarded with tragedy caused by the limits of awareness.

There is a character in a Cixin Liu novel I thought of while watching The Young Pope, the new series about a young American pope cross-produced by Sky in the UK and HBO. He is a prince who appears the same size no matter what distance you stand away from him. Viewed from afar, he resembles a giant; up close he is a bit smaller than an ordinary man. At times Paolo Sorrentino's direction makes his titular character Lenny Belardo (Jude Law), clad in gaudy robes and a tiara, seem to violate the laws of perspective.

Law seems to be having too much enjoyment in this role of an orphaned priest who manipulates his way into the papacy. He does not have to play at being a prick, since being Jude Law is synonymous with the concept. Law uses his lips to sneer in forty different directions, constantly on the verge of devouring his own face. He seems unable to pause or consider – every action and sentence was pre-planned, pre-written a long time ago, before the moment we witness. Scenes with the Italian ensemble that surrounds Law are markedly different when he is not present. His Pope is perenially onstage.

Eventually, Belardo chooses to address his cardinals to give them the blueprint for his reign as Pope Pius XIII. He presents them with a tiny door, explaining how he plans to demand fanaticism from Catholics, and his disgust with a Church which hopes to merely win the esteem of the people. It will be difficult to fit through the small opening, and not everyone will make it.

Belardo, like his alter-ego Dr. Mindy Lahiri, is not entirely unsympathetic. On the night of her ex-boyfriend's wedding, Dr. Lahiri begins hearing his voice channeled through a photograph on her refrigerator. In a fugue state she drives all the way to Massachusetts. Her boyfriend Ben has chosen not to spend the weekend with her, preferring to chaperone his daughter to a school event. He does call to check in on her. She does not ask him how it is going, or what he is feeling or thinking. He is merely an accessory to her, and when she thinks about Ben, her only thought is whether or not he is benefitting or detracting from the life she wants to live.

The danger for a priest is to become too drawn in to the lives of his adherents. Like Pope Pius XIII, Mindy has several useful followers. There is Jeremy, a man with low self-esteem who directs her gynecological practice. There is Morgan, an indigent nurse who finds the time to care for fifteen to twenty dogs when he is not constantly on call for his boss, and there is Ben, another nurse who cares for Mindy's son since she barely even holds him. Lahiri has nothing in the way of female friends – in the original incarnation of The Mindy Project she had several, but no one could think of any plotlines for them. They detracted from her odd appeal rather than added to it.

Pope Pius XIII's main follower is Diane Keaton, a nun who served as his secretary, but he soon bullies most others in the Vatican into his cause. He is fond of saying that when he appears in public he will be taken as a Christ-figure if he wishes it. The irony, of course, is that he is nothing like the son of God, and all the ways that he is different could fill several leatherbound volumes. Flashbacks explain how Lenny Belardo, abandoned by his alt-left parents got to be the way that he is.

Dipping back and forth between eras and locations, Sorrentino seems to have found his most rewarding subject. His recent films in Italian and English have considered, at extreme length, the topic of old age. He had a lot to say about how bracing it is to realize you are not as you were. In The Young Pope, he has engaged with the polar opposite experience. Birth is an ongoing metaphor in The Young Pope; as he cascades through a series of ever more elaborate settings and costumes, Jude Law seems to be constantly reborn. Watching him emerge in and out of his robes is so enervating you almost look away. Even his shoes are indecent.

It is supposed to be a kind of nasty fun, watching Law completely turn the papacy on its head. The Young Pope's astonishing title sequence makes the show appear to be a wicked joyride, like sneaking into a movie you were not supposed to get into. But I suspect anyone interested in Catholicism can't help but see it differently. Some of Law's over-the-top rhetoric is even inspiring in a certain context. It is rewarding to see a figure who truly believes in something, even if that something is only himself.

Alex Carnevale is the editor of This Recording.


Wednesday
Aug192009

In Which We Listen To Jason Schwartzman's Mind

The iTunes Playlist: Jason Schwartzman

Ever since he told Rosemary Cross "My top schools where I want to apply to are Oxford and the Sorbonne. My safety's Harvard" Jason Schwartzman has immersed himself deeply into the hearts of all knowing people. Unfortunately Wes and Owen couldn't write all his dialogue; he couldn't stay skinny, ambitious Max Fischer forever. He had to grow up and co-op Seth Rogen's ass. Here now his mixtape on iTunes:

"Nothing Stays the Same" - Elastica (mp3)

I loved the first Elastica album. I saw them play in 1994 and I was so into it. I loved her haircut. Then I waited...and waited...and waited for the second record. I loved it when it finally arrived. This song always sounds good to me. I never get sick of it.

"All In Your Head" - Rooney (mp3)

This is my brother's band. But, even if I weren't his family I would still love this song and it would still be on my list. It makes me want to roll my windows down and sing. So proud of my brother.

"The Goldenheart Mountaintop Queen Directory" - Guided By Voices

I remember when I first heard this song. I sat down in front of my stereo system for hours and hours. Though the song is short, I feel like it goes so many places. By the end I am exhausted and want to hear it again. Robert Pollard's voice is so intimate and I love the way it sounds. Long live TDK tapes! Lyric I love: '...and we passed through a hallway of shatterproof glass.'

"Indian Summer" - Beat Happening

I love this kind of constant drumming. This song makes me miss the old days for some reason.


"All We Are" - Fischerspooner

I love the drumbeat on this song. Man-played but strong and subtle. I like the 'tiss tiss' hi-hat work. This song sounds good in headphones.

"America's Boy" - Broadcast (mp3)

I have been told, it was made mostly in a bedroom, intimately. That makes me instantly interested. I will always gravitate towards a home demo or outtake. I like things in progress.

"Gideon's Bible" - John Cale (mp3)

I love all the John Cale records. I like how the verses of this song are chock full of strange guitar slides and odd rhythms. And I love how after a long verse it builds to straight ahead simple chorus. 'The force of China felt.'

"Lady Rachael" - Kevin Ayers & the Wizards of Twiddly

'Now she's safe from the darkness, she's safe from its clutch.' I love his vocal on this song. I have another version of the song that's 45 seconds longer, but I figured let's keep it short and sweet. Good recorder work, too.


"That Summer Feeling" - Jonathan Richman

I wish that this song was even longer.

"The Right Equipment" - The Movies

The Movies are one of my favorite Los Angeles bands. Others include Anavan and 400 Blows. The Movies just write great songs. And when all is said and done, I personally love a strong melody. And these songs have great melodies.

"Living Without You" - Harry Nilsson (mp3)

This song is from Nilsson sings Newman. I love the idea of an artist doing an entire covers record of a contemporary. This song is so beautiful. As I mentioned before, I love anything home spun or personal feeling. Nilsson somehow manages to sound smooth and technically perfect AND human and intimate.

"So Begins Our Alabee" - Of Montreal (mp3)

Alls I knows is...when I'm down and out this song lifts me outta da dumps. 'You're my only softness it's true.' I am sorry. I would have killed to have written that chorus!

"Elijah's Church" - Steve Earle (mp3)

This version comes from the soundtrack to Heartworn Highways. I love that movie. Might be one of my favorite documentaries. This song is so sad but what I love about this particular version of it, is how everyone at the kitchen table is singing along, not always the right words, and hollering, and playing anything they want on the guitar. This might be the best jam I can think of.

"You Only Live Once (live)" - The Strokes (mp3)

If I had to explain this one it could take hours. It destroys me.

schwartzman_120907.jpg

"Baby Bitch" - Ween (mp3)

I love Ween. I love the sense of freedom they seem to have when creating music. They do what they want, or at least make it look that way. 'baby baby baby bitch for words, I'm at a loss' My sentiments exactly.

"Whole Wide World" - Wreckless Eric (mp3)

I just love Wreckless Eric. I love the way he sings. I love this song. So catchy. So heartfelt.

"You Could Not Decide" - French Kicks

Just listen to the kick drum and get your face melted.


"Tired of Sex" - Weezer

I remember when this record first came out. It crushed me. I went bowling with some friends when this record first came out, and one of these guys had heard the record, and they described to me how it opened with this "DING DING DING DING" I envisioned it and envisioned it for weeks. And then when I heard it, it blew my mind. The dings were way better than I could have imagined. And when Rivers screams 'OOOOOHHHHH.' It fucks me up.

"Long Distance Call" - Phoenix (mp3)

Phoenix has always been an inspiration for me. They always seem to make their records lovingly and with care. Each sound is perfect. Each kick drum. Snare. Vocal. Guitar. It takes time to make things this wonderful.

"I Don't Believe In The Sun" - The Magnetic Fields (mp3)

The perfect song.

"Flourescent Adodolescent" - The Artic Monkeys (mp3)

I love this song so much. I think Alex Turner is super talented.


"Let 'Em In" - Wings (mp3)

I love the chords. I love the drumming. So pretty.

"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Closing Theme)" - Jack Nitzsche

This entire record is one of the most beautiful things I know.

"Beechwood Park" - The Zombies (mp3)

Colin Blunstone is so amazing.

"The Man With Two Brains" - The Rentals (mp3)

Being a Weezer fan the second The Blue Album came out, anything Weezer was sacred. So when I heard that Matt Shapr, the then bassist in Weezer, had a side band called the Rentals, I hunted for it. I loved the first record when it came. Alex, the singer from Phantom Planet, and I went out to (the now gone) L.A. music store Black Market Music and tested out every Moog in the house. We were 14. And probably annoyed the owners very much. This song comes from the second Rentals album and I love how sexy it is. Yeah. It's true.

You can find Ellen Page's iTunes playlist here and Wes Anderson's here.

digg delicious reddit stumble facebook twitter subscribe