Tuesday, January 29, 2008
The Dark Knight Working: Alchemy is a Joker
The always-revelatory Inside the Cosmic Cube is looking into the alchemical origins of the Joker. I'd just like to add that the Joker's original incarnation as the Red Hood reminds me of the Rubeo from Alchemical iconography...
Monday, January 28, 2008
The Dark Knight Working: Killing Joker
Jack Nicholson warned Heath Ledger on 'Joker' role
BY JOE NEUMAIER
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Thursday, January 24th 2008, 3:18 AM
Heath Ledger thought landing the demanding role of the Joker was a dream come true - but now some think it was a nightmare that led to his tragic death.
Jack Nicholson, who played the Joker in 1989 - and who was furious he wasn't consulted about the creepy role - offered a cryptic comment when told Ledger was dead.
Sunday, January 27, 2008
Dream of Californication
My favorite new show, Californication, features none other than Fox Mulder himself playing a sex-addicted writer trying to resurrect his career.
Friday, January 25, 2008
Killing Joker
The Mystery deepens to untold levels. Looking at the Dark Knight trailer, it's so painfully obvious that someone was looking very carefully at Killing Joke's video "Hosannas From the Basements of Hell."
Thursday, January 24, 2008
The Eternals: Pyramid Power
Radiohead's 2001 classic "The Pyramid Song"-
the future Atlantis in a year of Revelation.
Not so much stylistic influences that I want to emulate, but artists who completely changed the filters on my life-lens. And both of whom deeply explored Astronaut Theology (aka "Ancient Astronaut Theory") to the point that it's a fair bet that they believed in it. So what does that say about me?
The Dark Knight Working: Up From the Underworld
Heath Ledger's untimely death has people talking about the various symbols that are always put into play from events like this. Adam is digging into the the portents that no one paid attention to in his new piece, "This Joke is Not Funny."
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Sync Log: Bees
Last night (meaning Monday night) I dreamed my wife and I were searching for something in the forest. We were ascending a hill, being careful to keep on the flagstones because our feet were bare. But we dislodged one of the stones and underneath was a bee hive.
The bees started swarming but were very tiny and their stings didn't hurt much. Still, it was a swarm of frigging bees. In the dream I quoted a classic line from Bully, exclaiming "Nature sucks!"
I wake up, fix my coffee, open up my email and this is waiting for me, spam for Diego's Buzzing Bee Adventure...
I wonder if my exclamation was inspired by the recent, untimely death of Brad Renfro...
I wake up, fix my coffee, open up my email and this is waiting for me, spam for Diego's Buzzing Bee Adventure...
I wonder if my exclamation was inspired by the recent, untimely death of Brad Renfro...
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
The Leprechaun
Monday, January 21, 2008
Don't Take My Word for It...
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Jack Kirby: Mindbomb, Part 3: Only Come Out at Night
A pack of gluttonous, raccoon-eyed paranoids drunk on consumerism, Calvinism and overstimulation.
An expert diagnosis of Bush-era America? Well, that's a bit outside of the Secret Sun's province.
Here, it's a description of Jack Kirby's "Night People," whom Captain America tangled with following the Madbomb Saga.
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Jack Kirby, Mindbomb: Stargate in the Sky
As I mentioned before, Jake picked up the Kirby ball and took it to the semiotic endzone. Not having read the comics as of yet, he may not have been aware that the Madbomb, that infernal mind control weapon of the Anglophile Elite, was devised by the aptly-named Mason Harding.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
Jack Kirby, Mindbomb: Iran, the CIA and the Lord of Light
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Hollywood is Out of Ideas, Part 3,193
Diane Lane continues her slide back towards the B list with a new 'thriller' whose plot is stolen outright from an old Millennium episode called 'The Mikado'.
The Siren, Part 3: Sea, Swallow Me
Monday, January 14, 2008
The Siren, Part 1: Swim to Me
And so it began. With a band name taken from Hamlet- the Shakespeare Company's most portentious drama- and a song written by a doomed, modern day Celtic bard in honor of the great destroyer of men, the Eternal Drama found a new, real-world expression in the voice of Elizabeth Fraser, the not-quite-human Scottish thrush who would enchant not only David Lynch, but also the son of the song's composer.
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Sync Log: Ladytron
Joe turned me on to this band, whose lyrics are filled with fascinating snippets of deeper meaning.
Phasing In and Out of Our Reality
Tuesday, January 08, 2008
The Eternals: Astronaut Theology
Note that Claire is wearing a OMAC resonator on her jersey...
Monday, January 07, 2008
Secret Cinema: Dog Day Afternoon
While Jake was probably putting the finishing touches on his latest video last Saturday night, the missus and I watched the classic 1975 film, Dog Day Afternoon.
I haven't seen the film in, uh, a dog's age, and hadn't remembered it was the first major role of none other than Mr. Millennium himself, Lance Henriksen.
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Jack Kirby - Gods, Demons, and Fallen Angels
In this interview, Kirby speaks of his adventures exploring the Collective Unconscious and his role in creating the new mythology.
Saturday, January 05, 2008
Jack Kirby, Mindbomb: Move Over, Nostradamus
Friday, January 04, 2008
Jack Kirby, Mindbomb: Down the Rabbit Hole
It seems that nearly every major theme discussed in the more speculative branches of conspiracy research finds a synchronistic antecedent in three obscure Jack Kirby comic books. So many of the thematic strands that we now see bubbling up from the conspiracy underground seem to hover around these books like a Lovecraftian spectre.
Thursday, January 03, 2008
Astronaut Theology: Kirby Does Kubrick
The Telegraph of London Reviews Spandex!
Robert Hudson of the Telegraph gives Spandex a very nice review. Read it here.
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
Song & Album of the Year: 2007
My favorite song of the year is probably pretty obscure to some people, which just shows how pathetic the music industry has become.
"The Night Starts Here" by Stars is an instant classic, something I heard on 3WK and went and bought on ITunes before it even ended.
Jack Kirby, Mindbomb: Silver Star, Heroes and 9/11
This past July, Image Comics released a gorgeous hardcover volume of Jack Kirby's 1983 mini-series Silver Star. Though not one of Kirby's more celebrated works (his drafting skills were beginning to wane by this point), to me it's one of his more fascinating creations. It's also rife with unsettlingly specific 9/11 signifiers that strain the definition of "coincidence."
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