Thursday, November 20, 2025
Unintentionally unsettling eBay listing
Sunday, November 16, 2025
RIP, Tatsuya Nakadai
"It is striking how often Nakadai was cast in critical roles by the very best Japanese directors of his time – not even [Toshiro] Mifune made so many great movies. ... Directors felt Nakadai was a star, even if the Japanese audiences didn’t. Nakadai was the lodestone of all Kobayashi’s great films, but he also was consistently cast by Kurosawa, Okamoto, Gosha, and Ichikawa, and the results were usually among the directors’ finest work. ... Though Mifune is the giant who made Japanese movies popular in the rest of the world and the unchallengable king of film charisma, Nakadai is the genuinely great actor of his era, arguably the greatest in the history of Japanese film."
- Seven Samurai (1954) small, uncredited role; but he was there
- The Human Condition trilogy (1959, 1959, 1961)
- When a Woman Ascends the Stairs (1960)
- Daughters, Wives and a Mother (1960)
- Immortal Love (aka Bitter Spirit) (1961)
- Yojimbo (1961)
- Sanjuro (1962)
- Love Under the Crucifix (1962)
- The Inheritance (1962)
- Harakiri (1962)
- High and Low (1963)
- Kwaidan (1964)
- The Sword of Doom (1966)
- The Face of Another (1966)
- Samurai Rebellion (1967)
- Goyokin (1969)
- Portrait of Hell (1969)
- Zatoichi Goes to the Fire Festival (1970)
- Inn of Evil (1971)
- The Wolves (1971)
- The Human Revolution (1973)
- I Am a Cat (1975)
- Kagemusha (1980)
- The Battle of Port Arthur (1980)
- Ran (1985)
- After the Rain (1999)
- Lear on the Shore (2017)
Monday, November 10, 2025
Postcard: "To find the pot of gold"
Hello Girlie:-how are you? What are you doing these nice days? Why don't you come up and play with me? I am busy all the time. Can't get time to take a visit, nor even ride the ponys if I had a chance. I am homesick to see you, and hope I shall soon.
Saturday, November 8, 2025
From the readers: Halloween postmortem & other tidbits
Friday, October 31, 2025
Obscure book: "Gabby's Magic Brooms" take on U.S. car culture
Tuesday, October 28, 2025
The ghost photo that haunted Gen X
Sunday, October 26, 2025
Well-loved library copy of "Gallery of Ghosts"
"A reviewer of books learns the technique of skimming through a volume, getting the gist of the subject, but only enough of it to do honest justice to the author. In 'A Gallery of Ghosts,' by James Reynolds, this is wholly impossible, for one becomes more deeply absorbed at the turn of every page. Although it is often difficult to read continuously through a volume of short stories because the attention is apt to wander concentration to fail, this is impossible in this amazing and beautiful book because of its glowing, masterly writing, its hair-raising subjects, the fine sketches by the author, and even the admirable format of the book itself."
"The stories delve deeply into the lore of the many countries from which they are taken, but fail to produce the promised spine-tingling and goose-pimples promised on the dust jacket. In fact, I believe they may be safely read alone at night without fear of disturbing one's sleep. ... James Reynolds was an art-illustrator before turning writer ... and has done a very commendable job of illustrating 'Gallery of Ghosts.' It is one of the most attractive books I've seen in quite a long time and makes me wonder if he should not have stayed with his first love after all."
Saturday, October 25, 2025
Danny's sweater in "The Shining" was a real thing
As just one example, did you know there's an 800,000-word online guide by Eye Scream (Joseph "Joe" Daniel Girard) to all of the artwork that appears on screen during The Shining? The website is so labyrinthian that I suppose you could start either here ... or here. Or anywhere, and then circle round and round for more Kubrick analysis and connections. Don't go there expecting to spend only five minutes. You won't escape the hedge maze that easily. I especially like pondering the Alex Colville connections. (See also Idyllopus Press/Juli Kearns on that topic.)
Then there are the mind-bending analyses of mstrmnd's Physical Cosmologies of The Shining, which I mentioned way the heck back in June 2011. The links I posted then are now deader than Scatman Crothers' character at the end of the movie. But there's an Internet Archive link (bless those folks) that seems to have saved mstrmnd's musings for posterity. I may also still have the voluminous original printouts in an envelope somewhere. Can neither confirm nor deny.
All of which is a longwinded introduction to Danny Torrance's sweater.
At a key point in the film, Danny is shown wearing a blue sweater featuring an Apollo 11 rocket. That rocket carried the astronauts who first landed on the moon in 1969. Many suspect the sweater is Kubrick's sly nod to the ridiculous conspiracy theory, which emerged in the mid-1970s, that he assisted with (or even "directed") pre-recorded moon-landing footage shot in a movie studio. They believe we have never landed on the moon. It's not the only playful jab in The Shining from Kubrick toward the conspiracy loons, Screen Rant notes.
Mostly, though, I just think the sweater is awesome. And it reminds me of how much I love the movie.
And it was a real thing, not something concocted solely for the film.
It's Lister N2163 Space Age and was published as a knitting pamphlet in 1970 by Lister & Co. in the United Kingdom. While there are a lot of knockoffs due to The Shining's popularity, Katherine Hajer wrote in 2021 about knitting an Apollo 11 sweater from the original specifications.
It's too hot for sweaters in Arizona, even in the winter. So when there was a Spook-O-Rama showing of The Shining last December in Tempe, I opted for a T-shirt version of Danny's outfit and tried to get the wide-collared underneath shirt correct, too. The hair was another matter, and I didn't even try.











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