Film The Girlfriend Experience

May 14, 2009 - 9:04 pm

The Girlfriend Experience - Chris Gore Review
By Chris Gore

Not every one will be able to abide by the advice provided on the teaser poster for The Girlfriend Experience suggesting one “see it with someone you f—.”  Unless that includes oneself, which may describe most of the audience hoping to see adult film star and sexual pioneer Sasha Grey in action.  But before discussing the merits of this Steven Soderbergh film (best known as the director behind indies like Sex, Lies & Videotape and Hollywood blockbusters like the Ocean’s film series), let me answer the obvious questions:

  • Yes, Sasha gets naked.
  • Yes, she plays a high-priced call girl.
  • Yes, the HD cinematography is exquisite and Sasha looks the best she ever has.  (Okay, that’s one for the movie geeks.)
  • No, the sex is not explicit.  In fact, there’s not much sex to speak of.
  • No, the nudity is not particularly erotic.
  • Yes, there is a gang bang scene with double penetration.  Wait!  Correction.  There is no gang bang scene with double penetration, um, that’s a completely different DVD.  Sorry.
  • Most importantly, YES!  Sasha Grey can act.

Sasha plays Chelsea who charges powerful men money for sex and her time.  But the time is often spent listening to her client’s troubles with work and money rather than having sex.  Chelsea is unique in that she maintains a relationship with her live-in boyfriend Chris.  He is a personal trainer who, in a strange way shares a parallel client-trainer relationship with Chelsea – they both listen to problems about money.  Conflict arises when Chelsea feels a connection with a client who wishes to go on a weekend getaway, something that is outside the boundaries of her relationship with Chris.  The narrative bounces backwards and forwards as Chelsea slowly reveals at least a part of herself to a journalist seeking insight into her unique lifestyle.

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Film Top 5 Zombie Flicks Without “of the Dead” in the Title

May 14, 2009 - 9:04 pm

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Zombies may have existed in film before George Romero’s horror milestone from 1968, Night of the Living Dead.  But the affable Pittsburgh filmmaker must be credited with creating the undead rules we all know so well.

  • One, zombies devour the flesh of the living.
  • Two, a zombie bite will turn a normal into a zombie quickly.
  • And three, the only way to “kill” a zombie is to inflict major head trauma, preferably with a shotgun blast to the head.  Well, a blunt instrument will work, but a shotgun blast is perhaps the coolest way since the result is an exploding head!

These three rules are consistent both in and outside the Romero-verse of zombie movies where the undead walk the earth.  Sure, other filmmakers have taken license with the rules such as 28 Days Later which introduced us to the infected that run really fast.  Some may have seen recently deceased that could compete in the 50 yard dash as sacrilege, but it served to only advance both the genre and our love of those stupid flesh-eating corpses.  No matter how many new rules have been added to zombie lore via films, books, graphic novels like the amazing Walking Dead or videogames like Left 4 Dead, those three rules have always remained the same.

There seems to be no shortage of love for these poor undead creatures.  So to expand your horizons, here are some lesser-known zombie movies each worth boarding up the windows and locking yourself indoors to watch.


Dead Set Trailer – 4DVDThe most amazing videos are a click away

1. Dead Set
This zombie outbreak takes place in the U.K. on the set of the popular reality show Big Brother.  The undead can be seen on the rise during disturbing news reports about “unrest and riots” spreading across the country.  After the production crew is nearly wiped out, all that remains are the ignorant and drama prone contestants from the Big Brother show. This five-episode mini-series from the BBC has yet to make it to the U.S., but it is perhaps the best use of a zombie apocalypse to make social commentary in decades.  So, if there were an Oscar for the Best use of zombie apocalypse to make social commentary, then Dead Set would be the clear winner.

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Art/Design Event Gallery Baby Tattoo Presents: Dr. Sketchy’s LA Re-Launch

May 14, 2009 - 9:03 pm

Art, boobs, booze! Do we have your attention? That’s the idea behind Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School. Founded in 2005 by fierce  New York artist Molly Crabapple, the cabaret life drawing phenomenon has spread across the globe, now boasting over eighty chapters in several continents, everywhere from China to France. For four years artists, burlesque performers, and drunks have joined forces under the Dr. Sketchy’s flag to dispel art scene pretense in the name of creativity and fun.

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Music Everything Good: Butterface

May 14, 2009 - 7:44 am

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New York City’s DJ BUTTERFACE (aka Michael Bazini) got his start in 1994 with his “fundustrial” band Dystopia One. They released three full-length albums between None Of The Above Records and Rawkus Entertainment, and performed aggressively throughout the 90′s.

Butterpickle featuring Prez Ike Traylor Mix

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By 2000, he reintroduced himself as DJ Butterface, working as an electronic composer and producer. His music can be heard in video games (Extreme G3, Acclaim Entertainment), local independent films and television shows (CBS NFL / Basketball, MTV Cribs, Room Raiders), and his original compositions have been used for several New York City theatre productions.

DJ Butterface worked extensively with NYC DJ collective/label Vinylholic, and was a resident DJ at B3, their flagship club in the East Village. His current performances include events throughout the New York City area, and regular bookings nationwide in Tucson, AZ; Los Angeles, CA; San Francisco, CA; Miami, FL, and Boston, MA.

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DJ Butterface’s latest releases include remixes for Paranoid Social Club’s Two Girls (Vinylholic), and Nadir’s Slave (Bikiniwax). He appears on Martin Bisi’s (Sonic Youth, Helmet, Foetus) new solo album Sirens of the Apocalypse (Black Freighter) and performs backing vocals and keyboards on Bisi’s current tour.

Punks of Funk – Butterface vs Orion Mix

Urban Exploration Getting Down in Camden Town

May 14, 2009 - 7:43 am

The Horse Tunnel in Camden

Camden Town has been London’s subculture mecca since the 60′s. The Roundhouse Theater made its name as the home to countless goth and punk shows back in the day. Open air markets, including famous Camden Lock, draw alternative fashion hunters and tourists alike. The World’s End Pub is now my favorite place to lose a few hours to cognac, and my new favorite place for people-watching, fresh mint tea-drinking and baklava-chewing is a tiny Moroccan tea house situated in front of Horse Tunnel Market. I can’t think of a better way to spend a cloudy Camden afternoon. Other than at Proud, that is.

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Music Polly Scattergood

May 13, 2009 - 12:12 pm

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Polly Scattergood is a rare talent, a musician who can make the disturbing sound delightful. She might sing on her critically acclaimed debut album about suicidal tendencies, sadness in the air, spitting on her French knickers and being called a whore, but she does so in such an idiosyncratically alluring, soft little-girl voice, one of ravaged innocence, and she places her startling images in such pretty pop contexts, that you can’t help being seduced.
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Fashion Fashion Statement: Actual Pain

May 13, 2009 - 12:11 pm

TJ Creator of Actual Pain

The best fashion lines are able to make you feel something deep in your bones. If you can go from feeling like a worthless bum to channeling Jimi Hendrix’s sex appeal by simply donning a garment, you’ve discovered something special. Seattle-based, niche t-shirt line, Actual Pain is one those special aura-transforming brands. Its creator TJ Cowgill also happens to be the lead singer and vocalist of the black metal band, Book of Black Earth.

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Music Liars

May 12, 2009 - 9:21 am

Liars photo by Paul Drake

Photo by Paul Drake

Liars is a three-piece American band consisting of Australian-born Angus Andrew (vocals/guitar), Aaron Hemphill (percussion, guitar, synth) and Julian Gross (drums). Although initially lumped into the New York post-punk revival scene of the early 21st century, they have come to be categorized by their dramatic stylistic shifts between albums, while retaining a consistent interest in rhythm and sound texture.  Have a listen.

Liars – Plaster Casts of Everything

Liars – Houseclouds

Music Easy Dub It!

May 12, 2009 - 9:20 am

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I don’t particularly like Reggae. I mean, I get it, I just don’t particularly think it strikes harmony with my cold cold heart. But never-the-less the Easy Star All Stars make me re-frame my mind for it. This band brought you the musical re-incarnations of 2 of the most beloved albums of all times with their release in 2003 of Dub Side of the Moon, and in 2006 Radiodread. This month they did it again with the Easy Star’s Lonely Hearts Dub Band, out on April 14th on Easy Star Records.

They have somehow managed to ride the fine line between integrity and originality, flattering the masters they pay tribute to. Its nice, and mellow, and if you decide to partake in a little recreational smoking, well I say, puff puff give. They hit the road this week, check out their schedule here!

Words by Barbie Brady

Easy Star All Stars – Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds featuring Frankie Paul

Easy Star All Stars – She’s Leaving Home featuring Kirsty Rock

Music Chester French and the End of the Soft Sell

May 11, 2009 - 9:41 am

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At a time when the collapse of the music business has become a cliche and the major labels objects of derision, Chester French, a duo of Harvard grads whose names are neither Chester nor French, may well be the exception that proves the rule.

The two guys, Max and D.A., are one of those six-years-in-the-making overnight successes who turned their dorm-room obsession with mixtapes and pop music into a career the old-fashioned way: one fan at a time. In true Cinderella fashion, a few of those fans were famous, as in Kanye West, Jimmy Iovine and Pharrell, whose label, Star Trak, released their first album, Love the Future, on April 21.

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