Posts Tagged punk
Zack Carlson & Bryan Connolly on Destroy All Movies!!!
Posted by admin in Film, Literature on January 12, 2011
Anytime Fantagraphics publishes something outside of its core alternative comics foundation, I take note because it’s often quirky and entertaining as hell reading. That’s definitely the case with Destroy All Movies!!!: The Complete Guide to Punks on Film, co-edited by Zack Carlson & Bryan Connolly. The book strives to be the “most dazzlingly insane film reference book of all time … an informative, hilarious, and impossibly complete guide to every goddamn appearance of a punk (or new waver!) to hit the screen in the 20th Century”. To get a taste of the book, watch a video flipping through it; or take a gander at the introduction as well as a 24-page excerpt of the book. Once you’ve had a chance to read my email interview with Zack & Bryan, consider the current deal that Fantagraphics is offering, where you can save 20% if you buy Destroy All Movies!!!, along with Portable Grindhouse: The Lost Art of the VHS Box.
Tim O’Shea: I love book dedications for the stories potentially behind them. What’s the story behind this “Dedicated to PENELOPE SPHEERIS and JON GRIES for inspiring this project and countless others.”
Zack Carlson: Spheeris’ 1984 film SUBURBIA is by far the best movie I’ve ever seen, and Jon Gries’ performance in JOYSTICKS is a true display of subhuman wildness. Bryan and I watched both of these movies in a short span, and the realization of their sheer power planted the seed for this book that would devour our lives for seven years. We should sue!
Cecil Castellucci on Beige, Her Creative Process
Posted by admin in Literature, Music, sequential art on April 8, 2009
Cecil Castellucci is a storyteller of many platforms. In a creative sense, she wears a seemingly infinite number of hats–the most apt description of her work can be found at her You Tube channel: “young adult author, Graphic Novel writer, filmmaker, performance artiste and general troublemaker”. Her 2007 Young Adult novel, Beige was released in paperback last month (March) . I caught up with her recently to discuss that novel, as well as the path that has led her to find a new voice as a writer. An interviewer always hopes to get a subject who can be as open and direct as Castellucci, but it happens so rarely, I’m always appreciative.
Tim O’Shea: Beige is partially inspired by your initial move to Los Angeles. While the novel is not your story, of course, I’m wondering if when writing a novel like this do you find you learn a little about yourself in the process?
Cecil Castellucci: While no novel is biography, there are always elements of myself and where I’m at or where I’ve been. Sometimes it’s a look back, sometimes it’s a reflection of now, sometimes an imagined path not taken. So, I think that I learn a little bit about myself from every novel I write. For Beige, I was inspired by moving to my particular neighborhood in Los Angeles, Silverlake, and dealing with all the punk in Los Angeles. Everything was so punk rock here and I felt like an outsider looking in, even though I had moved here to put out my first CD on No Life Records. I was working at Epitaph Records and I was this little indie rock girl who sang Twee music. I suppose in this case I learned about the essential roots of punk, which are pretty much the essential roots of being an artist in the world. Ask questions. Pay attention. Think for yourself. When you do that, it’s all good.

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