Archive for February, 2013

Quote of the day: SODERBERGH

February 7, 2013

SODERBERGH

I’m always curious to hear how something was made—though I have no interest in why an artist did something, or what his work means. Like with Jackson Pollock: I’m always interested in what kind of paint and canvas he used, I just don’t want to know what he meant. You’re supposed to expand your mind to fit the art, you’re not supposed to chop the art down to fit your mind…

One thing I do know from making art is that ideology is the enemy of problem-solving. Nobody sits on a film set and says, “No, you can’t use green-screen VFX to solve that because I’m Catholic.” There’s no place for that, and that’s why I’ve stopped being embarrassed about being in the entertainment industry, because I’m surrounded by intelligent people who solve problems quickly and efficiently, primarily because issues of ideology don’t enter into the conversation.

After making a lot more films, I realized that the movie and TV business is, for all its inefficiencies, one of the best-run big businesses we have. It’s very transparent, financially, and the only business I know of that successfully employs trickle-down economics: When movies and shows make money, the profits go right back into making more movies and shows, because the stock price is all about market share. And these people excel at problem-solving—that’s 99 percent of the job. I look at Hurricane Katrina, and I think if four days before landfall you gave a movie studio autonomy and a 100th of the billions the government spent on that disaster, and told them, “Lock this place down and get everyone taken care of,” we wouldn’t be using that disaster as an example of what not to do. A big movie involves clothing, feeding, and moving thousands of people around the world on a tight schedule. Problems are solved creatively and efficiently within a budget, or your ass is out of work. So when I look at what’s going on in the government, the gridlock, I think, Wow, that’s a really inefficient way to run a railroad. The government can’t solve problems because the two parties are so wedded to their opposing ideas that they can’t move. The very idea that someone from Congress can’t take something from the other side because they’ll be punished by their own party? That’s stupid. If I were running for office, I would be poaching ideas from everywhere. That’s how art works. You steal from everything….

There are lots of things that America does really well.

Like what?
Comedy. We have the best comedy in the world, hands down. I’m very proud, for example, that we have Chris Rock.

Are you a Louis C.K. fan?
I love his show. He seems like someone who would be fun to know. Seems like. And we do sports entertainment better than anyone. It’s phenomenal—the production values, the computer graphics, the commentators …

What teams do you follow?
I followed the Jets, simply because they were such a train wreck this season. But I follow stories more than teams—stories like Robert Griffin III or Colin Kaepernick.

Do you watch basketball?
I was going to say that the only thing I don’t really watch is basketball. It has to do with my personality, how I’m wired. You can’t make a play in the first quarter of a basketball game that will determine the ultimate outcome the way you can in baseball or football—like if a touchdown is scored in the first quarter, that could conceivably be the only big play of the game. So I can never figure out why I’m supposed to watch the first half of a basketball game.

— Steven Soderbergh, interviewed in New York magazine

steven-soderbergh

Photo diary: Vieques 1

February 7, 2013
first day on the island, the ritual includes cocktail hour at Al's Mar Azul

first day on the island, the ritual includes cocktail hour at Al’s Mar Azul

here's why

here’s why

Philip on his first visit from London

Philip on his first visit from London

Michael and Andy with their property manager, Wendy

Michael and Andy with their property manager, Wendy

Not standard procedure -- wildfire in the fields down the hill, close enough to make us worry

Not standard procedure — wildfire in the fields down the hill, close enough to make us worry

fires are fascinating but scary -- certainly frightened the horses

fires are fascinating but scary — certainly frightened the horses

Tuesday is farmer's market day

Tuesday is farmer’s market day

I love seeing local produce -- we got ambitious and bought some chayote (aka chow chow)

I love seeing local produce — we got ambitious and bought some chayote (aka chow chow)

peeled it, sliced it, slathered it with olive oil and salt, and cooked it on the grill -- yum!

peeled it, sliced it, slathered it with olive oil and salt, and cooked it on the grill — yum!

the salad crew, or Still Life with Cocktails

the salad crew, or Still Life with Cocktails

Dennis on his third or fourth visit from Michigan

Dennis is on his third or fourth visit from Michigan

IMG_3637

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quote of the day: VAMPIRES

February 5, 2013

Disappointing, overrated, just not good: what was the last book you hated? Do you remember the last book you put down without finishing?

I’m not a big fan of the “Twilight” series. I can’t get past the premise, which is that a group of wealthy, sophisticated, educated, highly intelligent, centuries-old vampires, who can do pretty much whatever they want, have chosen to be . . . high school students. I simply cannot picture such beings sitting in a classroom listening to a geometry teacher drone on about the cosine. I have more respect for vampires than that.

— Dave Barry in the NY Times Book Review

barry_headshot-s6-c10