Seventh Heaven
Don't get your car wheel-clamped from today, because it's gonna cost you S$2.00 more.


Labels: 7% GST, Wheel-clamp Area

Labels: 7% GST, Wheel-clamp Area
Leave your inhibitions and logic at the door, and enter the sensuous, striking and disturbing world of Matthew Barney...Of course, normally, alarm bells would have sounded for most people when the description tell you to "leave your logic at the door", but I ignored all the blatant warnings and roped an innocent fan with me in to watch.
His latest filmic work, Drawing Restraint 9 (2005), unfolds in a dream-like Asian setting. It features the creative input of his partner Björk, both in the mesmerizing score as well as playing a bride who travels to a Japanese whaling ship, the Nisshin Maru, for a bizarre wedding ceremony with an unnamed man played by Barney. The ending scenes alone will leave your eyes glued to the screen. Difficult to describe, his films never fail to provoke a reaction from the audience.
The National Museum Cinémathèque’s Alternative Visions series presents cutting edge work that pushes the boundaries of film and the moving image.
Half hour into the show, I comprehended why critics described the show as unbearably slow and tedious. It literally took forever for Björk and Barney to board the Japanese whaling ship and put on their elaborate costumes.
In a passionate and intimate scene, Björk and Barney slashed each other's legs off and proceed to have a slice of their own leg meat sushi.
Towards the end of the film, Björk and Barney morphed into whales and lived happily ever after. (No, I'm not kidding about the ending too.)Labels: Björk, Drawing Restraint 9, Matthew Barney
Labels: IPPT


Labels: Auckland Bing