Three time academy award nominated director Christopher Nolan’s fans have received another trailer from his latest film Dunkirk.
This will be the 10th film directed by the well-respected director Christopher Nolan. Previous films include Inception (2010), The Prestige (2006) and The Dark Knight (2008). The film will be released on the 21st of July, 2017 in USA and UK. Mark Rylance and Tom Hardy are among the well diverse and strong cast. The film has been predicted to be another great success for Nolan, after many nominations and wins previous films he has directed had.
Tran Nguyen is an award-winning artist and illustrator. She is known for her beautiful paintings created with pencil and acrylic on paper. Nguyen has a good sense of aesthetics which she successfully incorporates into her work making the viewer captivated and entranced in the dreamlike world which is both beautiful and therapeutic. This is built up on in some of her pieces by the use of soft colours and thoughtful compositions of subject matter to create a feeling of nostalgia and longing which is quite befitting since she is said to be ‘‘fascinated with creating visuals that can be used as a psycho-therapeutic support vehicle, exploring the mind’s landscape.’’
Levente Márton better known as Sunny Lax is one of the most exciting and raw dance music producers around today. The Hungarian DJ and producer has produced some of phenomenal trance hits like Enceladus, Everything’s A Lie, Aeons. He is signed to one of best record labels Anjunabeats and has consistently released quality music for over the last decade, that we simply cannot get bored of. This is our interview with the very talented Sunny Lax.
Hi, how are you?
Very well thanks, busy with touring lately. Thanks for having me!
So, when did you decide to make music your career?
I started to mess around with music softwares when I was 13, cause I was a geek and I found some trackers softwares on some PC magazine’s CD attachment. My musical taste was changing those times from rap to dance music, so I started to make stupid dance “songs”. It became a hobby that took more time day by day beside learning programming in the school, literally spent almost all my freetime with it, I became and addict of music softwares, gears, music theory and MUSIC itself, and still I am. I sent my first demos out when I was 17, and Anjunabeats signed P.U.M.A. instantly and that was the moment when I realized this is what I want to do forever.
When I finished school I decided to take a job as an IT assistant to keep music as a hobby, instead of forcing it as a profession, cause I was worrying it would ruin everything.
I worked as IT guy until last year when I just couldn’t manage these thing in my life anymore, and had to decide what I want to do.. and it was pretty obvious I decided to choose my music career, cause I couldn’t live without making music anymore. That was the point when my hobby and my passion became my profession too and couldn’t be happier since then!
What is your source of inspiration when making music?
Anything can inspire, good mood, bad mood, a smile, a teardrop, a smell of a flower, a kiss of my wife. So many small wonderful things happen to us everyday, sometimes we don’t even recognize em. When I’m sitting at the piano i’m trying to set myself into a mood when I feel like it’s not me who creates the melodies, I just give my hands to someone who’s controlling me. I was always afraid it will be gone one day, and I’ll run out of ideas, but now I feel it’s gonna be with me forever.
Outside music do you have a hobby that you like to escape to?
I don’t have too much free time but I don’t complain cause music gives me almost everything. But if I have a couple of hours i love to watch some good movies or series or I like to play with some – mostly causal – video games. And my wife is an active voluntary member of the city pet rescue team and I help them too when I can, so sometimes I find myself on a car backseat going to the vet with a freshly rescued, big dirty dog on my lap, licking my face. 😀
Describe yourself in one word.
Human
If you could collaborate with any artist ever dead or alive who would it be and why?
I would say Sergei Rachmaninoff, cause his chord progressions are out of this world.
Do you have a favourite song/track you have made?
Most of the times after the release I find some parts what i would change somehow if I could. In every single track of mine. Except one: Enceladus. I still feel I wouldn’t change anything on that, it’s like my 5th symphony.
What do you hope to accomplish with your music?
I’d like to take my listeners through emotions into my own little world, where everything is better than in our real world at this moment, where everything is just beautiful or even if there is some darkness we need to deal with there is hope and enough power to defeat it. It sounds weird and cheesy I know, but it can be done through emotions, and music is one of the best resources to release emotions or feelings.
How long does it take for you to make a song?
I used to spend months to polish a track, but I realized it’s not a good strategy cause I have different emotions every day, i’m in different mood all the time when i’m sitting at the piano and the more different time I work on the musical idea, the bigger mess it becomes. 🙂 And my strategy is to make the final musical skeleton, the chords, melodies and harmonies a nice breakdown or a chorus as soon as possible, on one day if possible. And then I can start to make the sound design, the arrangement in the next phase, where I don’t really change the musical idea of the song, but starting to work out the track sonically. It can take another days or weeks, depends on many things. My record is finishing a track in one single day, and my negative record is to messing a track for 3 months. 🙂
If you could give any advice for any aspiring musicians out there what would it be?
It doesn’t matter what advice you get from anyone, you need to feel it if this is what you really love to do. And if it is, just do it, always and forever. You’re going to deal with a lot of difficult times which will make you appreciate all your small success later! But you need to have a deep, true and strong motivation in the bottom of your soul, which gives you enough fuel to stay inspired in all of your life!
How would you define culture?
To respect each other, to learn from each other and from our past, to make a positive impact on each other. To feel and to think – in the right ratio and in the right order. And to always evolve and try to become a better human being and so make the world a better place.
To find out more about Sunny Lax click here for his website
Two time Academy Award nominated actor Ralph Fiennes has announced that he will be acting in his film “The White Crow”
The film is due to release most likely some time next year, however as it is still in pre-production it is not clear when it will be released. The film focuses its story on the late Russian ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev. It will be a biographical film depicting his life and his influence. It will be based on the book by Julie Kavanagh and screenplay by David Hare. Oleg Ivenko will be playing the main protagonist Rudolf Nureyev. Several sources have announced that the film will be sold to international buyers at the Berlin International Film Festival. This will be the third film Ralph Fiennes has directed, his previous two films are Coriolanus (2011) and The Invisible Woman (2013)
With their debut EP out now via Alcopop Records, London-based trio Husky Loops have released a music video for their song ‘Tempo’.The stylistic trio have confirmed to the world their identity as bold, powerful but most importantly refreshing. This is our interview with the very cool Danio from Husky Loops.
Hi, how are you guys?
WE ARE REALLY WELL LOVE/PAL/MATE, the question is, How are YOU?
We are very well thank you! So, when did you decide to form Husky Loops?
It was about 2 years ago now.
How did you come up with the name Husky Loops?
We discussed about it for MONTHS and then randomly we decided we liked the sound of both words put together. It’s prettttty cool.
What is your source of inspiration when making music?
Our ideas and songs are the one that inspire our music and arrangements in the first place. The songs come from a place unknown to us, the ideas from everyday life and listening to a very wide range of music.
Describe your music in one word.
Yes.
If you could collaborate with any artist ever dead or alive who would it be and why?
David Bowie, because he would teach us so much. Or maybe Rachmaninoff, because it would be a MENTAL collaboration.
Do you have a favourite song/track you have made?
I feel like you’d get so many different answers that it might be better for us to say no.
If you had do anything other than music what would you do?
We’d try and understand why we’re not making music.
How long does it take for you to make a song?
We don’t really write songs together, songs come quickly from Danio but then it takes time to decide if a particular song is right for the project or not.
If you could give any advice for any aspiring musicians out there what would it be?
Be yourself, believe in yourself, make music for yourself, make the music you like, make the music you want to listen to and everything might be fine.
What is your definition of culture?
Let me ask you a question, what is the definition of definition?
OCM: Well, According to Google “a statement of the exact meaning of a word, especially in a dictionary.” But we don’t trust them with that.
To find out more about Husky Loops click here for their Facebook page.
The month of May scraps the miserable weather and gives us the lush and loving warmth of the nature that we wait so eagerly throughout the year. The trees are blooming, the people are outside. We leave the melancholy and misery the weather brings upon us and we restart the year in the way we wished it started. This months Listen Different will be just that. Full of hopeful, happy and just a tad of melancholic music, just to spice things up.
This list of music for Listen Different: May 2017 starts of with classical from Franz Liszt to Tchaikovsky and ending with Leo Delibes’ The Flower Duet. The second part of the list fades into ambient mostly consisting of Tycho and Aphex Twin but beautifuly supported by Nuages and Essay. In the third and final part we have some Fleetwood Mac, Leon Bridges and Gregory Porter to finish off the feeling of May. I feel this list is all about the start of summer and relaxation with a puddle of melancholic emotion, just for that little rain.
Going under the alias Huntar, the young and passionate musician has had quite a lot of success from headlining his own gigs to having his music listed on the most played sports video game FIFA 17. Here is our interview with the ever so talented Huntar.
Hi, how are you?
Hey, I’m great thank you
So, when did you decide to make music your career?
I’ve always been into music and singing but I guess aruond 16 I picked up a guitar and started writing.
How did you come up with the name Huntar?
It was after watching Deerhunter, I googled to see if there was a hunter and a Swedish heavy metal band came up so in my head changing it to A made it look a bit cooler and be a little different
What is your source of inspiration when making music?
My life, always trying to channel what’s going on in my life. Makes it easy to be honest and relate too.
Outside music do you have a hobby that you like to escape to?
I’m a big football fan, playing and watching
Describe yourself in one word.
Passionate
Describe your music in one word.
Progressing
If you could collaborate with any artist ever dead or alive who would it be and why?
Prince, my all time favourite artist.
Do you have a favourite song/track you have made?
They’re always changing as I have written about 450 now but I’d probably say Blindspot or a new song called Be My Girl
Do you have an accomplishment you are most proud of?
I think having my song Anyway on FIFA 17 was a big moment for me.
How long does it take you to make a song?
Every song is completely different, some 20 minutes and 1/2 versions some take months and 20/30 versions.
If you could give any advice to any aspiring musicians out there what would it be?
Be patient, be humble, be passionate, be patient again.
To follow and find out more about Huntar click here for his Facebook page.
‘A Rhedosaurus is brought to life by an atomic bomb test in the Arctic. Bewildered and disorientated, the creature makes its way to its original prehistoric home, which over the millennia had become New York City.’ – from Ray Harryhausen: An Animated Life
The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms is arguably one of the best American science-fiction films of the 1950s. With dazzling special effects courtesy of Ray Harryhausen, a fabulous score by David Buttolph, and some excellent camera work, The Beast is an iconic part of the monster sub-genre. Despite some questionable narrative elements, The Beast is one of the most stylish of its kind, earning respect and a dignified place in cinema history.
The narrative of The Beast is perhaps simple and predictable; a giant monster is awoken by a nuclear test to wreak havoc on the modern world. However, such an assessment is one made with a modern understanding of genre tropes and formulas. Few films, bar perhaps King Kong in 1933, had depicted such a spectacular story. The regular narrative beats of the monster sub-genre found in films that were to follow owe a great deal to the success of The Beast, which despite its measly $150,000 budget, grossed over $5 million for Warner Brothers in June 1953.
However, the writing of The Beast is not entirely without fault either. One would assume that the simplicity of the story would have allowed for greater emphasis on the character dynamics to guide the narrative and provide dramatic tension. To an extent, this is achieved (there is a peppering of romantic tension between Paul Hubschmid’s Tom Nesbitt and Paula Raymond’s Lee Hunter), but a certain similar film from November 1954 demonstrates how much can be added to a relatively simple story through character. Without turning this review into a comparative essay between The Beast and Ishiro Honda’s gripping Godzilla, it must be noted that the characters in The Beast, whilst charismatic and engaging, don’t match the same level of nuance and depth as those in Honda’s nuclear nightmare. Indeed, the emotional range of the characters in The Beast rarely extends beyond mild surprise, scientific confidence, or self-assuredness.
Perhaps the weakest point of The Beast’s narrative however lies not in its characters but in how it ends. Whilst the sight of the raging Rhedosaurus writhing around in the flames of a burning Coney Island rollercoaster makes for one of the film’s strongest visuals, the writing behind it is unsatisfying. Having the creature killed through the use of a radioactive isotope arguably mitigates the cautionary nature of the film. Nuclear weapons may have unleashed mighty horrors, but the atom is apparently sufficient to kill those horrors as well. Such an end to the mighty beast is emblematic of a contemporary ‘trust’ in the bomb; one that is juxtaposed to the terror of the bomb in a film where its use is presented as producing a literal monster. Perhaps such a tale works to the extent that it assuages fears that the bomb is unstoppable – that this atomic phantom can be swept away. On the other hand, there are arguably less clumsy ways of writing for such an effect.
Despite its arguable story and character shortcomings, the design work for The Beast is tremendous. The New York location photography and surprisingly lavish costume design (surprising considering the small budget) give the film a stylish air. To say Paula Raymond’s long sheepskin pea coat is elegant is something of an understatement. Perhaps the appreciation for such aspects comes from a retrospective delight at 1950s aesthetics, though this has certainly allowed the film to age gracefully. The camera work during the Rhedosaurus’ rampage in the Big Apple is breathtaking, with high-angle dolly shots gliding along with crowds of fleeing civilians. John L. Russell’s cinematography elevates the monster’s attack into a frenzied panic, perfectly immersing one into a city besieged by a leviathan.
Underpinning such gripping visuals is David Buttolph’s striking musical score. The Rhedosaurus’ main theme is striking, yet graceful. As the notes of the theme descend, so too does any hope of defeating the Beast. Buttolph’s Beast theme is also effectively used throughout the film, making one aware of the Rhedosaurus’ presence without it being shown. Following Dr. Elson’s death, the sad strings that underpin the tragedy end with the descending notes of the beast’s theme; his death subtly linked with the prehistoric menace. From the shocking brass that plays behind the Warner Brothers logo, Buttolph’s soundtrack is a joy to be heard and is one of the film’s strongest qualities.
Of course, one cannot speak of The Beast’s qualities without respect paid to special effects pioneer Ray Harryhausen. Certainly, the Rhedosaurus is an arresting sight to behold. The Rhedosaurus’ walk through New York is convincing and stunning. Through meticulous stop-motion animation, Harryhausen imbued the Rhedosaurus with a heart and soul. This beast is not a mindless monster as with other creatures of the era. The Rhedosaurus, as Ray himself pointed out, is ‘a poor lost soul’, awakening to a time that has forgotten it and trapped it to isolation. What the film may lack in genuine character depth, it makes up for with genuine pathos in the beast itself. A testament to Ray’s character realisation is that never do any of the characters in the film look upon the Rhedosaurus with open sympathy. On the contrary, one’s decision to look upon the beast with sympathy is a decision made because of its characterisation – a quality realised by Harryhausen. One sees a creature lost and scared, and one feels for it. Without Harryhausen, such a rich engagement with the beast may not have been possible.
The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms is a film that has a great deal to offer. Despite its shortcomings with its simple story and basic character dynamics, the film is elevated to brilliance through its camera work, production design, rousing musical score, and masterful effects work. Having aged gracefully, The Beast remains a powerful, and often frightening, look into the atomic age and the horrors that plagued the minds of those who lived through it.
Bridal fashion week occurred very recently and there are many trends to be taken from it. It has a very modern, sophisticated and elegant look. It keeps it original silhouettes as well as more modern tight hugging hour glass dresses. Many designers have stuck with delicate lace and others sheer fabrications.
Bridal capes come in different fabrications and this year it’s lace or a sheer fabric. Some plain and some with embellishments. It’s good for a slight cover up for a breezy day if you’re having your wedding at a garden or outdoors. It also almost looks like an accessory so if you’re not into wearing necklaces you can easily get away with wearing a cape.
Black accents
Designer: Vera Wang
Typically we associate weddings with wearing white or light colours. But Vera Wang challenges this with having black accents as belts or ribbons and in this case what looks like a flower next to the collar. I think this creates a sophisticated look as well as playful and challenging the boundaries of what a wedding dress should be.
Feathers
Designer: Jenny Packham
Very light wispy feathers are on trend. I think the lightness of the feathers gives a sense of elegance of movement to the bride. It’s also fitting to the season as feathers remind you of spring season, so it would be better worn if it was a garden wedding or somewhere near a garden.
Embellishments
Designer: Naeem Khan
This is a more modern take on wedding dresses with a tight hugging dress as well as adding beads. This looks quite glamorous but not too extravagant. This would really accentuate the brides body.
High collars
Designer: Marchesa
This reminds me a little bit of street style with the high neck collar but it definitely works with this bridal dress a mixture of lace and fabric. This works because the high neck collar is part of the dress and its decorated with flowers which makes this dress look elegant
Bows
Designer: Caroline Herrera
Big bows are on trend, whether it be on the back of the dress shoulder or even the sleeves of the dress. Most designers who have used bows have very soft outlines that can keep its shape as well as have some sort of a drape. This adds a girly touch to the dress but creates a dramatic look as well.
V necklines
Designer: Oscar De La Renta
There are many designers who have a deep V neckline on their dresses. For those who are more confident and slightly daring this is the kind of dress you are looking for. It has a very deep plunge but has a voluminous skirt which keeps it from being completely daring and keeping the modesty.
Ruffles
Designer: Viktor & Rolf
If you want added volume to the dress then having ruffles or cascading ruffles is the dress for you. It keeps it’s sophistication with a touch of volume. If the dress doesn’t have that much volume but you want parts of the dress to have it then an idea would be having cascading ruffles going down the dress.