Thursday, November 29, 2012

 

Support Europe’s creators – support authors’ rights // Soutenez les créateurs européens - soutenez le droit d’auteur


So many things have been said about copyright. A lot of it nonsense! Over the past few years, copyright has been accused of preventing works from being distributed, creating obstacles to consumer’s access to works, lining the pockets of the rich and worse still, standing in the way of freedom of expression.
Enough is enough!
On 5th December, at the initiative of José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission, the College of Commissioners will meet to examine initiatives that the Commission might adopt in the field of copyright.
Should the worst be feared? This is a valid question, especially when you consider the interconnections and almost cosiness that exist between some very powerful private anti-copyright lobbyists and certain departments and directorates of the Commission. Let there be no mistake; the message emerging is that copyright is the enemy of consumers and their desire to access culture. This is not just the opinion of a few personalities marginalized within Europe.
The fight against copyright, and against the right of authors to live from their art and receive fair compensation, forms the focus of an entire coalition: namely lobbyists from the leading companies on the Net who seek to exempt themselves both from their tax commitments to Member States and their obligations towards cultural diversity and creation; certain consumer lobbies who consider the total and immediate satisfaction of their constituency a necessity, regardless of the negative, harmful impact for cultural industries, jobs in culture and for the funding of future creativity; European administrative departments and even commissioners who confine authors’ rights and cultural diversity to old boundaries, thus irremediably excluding them from the digital world.
Authors’ rights are, of course, an old concept, several centuries old, but also surprisingly modern, supple and flexible. Modern authors’ rights are the work of a genius, Beaumarchais, who marked his era with all his battles for freedom. For one hundred years, technological developments have proceeded at an ever increasing pace to say the very least. Authors’ rights have kept pace with those developments and have continued to safeguard a key principle, namely the right of authors to enjoy fair compensation for the use made of their works, while facilitating public access to cultural works.
It is hard to imagine an author wanting to prevent his work, film, book, music from being seen, recommended or discussed by the public. It is however easy to imagine that convenience of the digital solution might pose a threat to this particular human right (art.27 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights): the author’s right to receive compensation whenever exploitation is made of his/her work.
There are basic principles that no tablet, no smartphone, no new service should undermine. Respecting authors’ rights is one of them.
However, every day in Europe, where authors’ rights began, their influence is being contested, their scope is under attack, their collective management criticized. Every day, new exceptions, or rather expropriations, are being proposed; every day, mechanisms that make it possible to finance creation are being contested in the name of free competition; every day, private copying remuneration is being denigrated. In a nutshell, all sources of revenue for authors are under threat and attack.
For the benefit of whom? Obviously not the creators themselves, whose general situation is becoming more and more precarious in many countries! And certainly not the consumers, whose access to works is not facilitated by the questioning of authors’ rights and for whom the cost of acquiring digital equipment is not reduced in any way by lowering the payments to authors!
Commissioners, you are meeting on 5th December under the watchful eye of creators, who contribute to the future identity of Europe. For these creators, authors’ rights are still the best guarantee of fair remuneration and their greatest hope to be able to continue to create.
‘Europe loves Cinema’, ‘Europe loves culture’? These are catchy slogans, but they must be put into practice and, more importantly, a new one must be coined: ‘Europe loves authors’ rights’!
The following creators have already signed.  Support them, sign the petition!

Robert Alberdingk Thijm, Marco Bellocchio, Lucas Belvaux, FredBreinersdorfer, Jean-Claude Carrière, Nicola Ciralosa, Stijn Coninx, Costa-Gavras, Luc et Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Anna Di Francisca, Hervé Di Rosa, Jacques Fansten, Marco Tullio Giordana, Ugo Gregoretti, Michel Hazanavicius, Jan Hřebejk, Agnès Jaoui, Pavol Kráľ, Paul Laverty, MikeLeigh, Jean-Xavier de LestradeCarlo Lizzani, Ken Loach, FrancescoMaselli, Radu Mihaileanu, Roger Michell, Rebecca O’Brien, Jorge Paixão Da Costa, Andrea Porporati, Paul Powell, Andrea Purgatori, Giovanni Robbiano, Jean-Paul Salomé, Volker Schlöndorff, Ettore Scola, Hugh Stoddart, Bela Tarr, Bertrand Tavernier, Fernando Trueba, Enrique Urbizu, Jaco Van Dormael, A. Vitorino De Almeida, Wim Wenders, SusannaWhite, Krzysztof Zanussi

985       Name: Jacques Coulardeau on Nov 29, 2012
Comments: I support authors' rights because they are attached to a work that has to be protected too against any violation, including from copyright holders.

To avoid that on the main square or squares of European capitals with books and CDs and DVDs andother works of art crucified to the greed of corporations and of the public who both would like to have them free from the authors or artists. I must say it would look nice On Place de la Concorde in Paris or on Trafalgar Square in London. 



http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/support-authors/


Tuesday, November 27, 2012

 

Enjoy this apocalyptic damnation


HANZEL AND GRETYL – SCHEISSMESSIAH

One thing is sure it is not baroque Venetian music, but it is stronger and more powerful than anything the underlings from Seattle have ever produced in the line of hard metal grunge Scheisse. This is Käse and that kind of cheese fest you cannot find anywhere else or hardly. That’s the first impression after a first hearing.

What about a second hearing with a little bit more attention to the details, sir!

With great pleasure, Herr Kaiser, mein Herr. With great pleasure.

It all starts with church bells and a sermon about the beast that is inside us and is eating us up, that beast has a name, a human name, but you need finesse and intelligence to read that name, and that name is 666, the beast, in other words Lust, a threesome fallatio in other words. Lust is the Beast within you, the beast that wants to consume you. Prosit, my friends. It is said the beast will just leave behind and beyond its repast two meat balls in the shape of bollocks, or is it buttocks, for you to suck on in your free time.

Then you can stand up and get up on the stool and reach out the arms of the cross and just start enjoying your own crucifixion and all the torturing you will have to go through in the hands of God and under the fingers of Lust, hanging from the arms of a Saint Andrew’s cross in the middle of the village square with dogs and kids authorized to do anything nasty they want and first of all rip off your clothes to be able to crush their cigarettes on your flesh, to use their lighters to burn you skin and you hairs, in one word to enjoy themselves at your yelling shouting howling expense.

“Fikk Dich Mit Fire” is a sublime frenetic beating up of your meat with fire up your dark door and fire in your hand on the front handle. What happens is exactly what is written in the title. You are fucked front and back with fire. And for you to hear the hammers driving the nails into your hands and feet into the cross the text is repetitive and groups of four of any repeated phrases are essential to give you the taste of that cross and the hammer can of course slip from the head of the nail to some of your bones, but who cares since you will never come back when you are finally gone. You will never need your bones any more. You will have been saved into becoming a pure spirit, and you can even think you are a soul if your god is a soul-making god.

“The “Kaiser Von Shizer” has little to say. He does not speak with words but with the big bertha of his farting mouth and this time he rejects salvoes of fire for you to enjoy how he is abusing you sexually in all holes and conduits, into the ears, the eyes, and so many other apertures. And no resistance is possible against this Emperor. You can always get your countertenor voice of a castrato , or maybe your soprano voice of a doppelganger, floating and flying around in the background. That will not stop the Kaiser who has decided to turn you into a motherfucker grilled hamburger.

But liberation comes with “Disko Fire Scheiss Messiah”. The Lord liberates you from your bondage. You can finally get free and enjoy the freedom of divine grace. But before that salvation you have to go through the epiphany of sulphur and fire, of complete elimination, or is it satisfaction, of all your instincts and impulses, and the body along with them since the body is the carrier of the orgasmic message, and everything material in that body made of dust (dust to dust), earth (man from clay, Adam from Adamah) and of course Scheisse (the perfect fertilizer of all times). But here we reach the total contradiction that this Scheisse is also the messiah himself. Is the Messiah made of Scheisse, or is he the one who brings Scheisse to our Last Supper, or is he the one who destroys all that Scheisse with archangelic fire? Who cares! We are floating in an ocean of Scheisse and we are back to the first verse of Genesis: total darkness and nothing but an immense expanse of Scheisse in that darkness with God and his spirit more or less flying or roaming over it.

The next track, “Blut! Zex! Fire!” should bring you to the final truth that nothing exists, that everything is delusional and everyone is delirious. In fact I just wonder if this piece is not advertising for Zex, that Zex that brings fire into your nerves and tripes and flesh, the fire of exhilaration and derangement and pure blissful pleasure. This music in a way is so onanistic and so masturbational. You have to let your own wild desires flow and fly and give them a hand if you can or even ten fingers of Schnapps to even amplify the delirium tremens of the passion, of the eruption that makes you ejaculate the name of the lord in vain, not really by the way, since your ejaculating the name of the lord enables you to get to the topmost bliss on earth: cumming over and over again and with no blue pill of any kind, just that music that drowns you in a sea of fiery cum.

“Burning Bush” comes after this sexual high. Then God can speak to you via a burning bush and you can hear the whimpering pleasure of the fornicating mother copulators in the back, and that will never be enough. So an extra track will lead you even deeper into that tsunami of hormonal fluids.

Welcome to the “Scheissway To Hell” and there you can at last just try to recuperate after your multiple orgasms waiting for and expecting the next stage. Along that way to hell you will hear a few church bells again to remind you of the simple fact that after orgasm comes communion, after enjoying the body of your Christ or you Mary Magdalena, or both, you have to receive the body of the Lord to prepare you for purification. Don’t be afraid of the monstrous monstrosities that howl around you. They are the minions of God and the real face of guardian angels. You are in good hands and in good bleeding teeth and you will be like all new in a minute to be purified into serving again for the glory of your Lord and God, Herr Kaiser, Maestro Penis, Doctor Phallus and all their plugs and sockets.

“And we shall Purify” has come and with it the great change and the seventh generation, the apocalypse of your sorry life into the purity of the next life. You have to be sanctified, via crucifixion and then with the help of a demonizer that will purify you. That’s the great mystery of this Gospel: the saviour is the one who can demonize you. There is no purification but beyond demonization and crucifixion; And beyond you will reach obsessive destruction into resurrection, and a few church bells of course. You will be sadistic with your personal  masochism and masochistic with your own sadism and you will never know how far you can go because there will always be one more step on the way, one more stage on the road one more station on the track.

Now it is time for the revelation of the “10th Circle” which is the sermon of the beginning but this time, you have understood the beast inside each one of us, lust. We have to let it come out onto ourselves and onto everyone else around us for the orgasmic epiphany to redeem our souls and our bodies into inflammatory sermons that will burn us down into a pile of ashes, sanctified by your end and transmuted into eternal death on earth and in a virtual body of no consistence at all. Can you hear the singing whiners in the back?

And Handel is waiting for you with his “Hallelujah” but it is not longer a welcoming song to heaven but to Hell and it is more Hellalujah than a nothing else though the musicians of German tradition have avoided the an easy Heili Heilo Heillalujah that everyone was expecting but you can’t have the devil and God together, so they kept the devil and got rid of all the saints who like final solutions too much. And obviously the closing word is “The power of God has freed us.”

So we can get onto the last instrumental piece, “Purity”, that sounds in a way like some cosmic interstellar galactic mission beyond the material reality of our small tellurianesque universe. We are reaching beyond the Space Odyssey of old and we are fully engaged in the Viagratic blue pill and amphetaminic red pill saga. We can go back onto the Argo of our senses, the Titanic of our impulses, the Queen Elizabeth of our passions and meet with a new iceberg to get down into the erotic hole of the ocean and directly into the underground hell of fire.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU


Sunday, November 25, 2012

 

Un film en forme d'apocalypse shakespearienne


BROKEN

PLUS SHAKESPEARIEN QUE SHAKESPEARE.

Comment la BBC peut-elle se laisser aller à une telle horreur sociale? Il est vrai qu’elle ne manque pas de scandale de cet ordre dans ses rangs plus ou moins dirigeants. Bien sûr que c’est la vérité mais il ne peut pas y avoir le moindre gramme d’humour noir, si cher aux anglais, dans ce cas. Et ne comptez pas sur la potion magique de Mary Poppins. Aucun supracalifragilistic en vue. Avalez sans faire la grimace. J’ai même peur qu’ils ont honte de ce film car on ne le trouve que sur les sites de cinéma français et sur Amazon.fr, mais sur aucune des autres sites d’Amazon, même pas l’Angleterre.

Imaginez une banlieue classe moyenne un peu supérieure d’une ville de province de la moitié sud de l’Angleterre, Bristol par exemple. Une rue en impasse avec un espace circulaire tout au bout. D’un côté un père devenu veuf récemment et qui doit s’occuper de trois filles qui l’exploitent jusqu’à la gorge : il fait le repassage, la cuisine, j’imagine le ménage et en plus il est devenu si protecteur qu’elles lui font croire ce qu’elles veulent pour couvrir leurs sottises et surtout leurs exactions à l’école et en ville.

Leur victime favorite est le handicapé mental d’en face qu’elles accusent de viol sur l’une d’elles et le père le croit immédiatement. Les parents de ce jeune homme qui veulent lui permettre de vivre une vie normale sont horrifiés mais ne peuvent rien, même quand les expertises montrent que la dite jeune fille n’a pas été violée puisqu’elle est toujours et encore vierge. Cela ne sera qu’une affaire d’un très court délai pour réparer cette erreur de la nature. La jeune fille de quatorze ans ne manquera pas de candidats. Elle finira enceinte et devra prendre son horreur en main et y mettre fin elle-même.

Mais le mal pour le jeune homme handicapé sera irréparable. Il sombrera dans la dépression sera hospitalisé et la fin est shakespearienne. Tuez les tous et on verra bien qui aura réussi à survivre. Les survivants sont les justes.

D’un autre côté dans cette impasse circulaire, un père avocat mais veuf lui aussi depuis la naissance de sa fille, son second enfant. Elle est diabétique de niveau 1 et doit vérifier son sucre dans le sang deux fois par jours. Elle sera prise à partie par deux des trois filles à l’école puis dans la rue et le professeur qui osera la défendre, dans la rue, sera ensuite accusée par la troisième de sa propre grossesse. Le professeur sera suspendu en attendant la vérification. Je ne dirai rien de la réaction du père dans cette situation d’allégations mensongères que lui seul croit.

On ne peut pas faire plus glauque et sinistre que cela. C’est Hamlet et Macbeth en une seule pièce, surtout que les trois sœurs sont de vraies sorcières, qui plus est toutes les trois rousses, donc écossaises, comme toutes les sorcières de Shakespeare. Même le gâteau de bienvenue de la mère du jeune homme handicapé pour son premier weekend chez lui n’a monté que d’un seul côté.

Je vous conseille d’aller voir ce film si vous voulez vous convaincre que le monde tourne mal et qu’il faut mettre un travailleur social sur le dos de chaque citoyen et un flic juste devant chacun d’eux. Il n’y a absolument pas une seule minute de beauté, de bonté et de douceur dans ce drame apocalyptique. Ce doit être encore une histoire maya.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

 

Seven seasons of Bones, and not yet finished.


BONES –SEASON 1

This new series has a pilot and twenty-one more episodes, and to cover this series five years later you have to consider two things: the content of the episodes, or their subjects, and the characters and plot treatment.

The subjects are always limited in one episode and they are often dealing with immediate reality. There is thus no surprise to find one essential subject is the Iraq war in 2005. This subject comes back in several episodes and these show that the war itself was not very clean and they reveal one attitude only: anything unjust has to be redressed. It has to be redressed because the victims of this injustice have the right to know and because the author of the injustice is a plain criminal, murderer most of the time. This attitude is all the more emphasized and even dramatized because Agent Booth is a veteran of the Kosovo war and has seen, experienced and suffered some such episodes.

That’s the second thing you have to keep in mind with this series: Agent Booth is an FBI agent but also a Kosovo survivor. He merges a very military dynamism, extremely precise work, a great sense of logic and deduction, total commitment to fairness and truth. This is also very important when they deal with the case of illegal immigration and more or less clandestine and illegal refugees from the Central American countries that have been ridden with civil wars most of the time supported on the wrong side by the US. On the wrong side, I will say because of what we know today, since today in most countries the left-leaning insurgency has politically recovered and electorally re-conquered power. In other words the US support and at times intervention was wasted and badly advised. And that has to do with Iraq where such an ill-advised intervention was going on at the time.

The second main character is Doctor Temperance Brennan. She works for the Jeffersonian Institute and she is a bone specialist in all fields where bones have to be scrutinized, analyzed and reconstructed as to what they may tell about what happened to the person they belonged to once.  She is assisted by three people. First an art-trained person is there to recreate places and bodies from the remains or the memory of witnesses thanks to highly specialized software. Then another doctor trained in physics, chemistry and biology who has an extremely high level of knowledge in his fields and can analyze any matter, stuff or whatever that can reveal the circumstances of the death of a “patient”. Finally a young intern who is working on his doctorate thesis and is also extremely and sharply specialized and informed in the physiology of the body or the skeleton of any person. The boss of the Jeffersonian institute is a Black man who used to be an archaeologist but who remains discreet on scientific matters.

Yet the series avoids any kind of over-learned language that we wouldn’t be able to understand. Nevertheless it uses a lot of the paraphernalia of software and computer assisted and aided visualization to make laboratory scenes palatable and even interesting.

The final great point of this series is the very careful study of the relations between these people, administrative, authority, personal, even intimate relations and problems, knowing there are two women and three men and they all have personal lives. But the series insist on the background of Agent Booth but also of Dr Brennan: her parents disappeared when she was a young teenager, her brother abandoned her when he was 19 and is on probation for some crime. At the end of this first series the body of the mother is found, her death is clarified, Dr Brennan gets to some kind of reconciliation with her brother and the father remains alive, talkative on the phone but absent physically, in fact escaping justice as he would deserve due to his criminal past.  That’s where the plot sickens for the second season.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

BONES –SEASON 2

This second season is exploring new ways and avenues where bones are of course multiplying at leisure and for our best pleasure. Yet this second season is quite new in several aspects.

First and foremost the season is widely open to personal matters and it explores the private, and at times not so private, relations between the members of the team, after the boss has been changed to a woman, which rebalances the sexual ratios. Bones herself is courting and going out with an FBI agent who has temporarily replaced Booth while he was sort of suspended and deprived of a gun after shooting a clown on top of an ice-cream vendor’s van. But in the end she will not go through the process completely as far as leaving the Jeffersonian for a life of full leisure and farniente.

Zack manages to get his doctorate and to be hired in the job he was holding as an intern because he goes to Angela and begs for help on his  look and manages to become presentable, which means he can now stand in court and testify seriously in a deportment that can carry the agreement of the jury. So far he is no longer obsessed by sexuality but he encounters a great difficulty: he is summoned by the White House to go to Iraq. But this time this reference does not lead to any political dissertation or even cogitation on the subject. Political questions are systematically and carefully avoided in this second season.

Jack and Angela are finally realizing they love each other and even decide to get married and they finally find themselves in front of a priest (in fact a black priestess) in some church for the last step when the State Department steps in and reveals Angela is already married in some kind of broom stick over-jumping ceremony. More later, I guess.

Booth is entangled in the hands of a British shrink after his shooting the clown on the ice-cream vendor’s van and he is a perfect sucker, building a full barbecue for the shrink under the shrink’s blackmailing procedure of retaining the document he must sign. This same shrink will also step into Bones’ psyche as some kind of private counselor. Agent Booth and Doctor Brennan will not be able to establish some kind of personal relationship, especially since Temperance’s father reappears in her life and even saves the situation a couple of times. But he has to be arrested by Booth and be brought to court for his ancient crimes, including the attack against the deputy chief of the FBI, though this one was crooked to the utmost, his lips kissing the heels of his shoes or something like that.

Booth reestablishes for a short while a relationship with the new boss of the institute, Dr Camille Saroyan, with whom he had had a liaison some time ago in another life. But that cannot last more than one or two episodes. This is characteristic of all these people: they are unable psychologically or administratively to build balanced and normal relationships. Is it a side effect of their jobs or professions, we can wonder, or simply  personal immaturity?

That level of the season blurs out the various crimes and cases they examine and solve. And these cases do not deal with political issues or even with immigration, except one case about some strange Chinese practice of burying the bones of a man with the bones of a woman so that the man has some company on the other side of the road. Most cases are plain simple crimes in America and among Americans. But they often deals with social problems like the mother of a severely handicapped girl: what can the mother do to help her child the genetic victim of a deadly disease that keeps her retarded, even if it is only for a short time before she dies? Some of these questions are crucial: do we have the right to experiment on human beings new treatments that would enable astronauts to reinforce their bones that get highly decalcified due to prolonged sojourn in space?

Some of the cases are plain vicious crimes and it is fun to catch the killers who are most of the time not at all the one or the ones we were expecting. Suspense is always with us even if the personal and more sentimental level of this season makes that suspense not as intense as I would personally prefer it to be.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

BONES –SEASON 3

This third season was shorter than the previous ones, but it was particularly hefty in events and closures. And it is these closures that have to be examined.

The first one is the integration of the psychiatrist and profiler Dr. Lance Sweets. He officially comes to help Dr Brennan and Special Agent Booth deal with the stress in their relationship due to the extreme tension their work is bringing in and imposing onto them. He is some kind of relation counselor. At first they took it badly but little by little they accepted to consult him and to follow his advice. That brings some clarification in the warped relationship that develops between the two people concerned. Little by little too he is integrated as a profiler in some of their cases and even later in all of them. This is a new development for the series.

The second closure is really a closure. It concerns Temperance’s father and by ricochet her brother. He is finally brought to court for his killing of the FBI deputy head. Dr Brennan is not even called as a witness whereas all her laboratory friends and Special Agent Booth are. She stands with the defense and she holds her position well. The tactics of the defense is simple. Let the prosecution put down all their cards and then let’s deal with the jury’s most intimate conviction. In other words let’s give the jury some alternative hypotheses as who could have done the killing. Here Dr Brennan plays an essential role to save her father and set him free. Can such a flawless scientist accept to be doubted and even negatively represented even if it is to save her father’s freedom?

The third closure is Zack. He had been sent to Iraq at the beginning of the season but his absence had not held one full episode. He was brought back to Washington DC because of his disruptive role in a military team due to his inability to integrate. But his attitude and role is becoming overbearing with everyone. Some would say that he must be slightly autistic and that would be a mistake. He is a very fragile personality who compensates his weakness in character with over-competence in his scientific field. He is irreplaceable. Yet he can become the prey of any strong personality he would encounter. His enhanced scientific competence is over-normal but it is a way to hide his brittleness. This season will bring Zack to his doom but you will have to be discovered it by yourself.

The fourth closure is also contained in this season. It starts at the beginning of it and ends with its final episode. It is the story of a serial killer that appears in some episodes. This serial killer is obviously imitated from Dexter and his viciousness is even worse than anything you may examine. Of course he tries to penetrate and infiltrate the Jeffersonian Institute and he will succeed for a time, though his agent will not be the best he could have found. He is a cannibal, the heir and continuator of an old practice against secret societies. We can hear there an echo to some of Dan Brown’s cogitation about old secret societies and free masons. That serial killer will be destroyed and will finally exit the series under a nickname, Gormogon. He is nameless.

This last element is surprising in such a series because the series is hyper scientific and tries to reject and even rebut all superstitions, mythologies, beliefs and even religions. Dr Brennan should know that the unnamable, the one who does not have a name, the one whose name is unutterable us also the one who was, the one who is and the one who will come. To keep a criminal nameless is to deify or at least magnify that criminal just as if he were some kind of divinity.

That’s the last remark I will make on this third season. It deals with social cases more often than criminal cases, and the crimes in each case are the result of weak people who cannot cope with the stress of life. Gormogon is the exception. In one word the series gets better as for its thrilling, even frightening atmosphere and it analyses in fair and fine details the relations between the various members of the team, of the laboratory, of the people who have dedicated their lives to fighting against crime.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

BONES –SEASON 4

This fourth season is the season of all come-backs. The attempt to bring Zack back, but that is too artificial in a way, does not work beyond one single episode. Of course he is particularly brilliant but with this brilliancy that is so bright it dazzles us. We need someone more evanescent in this laboratory, someone who is never the same and always a come-back again on some rotating basis. So the extra lab-worker is the ever going project to bring back someone that cannot be brought back, hence the character that can experiment all kinds of profiles: English, Japanese, simple intern or certified doctor of something, Moslem or happily paired with a woman and not interested in the constant sexual innuendo in this lab, etc.

The second come-back is that of Temperance’s father as some kind of museum science guide for visiting children. That one is hard on Temperance who considers her father as a criminal and has not yet forgiven him for abandoning her when a teenager in the custody of her unworthy brother who left and sent her to a foster home in a way. But that ex-science teacher has the knack it takes to have contact with young teenagers and make them like what is in many ways forbidding and austere, or at least can be if you do not know how to make it an adventure. He is a genial awakener for Agent Booth’s son Parker and Temperance has to yield to that demand.

The third come-back is the British psychologist but in a less flashy role now his barbecue is built. His main role is to set Dr Sweets, the FBI profiler, in perspective, a Dr Sweets who is so shy and so flippantly uncatchable. But he is so efficient and efficacious with the criminals who have to be discovered and caught.

The next come-back is that of the Gravedigger, and this time for the finish of that case. The grave-digger manages to kidnap Agent Booth himself and to bury him in a navy ship just before it is blown down into the sea by the navy itself. The point that appears little by little is that the gravedigger has inside information and must be from inside the justice department or the FBI or some other Home Security agency. And that’s how they find out that serial killer. At the other end Agent Booth experiences a comeback of a completely different nature. On the ship, while he is trying to escape he is helped by some ghost from deep in his mind, the corporal who was killed practically in his own arms and who he took back to base. Strange come-back but quite natural for all of us: we find help in someone in our minds who makes us keep our cool and find the way out.

Then we move to the come-back of Agent Booth’s younger brother who is a pain in the back because he is not able to do anything right without the help of his brother and he fails in some situations systematically just to get that help. A come-back and a good-bye too since he goes to India for a motorbike tour, but alone without his big brother. Good riddance in a way and good morning Vietnam in another. But the little boy has to grow one day.

The best of this series remains the vast array of cases that bring up a vast selection of social and cultural situations that are all explored in some fine details revealing the horror of this society of ours. Of course there are a lot of winks to other series in the genre. The main wink is to Stephen King who once wrote: “If you can’t terrify your audience, then horrify them. And if you can’t horrify them, then gross them out.” And you can be sure the cadavers, corpses, bodies, bones and other dead remnants of human beings are gross to the utmost. We can of course see here and there an allusion to Dexter, or another one to Crime Scene Investigation. But the style is original and personal.

This season finally is very rich to reveal the deeper selves of the characters, with some strange a priori idea that Dr Temperance Brennan, Dr Lance Sweets or Agent Seeley Booth, just like Dr Zack Addy have had a youth of suffering and want on the loving side of life. And that would be why they are great in their present positions. That’s too easy. And the characters that are kept in second position like Dr Camille Saroyan, Dr Jack Hodgins or Angela Montenegro cannot qualify at that level.  In other words it is a cliché that one can only be great if they have suffered in their infancy and youth. But it definitely gives the characters some density on the screen.

The last episode is a complete reversal due to some brain tumor and I must say Temperance as the manageress of a club that has more to do with a brothel and an opium den than with a café is quite a change of perspective.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

BONES –SEASON 5

This fifth season is the saddest of them all because it has to bring the series to an end, though it will have to keep some door open for further reviving. We know from the very first episode that it is going to be so, that we are going to move to a close.  

The main change is in tone. The various episodes are centered on the personal dimensions of the various characters. Personal remarks and personal details are more important than the crimes under scrutiny and the lab discussions are some kind of permanent interweaving of small talk about personal matters and the real business at hand that is in many ways kept at a respectable distance. It is not even rare that someone has to call the lab back to order, i.e. to work. And the cases are often slightly superficial and the conclusion hasty.

Then all current business has to be dealt with. First Angela and Dr Hodgins will finally manage to get married but that will have to be under duress, and I must say that was a good punishment for them two. That poor Angela even created a panic with her pregnancy test. Pregnant? Yes, you’ll have to find out and from whom.

Then a touch of nostalgia with the first case on which Booth and Bones worked together, a long time ago. That brings Zack back into the picture for a short cameo. A sorry case and yet quite a case that made Dr Brennan punch a federal judge in the nose twice.

Then we have to deal with the little personnel, those laboratory people who are only interns and live on precarious scholarships. By the way it reveals how these younger people have it a little difficult in life, getting from one job to another, being an intern for some pittance, etc. This should be a good lesson to those who believe a scientist is at the top two years after his or her PhD. That is absolutely false for one and for two it takes many years of precarious and low-paid jobs while doing their primary research for their PhDs.

Then small little bits of business concerning Dr Saroyan who finds a good date in the gynecologist of her own daughter. Daisy Wick will go on a one year mission in Indonesia on Dr Brennan’s reference. Dr Sweets will stay behind and will be slightly abandoned.

The main changes are of course for Dr Brennan and Special Agent Booth. But that, you will have to find out all by yourselves. You must be big boys and bog girls after all.

On the other hand the Gravedigger is finally brought to trial and convicted. The main witnesses and testifying experts are the very victims of that gravedigger, Booth, Hodgins, Montenegro and Brennan, which is a difficult situation in front of a jury: you have to convince the jury that your evidence comes from your expertise and not from your desire of vengeance.

Then a little tidbit here and another little tidbit there and we are at the end of the season and the sad departure of everyone to the four corners of the globe, if the globe has four corners. The team is down. What will happen then? We of course know there is a sixth season going on right now, but that will change the general outlook. They may even bring in some fresh air, and the last case was a typical case of a completely locked up hoarder’s den or lair with fans to move the air around. Five years is a long time for a series. It needs some renewing. Check it on TV, if you can get it.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

BONES –SEASON 6

To resuscitate a dead team out of their scattered disappearance is not an easy task. Luckily the DA in Washington DC is a powerful woman, stubborn and resolute, and she generally gets what she wants. So she brought Agent Booth back from Afghanistan, and Temperance Brennan, aka Bones, from the exotic place where she was trying to get some archaeologically interesting bones with Daisy, Dr Sweet’s girl friend, and Dr Sweet from his hideout somewhere in Paris where he was having a showbiz career as a cabaret singer. They all come back, change clothes and back in the business in a jiffy they all are. Angela and Dr Hodgins are also back though from not so far away and Angela is pregnant. Don’t worry the delivery will go just fine, and their fear of some handicap will be unfounded. They will celebrate at the end of the season.

But this season is a lot more interesting than just those circumstantial collateral disagreements or pleasure.

As usual one case per episode, clean and neat, always dealing with a lot of bones, gross and dirty, soaked in a lot of decomposed muck with a tremendous number of maggots, worms and other corpse parasites. A series not to watch while eating anything more delicate than dry cookies.

The interest is first the relations among the people in the series and these relations include some personal data on each case. Dr Saroyan has the case of her daughter to solve who is supposed to start her college years. The mother cannot cope with the idea of her following her boyfriend to some community college in some county of some northern New England state nearly in Canada but is it ethical to cheat the system and get her accepted in Columbia University, if it is Columbia University (you can check that one out), on a fake file? It is amazing what parents are at times ready to do that is so absurd and goes against the grain of their profession and personality. Will the girl accept to enter a top university on a fake file? That is the real question. Will the daughter teach a lesson to her own mother? Not so simple.

Of course Angela and Dr Hodgins have a full plate with the pregnancy and the delivery of the baby. For them that’s enough and that will require some help from a friendly psychiatrist because it is hard for the father not to become overprotective and it is hard for the mother to accept the physical handicap this pregnancy may represent. Yet they decided that working with the people they are used to work and live with was the best thing for the pregnancy, the mother and the child. Angela was not alone at any moment of her days or nights.

Agent Booth brought a journalist back from Afghanistan, a sort of love substitute for Temperance. But will that not cause some problems, like conflicting interests between the two professions? And Booth with his own son is already very busy in life. Will that new woman in the picture be able to cope with a child, what’s more the child of another woman? And the question of marriage will come up sooner or later and how are the two going to react to that eventuality? Probably not very well, maybe not too bad. A decision that is always difficult to take for someone who is constantly in the field of police investigation and for a journalist just back from a war zone and who may consider Washington DC as another war zone. Do you get married and build a home and a family when you are in a war zone?

There is of course the case of Booth and Temperance. It did not work the first time, but will there be a second time? Why not? They are both young enough to think about their independence and old enough to start thinking about settling down in some kind of normal place. But of course Booth is not free and temperance is mature enough to keep up appearances.

Then you have the interns still rotating, the four of them. They are the surprise of each episode because they are so different and they can be so funny, though at times they are just funny for us because they are mismatched with what is happening around them, but that’s what interns are all about. Unluckily one will end up very badly. That’s not the first case, but so far none had ended up that badly. But a song will carry him through: lime and coconut, sung in a chorus all together, mellow and heart stirring.

There will be a case that will run over the whole season, the case of a sniper who had been a colleague and friend of Booth in Afghanistan and who came back slightly berserk and decided that what he did over there was good enough for the USA too and he started killing those who were rotten, and those who were in his way for his type of justice and these were only collateral victims for him, hence justified by the end. It will take the whole team to stop him and it will bring a lot of suffering and even mourning to that team.

Then there are 23 cases in this season and I would advise you to watch them if you haven’t yet or watch them again if you have already.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

BONES –SEASON 7

No surprise after all. That’s what happens when you get married, at times even when you don’t. Temperance got pregnant and this season we are going to see her delivering a child. To bring the father back into the picture because the plot needed it the baby is a girl? SO THAT Temperance is going to relive her bad experience with her father when she was a girl and he abandoned her, and her brother. But you all know that. They decide to name the girl Christine, I guess in honor of the film and the book by John Carpenter and Stephen King respectively.

This season knits together some cases that solved in one episode and a couple of others that go beyond the episode structure. In that case even one that goes beyond the season structure. Suspense requires such tricks. TV is a Trickster. My favorite is “The Don’t In The Do” in which there is no Indian but a hair fetishist who believe in scalping. Tie up your hair ladies, especially if you are gentlemen.

The series uses of course many interns, rotating interns, which enables us to see some faces only episodically from time to time but repetitively every two or three episodes. That concentrates our attention on the six or so regulars and at the same time that gives us some new blood that titillates our interest.

The mother Temperance is even worse than the doctor Bones. She is anxious, afraid, over protective, quasi paranoid, definitely on the verge of neurosis, which is anything but rational, and she turns every one around her completely upside down and crazy if they dare follow her along that line. You have to learn how to let the mother rant and rave about all the dangers that menace her child and hope one day she might let that child grow up, and some anxiety is needed to grow up, some challenge some would say.

The most interesting part of this series is that the crimes are always extreme cases of asocial behavior and at time sociopathic derangement. It is practically always some hidden situation unknown of everyone that produces a reaction that brings forward a dead body. But in this series they always choose the grossest way to deliver the body, to wrap it up, to make it decay and rot, etc. There is no end along that line. It is always possible to make a body look more disgusting than what you have achieved in the previous episode. The rule is that you need to see the bones and to deal with the bones. You have to feel it in your buns.

A last note will be about the follow up story that ends up unfinished this season. Temperance Bones is at stake and is menaced. She was too often over positive and over affirmative. It is her time to get challenged. First she is wrong about the age of the bones of a body by fifteen years over and then she becomes the main target. Luckily she has a daughter, a loving husband and a resourceful father. What will be left of her integrity after that? At least the child has been christened just in time.

One thing is sure: this series tried to follow the antics of Supernatural this season and they have a dead body on the set of the film that will come out next summer on Bones, “Bone of contention”. Real crime in a virtual crime story. In fact virtual real crime in a virtual virtual crime story. What reality is left after all that virtuality?

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU


Thursday, November 22, 2012

 

Une Médée presque de cauchemar people


EURIPIDE – MÉDÉE – LAURENT FRÉCHURET – THEATRE DE SARTROUVILLE

Une présentation et production inattendue, surprenante et pourtant très traditionnelle.

Les surprises sont de plusieurs ordres. D’abord l’accompagnement musical tout du long ou presque de la pièce qui en devient un drame en musique. La musique joue sur quelques instruments qui travaillent la plupart du temps en solo, sauf la batterie et les percussions qui peuvent accompagner les autres instruments ou travailler en solo. Ces instruments et leurs instrumentistes sont dans deux demi-fosses au milieu de la scène, séparées par un pont. Ces deux demi-fosses hébergent les musiciens mais aussi la plupart du temps celle qui joue le rôle du chœur et enfin les personnages en définitive plutôt secondaires qui n’interviennent que rarement, comme Créon ou le Précepteur. Notons que Créon et Egée sont tenus par le même acteur. Notons enfin que la « maison » de Médée est une structure en bois de deux étages dont on ne voit que le squelette et les escaliers qui montent de la scène au premier étage puis du prmeier au deuxième. Cette structure a de vaste rideaux qui serviront pour construire des contre-jours et des clair-obscurs. Enfin cette structure est en fond de scène au-delà des deux demi-fosses.

La deuxième surprise est l’âge des acteurs principaux. Médée devrait être âgée d’environ 25, au plus 28 ans. Elle a quitté la Colchide avant l’âge de se marier, est partie en Grèce et a donné naissance à deux enfants dont l’aîné devrait avoir environ 5 ou 6 ans. 25 ans est déjà très avancé pour tout cela. On peut jouer sur l’âge des enfants mais porter l’aîné à sept ans serait probablement excessif. Ainsi l’âge de Médée ne se justifie pas, pas plus d’ailleurs que celui de Jason qui devrait avoir le même âge. Le théâtre grec n’avait pas se problème puisqu’il jouait avec des masques ce qui permettait toutes les configurations d’âge et même de sexe. Aujourd’hui on veut un peu de vraisemblance.

La troisième surprise est la réduction du chœur à une seule femme. C’est un chœur de femmes, mais le réduire à une seule femme (je néglige les deux pou trois interventions marginales du guitariste) fait que cela devient une simple performance vocale et non plus une voix de la collectivité, de la société, de la morale, des dieux même. On peut d’ailleurs se demander à quel titre elle parle au nom des femmes en général. Qu’elle parle en femme, cela passe, mais  au nom des femmes en général cela semble excessif. La pratique du chœur dans le théâtre antique répond à des règles très strictes d’interprétation : d’interprétation-performance d’abord pour permettre ensuite la bonne interprétation-réception. On peut jouer sur le code mais cela fausse parfois le sens. Ici cela le fausse définitivement : le discours de ce chœur devient un commentaire moral, éthique, social ou politique alors qu’il devrait être la voix collective de la commiunauté. On perd le sens social de la pièce. On tombe dans un sens prétendument moral étriqué.

La quatrième surprise est l’absence d’enfants. Les scènes qui se centrent sur ces enfants sont fondamentales puiqu’ils sont l’enjeu, le vecteur et l’outil de la vengeance de Médée sur la fille de Créon, sur Créon et sur Jason. Leur présence donne toujours une dimension odieuse et donc horrifiante à l’instrumentalisation de ces enfants. Leur absence supprime cette dimension. Les discours sur les enfants en leur absence deviennent alors vides, creux, abstraits comme un jeu d’échecs, ce qu’il ne sauraient être. On oublie que Médée joue sur l’horreur des deux corps morts et de la terreur qui s’empare de Jason devant cette horreur quand il est confronté aux deux corps emportés par Médée.

La quatrième surprise est étrange dans le renversement des positionnements des acteurs, partculièrement à la fin. Médée ne saurait être en hauteur par rapport à la ville car elle est à l’extérieur des murs. Or la ville est un ensemble de blocs en bois minuscules et empilés au pied de la « maison » de Médée et Créon « réside » dans la demi-fosse de droite côté jardin. A la fin c’est Médée qui part sur un char tiré par des dragons offerts par le dieu soleil, or elle descend progressivement sur scène et dans la fosse, alors que Jason qui doit rester atterré, cloué au sol par l’horreur et la terreur monte dans la « maison » et se retrouve deux étages plus haut que Médée, au moins six mètres. Ce renversement des positionnements n’a pas de sens et il renverse de toute façon le sens qu’Euripide donne à cette fuite dans le ciel sur un char divin tiré par des dragons qui rappellent le dragon de la Colchide et de la Toison d’Or. Cette fuite dans ce char est la marque de la divinisation de Médée : une déesse vengeresse et sanguinaire mais une déesse de toute façon. Ce renversement des positionnements de Médée et Jason brouille le sens. D’une histoire mythique on passe à ce que le producteur appelle une fable. Ce n’est pas une fable.



La ciquième surprise est justement à ce niveau là. La pièce a été produite en 2010 très loin derrière les réévaluations du mythe de Médée et ces réévaluations ne sont pas intégrées. La Colchide était, et est toujours sous son nom de Géorgie, un pays de langue turkique, donc elle faisait partie du premier peuplement de l’Europe par les populations turkiques venues d’Anatolie environ et au moins 45 000 ans avant JC. Or notre ADN européen est à 80% issu de cette ancienne population, et seulement à 20% issu de la population indo-européenne qui arrive en Europe environ 40,000-35,000 ans plus tard. Les grecs sont une vague de cette immigration tardive qui pourtant va l’emporter culturellement et économiquement. Quand une minorité colonise un pays elle s’arrange à intégrer dans sa mythologie, philosophie, religion ou culture des éléments prégnants de la culture des premiers occupants mais en détournant le sens vers une certaine diabolisaiton. Ainsi Médée est divinisée par sa référence à la déesse triple sous son identité de Hécate. La déesse triple est récupérée entièrement par les Grecs avec Diane la déesse du jour et de la vie, Séléné la déesse de la nuit et de la lune et Hécate justement la déesse du monde souterrain et des morts. En même temps Médée est « diabolisée » par une lourde référence à la Colchide comme un « pays de sauvages » dont les palais sont des « palais barbares ».

La sixième surprise est le langage. La traduction nouvelle est en langue française courante, normale pour l’essentiel, une langue de tous les jours loin de la langue emberlificotée de la plupart des traductions du grec qui veulent être littérales et fidèles et qui sont incompréhensibles. Mais cette langue naturelle est coulée dans une diction systématiquement montante et donc irréelle. On ne nous parle pas comme on nous parlerait tous les jours, mais on nous parle comme jamais personne ne parle. Cette diction suspendue, retenue en l’air renforce les effets d’irréel et d’abstaction que j’ai déjà signalés. De plus en plus on nous tient un discours qui est irréel, virtuellement irréel.

Que reste-t-il du drame mythologique de la confrontation de deux cultures antagonistes dont la minoritaire est en train d’avaler la majoritaire ? Que reste-t-il de l’invasion de l’Europe par la transformation économique et politique du Néolithique : l’agriculture, l’élevage, l’organisation de la cité par délégation du pouvoir de la population vers une élite élue parfois (par les hommes libres soit au plus 10 ou 15% de la population), désignée le plus souvent par des victoires guerrières et une filiation devenant héréditaire, sans parler des groupes de pression forts que sont les religions (les temples, les dieux, les prêtres, les prêtresses, et tous les autres) et de plus en plus les philosophes qui englobent les savants qui sont tous ou presque centrés sur le ciel et les astres, l’astronomie, l’astrologie, et avant toute chose la géométrie pour déterminer les limites des propriétés rurales privées. La géométrie est la preuve de l’invention de la propriété privée de la terre. Tout cela est l’enjeu de cette pièce d’Euripide et tout cela s’efface dans cette production. Qiue reste-t-il alors ?

Il reste un drame de société, initialement un drame personnel transformé en drame de société par la dimension criminelle de l’un des participants à ce drame, ici Médée, la femme. Il est sûr que la répudiation d’une femme, la résiliation des serments du mariage sont graves quand ils sont le résultat de la seule décision du mari. Mais le divorce n’était pas une option en ce tmeps-là, et cela est dit d’ailleurs. Aujourd’hui le moins qu’on puisse dire c’est que Médée sur-réagit à la situation car nous en sommes au temps du divorce, de la séparation à l’amiable ou pas. Si toutes les mères confrontées à un divorce qu’elles ne souhaitent pas devaient tuer leurs enfants pour punir leurs ex-maris, la terre serait littéralement dépeuplée et transformée en un charnier. On ne peut plus comprendre le drame de cette femme et de cette pièce car on a réduit le tout à un fait divers sordide et en plus  nettoyé de toute illustration visuelle de cette sorditude.

Le spectacle sst intéressant par la musique et les jeux sur l’ombre, le clair-obscur et le contre-jour, mais le théâtre n’est pas qu’un jeu de lumières ou de sons mais un sens sémantique et sémiotique. Si on met en scène un drame de l’antiquité grecque on attend que l’on nous révèle les secrets de ce drame dans cette antiquité tout en les ramenant au présent pour que le public en juge aujourd’hui mais dans la perspective historique qui s’impose. On se demande si cette Médée n’est pas plus une page Facebook de quelque feuille de chou people qu’une exploration d’une mythique fondatrice de notre civilisation.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

Sunday, November 11, 2012

 

L'HOMME EST UN CONCEPT: Fun video : Chats vs. Lasers ( Slow-Motion ) !

L'HOMME EST UN CONCEPT: Fun video : Chats vs. Lasers ( Slow-Motion ) !

 

L'HOMME EST UN CONCEPT: Fun video : Chats vs. Lasers ( Slow-Motion ) !

L'HOMME EST UN CONCEPT: Fun video : Chats vs. Lasers ( Slow-Motion ) !

Wednesday, November 07, 2012

 
The Mormon bigot is back in his cage. Dean and Sam, Obama and Biden have thrown him down into hell.

We might then manage not to have any backlash into the 19th century and even get a proper ruling from the Supreme Court on the Californian Proposition 8.

DOMA is thus dying and we are going to be able to dance on its ashes just the way we did on the DADT manure, both voted in and signed by Clinton, who left the bill to be footed by other people, and first of all by gay and lesbian people.



We can only regret, we in France elected the most amateurish and recklessly incompetent bunch if not gang of choir boys thinking they are the archangels of God almighty.

It will take many billions of euros from Asia to buy Europe back into shape and improvement.

Jacques



Friday, November 02, 2012

 

The Indian Ocean, The Mare Nostrum of Humanity




THE INDIAN OCEAN THE MARE NOSTRUM OF HUMANITY [Kindle Edition] Dr Jacques COULARDEAU & Ivan EVE (Author)
Amazon.fr €8,24 Amazon.com US$10,67
Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited ? Publisher: Editions La Dondaine; 1st edition (October 31, 2012), Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc. Language: English ASIN: B009ZVO0F6 Text-to-Speech: Enabled 


A MENTAL JOURNEY

Dr Jacques Coulardeau was in Sri Lanka in 2005 and he brought back from there a tremendous treasure chest full of poetry, meditation, philosophy.

Ivan Eve came back to France in 2009 after twelve years in Vietnam and Laos with an advanced Asian reserve and education. He met Dr Jacques Coulardeau in the Paris Sorbonne and since then has been working with him as his assistant.

This volume brings together several studies and documents, most of them unpublished before on the general geo-political question of the restructuring of the Indian Ocean as the center of global maritime commerce.

At first we go back to its central position as soon as Homo Sapiens emerges from Africa some 150,000 years ago.

Then we look at the history of Sri Lanka from the arrival of Homo Sapiens, then Buddhism, then the Chinese and later on the European colonial powers, to the central position it is taking in maritime commerce thanks to Chinese investment and the developing of the port of Hambantota and a few others after the end of the LTTE terrorist period.

We then stop on the Buddhist influence in Sri lanka as it appears in the Sigiri Graffiti in, Sigiriya from the 9th to the 12th centuries, plus a selection of these Sigiri Graffiti in an original English translation;

And finally we move to the development of Container maritime Commerce in the Indian Ocean at the Global level today

And we can then come to the concluding hypothesis that the world is being restructured globally and by reconstructing the dominance of the Indian Ocean the way it was up to the 15th century though in our modern context.

JC


TABLE OF CONTENTS


Introduction                                                 p. 5

Philogeny of Language
And African History                                               p. 13


Sri Lanka: From the Arrival
of Homo Sapiens to Indian
Ocean Maritime Hub                                  p. 53

A Buddhist Debate
In the Sigiri Graffiti                                     p. 95

Sigiri Graffiti, A Selection
Diyakapilla, October 5, 2005
Olliergues, December 27-31, 2005         p. 123

Hub Container Maritime Commerce
The re-emergence of the Indian Ocean
At Global level                                             p. 133

Can We Conclude                                     p. 171





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