Movie of Recognitions called "Certified Copy"
Mark Kohut
markekohut at yahoo.com
Mon May 30 07:23:12 CDT 2011
I think Kirostami is a great filmmaker....
He is one who is infused with (some) great writing and uses and changes and
alludes just
like some great writers do with their writerly influences---yes, like you TRP
and others....
The Wind Will Carry Us, a fave---first of his I saw, I think----borrows from The
Plague and
Waiting for Godot, I'm almost certain.....(many reviewers are so movies-only,
they might not
have seen the allusions, in my unhumble opinion.)
I cannot believe there is this movie!....Must see....seems Kirostami focussed on
that key
chapter about the married couple at home alone.....................
----- Original Message ----
From: Edward A Moore <edmoorester at gmail.com>
To: pynchon-l at waste.org
Sent: Mon, May 30, 2011 2:04:59 AM
Subject: Movie of Recognitions called "Certified Copy"
http://www.imdb.com/news/ni8855826/
Certified Copy
2010
Abbas Kirostami
English, French, and Italian
Of all the dense, intertwined ironies in William Gaddis’s novel The
Recognitions (some of which may not be ironies at all, but actual
truth), the slyest but also least reticent comes out in a conversation
between a young painter, Wyatt Gwyon, and the sinister art dealer
Recktall Brown. “It’s a question of being surrounded by people who
don’t have any sense that what they are doing means anything… If
everybody else’s life is interchanged and nobody can stop and say,
That is mine, this is my work, then how can they see it in mine,”
Wyatt asks. The irony is that Wyatt is exclusively a forger, an
incredibly talented one, mostly of Flemish masterpieces. His method,
handed down to him, is to reject any semblance of originality – “The
romantic disease” – and perfect the forms of the masters through
repetition. »
ed
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