Tuesday, 25 September 2007

oh no he didn't!

There's something quintessentially English about Punch and Judy (foundations in Commedia dell Arte not withstanding), and while it ought to be appreciated in it' natural habitat, aka the seaside, Covent Garden's not a bad spot either.

The Punch and Judy Fellowship's annual festival takes place on Sunday 30th September In the North Piazza of Covent Garden Market, London WC2 From 10.00am until approx. 5.00pm.

Friday, 21 September 2007

oh so intricate

Advance Warning - London Film Festival

London Film Festival - 17th October to 1st November - opens for public ticket bookings on the 29th September. With showings for so many acclaimed films, some that would not otherwise get a UK screening , and many of them attended by the people involved in making them, from actors and directors, to producers and stuntmen it's o surprise that events during the festival sell out quickly. If you see something that appeals amongst the hundreds of films and events on offer - don't hang about!

There are also a number of more public events, including screenings in Trafalgar Square on the 18th and 19th October, including a screening of Hitchcock's ‘Blackmail’ as well as archive footage showing 100 years of London, from top-hatted Edwardians through swingers in 60s Soho up to nearly-now, all set to piano accompaniment.

Wednesday, 19 September 2007

he doesn't look a thing like Jesus.

Having fallen over it on Monday, and then had another quick skim on Tuesday, I still went and spent my lunch break taking another stroll around the Lomographers WorldWall that's currently taking centre stage in Trafalgar Square.

I first heard of the lomo phenomenon about five years ago, and I still think it sounds basically groovy. Not quite groovy enough for me to rush out and buy one of their cameras, unfortunately, although the fantastic colour saturation that even the most basic of snapshots takes on is very tempting.

But they're right - just holding a camera makes you look differently. My current project is a 365 - a photo a day for a year. I haven't had time to upload them in months, but I have been taking them. Every day. And I'm not bored yet. The world's full of so many moments that can be beautiful if you look at them from the right angle.

The LomoWorldWall is in situ till Saturday - both the images and the display are great, and well worth detouring to visit.

Tuesday, 18 September 2007

He drinks a lager drink, he drinks a cider drink

This came up in conversation * over the weekend : SIRC's Passport to the Pub. It's a little dated now - pre smoking ban and extended hours - but the core material's not far off the mark. (I've worked bar jobs - yes, the invisible queue really does work.)

NB. This piece forms the foundation of the (obvious) chapter of Kate Fox's Watching the English, which has equally been lapped by legal changes, but is equally light reading and, I think, basically right more often than it's basically wrong.

* in the pub, as it happens ...

Wednesday, 12 September 2007

our house

As always, London Open House is a cruel temptress - there's far more that I want to do than the laws of time and space will allow, and as I will mostly be spending the weekend helping people *move* house, I've had to restrict myself to only pre-booking one thing (a guided tour of the main Stratford Olympic site).

Still, the Flikr riches that will no doubt bloom after the fact may cushion the blow.

Tuesday, 11 September 2007

it's not the end of the world

Imperial Wharf Jazz Festival - I'm going to be at a wedding the other side of London, probably listening to the bestman's speech right around the time Babyhead are playing... Other people should clearly go and enjoy them for me.

(While I try and re-arrange my Friday night so I can fit this into it. The Tate Modern people have such very nifty ideas sometimes.)

Friday, 7 September 2007

we could be heroes

Earlier this week, one of my students asked me to recommend a film that I thought was the most accurate representation of contemporary London.

This is the point when I realised that my first answer was going to be Shaun of the Dead, and the second one was Dr Who. Given that zombies and aliens do not play a major part in my daily life, this may say more about the sort of films and tv I watch than the city in which I live...

Previous conversations about London-ish films have brought up:

Notting Hill (Hugh Grant et al clearly inhabit some sub-set of London which I do not)
Sliding Doors (ditto)
Alfie (fails the contemporary clause)
Snatch (fails the accurate clause)
Four Weddings (fails both the contemporary and the Hugh Grant clauses, although it's the best of the RomComs that are not RomComZoms.)
Clockwork Orange (fails the contemporary clause)
28 Days Later - (potential future, so fails the contemporary clause)
Children of Men - (ditto - although it is brilliant)

So I turn the question over to you. What film do you think is the most accurate representation of contemporary London?

Tuesday, 4 September 2007

But down in the underground

Tube Strikes. Again. Although, actually, this time I kind of support the cause - PPP always was a horribly bad idea, and I'm all in favour of bringing the contracts back in-house. Just not of this course of action. Bob Crow is a thoroughly obnoxious guy, and since the whole round where they were striking in support of people who were drinking on the job, the RMT's reputation is far from shining. (It may be a different matter if the other TfL unions come out as well - the TSSA especially, and they are threating too, if the pensions thing isn't resolved.)

Still, I'm fairly sure the RMT aren't going to accomplish anything with this apart from making several thousand people's commutes nightmarish, confusing tourists, and denting the retail industry. Most of us have travelcards so TfL already have our money, and it's not like coming in by other routes is any *cheaper*.

My usual 50 minute journey was well over the two hour mark this morning, and I'm in the deeply irritating position of needing to renew my annual travelcard this week, which means queueing up to pay TfL well over a grand for a service that's not currently running ....

Sunday, 2 September 2007

in the middle of our street

Thanks to my friends and relations getting themselves hitched at a prodigious rate this autumn, I don't have any free time this week to go and enjoy / take part in the E17 Art Trail. (runs from now till the 9th), and I think I'll have about half a day free over the Open House weekend (15 &16th Sept), which is nowhere near enough time to take advantage of their generous offerings...

Good job I adore the friends and relations involved, really :D