photo


21
Jun 15

Andiamo al cinema

(Extra material from our trip to London.)

I found these three posters in an Italian restaurant in London. I took a few quick snapshots because, I figured, they’d one day be worth sharing. My apologies for the reflections. There was a stairwell and bad lighting and actual food to eat.

It isn’t the most influential spaghetti western, but For a Few Dollars More is a direct descendent. And this is a ridiculously good poster and, no matter the language, you probably know exactly what film this is for:

Released in 1965, the film became the highest-grossing film in the history of Italian cinema. It came to the U.S. a few months later and made millions more.

The Deerhunter, and so now you know that the poster acquirer — shut up, that is too a real profession — for this restaurant has taste:

Ferruccio Amendola did the Italian dubs for Robert De Niro’s Mike Vronsky. He did dubs for more than 30 years, usually carrying big, domineering characters.

Sorry for the angle here, but The Hustler poster was hanging too high:

Totally worth it.

Play this while you read below:

Happily, the Italian dubs for Fast Eddy in both The Hustler and The Color of Money were done by Giuseppe Rinaldi. That’s no small thing. He’s considered the greatest voice actor in Italian history. He dubbed more than 200 foreign actors in about 500 films. Hudson, Sellers, Sinatra, Lancaster, Douglas, Peck, Martin, Dean, Poitier. Were you a leading man in the second half of the 20th century? Chances are that, in Italy, you sounded like Rinaldi. He worked for almost 40 years, until 1997, and passed away a decade later.

Jackie Gleason’s Minnesota Fats was played by Carlo Romano, who was an incredibly accomplished voice actor as well. He appeared in 86 films and did voicework for a few hundred more foreign actors. I can’t find him in that role on YouTube, but there are examples of Romano’s other work. He was no Gleason.


20
Jun 15

Sixth anniversary

Today we celebrated our sixth wedding anniversary with a nice little bike ride, some afternoon silliness and then a dinner at Warehouse Bistro, which has become our traditional anniversary dinner. And, so, it was pretty much entirely perfect.

Our traditional anniversary selfie:

Six years and a lot of fun. Here’s to more adventures:


19
Jun 15

A few Berlin postcards

(Extra material from our trip to Germany.)

This wall relief is on display at the Pergamon Museum in Berlin:

It is from the temple-palace at Tell Halaf and was made from basalt and limestone.

Tell Halaf is a dig site in northeastern Syria, near the Turkish frontier and was the first find of a Neolithic culture, dating to the 6th millennium BC. The name Tell Halaf is a modern name. Tell means “hill” and Halaf meaning “made of former city.” The original name is unknown.

Max von Oppenheim excavated the site at the turn into the 20th century. Some of his finds were destroyed while on display during World War II. The surviving pieces went into storage until the beginning of the 21st century. Now more than 30 sculptures are on display.

This is a panorama. We got to climb to the top of the rotunda of the Berlin Cathedral, prominently featuring the iconic Fernsehturm:

Click the image to embiggen!


18
Jun 15

I have seen the future

And it doesn’t want $15 an hour:

I wonder how easy they are to use. And I wonder if this will finally mean you can reliably get your quarter-pounder with no pickles.


17
Jun 15

Back on campus

Had a meeting and a few things to take care of on campus today.

The landscaping is still lovely as ever:

And those banners will probably fly for a long time, too. Deservedly so. Top-ranked school in the state is no small thing. Go Bulldogs.

Pretty campus we have there, no?