Delve into the World of Art

Welcome to my online den. This blog gathers a wide and wild array of creative works relating to pop art—movies, songs, books, and so on. Enjoy the ride!

Soyez les bienvenus dans mon antre ! Vous trouverez ici des petites merveilles de créativité artistique qui gagnent à être connues. Bonne lecture !

May 28, 2013

Requiem pour les âmes damnés

Aujourd'hui chers lecteurs et charmantes lectrices, je m'apprête à vous emmener faire une balade en Enfer !

Restez bien auprès de moi. Ne vous éloignez pas trop, car il me serait fort pénible de vous retrouver exsangue à l'ombre d'une ruelle. Aussi méfiez-vous de certains sourires fauves...

Cap sur Résurrection
Pour un plongeon délicieusement morbide, 
dans l'univers torturé et tordu 

La décadanse | Bal des vampire | Requiem Chevalier Vampire
Résurrection est un monde décadent et baroque à souhait, un lieu où la mort est une longue fête. 

Résurrection est l'outre-monde. Là où les âmes damnés prennent corps et mort. Tout y est bien sûr inversé. On rajeunit avec le temps jusqu'à la sénilité infantile, les continents sont des mers de sang et les océans ne sont que territoires belliqueux et dangereux. Les lois du Karma y tranchent sec. Plus votre conscience est lourde et votre Karma infecte, mieux sera votre résurrection. Il est important d'être bien-né sur ces terres où votre mort ne tient souvent qu'à un fil. 

La caste la plus noble est celle des vampires. Élitiste jusqu'au bout des dents, cette caste ne tolère que ses plus forts et féroces représentants. Seul un vampire sur dix survit à l'initiation de l'inquiétant Sire Cryptus afin de se mériter le titre de Chevalier Vampire. Les dystopiens vénaux de Sa Reptilienne Majesté, les goules ultra-féministes, la fanatique bande de loups-garous et une multitude d'autres créatures vomies d'une purulente et féconde imagination complètent la lutte des classes. En bons derniers, les hordes de zombies tiennent lieu de populace abrutie à l'image de leur vie antérieure. 


Requiem Chevalier Vampire
Requiem, vampire tatoué aux croix gammée et inversée.
Pire encore... c'est un romantique désespéré.
Le genre de protagoniste qu'on ne croise pas souvent.
Mais, j'oublie les bonnes manières ! Laissez-moi vous présenter notre protagoniste, Requiem. Né Heinrich Augsburg, ce blond officier pâlot du 3ème Reich est mort au combat sur le front russe pour ensuite renaître vampire. Baptisé Requiem après son initiation, notre anti-héros refuse d'oublier son grand amour à la vie, à la mort - une jeune et jolie juive nommée Rebecca. Celle-ci périt sur Terre aux mains peu délicates de la Gestapo et réapparaît sur Résurrection consumée par le désir de faire la peau à son tortionnaire, un certain Otto Von Todt, qui n'est point étranger à Requiem.
Bon, je vous rassure tout de suite. La bande dessinnée Requiem n'a rien à voir avec l'idéologie nazi. C'est certes une oeuvre sans tabou, un imaginaire débridé qui n'a que faire du politiquement correct et qui campent les personnages dans des postures qui mettent mal à l'aise dès le début - mais il s'agit bien là d'une plume artistique qui se rattache à une tradition littéraire française puisant ses racines dans Les Chants de Maldoror du Comte de Lautréamont et les écrits philo-lubriques du Divin Marquis. Comme on le verra plus loin, Requiem Chevalier Vampire est - du moins à mes yeux - une oeuvre d'une rare qualité littéraire. Le maniement de la langue est subtil, les traits d'esprits acérés et les références culturelles qui y abondent témoignent d'une grande érudition et d'une ouverture d'esprit peu commune. Seule la religion en tant que concept creux en prend une sacrée volée. Si c'est cela qui vous choque, tant mieux ! Ne lisez pas des oeuvres qui vous font peur, vous risquez un brusque réveil de votre torpeur liturgique. Je m'égare, obscur brebis que je suis. Revenons plutôt à nos tourtereaux ! 

Requiem Rebecca etreinte
Requiem et Rebecca se donnent la petite mort à coeur joie

Outre, cette sensualité féroce et animale qui parsème cette oeuvre si française, l'humour y est aussi particulièrement délectable ! Qui de mieux que Sire Cryptus pour vous y faire goûter...


ou alors une petite allusion coquine...


Traits d'esprit ou de grotesques drôleries, vous y trouverez bien votre tasse de thé. Faites juste attention de ne pas avaler l'oeil flottant par mégarde, c'est juste pour donner un soupçon de tonus. Mais de grâce, refusez énergiquement le nuage de lait !




Bon, trêve de plaisanteries. On ne lit pas Requiem Chevalier Vampire comme une vulgaire histoire. On en profite aussi pour se cultiver. Comme je vous le disais plus tôt, cette oeuvre est truffée de références culturelles - certains évidents, d'autres exigeant une connaissance générale assez poussée et de la perspicacité à les dénicher.
Voyez par vous-même ! Dans l'extrait ci-dessous, Black Sabbath emmène Requiem faire un tour dans les entrailles de son antre secret afin de fomenter un coup contre Dracula. Un extrait certes important pour la suite de l'histoire, mais qui mine de rien, nous parle de Rablais, d'un culte de l'Ancienne Égypte, de l'architecture de la Grèce Antique et de l'occulte selon Aleister Crowley.



Quand on parle du loup... Voici Crowley en personne, aussi féministe que dans le temps !
Mes compères collectionneurs seront ravis de découvrir, au gré des pages, certaines pièces de toute beauté, comme la magnifique Rapière Trident offerte à l'Électeur Christian 1er de Saxe par l'exubérant Vincent 1er de Mantoue en 1587. Cette pièce unique, témoin de l'Histoire, repose paisiblement dans un musée à Dresde en Allemagne. 


Cependant, la Rapière Trident n'est pas aussi exotique que l'Urumi, ces lames d'acier légendaires du plus ancien art martial au monde. Le Kalaripayattu se pratique encore dans le Sud de l'Inde où certains étranges mystiques se souviennent encore de quelques bribes de ce qui fut autrefois un art foudroyant de destruction.




Je prend congé de vous en vous laissant profiter de ces quelques belles images. Mais avant que je ne me retire pour la nuit, permettez cet écart nostalgique ! Car je m'en souviens comme si c'était hier, le début de cet épopée. Ce fut à l'ombre ribaude des sapins des Vosges que je découvris l'univers de Pat Mills avec les yeux pleins de rêve. Une décadente décennie s'est écoulée depuis. Et c'est à l'ombre paisible des sapins du Québec que les derniers tomes de cet aventure se profilent. Le temps passe vite.

Croquez la vie à pleine dent !








April 03, 2013

Canadian Values 


Even though this blog is dedicated to Art, I've been feeling the urge recently to share my vision of what it means to be Canadian and to be living in a truly free country. I've lived and been to many places on this planet and seen many things, good and bad. I've seen how the absence of true liberty and the lack social consciousness bring out the dark demons of mankind.

I feel tremendously privileged to be living in a lively, participative society based on genuine human and humane values. A society where we smile to each other everyday, hold doors for the next person, greet strangers, and take care of one another. A transparent society where each individual is encouraged by all to develop his/her full potential as a complete, serene, happy and creative human being for the benefit of all. We are a rich society, not because of dollars and natural resources, but because we produce formidable individuals within the close-knit family of human bonds.

If I can encompass in just one sentence what it means to me to be Canadian for my fellow citizens, it would be -


"I am ready to die to defend your right to think differently than me and to be different."

"Je suis prêt à mourir pour défendre ton droit à penser et à être différent de moi."


February 28, 2013

Two Pints - addendum

My last blogpost on British TV comedy classics was shamefully incomplete. Of course such lists cannot be expected to be exhaustive, but I did leave out two major classics and for that I must repent. Mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. Keep the lions at bay as I make amends!

Mind Your Language


Mind Your Language was a show which ran in the late seventies. The first season was broadcasted before I was born, but I did get to watch it as a kid in Mauritius since the show was immensely popular in the entire Commonwealth. The humour in Mind Your Language is universal and as such it has aged like fine wine. I reckon it is just as funny today as it was back then, if not more given the quality of the puns - a bull's eye each and every time. 

Be warned though, the show is thick with stereotypes. Mind Your Language was produced in those days where being politically correct didn't matter as much as being artistically creative. The racial stereotypes - which might make Americans uneasy - are also accompanied by generous splashes of sexual innuendo here and there. That notwithstanding, the show remains very bon enfant. It was the spirit of the times. The seventies. Anyway, as I see it Mind Your Language celebrates multiculturalism through laughter. Everyone gets their share and all the characters in this show are quite charming.

You'll quickly want to fit in that class of looneys too


Witty humour in all good fun. 


Spitting Image


Spitting Image was a puppet show which ran in the eighties through the mid-nineties. It was a satirical depiction of royalty and politics. The show inspired the French equivalent Les Guignols de l'Info which currently enjoys similar popularity in France as Spitting Image did in the Commonwealth. Most other satirical puppet shows on politics and current affairs find their roots in Spitting. To be fair, this type of humour - heavily contextual and culturally specific - doesn't age very well. In fact, it's so not funny anymore that I'll spare you the clip. But it deserved to be mentioned as a classic.

February 12, 2013


Two pints please!


It's been quite a while now since I wanted to write something on British humour - that dry, wry and witty thing which charmingly reveals the warmer features of the otherwise phlegmatic and pragmatic folk of Great Britain. As you are aware, the United Kingdom is quite foggy. It is an island grey, dank, and cold. Yet or perhaps because of this, I've always been pleasantly surprised by the cosy feel that permeates the carpeted indoors of British households. Unmistakably so, every time I curl up with a funny British book or watch British comedy, this familiar feel gets conjured up much in the manner of a overly friendly blob monster oozing out of nowhere.

As the winter spell still huffs and puffs outside, grab a cup o' tea and cuddle up as I decant some of the finest gems of British humour. One blogpost to crack you up with the best of Britannia in a nutshell!


What's on the telly?


Yes Minister


I clearly recall the trumpeting opening theme of this programme which would gather family members around the telly. If you were living in a Commonwealth country in the eighties, you must have heard about Yes Minister and its sequel Yes Prime Minister. If not, well this is your opportunity to discover what to this day still stands as an ageless monument of exquisitely intelligent humour.

The plot satirically depicts power plays between the cynical public service and calculating politicians. It is about government – or the lack of it. And shows how the country manages to run itself while everybody is selfishly running after the ball under the guise of national interest.

Sir Humpfrey in Yes Prime Minister was certainly no yesman!
Sir Nigel Hawthorne as Sir Humpfrey
in Yes Minister was no yesman
The outstanding character of the show, Sir Humphrey, excellently played by late Sir Nigel Hawthorne, stands unrivalled to this day for his sarcasm, wit and... excessively lengthy and über-coherent sentences. Salut l'artiste indeed!

Yes Minister is one of the most brilliant pieces of humour ever made. And it hasn't taken a wrinkle. Relish it!




The Black Adder


Rowan Atkinson is famous all over the world for his iconic character, Mr. Bean. A show which has its merits of conveying humour beyond the barriers of language and culture, and honours the legacy of Charlie Chaplin and Laurel & Hardy.

However, there is so much more to this formidable artist that it is profoundly ironic that one of the most eloquent and witty comedian ever to grace national television be world-renowned for a dumbo character who almost never utters a word!!! So let me introduce you to my personal favourite of Rowan's fictional characters - The Black Adder. An infamous, vicious and calculating mind that you are bound to like!

The Black Adder spans over the history of England. The first season is set in the Dark Ages, where we find Black Adder as a medieval prince lurking and plotting in the obscure nooks of a Norman keep. In season two, we follow the turpitudes of his descendant Lord Black Adder as he manoeuvres in an elizabethan court for power and survival, under the erratic rule of a mad queen. Season three is a delicious excuse for an aristocratic Black Adder to hatch nasty schemes while he butlers for the brainless Regent (played by a young Hugh Laurier, yes that's Dr. House for ya!). In the last season, we find captain Blackadder knee-deep in the trenches. Throughout the series, Black Adder is accompanied by his servile sidekick Baldrick, “an oppressed mass” of humble origins.


'Allo 'Allo


Listen carefully, I will say this only once.”

'Allo 'Allo is one big feast of laughter. The show is set in occupied France where we find René, the owner of a small Café. René is your average French bourgeois of the times - striving to earn a decent living while the world is going berserk. René doesn't like trouble and has managed to keep his business afloat by catering to the German officers. His main concern is to conceal his ongoing affair with Yvette, the seductive lead waitress (Awwwww René!). While also hiding his affair with the lovely junior waitress from both his wife and Yvette. 

This is the tranquil life René aspires to. Then a twist of fate wreaks havoc in the plans when the French resistance decides to hide two British airmen in René's private apartments above the Café, which suddenly becomes the hotbed of intringue. Things get more complicated when the Gestapo dispatches steely and cunning Herr Otto Flick to investigate...

Fraulein Helga
Private Helga Geerhart (Kim Hartman)
Our reluctant Résistant and héros malgré lui is supported by a whole bunch of notable characters who wonderfully pepper this series to give it its warmth and flagrance.

Now that I think about it, it is probably 'Allo 'Allo which gave me my first insights in European accents and in the wealth of marked cultural differences in Europe. The little boy inside still clearly recalls the sultry French waitresses, Yvette and Maria, the feline Fraulein Helga, Michelle from the Résistance,... Thank you René!

Fawlty Towers

At its peak, Fawlty Towers towered over national television like no other. The show stars Monty Python's John Gleese, and though not in my personal top three – I'm the first to admit that it is the British classic par excellence. Fawlty Towers is less elitist than Yes Minister, less offensive than Black Adder and less “politically incorrect” than 'Allo 'Allo. The genius of it, however, is that it is brilliant humour whilst appealing to the broader audience.

Remember the cosiness I was talking about in the intro. Well, I'd definitely spend a weekend in Fawlty's hotel just to relish that feel. John Gleese, in the role of the Basil Fawlty, magnificently plays the part of the cynical hotel owner who is so despicable that you can't help but like him.

Basil The Rat is renowned as being the funniest episode of the lot. I dare you watch this without laughing out loud or “lolling” as it goes nowadays.





Two Pints of Lager and Pack of Crisps


After the classics, a breeze of the contemporary lifestyle. Two Pints of Lager is about the daily tribulations of a small group of friends in their mid-twenties. Set in the industrial town of Runcorn, the storyline sticks to the décor and is about the simple lives of ordinary blokes. What is unexpected though is how easily one gets attached to the characters – Donna, Gaz, Janet, Johnny, and Louise. Effective acting and quick humour makes this show quite addictive. Must be the reason it ran for ten years, which is quite a survival feat in today's TV jungle.





The Misfits


Now what would happen if a random group of young people doing community service suddenly gets struck by lightning and develop superpowers?

Well, in the US, they'd become superheroes.
But in England, they remain a bunch of simple lads suddenly endowed with superpowers. And all sorts of silly things ensue. Basically that's the plot in Misfits. A plot which won the show a BAFTA award and many nominations. The acting in Misfits has to be highlighted. Watch out for Nathan (Robert Sheehan), he'll come across as an irritating prick and he is definitely the star of the show, even though there are no lead characters as such in the gang. Kelly (Lauren Socha) is also wonderfully refreshing in her role as a chav.




Alan Partridge


Alan Partridge
I'm Alan Partridge.
The ordinary bloke thing seems to be a recurrent aspect in contemporary Brit humour. But allow Alan Partridge to make it sub-ordinary and lower all your expectations... as to humanity itself. If there ever were words to describe Alan, amoebic would most likely come closest. Alan works in a local radio - Radio Norwich - where he runs a live show airing at around 4 a.m. This is just how exciting Alan can be. You'll hate him. But somehow, inexplicably, you'll absolutely love to hate him. Alan Partridge is played by British comedian and writer Stephen Coogan.

Well off you go. Indulge in that porridge of funniness. Aha!



Minor criticism. More distance between the eggs and the beans. 

I may want to mix them, but I want it to be my decision.

My personal favourite. 

p.s. The movie Alpha Papa based on Alan Partridge series was released in August 2013. Haven't watched it yet though, so you'll have to tackle this one on your own!

UPDATE: Alpha Papa watched and my advice: Watch it!

Men behaving badly

To finish with the ordinary bloke string of shows, here's the classic in the genre. Men behaving badly is about two roommates and how badly these everyday joes go about with their lives. The show is probably the trend-setter which inspired those aforementioned, and encapsulates life in the 1990's.

Absolutely fabulous

Ab Fab is about cougars and milfs before the terms were coined. A feminine take on humour, the show is very entertaining. The show delves mostly into family relationships from a surprisingly sarcastic and hilarious perspective.

---
That's it for the shows I'd recommend to cheer you up on an icy day. Hope you'll enjoy each and every one of them. The list is certainly not exhaustive and there are also a number of other shows like Little Britain (trash humour), Red Dwarf (sci-fi comedy), Only Fools and Horses, The Office and the like, that might also be your cup of tea.

Cheers!

December 20, 2011

Of Epic proportions - The Meme phenomenon

The Meme is here. It lurks everywhere, crawling all over the Web. You've seen it, read it and probably thought that it was some sort of obscure gibberish. But the Meme is not to be taken lightly. It is not merely some nonsensical secret language or code; it is an invisible bond that today unites entire Web communities. It has shaped an underground network that connects individuals in climes remote, shrinking the world to yet newer proportions.

This blog post explores the Meme. As you delve into secrets untold and learn to decipher a whole new worldwide web of creativity unleashed and humour gone wild, you will notice that my tone will ping-pong between that of the stoical lecturer and that of the dreamy back-bench student. But, I'm only sticking to the dichotomic paradigm of this blog. On one hand, the Meme is a very elaborate abstract concept fertile in philosophical intricacies, and on the other hand the Meme is a very contemporary humour phenomenon in Web culture. So please bear with me!


The Meme as an abstract concept 

What is the Meme, you will ask. Well, Merriam-Webster will tell you that a Meme is an idea, behaviour or style that spreads from person to person within a culture. The Meme can be broken down to a unit bearing a cultural significance,transmitted from one mind to another through writing, speech, visuals, gestures, mimics or other repeatable phenomena. The Meme is, by definition, an interesting thought to dwell upon. One fertile with philosophical considerations and musings.

The term 'meme' is derived from the Ancient Greek word 'mīmēma', meaning 'to imitate'. Both the word and the concept are relatively new and sprung from the mind of British evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins in The Selfish Gene (1976). Dawkins coined the abstract notion to encompass the set of evolutionary principles in explaining the spread of ideas and cultural phenomena. Thus, Dawkins makes an analogy between the spread of ideas and biological evolution through the process of natural selection. Meme ideas or memes spread through the behaviours that they induce in their hosts and undergo variations along the way. Some become extinct while others proliferate.

Food for thought, aye? Ideas have always spread like wildfire, bringing forth changes, good or bad, as they trigger irremediable chain reactions in the brain and in society. Once an idea is out of Pandora's box, there is no stopping the Domino effect. This is why some will have it that you do not think outside the box, that you don't bite into the apple of knowledge or that you don't google the word freedom. They can shoot the messenger, but they can't shoot the message. Interesting thing, this Meme. In today's world where an idea can be shared to hundreds of millions across the globe in a matter of seconds, what are the implications?

Humans have evolved to produce ideas, what now if rapidly evolving ideas are driving humans to evolve even faster? Far-fetched? Not really. Look at the world around you and see how it has changed. Remember the rotary dial telephone, the walkman, the VHS, USSR, the Berlin wall, Apartheid, life before Internet? You don't have to be a venerable sage or an old-timer to remember all that, being in your late twenties would suffice. Ideas are rushing by, carving out within our lifetime and in front of our bedazzled eyes, not one but several brave new worlds

Memes - ideas diffusing rapidly and evolving through behavioural changes induced in their hosts - is one theory that you are bound to encounter again as it gathers momentum, shedding light and delivering critical insight on today's age information and technology. 

The Meme as Web phenomenon

The second part of this abstract is way less academic and much more...fun! If you're a well-rounded consumer of entertainment and pop art, into geek culture, an Internet addict, or simply a curious fella, then you've probably already heard of the Meme Theory through The Big Bang Theory. TV shows and movies are major generators of Internet Meme. "Hope you're hungry", "Still a better love story than Twilight", "How you doin'?", "This is Sparta!" are but a few examples. Get it? Well, this is what the Meme is about - getting it. 

If you don't, you're not in the loop. But fear not, you'll be shouting out loud "I see what you did there" soon enough given that you've knocked at the right door for insider information. I'm handing out red pills to the other side for free. Memes have always existed wherever you have a decent or indecent community within which the members share common cultural codes which intentionally or unintentionally sounds like plain gabble and vain goobledygook to outsiders. Internet Memes however, have the particularity of benefiting from visual support and instant worldwide propagation capacity. An epidemic of epic proportions, it is Sir.

Web-based Memes have steadily risen in popularity with the advent of a generation born in and raised on the Internet Culture. A community to be reckoned with, as Nescafé found out only a few weeks ago when a member of the 9GAG community expressed his despair online after the unfair disqualification of his handicapped brother from a competition organized by Nescafé Hungary. The 9GAG army literally gagged Nescafé's Facebook page, forcing the company into some action to save its public image. Nescafé found itself donating 5 million Hungarian forints to charity for disabled persons, out of sheer Internet pressure. 

And I must say, having witnessed this moment live on the Web, there was something comforting in seeing youngsters from all over the world, united by a shared sense of humour and an odd sense of community,  gang up on a multinational to seek justice for their brethren. A new, budding community at play, one that knows no frontier - physical, racial or of creed, and one which is already shaping its own future world.