Pablo Picasso: 1881-1914 (Perfect Squares)


Pablo Picasso: 1881-1914 (Perfect Squares)

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The game of picture charades. Race against time to guess famous expressions and words. As your opponent sketches, shout out your guesses. Guess correctly and roll the die to allow you and the sketcher to move ahead.
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Picasso and the War Years, 1937-45 Picasso’s reputation has ensured that the defining points in his artistic development, from the Blue Period to the late works, have been exhaustively covered by art and biographers alike. However, his output from the late 1930s and through the occupation of Paris has received surprisingly little attention. Steven Nash’s excellent new collection, Picasso and the War Years, 1937-1945 admirably fills this gap in Picasso’s career.

The collection reassesses both Picasso’s life and his artistic output during these critical years. Contributions include discussions of Picasso’s wartime writings, his horror at the effects of aerial bombardment, his anguished portraits of women, and the increasingly political nature of his work. Paintings of the stature of Weeping Woman, the enigmatic Night Fishing at Antibes, and the later still lifes are re-evaluated in the light of Picasso’s troubled and ambivalent response to war and occupation, and virtually the entire wartime oeuvre is beautifully reproduced in 83 sumptuous colour illustrations.

Following the liberation of Paris in 1944, Picasso told an American reporter: “I have not painted the war because I am not the kind of painter who goes out like a photographer for something to depict. But I have no doubt that the war is in these paintings … Later on perhaps the historians will find them and show that my style has changed under the war’s influence.” Picasso and the War Years uncannily fulfils Picasso’s prophecy, which stands as an important book not just on Picasso but on the wider impact which war has upon art. –Jerry Brotton

Pablo Picasso

Picasso: sculpture, ceramics, graphic work.

Picasso: sculpture, ceramics, graphic work.

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Under Fire [1983] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
Under Fire was one of a trio of notable films from the mid-1980s about journalists involved in Third World war zones. While certainly a lesser film than Salvador (1986) or The Killing Fields (1984) Roger Spottiswoode’s movie is still a commendable work from a director who later brought a similarly political edge to Noriega: God’s Favourite (2000).

Nick Nolte plays an American photo-journalist covering the civil war in Nicaragua in 1979, finding himself caught in a dangerous and cynical web of duplicity and self-interest, as well as falling in love with fellow American, Claire (Joanna Cassidy). Nolte gradually uncovers the degree of his own government’s involvement with the corrupt regime, and inevitably ends up crossing the line from neutral observer to helping the rebel cause.

Under Fire is in essence a reworking of Casablanca, especially as Gene Hackman’s network newsman proves to be Cassidy’s ex-lover, yet thanks to an intelligent script, strong support from Ed Harris as a mercenary and some genuinely unnerving and frightening scenes of the random chaos of war, it’s one which packs a powerful punch. Jerry Goldsmith’s evocative score is among his best of the 1980s.

On the DVD: Under Fire is presented in an anamorphic 1.77:1 transfer which is very clean and clear with minimal grain. The well-mixed Dolby Pro-logic soundtrack is highly effective, if not so startling as a 5.1 track. Beyond multi-language and subtitle options, the only extra is the original trailer, which is also anamorphically enhanced. –Gary S Dalkin
Customer Review: Taking sides
Under Fire is one of the few mainstream American `political’ movies to emerge from the studio system, but along with Missing it’s probably the best. On one level it grafts a traditional romantic triangle onto its story of American war correspondents in Nicaragua gradually finding themselves drawn to taking sides instead of taking pictures, but at least it’s a convincingly grown-up relationship that allows Nick Nolte, Gene Hackman and a never better Joanna Cassidy to really shine. It’s a shame that Cassidy never got more opportunities like this: a last-minute replacement for Julie Christie, she’s extraordinarily good here. The film also boasts an impressive supporting cast, with a star-making turn from Ed Harris as an amiable but deadly mercenary a standout, although Jean-Louis Tritignant’s deceptively unsubtle CIA man gives him a run for his money (not so much for his performance - his English was non-existent and it’s obvious he’s learned his lines phonetically - but because he has most of the film’s best dialog). Extremely well directed by Roger Spottiswoode with a promise he never really fulfilled, it’s an impressive albeit partisan portrait of a country decaying in the last stages of revolution and also boasts what is possibly Jerry Goldsmith’s finest score (which is saying quite something). Impressive stuff. The DVD’s only extra is the superb theatrical trailer, although it does boast a decent widescreen transfer.
Customer Review: A film with new resonance
Set in civil war torn Nicaragua where the US was propping up the regime of a Dictator (Antonio Somoza) against a popular left wing uprising. Stars Nick Nolte Joanna Cassidy and Gene Hackman. The heroes all make poor choices and are flawed, for both good and bad reasons. The journalists become committed to one side in the conflict, and in this action harm those they wish to support, and yet ultimately an honest piece of reporting does produce change. Thus it addresses the eternal dilemma for journalists who must ask whether to remain passive or become active - record or participate? Now probably - “suppress or report”? Its resonance is the hypocrisy and arrogance of US foreign policy - then supporting South American Juntas through the 1980s and 1990s - and now… It is based upon a true story - the the death of journalist Bill Stewart at the hands of a Nicarguan soldier was filmed by a TV crew and really did change the course of a Civil war - but not before countless “less important” deaths. The film is driven along by an excellent soundtrack, which sucks you in as the tension builds. Weaved in this is an inevitable but credible love story. The leads all give strong performances. I think this film has been rather overlooked - perhaps it said too many things the American public did not want to hear. Better than Salvador. A policitical drama and love story about a murder set in a war! Worth a watch.

The Spanish Portrait: From El Greco to Picasso

Le Pingouin, 1907 by Pablo Picasso, 20×24
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Pablo Picasso: The Lithographs

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