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1. Tuesday, April 10, 2007 5:39 PM
nuart Another Reason I Love LA!


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So it's always warm here.  Sometimes hot but owning a heavy jacket or a coat is a complete waste of money.  That means it's always easy to pop in or pop out of wherever you are without having to bring extras.  Half the houses here don't even have coat closets! 

It smells so good in the spring.  Nightblooming jasmine and orange blossoms.  In the summer, honeysuckle and gardenias.  

It's BRIGHT.  The sun shines brighter here and when it lands on the bright colored houses, cars and plant life, it is enough to take your breath away.

People are pretty colorful here too.  They come from all corners of the globe.  Over its short lifespan architects came from troubled European cities and took up residence in the hillside communities designing in a wild assortment of styles. 

It's a side-winding city that covers many square miles with the rare highrise going more than 25 stories upward.  The many mountains and the coastline provide a ever changing array of vistas depending on what part of town you happen to pass through.  And I'm telling you that even our slums (if indeed they exist here) are beautiful!  Nice middle class neighborhood in New Jersey do not have the flair of an LA ghetto.  

I just got back from the dog park where we met "Stone" and his owner, a young man so attractive you'd expect him to say he's an actor/waiter.  But no, he was an emergency room doctor!  For real!   

And then there's this.  Making LA ever more what it is.  A vibrant lovable town.  My kinda town! Seriously, not that I want any more people here clogging up the freeways, but how can the rest of you NOT want to be here???  You can always visit other towns -- other states -- other countries.  But not to live in Los Angeles?!  What gives?

Susan 

April 10, 2007

Los Angeles, City of Productions

A.M. Mora y Leon
2 A.M.

Sleepless in Los Angeles. There are so many helicopters buzzing in this place it sounds like a war zone. Endlessly they are circling; I don't know what this is all about. I look out the window and hear police sirens and see flashing blue and red lights, too. And the buzzing and chucking of police helicopters over empty streets in the dead of night continues.

I googled the local radio stations and found nothing. The roaring and chucking continues. Next I called the L.A.P.D. They wanted to know what crime I wanted to report and I told them my neighborhood sounds like a war zone and it's so bad I can't sleep, and would they be able to tell me what's going on? Should I be alarmed? It sounds like 9/11 all over again, I told them. The lady got my address and looked up ongoing police activity in the area. She said the only crime in my area was a report of a man screaming on a nearby highway.

"But would you guys send a whole police helicopter just for that?"

"Yes, all the time," the lady politely told me.

Life in Los Angeles.

Even the police activity in this city has all the flash of a Hollywood production. This city really would send a helicopter - and it must cost a lot to send - over to some guy screaming on a highway. And for all this, I've actually never encountered a crime in this city, yet I've lived here for three years.

But maybe it's related to series of events in Los Angeles that really intrigue me.

And maybe they all have something to do with this city's proclivity for putting on productions, as everyone from Hollywood film producers to the L.A. cops do. Los Angeles is a city of productions. Instead of building many big fancy monuments - projections of civic greatness (although there are a few here and there) - this city more famous for its highways exists to put on productions.

It has one important aspect. Putting on productions requires stars.

It's significant that Los Angeles' roster stars, along with its productions, seem to be extending well beyond Hollywood's output.

Two big ones have arrived in Los Angeles in the past few weeks. First, soccer great David Beckham of England, whose ferocious talent and straightforward play have delighted everyone who watches him. He's the inspiration for the terrific movie "Bend It Like Beckham" and probably others, and he's still got some good playing years ahead. It will be so fun to have the opportunity to watch him live. It's an intriguing stretch that he's decided to come to a place so far away from the world's great soccer capitals. What great fortune he's landed in Los Angeles!

Now, a hot young Venezuelan orchestra conductor, Gustavo Dudamel, age 26, a brilliant product of Venezuela's state youth orchestra program which has been going strong for three decades, has announced he'll come to Los Angeles to conduct the Philharmonic.  Dudamel's probably the most sought-after classical music talent in the world, with orchestras fiercely competing for his presence.

Yes, I intend to go see and enjoy both of them.

It's probably not all that surprising that either of them chose Los Angeles, given the breezy and sort of original and glamorous quality of life here, side by side with its unabashed consumerism. The city has come a long way from its earlier zenith as a producer of entertainment to make everything a fancy production now. With that, it can be expected to attract the only purpose of productions, more talent, and from more areas than anyone can forecast. I look forward to seeing a lot more of this as the city spreads out in its forte of making everything out there, even a nut screaming on a freeway, into a production.  

 


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
2. Wednesday, April 11, 2007 1:44 AM
A Woman In Trouble RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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I wouldn't contradict anything that you've said, Susan. However, for me the smog and general pollution (light and noise etc...) outweighs all the pros you've listed as a reason not to live in LA.


On the second day he came
With a single red rose
Said "Will you give me your loss and your sorrow?"
I nodded my head as I lay on the bed
He said, "If I show you the roses will you follow?"

On the third day he took me to the river
He showed me the roses and we kissed
And the last thing I heard was a muttered word
As he stood smiling above me
With a rock in his fist

They call me the wild rose
But my name was Eliza Day
Why they call me it I do not know
For my name was Eliza Day

 
3. Wednesday, April 11, 2007 9:01 AM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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I have heard about this "smog" but it is often mislabeled. Before the automobile was invented, the indigenous people of the San Fernando Valley called it "valley of smoke" because of the inversion layer that develops on super hot days. Emission controls for automobiles are stricter in California than they are in other states which is why we pay so much more than others for gasoline.  Days of unhealthy smog are rarer now than they were in the 1950s. Maybe if someone suffers from asthma or other breathing disorders, they physically feel smog or suffer as a result.  Myself, it's a rare day I would label as smoggy.

I would imagine that anyone concerned about the health effects of smog would be a non-smoker, right?  Don't forget, we have entire towns within Los Angeles where smoking is illegal, with Santa Monica becoming the latest.  You CAN smoke in your home if you live in the People's Republic of Santa Monica, but nowhere else.

Okay, noise.  I guess I have complained often about the construction WHAM-BLAMS that I awaken to each morning at 7:00 am.  Both houses should be complete by year's end but it's been a long haul.  Nearly four years for my one neighbor's house!  Sure, I've mentioned the howling of coyotes in the middle of the night but to me, that's mostly pleasurable unless it wakes up Lola.  Maybe you mean the helicopters?  The person who wrote that article lives in Hollywood.  The sound of choppers is infrequent.  They usually hover over the freeways to keep track of traffic.  Which really is the number one downside to living in LA even though if you learn the back streets, you can avoid most of that.

Simon, despite your protestationsI think you'd love it here! 

Your Friendly Chamber of Commerce member, 

Susan 


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
4. Wednesday, April 11, 2007 7:33 PM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Today's newspaper had an article on this website put together by a German tourist who regularly travels to Los Angeles to photograph the city of angels. His website is amazing! I hope you'll all check it out.

 

BOOTH, you architecture fan -- you will love this website!!!

 

Anyone else who is curious, please dig in. This wild man has seemingly photographed every building in town.  Lovely!

Susan


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
5. Wednesday, April 11, 2007 7:53 PM
Booth RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Oh Googie, you are so beautiful.
Dingbats seem to be hated, but I like them.

Hey, there's a picture of David Lynch's house.

 
6. Wednesday, April 11, 2007 7:59 PM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Lost Highway house , right?

 

 

Susan 


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
7. Wednesday, April 11, 2007 8:09 PM
Booth RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Yes, that's the one. Beautiful.

Also worth noting is the Chemosphere, owned by Benedikt Taschen of Taschen books.

 
8. Wednesday, April 11, 2007 8:27 PM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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That house was for sale a few years back.  It's had several owners.  Remember when it was in one of those Lethal Weapon movies? Lethal Weapon II, I think.  It's been used in several films though.

Susan 


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
9. Thursday, April 12, 2007 7:32 AM
Booth RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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I know it's supposed to be in Body Double, but I don't remember that movie very well.
According to IMDb, the house in Lethal Weapon II was a "mock stilt house" in Valencia, California.
Same thing for Charlie's Angels. It's based on the Chemosphere but it isn't the actual house.

 
10. Thursday, April 12, 2007 8:58 AM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Here's a good article on the history of the Chemosphere house from last year's LA Times. Valencia, huh?  Actually I do remember wondering about the road in front of the house when I saw Lethal Weapon because it looked different from my memory.  Valencia is basically known for two things -- Cal Arts (a Disney-funded art school of the ilk ridiculed by Daniel Clowes) and Magic Mountain.  Lots of open spaces and probably more so back in the 80s. 
 
If you ever saw the Peter Sellers film, The Party, (some may call it a Claudine Longet film) then you will have seen the exterior of another mid-century house here in Tarzana.  I can't find any information on that one online but we went through it during an architectural tour.  When I walk to my mail box and look up across the street, I can see it from below.  Spectacular 360 degree views.  The interiors were filmed in a studio but with the same basic design as the actual house.  It has an interior stream that runs through all the corridors.  The last time I saw the interior, it was still purple and orange.  Wonder if the present owners have left it like that.
 
Susan 
 
ARCHITECTURE

Eight sides to this story

Perched high above the city, publisher Benedikt Taschen inhabits the John Lautner house Chemosphere, an octagonal design that's part Jetsons, part Bond and vintage L.A. Modern.
By Scott Timberg, Times Staff Writer
April 7, 2005

When Benedikt Taschen, a globe-trotting publisher of stylish art books, and his then-wife first laid eyes on Chemosphere House in 1997, the iconic Los Angeles structure had seen better days.

The sleek, octagonal house, perhaps the boldest work by the singular architect John Lautner, is considered a masterpiece of California Modernism and is beloved by cultists of midcentury design.


FOR THE RECORD:
Chemosphere house —An article in Thursday's Home section about Benedikt Taschen's home said the house appeared in the movie "Diamonds Are Forever." The house was not in that film.



But the Taschens saw dirty, disco-era, wall-to-wall carpet on much of its 2,200 square feet, an old aluminum door, smudged windows and seven layers of paint on what was originally a gently austere, exposed brick wall.

Still, "it was love at first sight," says the laconic German, wearing a red Muhammad Ali bathrobe as he shows off the place on a hazy morning. The backlist of Taschen's company — from homoerotic nudes to the original Lutheran Bible — includes books on Modernist homes, the architectural photographs of Julius Shulman and monographs on Richard Neutra and the Case Study houses. Some of the books, along with dozens of art magazines, are scattered around the house and its unobtrusive furniture.

Today, the place is serene and airy, with a simple, light-wood openness that suggests midcentury Scandinavian crossed with a ski chalet, and views that are pure Southern California.

"I bought it right away — as fast as possible," says Taschen.

Frank Escher, who was brought in as restoration architect, vividly remembers the place's condition. "I have to give Benedikt credit for seeing past the disrepair and sad state the house had fallen into," he says. "It looked like a rundown motel. It had been rented out for 10 to 12 years; it was like the ultimate party house."

In fact, during much of that decade, the place had been on the market. "It was for sale for so long," says Taschen, "that it was even in a 'Simpsons' episode: a house with a for-sale sign."

"There was no market for that house," says Julie Jones, the Realtor in the sale, who had watched the place languish after she listed the house. "Everybody loved Spanish, and then shabby chic came in." Midcentury houses "would sit and sit and sit — you couldn't give 'em away. People would want to see the view, and that was about it."

The fate seemed unjust for a structure the Encyclopedia Britannica had once judged "the most modern home built in the world," and which had appeared in Brian De Palma's "Body Double" and the James Bond movie "Diamonds Are Forever." It's hard not to see the house, which sits on a 29-foot-high, 5-foot-wide concrete column over a long-considered-unbuildable Hollywood Hills site, as a hovering flying saucer or a prototype for the 23rd century architecture of "The Jetsons."

But the 1960 house is very much a work of its time and place.

Alan Hess, an architectural historian and author of "The Architecture of John Lautner," considers Chemosphere as perfect an expression of Southland culture as Greene & Greene's Gamble House, Eames House and the finest work of Neutra and R.M. Schindler.

Chemosphere was characteristically Los Angeles of that time because "it didn't have to look like a house," says Hess. "It was an architecture newly defined. It could take on its own brand-new shape. It displays the optimism of its time: that technology can be used to solve any problem, just as Century City and Googie's," the Lautner-designed Sunset Boulevard coffee shop, did. "The West would not be possible without technology: Water, electricity, everything that it took to overcome dryness and distance was dependent in some form on technology.

"Something I find fascinating about the house is that it is a single-family home," built for a couple and their four children. "And yet whenever that house is used in the movies, it's always a decadent bachelor pad. You have the reality of Southern California life, and the image of Southern California life, summed up in one house."

It's not the only contradiction the place contains. "From the outside it looks like a spaceship which you cannot enter," Angelika Taschen says from Berlin, where she now lives. (The couple are finalizing a divorce.) "But if you go inside, it feels very cozy … very Zen and calming. Maybe because you are floating above the city, above reality in the sky. You feel disconnected from the planet and completely free and happy."

The house is the product of a fortuitous union of architect, client, time and place. Leonard Malin was a young aerospace engineer in late-1950s L.A. whose father-in-law had just given him a plot north of Mulholland Drive, near Laurel Canyon. The land was leafy and overgrown, with extravagant views of the San Fernando Valley.

"My philosophy at the time was, most people work their whole lives to build their dream house," Malin says from Arizona, where he's constructing a new home. "Why not build it now, and pay for it for the rest of my life?" This was a time, during L.A.'s postwar expansion, when a middle-class client could build in the Hollywood Hills on a modest budget: Malin had $30,000 to spare.

The only catch: At roughly 45 degrees, the slope was all but unbuildable. The plot may have remained empty had Malin not approached Lautner, whose work he knew from a nearby house. Lautner, a brilliant but reputedly prickly man, sketched a bold vertical line, a cross, and a curve above it. "Draw it up," he told his assistant Guy Zebert.

Though Lautner could appear imperious, a quality he may have learned from his mentor Frank Lloyd Wright, he was also a deeply practical and hard-headed problem-solver. Lautner didn't see the house as a flying saucer but as a sensible solution.

However counterintuitive the scheme, it was also one of very few imaginable that allowed the plot to be utilized. And because of a concrete pedestal, almost 20 feet in diameter, buried under the earth and supporting the post, the house has survived earthquakes and heavy rains. (The house is reached by a funicular.)

"What was great about Lautner," says Benedikt Taschen, "is that he had this dualism about nature and the city. On the other side, it's very quiet," he says of the home's northern edge, which contains the bedroom and his office. "It's pure nature, with all kinds of animals: skunks, bobcats, coyotes, deer. They are not shy; you almost have nose prints on the window.

"And here," Taschen says, walking toward the living room window that faces the Valley's homes and skyscrapers along the 101 Freeway, "it's all city."

Taschen admires the bold dichotomies the architect worked with. "That's the characteristic of great artists: They can make things simple."

Hess points out that Lautner's embrace of Modernist innovation and organic forms made him a more interesting architect, but also contributed to his obscurity during much of his career. During the 1950s and '60s, the starker, cooler Modernism of the Bauhaus and of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe reigned in intellectual circles, especially in Europe and on the East Coast.

"Organic Modernism was just as modern in its use of materials," Hess says, "but it had a different sense of space, which was flowing. The way a building was put together was like a tree or a flower or a cave — natural forms. Wright was one of the founders of that approach to Modernism, and Lautner brought it to Southern California."

Even out-of-state critics and scholars who could appreciate the sharply angular California Modernism of midcentury didn't know what to make of Lautner's merging of the modern with natural forms. "So they ignored him," says Hess, "or put him in the category of undisciplined, far-out, do-whatever-you-want California architecture."

Escher, the preservation architect, considers Lautner "the missing link between the classic Modernism of the Case Study Houses and the work we now associate with Los Angeles — the more expressive, more sculptural forms. Frank Gehry has said that as a student, he considered Lautner to be a god."

Unlike a lot of the more didactic and theory-driven homes of Modernists from Le Corbusier to Philip Johnson, it's actually pleasant, most of the time, to live inside a Lautner. The homes don't force their inhabitants into an ant farm's existence the way some houses do. Le Corbusier called his homes "machines for living in," and sometimes they felt that way, with their narrow hallways and rigidly prescribed paths.

Chemosphere is bisected by a central, exposed brick wall with a fireplace, abutted by subdued seating, in the middle. One side of the house is public, with a small kitchen and blended living and dining rooms including built-in couches below glass windows. The house's private half includes a master bedroom with bathroom, small storage and laundry rooms, an office made of two children's bedrooms, and an additional bathroom. Despite being more compact than many new single-family houses, it has most of the essential elements.

Angelika Taschen, a leonine PhD in art history, knew the house from Shulman's photos before she saw the real thing. She worried it might be difficult to live there.

She said that besides limiting her trips out of the house because of the funicular, living there didn't alter her behavior. "Day-to-day life is really easy," she says, often easier "than in a conventional home where the architect has not thought so much about every single detail."

Lautner, despite his reputation as having a strong personality, worked hard to suit his clients and their inner lives.

Angelika describes the place as having a spiritual impact, almost like a church. "With this house he found and expressed this almost religious spirit with a perfect architectural language in general, but also in detail."

Benedikt likens the house to an eagle's nest. "You feel safe. It's warm and human, not a cold place. You would not expect it from outside."

The only consistent problem with the house, Taschen says, is that its technology often fails in subtle but frustrating ways. "Every day there is something not working," he says. "The maintenance is 10 times higher than in any other building. Everything is much more complicated. To get cable or Internet, they have to come 10 times.

"It's like having a vintage car — a '55 Mercedes. More difficult. But they have a personality to them, ya?"

In Escher's first meeting with Taschen, the restoration architect pointed out which pieces were original, which needed to be replaced, and which details deserved restoration. "He interrupted me in about half a minute and said in German, 'Herr Escher, why don't you do what you think is right?' "

For Escher, a native of Switzerland who loves the rational, structure-inspired work of Lautner, Neutra and the late Pierre Koenig, this was a gift from the gods. His firm, which he runs with partner Ravi GuneWardena, had been partly inspired by classic California Modernism, and here he could delve into a great Modernist's original conception. (Escher wrote the first book on Lautner a few years after moving to Los Angeles in 1988, and currently oversees the John Lautner Archives.)

The architect describes the job as a philosophical challenge. "I think the hardest thing was developing an intellectual strategy for how to deal with it," Escher says, calling the task, "a combination of research into history and technology, and to some degree into Lautner's psychology. You can't be afraid of a house like that: You have to, in some cases, be kind of forceful."

The forcefulness was balanced with the architects' own "sensitive and careful" respect for Lautner's intentions: The goal was to undo the damage previous tenants had exacted, and to simplify. The restoration team removed layers of paint, paneled the walls with the same shade of ash wood used for the original built-in couches and cabinets (some of which needed repair or restoration), and replaced the fixed-paneled windows with frameless glass.

"We wanted to make it as invisible and elegant as possible," says Escher. "That's something that's important to all our projects: We don't try to draw attention to a detail. It should disappear." GuneWardena compares the process to "pruning a garden, to reveal the clarity of the structure."

They also tried to match what they thought Lautner would have chosen if he'd had access to contemporary workmanship and a larger budget: The original drawings, for instance, described a floor of random broken slate, but the day's technology would not allow the stone to be cut thinly enough to keep from destabilizing the house. Escher's restoration ran the flagstone pattern inside and out, across the bridge that connects the front door to the funicular.

One of the biggest challenges was bringing art into the house, difficult when a home already exerts a bold personality. "The Taschens originally wanted to have more period pieces," Escher says. "But we didn't want the house to be a museum of the 1960s."

Today, Chemosphere is furnished sparely with clean-lined pieces including Eames chairs and a coffee table and an oval Florence Knoll dining room table. Taschen commissioned the suspended lamps of bent plexiglass strips by Cuban-born L.A. artist Jorge Pardo and the pastiche rug designed by German painter Albert Oehlen.

"These Lautner houses are like custom-made clothes," says Escher, "so you really have to find the right tenant for them. Taschen was perfect for the house — he immediately grasped what the house was about, and he was entirely open to our ideas for the place, like ripping out the glass and commissioning pieces by artists."

During the first few years the Taschens lived there, the house became locally famous for their parties, where photographer Bill Claxton and his model wife Peggy Moffett would carouse with porn stars, jazz musicians and director Billy Wilder.

These days, now that Taschen has an office in Hollywood and a bookstore in Beverly Hills, the place has reverted to being, mostly, a house for him and fiancée Lauren Wiener. He has canceled plans for a guesthouse designed by Rem Koolhaas at Chemosphere's base because he feared it would visually compete with the main house. His only major plan is to replace the bird-cage-like funicular with a more open one.

Taschen remembers going to a Beverly Hills open house where "a fashionable Hollywood film star" was selling his Neutra home. The young actor, in the publisher's estimate, "had robbed the soul of the house. If you make tiny changes that don't fit the integrity of the house, you destroy it. It's like a movie where you add a scene of someone with a mobile phone in 1958, or a style of shirt or car that wouldn't have existed until years later.

"It's the responsibility of the owner to preserve it for future generations," Taschen says, "because a house like this doesn't belong to one or two people: It belongs to mankind."

The Chemosphere restoration won an award from the Los Angeles Conservancy as well as the approval of its original tenant.

"Today there are materials that weren't available then," Malin says. "The place is much better than when I was in there — and it's in keeping with Lautner's vision."

Taschen says it's hard to get bored with the place — despite the rain this winter — since the enormous windows offer an expansive view on the world. "It's like a wide-screen movie," he says. "Always changing."


Times staff writer Scott Timberg can be reached at scott.timberg@latimes.com.


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
11. Thursday, April 12, 2007 10:08 AM
Booth RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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QUOTE:

If you ever saw the Peter Sellers film, The Party, (some may call it a Claudine Longet film) then you will have seen the exterior of another mid-century house here in Tarzana. I can't find any information on that one online but we went through it during an architectural tour.
I've only seen the birdie num num part of the movie, but I did some looking to see if I could find any information. I didn't find anything of interest, except this:

"This movie is more or less an American remake of the final phase of Jacques Tati's Playtime, released one year earlier. The tampering with electronic switchboards, the drunken waiters, the funny chairs, the stoic, fat capitalist and the everything-gets-out-of-hand – it's all there, together with a similar, loosely structured narrative style."

How about that? Huh? Huh?

 
12. Thursday, April 12, 2007 10:48 AM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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That's HILARIOUS, Booth!  But somehow, I'm taking that little blurb as seriously as I did those invented words on the Word o' the Week thread.  Is that review from the Booth Book of British Humor (subtitle: ...and How the Lot of it Was Pilfered from Jacques Tati)?   I'm starting to pin down your geography now, I think...

You cannot seriously suggest that Jacques Tati is the comedic equivalent (or superlative) of PETER SELLERS, can you?!?!  

The Party was a brief moment in time and I saw it contemporaneously.  If I watched it again, I might react the same as I did after watching Mon Oncle.  Hard to say.  Of course, Peter Sellers had the advantage of speech so I still think The Party would have the edge.

When that film came out, I was still living in bleak post-riot Detroit where I could look out my apartment window and watch young Black Panthers practicing their moves with the bigger boys in black berets.  Very grim.  I so wanted to be in Los Angeles but that would follow a winter sojourn in the deep South -- Miami. 

To me that house was the epitome of what it meant to live in LA.  A couple years earlier I had taken a high school drafting class.  Our final assignment to design a house with all the floor plans and the interior design.  My house plan had a circular bathroom with an elevated circular tub on a rotating pedestal.  Windows all around.  Sculptures of egrets as towel holders.  The living room was orange with a hot pink Jaguar XKE right in the center of the room as a work of art never meant to be driven.  So, what I'm saying is The Party was something beyond its filmic dimensions -- I could almost live in it.  (where have I heard that before??? The Party along with Juliet of the Spirits pretty well summed up my architectural fantasy of what home was all about. Throw in the Anjanette Comer hillside house in The Loved One and it all comes together!

Susan 


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
13. Thursday, April 12, 2007 11:26 AM
Booth RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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QUOTE:

That's HILARIOUS, Booth! But somehow, I'm taking that little blurb as seriously as I did those invented words on the Word o' the Week thread. Is that review from the Booth Book of British Humor (subtitle: ...and How the Lot of it Was Pilfered from Jacques Tati)? I'm starting to pin down your geography now, I think...

You cannot seriously suggest that Jacques Tati is the comedic equivalent (or superlative) of PETER SELLERS, can you?!?!

The review is not mine, it was lifted from the IMDb user comments here: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063415/usercomments-62

As for the Tati vs. Sellers thing; no I probably wouldn't.
I'd put Tati with Buster Keaton.
Keaton was at his peak 1920-1928, and just about everything he did then still holds up today, even if some the comedic value has diminished over the years. It's still excellent moviemaking.

That's why I said you shouldn't expect a laugh riot from Mon Oncle, even though it's billed as a comedy.

 
14. Thursday, April 12, 2007 12:47 PM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Okay then, Manuel.  Ooops, I mean "Booth." 

 

1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-
Oh, those harmless anarchists!, 18 June 2003
Author: manuel-pestalozzi from Zurich, Switzerland


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
15. Thursday, April 12, 2007 1:31 PM
Booth RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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If you're trying to make me feel frustrated, it won't work.

 
16. Thursday, April 12, 2007 3:40 PM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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QUOTE:If you're trying to make me feel frustrated, it won't work.

Wouldn't dream of it!

Meanwhile, the canyons of Beverly Hills are ablaze. My sister's house is in the path. Mulholland Drive, Beverly Glen Canyon and Coldwater Canyon is the zone. One humongous house was burned through and through. The roads north of Sunset in Beverly Hills are closed to through traffic.

It's very dry here. And today was super windy. There are tree branches down all over the place and since Thursday was trash day, empty trashcans are littering the streets. Water dropping helicopters are flying over the hillsides and hopefully, they will soon have it under control.

Well, it's all in a day's work here. No rain, lotsa dry vegetation and probably a careless cigarette ash that started the whole thing.

I still love it, but the fires can get scary.

Susan


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
17. Thursday, April 12, 2007 5:37 PM
John Neff RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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All this mayhem must just be my welcome back to LA! I just came down Hollywood Blvd. and had to pull over for a huge firetruck that went roaring up Laurel Canyon.

Just another day in the Naked City.

Meanwhile, can't wait to get back to Marin, where the butterflies are SO DAMN LOUD, you can HARDLY HEAR YOURSELF THINK!!!!

And don't get me started on the DRAGONFLIES!!!

ODE TO LA:

I do not miss the trash trucks at six

The clanging in my alley

I do not miss the choppers flying right above the Valley

The criminals they run so fast

The cops can hardly catch them

Illegal Immigrants flying past

Insurance does elude them

Restaurants rated 'A'! 'B'! 'C'!

Delis without health food

Taco trucks on ev'ry corner

Feedin' all the 'hood

Travel west on Sunset

searching for the beach

Realize your own small space

Keeps you out of reach

So much money

So little time

Text me when you can

Get your people to set up lunch

Ooppss! I'm off again

Chasing that strange pot o' gold

It's right there-at the end of the rainbow!

Sorry officer for being so bold

I thought I could get home, No?

Please, Mister, give me a chance

I'll show you I can take it

Give me just a little more

Then I know I'll make it

What do you mean, he's out of town?

He told me he'd be here

Oh, some other little star

Has gotten to his ear

 
18. Friday, April 13, 2007 12:25 AM
12rainbow RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Was that off the cuff, John?  I like it alot *thumbs up*

 
19. Friday, April 13, 2007 8:13 AM
Booth RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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QUOTE:

Well, it's all in a day's work here. No rain, lotsa dry vegetation and probably a careless cigarette ash that started the whole thing.

It could be an interesting building; one giant tumorous Gaudiesque smoke pillar skyscraper made out of concrete.

 
20. Sunday, April 15, 2007 2:01 PM
John Neff RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Off the Cuff, Angel. My first time back in LA for a couple of years.

 
21. Sunday, April 15, 2007 7:16 PM
cybacaT RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Ok I was with the "Go LA!" thing until you started commenting on clear skies and fresh air.

I remember the last time I was in LA the plane descended from "clear and fresh" air, down into the browny-orange haze that passes for "air" in LA.  Now we're not talking Bombay/Mumbai level pollution, where your eyes literally sting if they don't blink every 3 seconds, but it's no clean air of the Alps either...

 

That said, LA does have a lot going for it.  I'd sum it up as an awesome place to holiday or visit, but well down the list of places to live.

 
22. Monday, April 16, 2007 8:36 PM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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QUOTE:

 

That said, LA does have a lot going for it. I'd sum it up as an awesome place to holiday or visit, but well down the list of places to live.

And how I wish about 9 million of the 10 million in LA County agreed with you, Cyba.

Susan 


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 
23. Monday, April 16, 2007 11:45 PM
cybacaT RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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I guess that's the lure of the razzle-dazzle, celebrity, Hollywood...

If you didn't have all those millions, you wouldn't have the 0.01% who actually make the dream a reality.

(and then realise like Anna Nicole that the dream was a little hollow to start with)

 

As far as theme parks and excitement go, LA goes great guns.  But don't get me started on the superficiality, the vaccuous celebrity culture etc.

I admit my experience with LA first hand is limited, having only been there twice.  But when staying with obscenely rich friends who live there, I got to see the Rodeo Drive side of life...and was somewhat impressed by the luxury, somewhat disgusted at the excesses.

Visiting the touristy spots around LA I was left mightily impressed...especially the theme parks - just brilliant!

Driving around seeing the poorer side of LA, as uninformed Aussie tourists are apt to do, I was surprised and dismayed by the poverty there in such an affluent city.

 

As I said  - a great place to visit, but not on my top 10 list of places to live.

 
24. Thursday, April 19, 2007 9:10 AM
Booth RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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I just finished watching this: Reyner Banham loves Los Angeles. Fun.

 
25. Thursday, April 19, 2007 11:14 AM
nuart RE: Another Reason I Love LA!


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Thanks for that film, Booth! What a nostalgic trip it was! I moved to Los Angeles just before that -- 1970. Like Reyner, I have always felt like a perennial tourist in my town. I love that people call Los Angeles "this town" so often in conversation.  Wow, LAX back in those days before the high security!  Phew.

Nostalgia is hard to take in large doses so slightly less than one hour was good. Sunset Blvd has changed so much since then. Wilshire Blvd with its high rise office buildings and flat parking lots back in 1972 was a strange sight as it is now solidly high rise (20 stories maybe) multi-million dollar/per unit condominium complexes from Westwood to Beverly Hills. Venice Beach has improved as the body builder predicted it would. I was always amazed by a beachfront slum when I first came here. I have visited Vasa's studio too and enjoyed hearing his thoughts. The only place in that film where I have not visited was the Watts Tower but I now feel inspired to do so.

I came to LA right after the Manson murders. I used to think it was funny how people dated things here around the prominent crimes. That was right after the Bobby Kennedy assassination. Around the time of the OJ murders. The Freeway Killers were on the loose then. That's when Marilyn Monroe 'committed suicide.' Biggie was shot that night on Wilshire Blvd. It was right around Christmas time when Jack Nance was attacked in that donut shop. When Robert Blake shot his wife. When Phil Spector shot that woman from The House of Blues." Etc.

He hit the nail on the head by pointing out the ephemeral quality of this town. Loved seeing a young Ed Ruscha too!

Thanks again for that, Booth. He gets it! And for anyone who wants to come to LA and take my tour, I'm available if you book it in advance. There are many new sights not mentioned on this film and lots of older places he didn't get around to visiting.

Susan


     
“Half a truth is often a great lie.”

 

Ben Franklin

 

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