Yeah, I think we're still several years away from Criterion going HD.zedz wrote:Ah, I think he's talking about a regular DVD (from an HD transfer), not an HD disc.
Tribe
I think criterion will go HD by Summer 08 at the latest. That's my bet and I'm sticking to it. I can't wait to see what kind of extras they put on this set. Maybe we'll get the whole trilogy, the other two belonged to image at some point, no?Tribe wrote:Yeah, I think we're still several years away from Criterion going HD.zedz wrote:Ah, I think he's talking about a regular DVD (from an HD transfer), not an HD disc.
Although Salo is sometimes considered a poisonous abreaction to the Trilogy of Life, it's not formally a part of it. The Trilogy is the three episodic adaptations of classic story cycles (The Decameron, The Canterbury Tales and The Arabian Nights). Apart from the last of these, there must be a good half-dozen Pasolini's I'd rather see Criterion tackle.SncDthMnky wrote:I can't wait to see what kind of extras they put on this set. Maybe we'll get the whole trilogy, the other two belonged to image at some point, no?
120 Days of Sodom is not 800 pages long, that's the length of the volume of collected works that includes Sodom. I don't remember offhand how long the novel itself is, but I'm fairly certain it's short enough that it could be included. The only trouble is, I don't think there's currently an in-print edition of just Sodom.editman wrote:At last! Ideally Marquis de Sade's 120 Days of Sodom (at least in abridged form - I doubt it's feasible to give away a 800-page book with the DVD)
I haven't read his work, but having seen "Quills", His work was probably more important in the way it was received as opposed to how it was written. I doubt he was the first man to put ink to paper and describe his sexual thoughts at length, but he was imprisoned and had to sneak his writings out of his confines, making it far more inflammatory.Highway 61 wrote:Predictable question here: what exactly are the merits of the Marquis de Sade's work? He was nothing more than an amoral hedonist, no? Although I've never seen Pasolini's film, I am aware of his intentions, so please don't take my inquiry as a dismisal of his film; I'm just curious about the source material.
Also, is there a public-domain translation, or would Criterion have to license one (or pay for a new one)? The original text is long out of copyright, of course, but English versions may not be.solaris72 wrote:120 Days of Sodom is not 800 pages long, that's the length of the volume of collected works that includes Sodom. I don't remember offhand how long the novel itself is, but I'm fairly certain it's short enough that it could be included. The only trouble is, I don't think there's currently an in-print edition of just Sodom.
Are these all book-length?Roland Barthes: 'Sade, Fourier, Loyola' (Editions du Seuil)
Maurice Blanchot: "Lautréamont et Sade' (Editions de Minuit; in Italy Dedalo Libri)
Simone de Beauvoir: 'Faut-il brûler Sade' (Editions Gaimard)
Pierre Klossowski: 'Sade mon prochain, le philosophe scélérat' (Editions du Seuil; in Italy SugarCo Edizioni)
Philippe Sollers: 'L'écriture et l'experience des limites' (Editions du Seuil)
he also stated that he did not act upon many of his impulses, but the very fact that he had them meant that someone out there had those impulses too, and that they might not have the dicipline to control their urges... I believe that he also used writing as the main escape for his desires. He did act upon many of them, but his worst ones (like those depicted in 120 days of Sodom) were never enacted upon by the man.Highway 61 wrote:Predictable question here: what exactly are the merits of the Marquis de Sade's work? He was nothing more than an amoral hedonist, no? Although I've never seen Pasolini's film, I am aware of his intentions, so please don't take my inquiry as a dismisal of his film; I'm just curious about the source material.
I don't know about trolling, but it's certainly misinformed.denti alligator wrote:I consider this trolling. Anyone with me?jbeall wrote:FWIW, I think their reading is wrong, just because these two "Marxist" philosophers haven't really bothered to read their Marx.
And I stand by my claim that Adorno and Horkheimer were just wrong (quite often in that book, I might add). Adorno and Horkheimer argue that fascism is the end result of the dialectic of enlightenment, showing how, for example, Odysseus is a actually a 'modern' man, as is Sade. But that's not Marx! Marx was no vulgar materialist, and certainly he never said that progress was just some continuous process where the crossbow necessarily leads (as A and H claim) to the gas chamber.tryavna wrote:In fact, Adorno and Horkheimer knew their Marx quite well but were part of a much wider movement during the first half of the 20th century to reevaluate Marx and figure out what he got wrong. Others include Gramsci, Benjamin, Althusser, etc. In particular, Adorno, Horkheimer, and the rest of the Frankfurt School's major project was to align Marx with Freud -- a rather odd goal if you think about it. But that helps to explain why they'd find Sade an interesting person/phenomenon to write about.
Yes, this was my point. Just because one disagrees with the thread of Marxism that the Frankfurt School pursued doesn't mean that it's not Marxist. Dialectic of Enlightenment is one of the most influential Marxist texts of the 20th century, heavily influencing Jameson (among others) -- and Jameson himself hardly qualifies as an "orthodox" Marxist any more.denti alligator wrote:it's still simply wrong to say that A&H didn't know their Marx. In fact, it's preposterous. They may not have spouted orthodox Marxism (thank god!), but that doesn't make their brand of Marxist-tinged social criticism a sign of watered-down or misunderstood Marx.
I can appreciate this point of view. Adorno is one of those theorists/critics that one either likes or hates. (Often, it depends on which of his works you read first and whether or not you agree with the principles of "negative dialectics.") I happen to like him, despite his apparent elitism. And although I strongly disagree with his opinions on jazz, he wrote some of the finest, most insightful criticism on both Beethoven and Schoenberg. Not to mention his input into the Frankfurt School's study of the "authoritarian personality" -- perhaps the F.S.'s single most important contribution.But Adorno, and Horkheimer to a lesser degree, don't do so well with the historical stuff because they're elitist intellectuals of the academy. Is it trolling to call it like I see it? It would hardly be trolling to say that Adorno was completely wrong about jazz.