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Choice is good apparently, it’s what is drummed into us the whole time. Well when it comes to clothes, there is a real beauty in simplicity and forcing yourself to reduce your choice.
This simplicity when done well is based on knowledge, craft, style, confidence. It can manifest itself in many forms but I think we should start saluting those who keep it simple, know what they like and buy a lot of it.
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‘Most of these recipes are enough for two. I know this is slightly unusual, but I am certain that more people eat this sort of food in twos than in fours’
There’s a truth in the opening words of Nigel Slaters ‘Real Fast Food’ that disrupts the status quo of cookbooks and the way recipes are almost always written – for four people
Why do we hang on to this idea that four people is the norm in a household? it almost definitely isn’t. Is there some uncomfortable truth about our nation not being street after street of happy families or gently enjoyable dinner parties? Maybe it’s just a hangover from the Elizabeth David / Delia era – who knows.
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The high street is a strange beast, it evokes so much emotion that the thought of the end of it frightens the crap out of people. Obviously, none of us, even the journo who wrote those words actually knows what they mean by it – afterall, there will always be a street and as long as people live on that street they will need to buy stuff.
I’ve been as hypocritical as the next man over the past few years – often deriding the failures of said brand as I walk past the sad looking windows yet when I walk past again and realise it’s shut for good and in it’s place is an empty shop floor and a new ‘retail opportunity’ i miss the brand. That is the beauty and the great problem of ‘the high street’, most of us want it there for aesthetic and emotional reasons, rarely for functional ones.
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industry scaremongering about the death of cinema gets tackled in the guardian with a healthy dose of common sense.
“Let’s get something straight: nothing can compete with cinema, and nothing ever will. Audience numbers and box-office takings will always fluctuate. But suggesting that downloading can ever provide an alternative to cinema is like saying that fast-food chains will kill off restaurants. The experiences are not comparable. It may take people a while to realise that – they may dip a toe in the studios’ on-demand scheme – but they will soon come to miss the largeness, the inclusivity and the sense of occasion that comes from going to the cinema. When you watch a film on a television or a laptop or, God forbid, an iPod, you haven’t seen it as it was intended. Sometimes it’s the only option available, especially with old or obscure movies now that the repertory scene is in permanent decline and the double bill has all but died out.
But the idea that audiences for blockbusters are going to spurn the excitement of experiencing at maximum size, say, the latest Pirates of the Caribbean release, or whatever floats your schooner, is ridiculous. Most will know almost without realising it that there is no alternative to the communal, immersive alchemy of cinema-going. Nothing trumps it.”
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Great quote from this Francis Ford Coppola interview
When you make a movie, always try to discover what the theme of the movie is in one or two words. Every time I made a film, I always knew what I thought the theme was, the core, in one word. In “The Godfather,” it was succession. In “The Conversation,” it was privacy. In “Apocalypse,” it was morality.
The reason it’s important to have this is because most of the time what a director really does is make decisions. All day long: Do you want it to be long hair or short hair? Do you want a dress or pants? Do you want a beard or no beard? There are many times when you don’t know the answer. Knowing what the theme is always helps you.
I remember in “The Conversation,” they brought all these coats to me, and they said: Do you want him to look like a detective, Humphrey Bogart? Do you want him to look like a blah blah blah. I didn’t know, and said the theme is ‘privacy’ and chose the plastic coat you could see through. So knowing the theme helps you make a decision when you’re not sure which way to go.
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