Cool Hunting Video: Rachel Levit: From sad children to balding business men, the fantastic work of an up-and-coming Brooklyn illustrator

Cool Hunting Video: Rachel Levit


CH recently trekked over to the Bushwick neighborhood in Brooklyn, NY to visit the studio space of illustrator Rachel Levit. With strong influences from Mexican folk art, Levit has developed a distinct style of figure…

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(Re)turn of the Screw: The screwball comedy has its roots in the sport of cricket

(Re)turn of the Screw


Sponsored content: By Chris Diken of Vimeo In conjunction with Vanity Fair and Film Independent, The Lincoln Motor Company tapped filmmaker Dana Turken to reimagine the classic genre of screwball comedy. Her film “A Likely Story,” is a madcap adventure…

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Tarantula: Carson Mell’s animated series on the life and times of Echo Johnson

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“Echo Johnson is a 42-year-old widely respected but uncertified tattoo artist of mixed race who has willfully cast off the burden of being at all ambitious.” “Your TV doesn’t love you, but I do, I do,” serenades Echo Johnson, the transient hero of Carson Mell’s animated series “Tarantula.” In…

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Live

Cancer fuels comedy in Tig Notaro’s impromptu album

Live

Tig Notaro was on top of the world. Ringed with critical appeal and on the crest of a booming career, life was looking up for the comedian. The tumbling of events that followed included a severe sickness, the death of a mother, a breakup and, finally, a cancer diagnosis….

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Theatre Almonte Architecture

Coup de cœur pour ce projet très réussi et visuellement impressionnant, encadrant ainsi avec talent la scène de théâtre avec des jeux de lumières de qualité. L’architecture du Theatre Almonte à Huelva en Espagne a été confié au studio Donaire Arquitectos. Plus d’images dans la suite.

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Sleepwalk With Me

Mike Birbiglia’s new film makes a powerful commentary on modern romance
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In his cinematic debut, comedian Mike Birbiglia takes the audience on a journey that explores his transformation as an individual and comedic artist. Birbligia, who has made a run on Broadway in a one man show and appeared on NPR’s This American Life and The Moth Podcast, brings his story to the big screen in Sleepwalk With Me. The film tells the tale of Birbiglia’s cumbersome entrance into comedy that runs parallel to a failing relationship and the comedian’s coping with an extreme sleeping disorder. If you are familiar with Birbiglia from the radio or his shows you will recognize many of the stories told here but the interpretation in film adds a fresh layer to his epic on comedy and elusive topic of contemporary romance.

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To begin we see Birbiglia the bartender, struggling as a comedian both professionally and creatively. Desperate to succeed in the shadow of an overbearing father, Birbiglia gets his break at the hands of a talent agent who sets him up with very low paying gigs scattered across the Eastern Seaboard. His hunger drives him on, forcing him to neglect his longtime girlfriend and himself through his denial of his sleep disorder, but success is still evasive because his material is stale. The turning point arrives when he begins to speak frankly about his life, his woman and his sleeping disorder.

Once he ditches the jokes and starts being honest the audience can begin to respond. Birbiglia is naturally awkward but relatable, his written comedy isn’t that funny but his stories are fantastic and his honest, depreciating delivery is enchanting. In the process of his comedic transformation Birbiglia becomes alienated from the love of his life, and in his denial of their parting ways proposes marriage to patch things up. This predictably fails, leaving Birbiglia alone to finally face the roots of his destructive sleeping habits and the realities of his relationship.

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In the film Birbiglia uses several devices to construct his narrative. At times he addresses the camera directly, frankly attempting to explain himself to the audience and setting up the following scenes. The majority of the film comprises these set-ups acted out by Birbiglia, playing himself, and a dynamic cast of characters. Finally, we are allowed to enter the hectic and dangerous territory of his sleep disorder—cinematically the most compelling element of the film—and see how his bizarre imagination creates situations that are treacherous when lived out in reality.

Despite the title of the film, sleepwalking plays a minor role compared to Birbiglia’s struggle with comedy and his relationship, with one flourishing as the other falls apart. The resulting story ends up providing surprising insight on the necessary sacrifices required to achieve one’s goals and the finely blurred lines between love and romantic maintenance.

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The film speaks strongly to the state of modern love and offers a very fresh look at relationships. There is no real conclusion, just a description of experience that points out the absurdities of romance and let’s the audience make their own resolutions. Produced in partnership with Ira Glass, the film itself feels like an extreme labor of love with clear passion and energy applied in every element. While very entertaining it is clear that this, like all of Birbiglia’s projects, is a therapeutic exercise for the comedian, another step in processing his rise to notoriety and his personal life experience.

Premiering 24 August 2012, this film is definitely worth checking out and is an exceptional example of how a compelling story, great cinematography and dedication can make independent cinema shine.


Cool Hunting Video Presents: Aziz Ansari

Our chat with a comedy powerhouse about tacos, comedy and the future of media

It’s not everyday you get to sit down with a comedy powerhouse like Aziz Ansari. We lured Aziz to Dorado NYC with delicious Mexican fare and talked shop about the current state of the media business. Having released his latest special, Dangerously Delicious, independently and strictly available online in a digital format, Aziz had made some interesting points about the future of content. Check out the video to learn more about his start in comedy, his love of properly battered fish and where he hopes content is going.


Monty Python: The Holy Book of Days

Witty cast commentary and Blu-Ray synching in this behind-the-scenes app for iPad
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Offering Flying Circus fans a behind-the-scenes look at “Monty Python & the Holy Grail” (now out on Blu-Ray), the just-released companion iPad app “Monty Python: The Holy Book of Days” covers the epic film’s 28-day shooting schedule with previously unpublished content sure to please Python aficionados and pillocks alike. The production story is laid out in animated pages that mimic the movie’s transition screens and title sequence, with interactive bits hidden throughout the app.

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Users can browse by scene or production day to find outtakes, film stills, storyboards and original script pages. Terry Gilliam’s storyboards are hilariously brilliant, and actor Michael Palin’s daily filming journal provides valuable insight on making of the cult classic. John Clese provides the video introduction—just a few of the 70 never-before-seen minutes—and all of the Pythons chip in to narrate a day-by-day recollection of the shoot.

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Melcher Media’s Charlie Melcher created the app in collaboration with Holy Grail producer John Goldstone to highlight the newest version of the film on Blu-Ray. The companion disc syncs with the app on a Blu-Ray player, letting you keep up on production notes as you watch the film. Using a simple home wifi network, the Blu-Ray converts the iPad into a second screen to augment the film content. Users who are surfing the app can also play relevant scenes on their televisions with a simple tap.

“We wanted this app to not only tell the story of the production, but also be a quest in its own right,” says Melcher. “Storytelling app design is like creating a topography to give your reader an immersive, tactile adventure through the landscape of the story.”

“Monty Python: The Holy Book of Days” is available from the iTunes app store for $4.99.


CH Book Giveaway

Tweet to win a book and iPhone case in our giveaway

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Spanning indie zines to extensive cookbooks, the plethora of books sourced for our holiday pop-up with the Gap last year are all penned by NYC-based authors. Our city’s literary bounty can now be yours—we’re giving away the backstock to a handful of lucky CH readers along with our special-edition Cool Hunting iPhone cases.

To win, tweet @coolhunting with the link to your favorite Cool Hunting book review before Wednesday, 17 August 2011, 11:59pm EST. We’ll pick winners, who we’ll award a grab-bag of one book and iPhone case.


Your Wildest Dreams, Within Reason

Hilarious excerpts, lists and essays from a budding American humorist

by John Ortved

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What’s the worst icebreaker you can think of? Mike Sacks has some suggestions: “This party reminds me of 9/11;” “What’s your all-time favorite coupon?” or “They’re night-vision goggles, and no, I won’t be removing them.”

“Icebreakers to Avoid” is just one of dozens of hilarious lists, essays, emails and letters that make up Sacks’ new book, “Your Wildest Dreams, Within Reason” from Tin House Books. Culled from previously published work in The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, McSweeney’s and Esquire, as well as including new work, Sacks strikes blow after blow for the cause of humor.

Whether he’s reporting on the “Signs Your College is Not Very Prestigious” (they offer a minor in “Winning Radio Contests”), Sacks is unfailingly clever and precise in his satire.

His pieces have no goal but to make you laugh—and he achieves it over and over. The most succinct description of Your Wildest Dreams comes in the form of a blurb on the book’s cover, from none other than David Sedaris: “Mike Sacks is not just a sensational comic writer, but a sensational writer, period.” High praise and well deserved, it is available from Tin House’s online store and Amazon.