18 September 2025

Get in, stay in, 'cos right now you're vulnerable

Thursday music corner: Wesley Gonzalez is an English indie solo artist and founder member of London indie trio Let's Wrestle. The band released three albums and was active from 2005 to 2015. Gonzalez (who is not to be confused with the Filipino basketballer Wesley Gonzales) then went solo, releasing albums Excellent Musician (2017), Appalling Human (2020) and Wax Limousine (2022). His most recent release is the four-track Wild Garlic EP from June 2023.

Greater Expectations was released in May 2021, and features guest vocals by former Pipette, Rose Elinor Dougall. The song later appeared as the opening track on the Wax Limousine album.

Wesley Gonzalez - Greater Expectations (featuring Rose Elinor Dougall, 2021)


See also:
Music: Wesley Gonzalez - Wax Limousine (2021)
Music: Let's Wrestle - In Dreams Part II (2011)
Music: Rose Elinor Dougall - Start/Stop/Synchro (2009)

15 September 2025

Dennis Hopper: photographer

The aftermath of Hopper's first film as director saw the global superstar and auteur on a self-exiled binge in Taos, New Mexico. Wrangling footage of his second, The Last Movie, into something approaching coherence while remaining true to shifting principles of incoherence proved predictably tough going - not least for anyone expected to sit through the result. Hopper's banishment was by then complete, but it was not unprecedented. After repeated run-ins with director Henry Hathaway on the set of From Hell to Texas he was effectively blackballed by Hollywood at the tender age of twenty-one.

He went to New York, where he studied with Lee Strasberg and fell in love - with modern art and [his first wife] Brooke [Hayward], James Dean had urged him to start taking photographs when they were filming Rebel Without a Cause in 1955 but Hopper did not get a serious camera a birthday present from Brooke until 1961. Back in LA the couple discovered a simmering art scene that was about to come to the boil. Hopper was in its midst as collector (he bought one of the first Warhol soup-can paintings), participant, friend and witness.

He was shy he said later, and liked the way the camera gave him something to fiddle with. As in a low-budget indie production, the nascent scene had a cast of dozens, some natives of this coastal paradise (like his lifelong friend, curator and impresario Walter Hopps), others, like Hopper himself (Kansas) and Ed Ruscha (born in Nebraska, raised in Oklahoma) from the Midwest. In opposition to the psychological depths plumbed by Abstract Expressionism (Hopper's first painterly passion in New York), LA art relished and reflected the mass visual culture of southern California. 'Pop' may have been a conceptual import, but its raw materials could be locally sourced. The streets were full of stuff that would end up in the paintings (and the photographs): cars, gas stations, billboards for the movie stars whom Hopper counted among his friends. They brought a glamour to the art which, in turn, celebrated the profundity of the superficial. The marriage of showbiz and art has been enduring, as a merger, it has proved stunningly lucrative.

- Geoff Dyer, See / Saw: Looking at Photographs, Edinburgh, 2021, p.80-81.

See also:
Photography: Joel Meyerowitz: the heart of the photographic moment, 9 July 2024
Photography: Cindy Sherman: chameleon, comedian, 15 January 2017
Photography: Ans Westra: Wellington 1976, 30 June 2013

14 September 2025

Film Festival 2025 roundup

This year's festival was shorter than usual, just two weekends long, and due to the new 10-trip concession tickets we saw fewer movies than we normally would. In the previous two years I saw 16 films, but this time around I only managed 11. All things considered it was a decent festival, but attending the opening night screening reminded me why I generally avoid the first and last nights - the interminable speeches meant for a late and grumpy start to proceedings. Had to chuckle at the festival manager bod who claimed "It's all about the movies" while the festival leadership spent 35 minutes talking about how much work it is to stage a film festival. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad they do it, but talking about it at length is the height of self-indulgence!

Here's the films I saw this year, in rough order of preference:

===


The Ballad of Wallis Island 
(dir. James Griffiths, UK, 2025)

A real delight - why aren't there more films like this? The most charming musical offering on the big screen since Once, with great songs to boot. Not surprising, given the multi-talented Tom Basden and Carey Mulligan are involved. Tim Key, Basden and Mulligan are all superb and it all wraps up into a charming homage to the healing power of music to bridge the doldrums of loss and regret. Also contains the most definitively British euphemism for undies possible. See it - the film, not the undies, although they are obviously in the film - if you can! And if you want to learn more about the making of the film, Key and Basden's May 2025 podcast interview with Adam Buxton is the perfect companion:



Werckmeister Harmonies 
(dir. Bela Tarr, Hungary, 2000)

Constructed of long, languid takes, Werckmeister Harmonies proceeds at a stately pace depicting the descent of a Communist-era society into totalitarianism, but is anything but dull. Replete with stunning black-and-white cinematography and a gifted orchestral score, it illustrates the breakdown of a community as insidious superstition and cynical manipulation take hold, to chilling effect. Throughout, the haunted, expressive performance of lead actor Lars Rudolph bears witness to the looming, inevitable dread.



Nouvelle Vague 
(dir. Richard Linklater, US/France, 2025)

Just the note-perfect fan service making-of-Breathless that cinema buffs deserve and Richard Linklater has always wanted to make. An expert navigation of the rich mine of creativity and the innate and unavoidable frustration of working with the talented and insufferable Godard. Looks beautiful, superb casting (Zoey Deutsch and Aubry Dullin are perfect as Seberg and Belmondo), and it deftly depicts the bemused camaraderie of the cast and crew brought along, willingly and unwillingly, on the fabulist's mad journey that created an improbable, indelible memory.



Prime Minister 
(dir. Michelle Walshe / Lindsay Utz, NZ, 2025)

A useful antidote to years of self-serving revisionism skewing the narrative of Jacinda Ardern's time in power, and distinctive due to the commendably frank and revealing access provided by her partner Clarke Gayford's personal interviews and the recorded-for-posterity political diary oral history project by the Turnbull Library. Ardern's fleeting reference to Boris Johnson is a timely reminder that, whatever their political stripe, leaders aren't always equal to the tasks placed on their desks, and the skills and emotional investment required in peaceful, prosperous times don't fly for a second in times of sustained, historic crises like the Christchurch mosque massacres and the Covid pandemic. Gayford's perhaps poorly-worded query to Ardern near the end of the film - could she have perhaps delegated more, and by implication protected her own wellbeing better? - is understandably rejected by Ardern simply because of the sort of person she is; while tasks can be delegated, if you take the role of leadership seriously as Ardern does, overall responsibility can never be sloughed off. If anything, Prime Minister reveals it's a surprise she stuck it out in the role as long as she did. Which does her credit, and is a sad indictment of the corrosive nature of modern politics.


It Was Just An Accident (dir. Jafar Panahi, Iran, 2025)

Aspects of Jafar Panahi's NZIFF-opening Palme d'Or winner are intriguing, particularly its searing insights into the brutal repression of dissidents and leftists by the regime, and the lasting trauma that clouds the lives of those who survived their torture. It also benefits from wry shards of social commentary, such as the ever-present and ever-increasing nuisance of requests for baksheesh that Iranians use to make ends meet or extort tribute from those they hold fleeting power over. But the whole is perhaps less than the sum of its admittedly well-honed parts, given the implausibility of so many character actions and the handwavium needed to advance the plot being reminiscent of Jim Jarmusch's 1986 feature Down By Law, in which the jail escape is breathlessly unexplained - because if it was explained the audience wouldn't buy it for a second.


Mirrors No.3 (dir. Christian Petzold, Germany, 2025)

A pleasingly gentle German drama featuring frequent Christian Petzold muse Paula Beer as a woman involved in a rural car-crash who lodges with a lonely older woman living nearby. Examining the trajectories of grief, the solace of companionship, and with touches of pathos as the characters reveal more of their personal demons, Mirrors No.3 improves on Petzold's previous outing, Afire, and may well achieve a wider audience. It also features a well-judged deployment of the 1972 Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons northern soul classic, The Night.


One to One: John & Yoko (dir. Kevin Macdonald, US, 2024)

An effective documentary glimpse into John & Yoko's years in Greenwich Village in Manhattan from 1971 to 1973, spanning their arrival in America til their move uptown to the Dakota Building on the Upper West Side. The highlight is the restored concert footage from the August 1972 Madison Square Garden benefit gig they staged to aid the cruelly neglected children of the Willowbrook institution on Staten Island; astonishingly, the two Willowbrook benefit performances were John's last full-length public gigs. A recreation of the couple's tiny Village apartment with its telly blaring at the foot of the bed is the key to the documentary's use of snapshot TV footage from the era - news reports from Vietnam, hippie radicals expounding, and garish TV commercials speaking to middle America that John, in particular, lapped up after his youth in Britain as an America-obsessed rocker. The political machinations of the time, when the couple were flirting with revolutionary politics while at the same time trying to remain in the US legally under the Nixon administration, and every radical seemed to want them to lend their voices to their increasingly off-beat schemes, are successfully illustrated. A useful companion documentary to Michael Epstein's 2010 ungainly-named film LennoNYC.


Sorry, Baby (dir. Eva Victor, US, 2025)

Eva Victor’s first feature is a lively and sympathetic depiction of twenty-something trauma and companionship with a polished grasp of humour to leaven the serious subject matter and a compelling gift for inspired casting, idiosyncratic character development and pleasingly authentic dialogue. Hopefully this is the emergence of the next actor-director star alongside the multi-talented Greta Gerwig. Also features an excellent kitten.


But Also John Clarke (dir. Lorin Clarke, Australia, 2025)

Clarke's daughter Lorin has assembled an understandably affectionate portrait of a genial comedic polymath who charmed two nations and built a distinctive Antipodean outpost in thrall to the British satire boom of the 1960s that expanded what was possible in comedy terms in both New Zealand and then Australia. Sam Neill is an obvious interviewee, Ben Elton and Oscar Kightley perhaps less so (the latter never met Clarke, but watched him on the telly like the rest of us). I also learned that RNZ's Simon Morris of 'At the Movies' fame provided the backing vocals on the hit Fred Dagg record.  


The Mastermind (dir. Kelly Reichardt, US, 2025)

A perfect downbeat mood-piece accompaniment to Alexander Payne’s The Holdovers, depicting the preparations for and aftermath of an amateur 1970 Ohio art heist that goes awry. The titular mastermind, played by Josh O’Connor, displays flashes of insight into the meticulous planning required for a successful heist but suffice it to say, continually fails to live up to the film’s title, often in subtle but compounding ways. Kelly Reichardt has assembled an excellent cast including Alana Haim as O’Connor’s long-suffering wife, and two young sibling actors as their lively sons, who regularly pop up at potentially inconvenient moments in the criminal process. The film’s second half takes up where Reichardt’s 2013 film Night Moves left off, and adopts a loping, languid pace as O’Connor adapts to life on the lam. While the stakes may be relatively low, Reichard’s script contains welcome flashes of humour and period detail, and there’s a talented jazz score by Rob Mazurek and beautiful muted-tone cinematography by Christopher Blauvelt.


Blue Moon (dir. Richard Linklater, US, 2025)

A delightfully stagey production with a tightly-knit cast and a winning performance as Lorenz Hart by Ethan Hawke acting in shortface (is that a thing?). Able support is provided by Andrew Scott and Margaret Qualley, and the script is laced with acidic epithets, self-deprecation and barbed quips aplenty. Potentially a proud double-feature companion for David and Jack Fincher's Mank.

See also:
Movies: Film festival roundup 20242023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016 part 1 / part 2, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2009

11 September 2025

We're dashing ourselves against the rocks of a lifetime

Thursday music corner: The Style Council were a 1980s band comprising vocalist Paul Weller and keyboardist Mick Talbot, and are seen as the vehicle by which Weller exited his punk-pop phase embodied by his chart-topping band The Jam, and bridged the gap to Weller's later, Mod-influenced solo career. 

The European and jazz influences of the Style Council were expressed in four studio albums from 1984 to 1988 including 1985 chart-topper Our Favourite Shop, plus one final album delving into house music that label Polydor rejected, and which wasn't released until 1998. The band scored 16 UK top 40 singles, including four that reached the UK top 5: debut single Speak Like A Child (#4, 1983), Long Hot Summer, which appeared on the À Paris EP (#3, 1983), My Ever Changing Moods (#5, 1984) and You're The Best Thing, which appeared on the Groovin' EP (#5, 1984).

The 12-inch extended version of Long Hot Summer appeared on both the Introducing the Style Council mini-LP released outside the UK in 1983, and in the UK on the À Paris EP released in August 1983. It was the band's highest-charting UK single, and also reached number 3 in Ireland.

Style Council - Long Hot Summer (12-inch version) (1983)


See also:
Music: The Jam - David Watts (Kinks cover, 1978)
Music: The Style Council - Shout to the Top! (1984)
Music: Paul Weller - This Is No Time (live, 1994)

04 September 2025

Because we'll see the mountains tumble before we say goodbye

Thursday music corner: English pop band Unit 4+2 weren't, strictly speaking, a one-hit wonder, having scored two UK top 40 singles, but their 1965 chart-topper Concrete and Clay is the only indelible contribution the band made to the 1960s pop scene. The single hit number 1 on 10 April 1965, supplanting the Rolling Stones' The Last Time, and the band appeared on Top of the Pops on 3 June 1965. Concrete and Clay also reached number one in Canada and was a middling hit in both Australia and the US. In America its chart success was limited by a pre-emptive cover version by an American producer. 

Unit 4+2 released two albums and 12 singles; the other chart success was Concrete and Clay's follow-up, (You've) Never Been in Love Like This Before, which reached number 14 in the UK. The band dissolved in 1970.

Unit 4+2 - Concrete and Clay (1965)


See also:
Music: Eddie Rambeau - Concrete and Clay (1965)
Music: Martin Plaza - Concrete and Clay (1986)
Music: Jurassic 5 - Concrete & Clay (2000)

02 September 2025

The NZ Rowing team's trip to the 1975 World Rowing Champs in Nottingham

This is a special guest post from former senior Beehive official, 1976 Montreal Olympics rowing eights bronze medallist (and my former landlord) Alec McLean, on the 1975 World Rowing Championships in Nottingham. Reposted here, lightly edited, from Facebook with Alec's permission:   

===

Fifty years ago yesterday! The 1975 World Rowing Champs, Nottingham. It was a funny old trip. From memory, Rowing NZ had very ambitious plans for that tour. In preparation for the Montreal Olympic Games, a lengthy North American tour was planned, even some talk of the team getting jobs while away (all amateurs in those days). The squad assembled in Christchurch quite early, anticipating a departure for North America before going on to the UK.

As it turned out NZ Rowing had absolutely no funds - the North American plans fell by the wayside, we would continue training in Christchurch, and fly straight to UK for a very short build up to the World Champs at Nottingham.

So began a very long training period through a Christchurch winter (NZ Rowing didn't move to Karapiro until 1976). We would occasionally turn up for training at 3pm, frost still on the ground, and very occasionally you would see snow building up on the ears of the guy in front of you as we plied the river at Kerrs Reach.

We also had some health issues with the guys, one having to pull out, plus some crew changes, making it hard to get some consistency going. After flying to the UK we settled in, accommodated at Pangbourne Nautical College in Berkshire.
 
We again had some crew changes through illness. The stretch of water on the Thames by the Pangbourne College sheds was not long enough for eights training, so the eight moved up the river to Hobb's boat-yard. It proved to be a great venue, and I have since been back to Hobb's boat-yard twice on visits to England. Despite all our setbacks, we had an amazing black Empacher carbon fibre boat, extremely fast, and great looking. It also hummed! Some sort of harmonic resonating in the aluminium riggers maybe. It was a bit surreal rowing up the Thames on a beautiful English summers day, just the sound of the oars going kachunk, kachunk, then at a certain speed the boat would start humming - unique. But we were running out of time. Rusty had said a couple of times, 'I think there is a better way of rowing this boat', but time was against us, and we were into the Champs at Nottingham in no time. 

We had a perfect row in winning the heat, going straight through to the final. I don't really recall the final - I see from the clippings that stroke Grant McCauley says we got a slightly shaky start, but we ended up with a bronze behind East Germany and Russia. Second bronze for me! I should emphasise that our three crews had travelled from NZ just four weeks before the finals, with three weeks training in the UK, and having had not a single race until the heats.

I must mention our (unofficial) training shirts. A colleague of mine in Customs had done a bit of a cartoon for me (pinched from one those old Ozzie weekly magazines - it was a cricketer). So I had some t-shirts made up for the guys. Well, what a hit - as soon as the boys saw them I had to get another big batch made up. They were also a hit when it came to swapping shirts at the end of the Champs (an age-old custom). Some crafty bargainers were even getting a three for one swap, or a track suit for a scrappy NZ t-shirt. I managed to trade mine for an East German racing singlet (the East Germans were forbidden from trading their rowing gear). I offered him my racing singlet, but he said 'No, I want the one with the club'. So that was 1975!



 
Final crew - David Simmons cox, Grant McCauley, me, Dave Rodger, Athol Earl, Lindsay Wilson, Ross Collinge, Trevor Coker (dec), Pete Dignan (dec).



AM: 'Departing Pangbourne College for training. No money that year - a clapped out Ford Transit with two wooden benches along each side in the back. Lindsay Wilson, me, Pete Dignan (sadly passed away from cancer and few years ago)'

===

The NZ rowing eights came third at Nottingham (time 5:43.61) behind East Germany (5:39.01) and the Soviet Union (5:41.34). Wikipedia notes that 'Beginning in 1974, doping became a blanket policy imposed by the GDR [East German] sports federation' (source).