Photographer puts Bob Dylan’s fame in frame


Work by a Hamilton photographer was under the nose of Bob Dylan at the weekend.

Mark Hamilton created a series of portraits inspired by Dylan’s music which were displayed in the Claudeland Events Centre – perfect timing for the singer’s two shows at the venue at the weekend.

The portraits, which artistically show different characters from Dylan’s songs, are on display in the venue’s backstage area, which Dylan used to enter and exit the stage.

“It’s just an opportunity that’s presented itself,” Hamilton said last week. “I’ve got no idea whether he’ll see them or not. If he does, that’s good. For me it’s just getting the work out there for people to see. If the man gets to see them himself, that’s great.”

The subjects of the portraits, shot over the past two and a half years, are framed with dark and often surreal landscapes.

The intent is for people to view the images and wander across this fantasy landscape, randomly stumbling across the characters.

Some are central to Dylan’s songs, such as Hollis Brown from the ballad of the same name, while others are inspired by as little as a single line.

In one portrait, a young man stands in a dilapidated basement, apparently preparing drugs. The scene comes from a lyric in Subterranean Homesick Blues: “Johnny’s in the basement, mixing up the medicine.”

The portrait is the professional photographer’s favourite.

“Everything came together, the light’s nice, the colour’s nice, the detail’s nice, the concept worked. They’re all favourites, but if I had to stick one on my wall, that would be the one.”

The 53-year-old hopes Dylan will at least recognise the characters, but is not desperate to receive recognition from the singer.

“If his Bobness was to sign a portrait that would be nice.

“It’s not that it needs validation, but it would mean that he’d seen it.”

Despite being a Dylan fan since 1977, Hamilton is happy to joke about the singer’s potential reaction.

“Imagine if he didn’t like it, if he retires after seeing those pictures!”

“At the end of the day they’re my interpretations and that’s art. It’s even like Bob Dylan himself, he reinterprets his music all the time. He’ll record it for an album but he’ll never play it the same again.”

Mark Hamilton’s next project is a series of portraits inspired by Australian songwriter Nick Cave’s album Murder Ballads. Louis Houlbrooke is a communications student at AUT.

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– Waikato Times

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The Kick – So bad it’s good, or just bad?

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Why Mad Max director didn’t cast Gibson


Mad Max director George Miller was “heartbroken” over Mel Gibson’s string of scandals in recent years. But he says that isn’t why he recast the lead part in the post-apocalyptic auto action franchise.

Gibson was simply too old.

The Australian director helped launch Gibson, now 58, to stardom three decades ago in the trilogy featuring stark desert landscapes, intense car chases and a bleach-blonde Tina Turner.

Miller, 69, originally hoped to bring Gibson back as Max Rockatansky for the fourth film. As he developed the story over the last decade, Miller hatched plans for a second trilogy instead of just the one new film. Concerned that Gibson wouldn’t be able to commit to three more movies, he asked Tom Hardy, 36, to step into the road warrior’s black leather boots.

“I have a great affection for Mel. I was really heartbroken to see him go into (the scandals),” Miller said in a recent interview. “But it’s a new time. I hope Mel gets to act in more movies because I think he’s a wonderful actor. But I think he’s an amazingly good director.”

Miller describes Mad Max: Fury Road as an extended chase taking place over three days. The movie, due out next summer and also starring Charlize Theron, features minimal dialogue. The screenplay consisted of storyboards – sketches of each planned shot – rather than a conventional script.

“You’re picking up the characters and the backstory as you go,” Miller said. “And in order to create that backstory, we found ourselves having written two other screenplays. One of them is completed. The other one is in the form of a kind of unedited novel. So by the time we got there, we realized we’ve got a couple more Mad Max stories to tell, and that … required us to cast someone who was younger.”

Miller showed the first footage from Mad Max: Fury Road at the recent Comic-Con fest in San Diego and got an enthusiastic response from attendees. He’s still finishing work on the movie, his return to live action after directing the animated Happy Feet in 2006 and 2011’s sequel.

“Roman Polanksi had a saying, which is that there’s only one perfect place for the camera at any given time. And I learned that on the animations,” Miller said. “You can move the camera wherever you like. But to tell the story – it was interesting how much you could influence the story by simply shooting from another perspective.”

There is, of course, a heightened sense of danger when you’re moving said camera through a high-speed motorcycle and dune buggy chase in the harsh Australian outback – not circling cute dancing penguins via computer software.

“Particularly a film like this where we wanted to shoot like real, old-school,” Miller said.

“Every car you see smashed is a real car. Every stuntman you see is a real person, and in many cases the cast. … It’s like being in the middle of a real-life video game getting that footage. One, two inches too far one way or the other or a miscue and you’ve got disaster on your hands. It was both exhilarating and very wearying.”

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There were only minor injuries during the shoot, Miller said. Mad Max: Fury Road will roll into theatres next May.

– AP

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Photographer puts Dylan’s fame in frame


Work by a Hamilton photographer was under the nose of Bob Dylan at the weekend.

Mark Hamilton created a series of portraits inspired by Dylan’s music which were displayed in the Claudeland Events Centre – perfect timing for the singer’s two shows at the venue at the weekend.

The portraits, which artistically show different characters from Dylan’s songs, are on display in the venue’s backstage area, which Dylan used to enter and exit the stage.

“It’s just an opportunity that’s presented itself,” Hamilton said last week. “I’ve got no idea whether he’ll see them or not. If he does, that’s good. For me it’s just getting the work out there for people to see. If the man gets to see them himself, that’s great.”

The subjects of the portraits, shot over the past two and a half years, are framed with dark and often surreal landscapes.

The intent is for people to view the images and wander across this fantasy landscape, randomly stumbling across the characters.

Some are central to Dylan’s songs, such as Hollis Brown from the ballad of the same name, while others are inspired by as little as a single line.

In one portrait, a young man stands in a dilapidated basement, apparently preparing drugs. The scene comes from a lyric in Subterranean Homesick Blues: “Johnny’s in the basement, mixing up the medicine.”

The portrait is the professional photographer’s favourite.

“Everything came together, the light’s nice, the colour’s nice, the detail’s nice, the concept worked. They’re all favourites, but if I had to stick one on my wall, that would be the one.”

The 53-year-old hopes Dylan will at least recognise the characters, but is not desperate to receive recognition from the singer.

“If his Bobness was to sign a portrait that would be nice.

“It’s not that it needs validation, but it would mean that he’d seen it.”

Despite being a Dylan fan since 1977, Hamilton is happy to joke about the singer’s potential reaction.

“Imagine if he didn’t like it, if he retires after seeing those pictures!”

“At the end of the day they’re my interpretations and that’s art. It’s even like Bob Dylan himself, he reinterprets his music all the time. He’ll record it for an album but he’ll never play it the same again.”

Mark Hamilton’s next project is a series of portraits inspired by Australian songwriter Nick Cave’s album Murder Ballads. Louis Houlbrooke is a communications student at AUT.

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– Waikato Times

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Seinfeld sees comedy as ‘deadly serious’ craft


Jerry Seinfeld doesn’t do angst. His comedy may be born of the alienation that many – maybe even all – comedians feel. But in conversation, the 60-year-old comedian comes across as more craftsperson than crazy man. He approaches joke-telling with the care and thoughtful precision of a jokesmith, in the truest sense of the word: a gimlet-eyed professional calibrating and tuning each bit until it hums.

In the 16 years since his Emmy-winning sitcom went off the air, Seinfeld hasn’t rested on his laurels. He’s returned to his first love – stand-up – regularly working on his act in New York comedy clubs, and then taking it on the road, as with this current national tour, which runs through mid-October. He finally settled down, marrying and fathering three children. He co-wrote and starred in an animated film (2007’s Bee Movie, in which he played a litigious honeybee). And he produced The Marriage Ref, a short-lived mashup of game show and reality television.

We caught up with the fastidious funnyman for a phone chat about his new life, his old show and the surprise success of his most recent venture, the Web talk show Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, now in its fourth season. Seinfeld offered deep, and frequently funny, insights about what makes him – and his humor – tick. (This conversation has been edited for length.)

Q. This may be my first celebrity interview that began on time.

A. Really I didn’t know that about celebrities. I never interview them. Well, I guess I do now.

Q. Tell me about your current tour. Is there much new material

A. I don’t really track any of that. I’m always developing new stuff, and I’m always doing stuff that I still like, for whatever reason. It’s just a big messy sandbox for me. I don’t know what people are coming to see, or want to see, or don’t want to see. It’s so complicated, if you really stop to think about it.

Q. You’re known as a meticulous technician.

A. Extremely meticulous, yes. I love the precision of a comedy bit that works.

Q. Such meticulousness implies that every joke is fixable. What if it’s not the joke’s fault, but the audience’s

A. That’s never the case. There are jokes that can’t be fixed, but it’s never the audience’s fault, because they’re the ones that decide if it’s a joke or not. If they don’t approve it, it doesn’t survive.

Q. Has anyone told you that they just don’t get you

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A. They don’t really go to that kind of trouble. That would be a very mean person. They just don’t come. And they don’t walk up to me either. Who would be that horrible Oh, I know they’re out there.

Q. In the 2002 documentary “Comedian,” you tell a story about musicians arriving at a gig by plane, in the middle of a snowstorm. As they trudge past a cozy cottage, one of them looks through the window on a scene of domestic bliss and says, “Ugh, how do people live like that” Is it essential for a comedian to maintain that sense of the outsider

A. Yes. When I’m at a party and somebody comes up to me and they’re not a comedian, I still clench up inside and go, “What am I going to say” They’re going to say, “Boy, isn’t the food great” I’m like, “What would a normal person respond to that” I try and do an impression of normal people that talk about food and traffic and the weather. I listen to what those people say, and I repeat what they say, but I don’t understand any of it. If someone said to me, “Boy, the food here is great,” I would just want to say, “But we’re all going to die anyway, what’s the difference” They would be shocked.

Q. How do you stay an outsider after success, marriage and kids

A. I guess I just never wanted to be an insider. I’ve had the same old friends for, like, 35 years. I hang out with the same people, talk about the same things. I don’t have a different life. I have a better life in terms of material things, but I don’t really do anything different. I still hang out with comedians and work on jokes. My life, to me, in the important ways, has not changed. It’s changed in a lot of other ways that are great, but me having kids, I have the same experiences that everybody else has that has kids.

Q. Is the world funnier or less funny from your Mount Olympus vantage point

A. [Laughs.] Everything in life is funny to a comedian. Everything is absurd. You have to find a way to communicate what you’re seeing.

Q. Is it genetic

A. I think so, yeah. I think it’s an inborn thing.

Q. A recent essay in The New York Times described “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” as “pairs of rich guys chatting about the gilded joys of their lives and careers and cars, about the sealed-off world they inhabit and we don’t.”

A. [Laughs.] I saw that piece. That made me howl. And his example – it was such a poorly reasoned argument – his example of the sealed-off, elitist world was Alec Baldwin wanting a fork, in a diner. It was really pathetic.

Q. It presumes a caste system where you’re at the top and we’re at the bottom.

A. If that was true, I could never stand in front of an audience and do my thing. If I was really that person, I’d be finished. Nobody would come to see these shows, they’d be so horribly annoying – this elitist person from the sealed-off world.

Q. Are comedy geeks the target audience for the show

A. I thought that’s who would like it. I did think of comedy geeks. There are so many stand-up geeks these days. I thought those types of people might enjoy something like this, but it seems to be doing a bit better than that, I’m happy to say. I always give the Jackie Gleason answer when people ask me about “Seinfeld” or “Comedians in Cars”: It’s funny. People always asked Gleason, endlessly, “What was the secret to ‘The Honeymooners'” If it’s funny, that proves that I am not a walled-off elitist.

Q. So you don’t live in a gated community. . . .

A. No gate.

Q. . . . urinating in jars like Howard Hughes.

A. No. I’d like to. I don’t know where you get people to pick up those jars.

Q. You’ve conquered the TV sitcom, you did a movie, you’re reinventing the talk show for the Internet age. Why keep pushing yourself

A. I wouldn’t call it pushing. It’s just fun to do stuff. And it’s really fun to invent stuff. If I wasn’t writing new material, I would not do stand-up anymore, because it’s the new stuff that I can’t wait to see if it’s going to work or not. The same with “Comedians in Cars.” To me, to any artist, it’s a science experiment. You make something, and you see if people like it. There’s something about comedy – when you make someone laugh, it really feels like you’ve made the world just a tiny bit better. It just feels so worth the effort.

Q. So jokes matter

A. To me they do. But it’s kind of hard to say that. I am deadly serious about everything that I do in comedy. Deadly. Mostly because it’s so unforgiving. This concept that I can go in front of any audience and do well is the funniest thing. Nobody automatically does well. That’s why I wanted to be back in stand-up after the TV series. Because there’s just no cheating, and there’s no gimmes.

Q. Not even a five-minute grace period at the top of the show

A. When I go out there and fumble the first joke, it’s quiet. It’s totally quiet. Any joke, if it’s not timed right and said right and done right, dies.

Q. In a previous interview, you said that you were asked to host the Oscars but turned it down.

A. I don’t think I was supposed to talk about that. I’m sorry I said that. Yeah.

Q. I suspect that your name comes up in almost any context where someone is required to be funny. Yet you’ve never appeared on “The Simpsons.” You have been the butt of a joke on the show.

A. What joke

Q. “My mom is not dating Jerry Seinfeld” was a chalkboard gag. And the name “Jerry Seinfeld” appears on Ned Flanders’ list of “laudable lefties.”

A. That’s funny.

Q. Doesn’t that seem like an oversight

A. Maybe they were busy with other things. I know what it’s like to do a show. You’re not thinking we have to get each significant person. You’re just trying to get that show done for that week.

Q. If you were to do the show, which is known for self-parodying cameos, who would you play

A. I would like to play myself as a sealed-off elitist, occupying a rarified atmosphere where I never need to ask for a fork.

Q. If you were making a sitcom about your life today, what would it be like

A. That’s probably why I haven’t done it. The life I occupy now doesn’t really have the charm of being a young and up-and-coming stand-up comedian. Once you’re old – it would have to be something about marriage and family. I find marriage to be one of the funniest subjects. I’d probably start with the idea of a guy who gives seminars on wife-ology.

Q. Sounds a little like “The Marriage Ref.” Have you thought about why that show didn’t work

A. Yes, I have. It was pretty obvious, once we set about doing it, that the audience perverted the conversation. Things people say to each other at the dinner table, they don’t feel comfortable saying in a TV studio. That’s kind of what took me to “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee,” which lets me keep it private and see what I can discover about conversation.

Q. How about a marriage movie

A. Yeah, if I had it in me. I don’t really get movie ideas, those kinds of big ideas that only a movie can hold. I don’t really even like the size of movies, really. I’d much rather watch Laurel and Hardy two-reelers than any of their features. I think they’re much funnier, and I like the size. I like the size of stand-up bits. I like the size of a funny TV commercial. I like the size of a sitcom. I have never liked the size of movie comedies. It just feels unwieldy. It tends to crush a small, quirky idea, which is what makes a great comedy.

Q. You’ve described the movie industry as doomed.

A. Fear generally runs the world. Look at movies now, even the comedy movies. They’re really wrapping it up and tugging the heartstrings, and they have to hit all these notes. The audience has to come out feeling good. When you put all those things in a comedy, again, you crush it. The atmosphere of fear ruins it. This was what was great about doing the sitcom. We could do a show where Kramer finds the Merv Griffin set, and get away with that, because it’s just 20 minutes, and then it’s gone. It’s like a cartoon. That’s where comedy thrives, in my opinion. I want to be doing the best comedy, so I look for it in smaller portion sizes. I think a great stand-up bit stays with people much longer than a good comedy movie. I like the simplicity of that.

Q. What makes a great bit

A. It’s the way it stays with you. It’s never the jokes you think. I love Brian Regan’s “Donut Lady.” I’m sure when he first wrote “Donut Lady,” he didn’t think this is going to really hit people hard. It’s one of his famous bits, about going to this doughnut place and ordering 12 doughnuts, and the lady counts down as you pick them: “You have eight left . . . you have six left.” It’s become this legendary bit. That’s not planned. It just happened.

Q. Is there a perfect joke

A. No. There are jokes that are perfect for you. There’s some study about how they can never get a group of people to agree that five jokes are funny, or five jokes are not funny. There’s always someone that disagrees in the group. That’s just the nature of comedy. It’s very, very personal.

Q. Do you have a comedic Spidey-sense

A. I do have a Spidey-sense. I could do a set, and we could play it on a monitor, and I could show you the number that it reaches on the level meter, like, “Oh, that’s a laugh, that’s something that will stay in the set,” and “This one will have to go.” I could show you numerically. I don’t know what that number is, but I could figure it out. It’s like baseball. There’s a batting average that keeps you in the majors, and there’s a batting average that does not. It’s the same with jokes. Like everything else, there are rules. You have to figure out the rules.

Q. Are you still figuring them out

A. No, I figured them out a long time ago. I was trying to work on this bit about those stickers – the family member stickers on the back windows of minivans where people show their family members as little stick figures. I have a whole bit about that, and then it goes into this other bit about fatness. A lot of comedians do bits about the weight problem, and it’s always a thing of trying to figure out “How much can I insult these people and get away with it” If you call the audience fat, they might not like that. But if you tell them in a funny way, they might like it. These are things that are not known.

-The Washington Post

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Film duo switch from ‘bro’ humour to romantic comedy


A Hamilton duo who recently returned home after touring the United States with their short comedy film has two more exciting projects ahead.

Scott Granville and Ben Woollen have been making short and feature films together for six years, after sparking up a partnership and forming Chasing Time Productions in 2008.

The duo’s ninth film Serve and Protect was accepted into 15 international festivals, winning the 2014 Audience Choice Award at the High Desert International Film Festival in Nevada. It was also “audience choice” at last year’s Show Me Shorts Film Festival, the only Academy Awards accredited festival in New Zealand.

“It was incredible to win audience choice.

“The hardest thing about making films is trying to get them seen by other people,” said 37-year-old Granville.

The pair usually share the directing, writing and producing but for one of their next ventures, feature-length comedy Happy as Larry, some fresh talent has come on board.

The film is in its development stages with comedic guidance from Sydney-based “comedy guru” Tim Ferguson, said Granville, who is an English language tutor and academic adviser at Wintec.

“He’s helping us to make it more of a romantic comedy rather than a ‘bro’ comedy,” he said. “But we still want to retain our own humour.”

The film gained support from the New Zealand Film Commission after receiving a grant through its First Writers Initiative.

“We definitely self-fund things like touring overseas festivals,” said Woollen, who is the head of the video department at MEA Mobile.

“But we also get a bit of support from the Hamilton Community Arts Council and the New Zealand Film Commission.”

Woollen, 36, said New Zealand has a lot of benefits and drawbacks to independent filmmaking, because it has more creative people in a smaller area but fewer platforms.

Chasing Time Productions’ second venture this year is a short film in collaboration with Wintec, which explores the experiences of permanent resident refugees in Hamilton.

“It’s from the time they arrive in New Zealand, so we don’t focus on the political side behind things,” said Granville.

He said the film explores their struggles in a poetic way.

Although the men are often busy with their day jobs, the pair insist “there’s always time” for filmmaking.

Granville is also finishing his second children’s book called Charles the Magnificent Pony.

*Chelsea Armitage is a communications student at AUT.

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– Waikato Times

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Auction house stand by treatment of McCahon painting


Webb’s auction house is standing by the restoration treatment of a valuable Colin McCahon painting it withdrew from sale 10 days ago.

The company pulled the work from auction less than three hours before it was due to go under the hammer, following inquiries from the

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YouTube stars more famous than Katy Perry


You all knew YouTube stars were Kind Of A Big Deal with the #teens, but thanks to a survey by

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They just don’t make movie kisses like they used to


Can we have a serious talk about kissing Have you ever noticed in old movies when Bogart or Clark Gable kissed a girl, her head would go back and his head would push forward It wasn’t just a kiss, it was a symbolic act of invasion, a D-Day landing by the forces of masculinity. Indeed, an act of penetration by him, and submission from her.

That’s how the movie kiss was in the ’30s, even after the Hays Code tried to stamp out all lust and licentiousness in American cinema, including within marriage. (You may find this strange, kids, but married couples had to have separate single beds in movies under the Hays Code).

Power shift: In <em data-recalc-dims=Spider-Man, it is Kirsten Dunst who has the control, not the dangling Tobey Maguire.” />

Power shift: In

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Christina Ricci ‘welcomes first child’


Christina Ricci and her husband James Heerdegen have reportedly welcomed their first child.

Speculation the couple were expecting first arose in May when the 34-year-old actress was seen walking through Los Angeles International Airport with a bump clearly on display.

And according Us Weekly, Ricci and her beau are now parents to a baby boy. Insiders provided no other information about the birth to the outlet at press time and the Sleepy Hollow star’s publicist has not responded with an official comment.

Ricci married Heerdegen, who works as a dolly grip, in October 2013.

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