by Ryan Stewart
“Their relationship is tender, and also drenched in blood.” – ”
– Matt Reeves
Tomas Alfredson’s brilliant Let the Right One In, which made SuicideGirls’ distinguished Top Ten Films of 2008 list, is no less brilliant for having been remade as Let Me In, the Americanized version in theaters this week. In fact, the exquisite direction of the remake by Matt Reeves (Cloverfield) has earned it surprisingly good reviews from critics still enamored with the original, and sparked a debate in some quarters about which version is the definitive one. Whichever you prefer, the very fact of this dark story now having been positively received twice in two years is proof of its poignancy and emotional heft. With the action moved from an apartment block in Sweden to the creepy suburb of Los Alamos, New Mexico, Let Me In retells the story of Oskar (now called Owen), a shy, possibly disturbed young boy who is seeking a respite from severe school bullying when a savior appears: a quiet, severe-looking girl named Eli (now called Abby), who teaches him to stand up for himself in exchange for nothing more than his companionship, at first.
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Holley Suicide in Specs Appeal
- INTO: Photography, tattoos, piercings, the 1950s, dancing, looking for cool vinyl, make-up, watching live music and taking pictures of the live music, smiling, cartoons, playing Nintendo and Mega Drive, eating chocolate.
- NOT INTO: Selfishness, seriousness, growing up.
- MAKES ME HAPPY: My friends and great music.
- MAKES ME SAD: Nastiness.
- HOBBIES: Gigs, photography, feeling nostalgic, daydreaming.
- 5 THINGS I CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT: My iPod, camera, my Mac, mascara, hairclips.
- VICES: Chocolate, shoes, and tattoos.
- I SPEND MOST OF MY FREE TIME: Listening to music and taking pictures.
Get to know Holley better over at SuicideGirls.com!
by Nicole Powers
“People are losing their skill to express themselves.”
– Chuck Palahniuk
“Chuck Palahniuk needs little by way of introduction on SuicideGirls, our very name being an hommage to the author of Fight Club, Choke and Snuff. We caught up with him by phone to talk about his latest novel, Tell-All. It’s a fictional gossip-laced memoir told in the voice of Hazie Coogan, the female assistant to “the glorious film actress” Miss Katherine Kenton who resides in Hollywood’s very real past – a glamorous world populated by the likes of Lillian Hellman, Darryl Zanuck, David O. Selznick, Clark Gable and Bette Davis, who are all names Tell-All’s characters love to drop. During our conversation with Palahniuk, we spoke about society’s need for the culture of celebrity, the nature of name-dropping, and the ultimate name to drop.
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AnnaLee Suicide in Specimen
- INTO: Living a good life.
- NOT INTO: Cars, television, cigarettes, meat, drinking culture, negativity, superficiality and people with no imaginations or desires…
- MAKES ME HAPPY: Books, tea, solitude, ornithology, natural history, baking cakes, my cat, sleeping, the sea, old-fashioned museums, etymology, entomology, walking, cycling, equality, understanding, compassion, passion, good manners, hermit crabs, olives, peace, quiet, the sky, meteorological phenomena, drawing, painting, churches, nature taking over, wall paintings, bees, stoicism, cinema, hot baths, gardens, wild places, lochs, rivers, anything wet, perfume, cardigans, being a stranger in new cities, unusual encounters with other creatures, marmalade, moths, butterflies, being productive, cold climates, wallpaper, sewing, the changing seasons, red hair, pickles, whiskers, paws and cats purring.
- MAKES ME SAD: When my family are unhappy. How little we care about non-human animals, our planet and each other. People not living life as well as they could. The fact that work, productivity and consumerism overtake life. Wasting time. Negativity. Physical and mental illness. Intolerance.
- 5 THINGS I CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT: A book, a quiet place, fresh air, hot tea and of course music.
- VICES: Book buying, but that’s probably not too unhealthy…I am also addicted to expensive chocolate, that is ever so slightly unhealthy.
- I SPEND MOST OF MY FREE TIME: In a book.
Get to know AnnaLee better over at SuicideGirls.com!
by Nicole Powers
“Restraint means more to me now.”
– Jake Shears
When Scissor Sisters first burst forth with their debut self-titled filthy gorgeous album in 2004 their brand of hedonistic dance was too hot for mainstream America to handle (the CD was even pulled from Wal-Mart’s shelves). It was a different story across the Atlantic in the U.K. however, where the band were welcomed with open arms – and notable record sales. There the release spawned a total of five Top 20 singles, and became the country’s top-selling album that year (and the 9th biggest seller of the decade). The band’s follow up full-length, Ta-Dah, released in 2006, also fared much better outside of the U.S. It went straight to the top of the U.K. album charts, and the first single, “I Don’t Feel Like Dancin'”(a collaboration with Elton John), also hit the number one spot – and stayed there for four consecutive weeks.
The wide chasm in reception and record sales between the two continents – the Scissor Sisters’ first two albums each sold in excess of 3 million units across Europe – can easily be explained when looked at in the context of cultural attitudes. The more liberal Europeans have been dancing continuously since the ’70s and dance-based music is ingrained in the fabric of European life. In America however, seizing on the opportunity afforded by AIDS, the disproportionately influential Christian right whipped up a frenzy of anti-dance “disco sucks” hysteria, stopping the party in its tracks and creating a deep-seated prejudice against the genre as a whole that remains prevalent to this day in significant pockets of society.
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By Edward Kelly
The Night House was not a place we had a name for. I started calling it The Night House about 30 seconds ago when I decided the place I’m about to describe needs a name, otherwise I’m going to keep calling it “the house” or “that place.” The Night House was, quite obviously, a house – technically. As a kid, I lived in a small community, a relatively idyllic suburb in upstate New York. Most of the houses in my neighborhood were less than five years old. I think the term for it is “tract housing” but that might be wrong. What it meant is that they were constantly building new houses at the end of our estate so new families could move in. And without fail we, that is my friends and I, always had a Night House — a house at the end of the estate that looked like a skeleton home, all angular wood jutting out at weird places, made even creepier at night with its ghoulish pockets of utter darkness, window holes cut out but not yet illuminated by the warm incandescence of electricity.
[..]
Feyne Suicide in Wolf Spirit
- INTO: Being lost, animals and nature, solitude, silence, independence, reading, studies, foreign languages, nudity, sincerity, trees, philosophy, Asian films, Mandarin Chinese, China, traveling, motorcycling, herbal tea, cold climates, Great Britain, rain, having fits of laughter, smiling, feeling like a raindrop in the ocean, Léon Spilliaert, Jack Gescheidt, Kim ki-duk, Leslie Cheung, being natural, being mortal.
- NOT INTO: Fake bodies, fake souls.
- MAKES ME HAPPY: True love.
- MAKES ME SAD: Animal cruelty, contemporary environmental issues, society as it is today, consumerism, advertising, money, watches, Facebook, television, Photoshop, cars.
- 5 THINGS I CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT: Nothing is indispensable.
- I SPEND MOST OF MY FREE TIME: Enjoying my life and good health.
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Get to know Feyne better over at SuicideGirls.com!