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The Master, Moonrise Kingdom and Lincoln

Courtesy of The Weinstein Company. Film is so strange. I think Daniel Day-Lewis' performance in Steven Spielberg's  Lincoln is remarkable - the hunched physicality, his voice, his utterly believable mix of idealism and pragmatism. Likewise Tony Kushner's extraordinary script - and Tommy Lee Jones , who is fabulous. Yet Lincoln doesn't excite me, doesn't get my juices flowing, the way that Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom or Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master do. Daniel Day-Lewis' remarkable performance as Abraham Lincoln. If you think about a classic (yet still Hollywood style) biopic like Lawrence of Arabia , you have something that is also centered around a remarkable performance - and with a challenging story to tell - and yet you have unforgettable imagery and a sense of your emotions being stirred in a completely different way.  The movie of my childhood - I adored it. The cut early on from Lawrence/ O'Tool

Santa Cruz Scrapbook

All Photographs  ©   2013 Alexander Chow-Stuart. We are becoming increasingly fond of Santa Cruz, which we visited again recently both for research for a script I'm working on and to celebrate our daughter Paradise's fourth birthday. Aside from the fact that we love the ocean with a passion that cannot be fully expressed in words, Santa Cruz has something of the feel I imagine Malibu had in the 1960s - a surf town, with a college feel as well, of course ( UCSC is close by), but without the high-end development and casual-chic of Malibu now. My early morning rumpled look. It also shares some of the appeal Miami Beach had when I first moved there in 1990 - when South Beach was first emerging as somewhere hip (I'm not suggesting Santa Cruz isn't already hip), before the massive overdevelopment and condo-ization of SoBe took over. In 1990, South Beach was still partly a retirement community, partly a crack neighborhood, mostly Art Deco, and Cuban in a w

Strange Charm - A Fun Song About Quarks (Yes!)

Hudson asked me this morning what is the smallest thing in the world. We had already discussed atoms and protons, neutrons and electrons, so I told him that I thought quarks were still the smallest. Hudson thought I said corks:) I tried (valiantly, I thought) to explain that quarks are tiny particles of matter that cannot exist on their own - we have already watched a very cool cartoon in which an animated atom explains that it is indivisible , even though it has electrons z ipping around its core of protons and neutrons. I then found this wonderful - and very catchy - song about quarks , which both Hudson and Paradise love listening to. I think it's quite an achievement to make quarks fun! (WARNING: there is one expletive in Hank's spoken intro to the song and a link at the very end of the video that is unsuitable for children.) The chorus, for those who know as much about quarks as me, names the different types of quark: Up/Down, Charm/Strange and T

HAPPY NEW YEAR - CHANGE EVERY MOMENT

© 2012 Alexander Chow-Stuart.

Don't Mess With The War Zone

I just came across this picture of me with Ray Winstone and Tim Roth at Sundance with The War Zone in January 1999. If only I'd been wearing black, we could have really worked our Reservoir Dogs look! If you're interested in the Kindle 20th Anniversary Edition of The War Zone , it is currently available AT A SPECIAL HOLIDAY PRICE OF $3.99 FROM AMAZON. The print edition is its usual outrageous $15.99 - it's hard for me to get that price down, but I'm going to make sure that the next edition is better priced!