3.31.2008

IMIA FOR SALE




ΣΗΜΙΤΗΣ-ΠΑΓΚΑΛΟΣ (ΕΠΩΛΕΙΤΟ TMHMATIKA ΕΠΙ ΠΑΣΟΚ Η ΕΛΛΑΣ)
" Άκουσα τον κ. Σημίτη να λέει στον Πάγκαλο, που είναι οι διαπραγματεύσεις; Δεν ήξερα ποιες ήταν οι διαπραγματεύσεις! Δεν μου είχαν πει τίποτα. Μου είπε ο πρωθυπουργός, αρχηγέ αν βγάλουμε την σημαία είναι σοβαρό; Του λέω, μπορεί να πέσει και η κυβέρνηση. Μου απαντάει: Είστε συναισθηματικός! Προς στιγμήν είπα, ρε μπας και πάμε για πόλεμο; Τους είπα ότι αν θέλετε να κάνετε αυτό που λένε οι Αμερικανοί κάντε το αλλά δεν είναι σωστό. Ήρθε ο κ. Πάγκαλος και μου είπε: "Ρε αρχηγέ, δεν λες ότι την πήρε την σημαία ο αέρας το κύμα να τελειώνουμε;" Και είπα όχι. Αρνήθηκα!..."
ΧΡΗΣΤΟΣ ΛΥΜΠΕΡΗΣ, πρώην αρχηγός ΓΕΕΘΑ
Aπό την εκπομπή του ΜΑΚΗ ΤΡΙΑΝΤΑΦΥΛΛΟΠΟΥΛΟΥ για τα ΙΜΙΑ

JULES DASSIN IN MEMORIAM



Jules Dassin
Nationality: American. Born: Middletown, Connecticut, 12 December 1911. Education: Morris High School, the Bronx, New York. Family: Married 1) Beatrice Launer, 1933 (divorced 1962), one son, two daughters; 2) actress Melina Mercouri, 1966. Career: Member of Artef Players (Jewish socialist theatre collective), 1936; directed first Broadway production, Medicine Show, 1939; contracted to RKO (moved to MGM after eight months), Hollywood, 1940; left MGM and worked with producer Mark Hellinger, 1946; named by Edward Dmytryk and Frank Tuttle in HUAC testimony as member of Hollywood "Communist faction," 1951; subpoenaed by HUAC, 1952; moved to Europe, 1953. Awards: Best Director Award (shared), Cannes Festival, for Rififi, 1955.
Between the mid-1940s and the late 1950s, Jules Dassin directed some of the better realistic, hard-bitten, fast-paced crime dramas produced in America, before his blacklisting and subsequent move to Europe. However, while he has made some very impressive films, his career as a whole is lacking in artistic cohesion.
Dassin's films are occasionally innovative: The Naked City is one of the first police dramas shot on location, on the streets of New York; Rififi is a forerunner of detailed jewelry heist dramas, highlighted by a thirty-five-minute sequence chronicling the break-in, shot without a word of dialogue or note of music; Never on Sunday, starring his wife Melina Mercouri as a happy hooker, made the actress an international star, won her an Academy Award nomination, and popularized in America the Greek bouzouki music. The Naked City and Rififi are particularly exciting, as well as trend-setting, while Brute Force remains a striking, naturalistic prison drama, with Burt Lancaster in one of his most memorable early performances and Hume Cronyn wonderfully despicable as a Hitlerish guard captain. Thieves' Highway, also shot on location, is a vivid drama of truck driver Richard Conte taking on racketeer Lee J. Cobb.
Topkapi is a Rififi remake, with a delightful touch of comedy. Many of Dassin's later films, such as Brute Force and Thieves' Highway, attempt to observe human nature: they focus on the individual fighting his own demons while trying to survive within a chaotic society. For example, in A Dream of Passion, an updating of Sophocles' Medea, an American woman is jailed in Greece for the murder of her three children; Up Tight, the filmmaker's first American-made release after the McCarthy hysteria, is a remake of The Informer set in a black ghetto. Unfortunately, they are all generally flawed: with the exception of Never on Sunday and Topkapi, his collaborations with Melina Mercouri (from He Who Must Die to A Dream of Passion) are disappointing, while Up Tight pales beside the original. Circle of Two, with teenager Tatum O'Neal baring her breasts for aging Richard Burton, had a limited release. Dassin's early triumphs have been obscured by his more recent fiascos, and as a result his critical reputation is now irrevocably tarnished.
The villain in his career is the blacklist, which tragically clipped his wings just as he was starting to fly. Indeed, he could not find work in Europe for five years, as producers felt American distributors would automatically ban any film with his signature. When Rififi opened, critics wrote about Dassin as if he were European. The New York Herald Tribune reported in 1961, "At one ceremony, when the award to Rififi was announced, (Dassin) was called to the dais, and a French flag was raised above him. 'It should have been a moment of triumph but I feel awful. They were honoring my work and I'm an American. It should have been the American flag raised in honor."' The blacklist thus denied Jules Dassin his roots. In 1958, it was announced that he was planning to adapt James T. Farrell's Studs Lonigan, a project that was eventually shelved. It is one more tragedy of the blacklist that Dassin was not allowed to follow up Brute Force, The Naked City, and Thieves' Highway with Studs Lonigan.
—Rob Edelman

Films as Director:
1941
The Tell-Tale Heart (short)
1942
Nazi Agent; The Affairs of Martha (Once upon a Thursday); Reunion (Reunion in France; Mademoiselle France)
1943
Young Ideas
1944
The Canterville Ghost
1946
A Letter for Evie; Two Smart People
1947
Brute Force
1948
The Naked City
1949
Thieves' Highway
1950
Night and the City
1955
Du Rififi chez les hommes (Rififi) (+ co-sc, role as jewel thief under pseudonym Perlo Vita)
1958
Celui qui doit mourir (He Who Must Die) (+ co-sc)
1959
La legge (La Loi) (released in U.S. 1960 as Where the Hot Winds Blow) (+ sc)
1960
Pote tin kyriaki (Never on Sunday) (+ pr, sc, role)
1962
Phaedra (+ pr, co-sc)
1964
Topkapi (+ pr)
1966
10:30 p.m. Summer (+ co-pr, sc, bit role)
1967
Survival 67 (+ co-pr, appearance) (documentary)
1968
Uptight! (+ pr, co-sc)
1971
La Promesse de l'aube (Promise at Dawn) (+ pr, sc, role as Ivan Mozhukhin under pseudonym Perlo Vita)
1974
The Rehearsal (+ sc)
1978
A Dream of Passion (+ pr, sc)
1980
Circle of Two (released in USA 1982)

MINORITY OF 200.000 VLACHS IN SKOPJA



GREEK VLA(C)HS, A MINORITY POPULATION OF 200.000 PEOPLE, DEPRESSED IN SKOPJA FROM THE REGIME OF THE GEORGE SOROS FOUNDATION GRADUATES.

See http://vlahoi.gr/

SKOPJA CALLING:"We are of Slavic descent"...



Kiro Gligorov, FYROM President, 1992: "There's no connection with Alexander the Great. We (Skopjans) are of Slavic descent. We came in this area the
6th century A.D. Alexander the Great was Greek".

BBC-GREECE:AGE OF ALEXANDER PART 6



Dedicated to our George Soros Foundation friends in Skopja.

DON'T FORGET THE PLUTONIUM BOMBS


From www.huffingtonpost.com

After bombarding Yugoslavian children with PLUTONIUM BOMBS former Cliton VP AL GORE NEEDS NOW 300M USD to campaign for (the) climate (he helped) change (for the worst)...
Former Vice President Al Gore is set to unveil a three-year, $300 million climate change campaign Wednesday, one of the most ambitious and costly public advocacy campaigns in U.S. history, the Washington Post's Juliet Eilperin reports:

The Alliance for Climate Protection's "we" campaign will employ online organizing and television advertisements on shows ranging from "American Idol" to "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart." It highlights the extent to which Americans' growing awareness of global warming has yet to translate into national policy changes, Gore said in an hour-long phone interview last week. He said the campaign, which Gore is helping to fund, was undertaken in large part because of his fear that U.S. lawmakers are unwilling to curb the human-generated emissions linked to climate change.

"This climate crisis is so interwoven with habits and patterns that are so entrenched, the elected officials in both parties are going to be timid about enacting the bold changes that are needed until there is a change in the public's sense of urgency in addressing this crisis," Gore said. "I've tried everything else I know to try. The way to solve this crisis is to change the way the public thinks about it."

Private contributors have already donated or committed half the money needed to fund the entire campaign, he said. While Gore declined to quantify his contribution to the effort, he has devoted all his proceeds from the Oscar-winning documentary "An Inconvenient Truth," the best-selling companion book, his salary from the venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers and several international prizes, such as the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, which add up to more than a $2.7 million. Paramount Classics, the documentary's distributor, has pledged 5 percent of the film's profits to the group, and some of the money raised through the 2007 Live Earth concerts will help the campaign, along with Gore's proceeds from an upcoming book on climate change.