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MOVIES OF TODAY

Movies Of Today: “The Water Diviner”

WaterDiviner

Whether he’s ducking friendly fire from the LAPD in a rundown motel in L.A. Confidential, fighting for his life with a short sword and a shield in Gladiator or creaming three Greek soldiers with a cricket bat in current post-World War I epic The Water Diviner, Russell Crowe hardly ever loses his cool. It’s his ace in the hole as one of the finest actors of our time, this ability to keep his head when everyone around him is going ballistic. Crowe’s understated work here is reminiscent of the most heroic moments of John Wayne (True GritRio Bravo).

A few years after the end of WW I, the wife of Joshua Connor, overcome with grief by the loss of her three sons at the battle of Gallipoli in 1915, drowns herself in a pond. Connor (Crowe) swears he will bring the bodies of his boys back home and bury them beside their mother. The Aussie farmer possesses an uncanny ability to find water in the wilderness, a knack that will soon come in handy.

After arriving in Turkey, Connor meets Ayshe (Olga Kurylenkov), the proprietor of his Istanbul hotel, whose husband has also died at Gallipoli at the hands of the ANZAC troops. And he encounters Major Hasan (Yilmaz Erdogan), whose Turkish forces were responsible for taking the lives of Connor’s boys. Now working to identify the remains of the Gallipoli campaign, Hasan becomes an unlikely ally in Connor’s mission.

Crowe’s excellent directorial debut is an effective portrayal of the grisly side of what was once known as “the war to end all wars.” And, much like Saving Private Ryan, a World War later, it is highlighted by one man’s attempt to complete a Herculean task that seems well nigh impossible.

—Jud Cost

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GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Gang Of Four: The Painting By Manet Called “Luncheon In The Studio”

Andy Gill has a relatively simple work ethic that’s guided him for years, ever since his legendary post-punk outfit Gang Of Four burst onto the staid scene with its jagged, jarring Entertainment! debut in 1979. “There are loads of bands that can chuck out the same album, year after year,” he says. “But that model is just not for me.” The group’s quantum leap forward to 1982’s more danceable third album, Songs Of The Free, might have clarified that tenet already. If not, the latest Gang Of Four record surely will—the aptly dubbed What Happens Next, Gill’s first after the departure of longtime vocalist Jon King. Gill will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our new feature on the band.

E0702 MANET 8638

Gill: Manet is the man. This painting has always fascinated me, and in certain respects it helped me formulate some of the underpinning ideas that led to Gang Of Four. Manet “sampled” other artists’ work and deliberately drained them of the meaning those works had in their original contexts. What Manet does is quote from older Dutch and Spanish sources and then place them in a weird, flat world where they are devoid of their original meanings, transformed. Luncheon In The Studio might look like a picture of three people not doing much in a room. While it is mysterious and meditative, it is profoundly revolutionary. It says there are no hierarchies, that traditions are hollow, and that God does not exist.

Video after the jump.

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VIDEOS

Film At 11: Rachel Grimes

Kentucky-based pianist and composer Rachel Grimes plans to release her newest album, The Clearing, on May 26, and now shares a video for “The Herald.” The clip was shot in various cities such as Jerusalem, Venice, Tel Aviv, Amsterdam and Bethlehem and shows peaceful imagery. This kind of visual works well with the smooth improv Grimes employs. Check it out below.

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FREE MP3s

MP3 At 3PM: The Space Merchants

SpaceMerchants

Brooklyn quartet the Space Merchants play a unique brand of lo-fi psych rock and ready for the release of their self-titled debut, due out June 9. Now they offer haunting single “One Cut Like The Moon” for free download. The track exemplifies their huge-yet-minimal sound, mixing psych with blues and country-style riffs to make something great. We are proud to premiere “One Cut Like The Moon” today on magnetmagazine.com. Download it below.

“One Cut Like The Moon” (download):

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GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Gang Of Four: The Music Of Erik Satie

Andy Gill has a relatively simple work ethic that’s guided him for years, ever since his legendary post-punk outfit Gang Of Four burst onto the staid scene with its jagged, jarring Entertainment! debut in 1979. “There are loads of bands that can chuck out the same album, year after year,” he says. “But that model is just not for me.” The group’s quantum leap forward to 1982’s more danceable third album, Songs Of The Free, might have clarified that tenet already. If not, the latest Gang Of Four record surely will—the aptly dubbed What Happens Next, Gill’s first after the departure of longtime vocalist Jon King. Gill will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our new feature on the band.

ErikSatie

Gill: Erik Satie was a quixotic man, of Scottish/French parentage. He was brilliantly eccentric—when he died, they found 20 identical grey velvet suits in his wardrobe along with 20 grey velvet umbrellas. He loved to drink absinthe. Back then in Paris, there were marks down the side of the bottle to guide the bartender as to how much he poured in your shot. Satie was convinced that the last measure was bigger than the others, and, to the irritation of the barman, would always demand to be served the last measure.

Space here is too limited to highlight all his incredible achievements, the ballet scores he wrote (for which Picasso did the backdrops) for example, but his music stands apart from all the other impressionist composers. It is profoundly modern in its sensibility, and yet it seems to resonate with something medieval. As you listen, you are not sure when or where you are anymore—it’s as Arabian as it is European. It feels like you are dealing with absolutes; space itself is being measured. His influence shaped the course of 20th century music probably more than any other composer.

Video after the jump.