2013 Movie Challenge:
The Artist
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2013 Movie Challenge:
The Artist
“I’m unhappy” “So are millions of us”

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A jeep and other vehicles from the British 3rd Infantry Division in La Brèche d'Hermanville as they move inland from Sword Beach - Normandy, 6th June 1944. Photo : IWM
Every year on the anniversary of DDay, French citizens take sand from Omaha Beach and rub it onto the gravestones of fallen soldiers who gave their lives to liberate Europe. It gives the letters a golden shine. They do this for all 9,386 American soldiers buried there.
Chaque année, à l'occasion de l'anniversaire du DDay, les citoyens français prennent du sable d'Omaha Beach et l'étalent sur les tombes des soldats tombés au combat qui ont donné leur vie pour libérer l'Europe. Cela donne aux lettres un éclat doré. Ils font celà pour les 9'386 soldats américains qui y sont enterrés.
On this day, 82 years ago, on June 6, 1944, Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., age 56, landed with the first wave of infantry on Utah Beach during the Allied invasion of Normandy.
Roosevelt was the assistant division commander of the 4th Infantry Division. He suffered from arthritis and had a heart condition. He walked with a cane. Despite this, he personally requested to go ashore with the first wave of troops. His request was approved.
When Roosevelt landed, he immediately realized that the landing craft had drifted nearly 2,000 yards south of their assigned beach. The units were scattered. The beach was under fire. Shells landed nearby. German machine guns swept the shoreline. Officers and men were disoriented. Command structure was breaking down.
Roosevelt made a decision. He walked up and down the beach under fire. He located commanders. He assessed the terrain. He determined the new location could still support the mission. He ordered the troops to press forward from that point. He said, “We’ll start the war from right here.”
Throughout the morning and afternoon, Roosevelt moved across the sand and the sea wall, personally directing units, grouping scattered soldiers, and assigning objectives. He organized columns and pointed them toward exits from the beach. He made contact with naval gunfire units and adjusted fire on enemy positions inland.
He repeatedly exposed himself to enemy fire while moving between positions. He brought up reinforcements and guided them through minefields and along cleared paths. At multiple points, he led troops directly through enemy zones to ensure progress inland. His leadership stabilized the beachhead and enabled the division to achieve its initial objectives with fewer casualties than expected.
Roosevelt remained on the beach all day. He never sought cover. He refused to rest. He coordinated with both division staff and regimental units as they established a foothold in enemy territory.
One month later, on July 12, 1944, while serving in France, Roosevelt died of a heart attack. He was buried at the Normandy American Cemetery. His grave lies next to that of his younger brother Quentin Roosevelt, a pilot killed in World War I.
For his actions on June 6, 1944, Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr. was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.
US Paratroopers from F Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division, on their way to Normandy, France - 5th June 1944. Photo : US Army Archives

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A jeep and other vehicles from the British 3rd Infantry Division in La Brèche d'Hermanville as they move inland from Sword Beach - Normandy, 6th June 1944. Photo : IWM
George Lucas’s STAR WARS premiered on May 25, 1977. Pictured in the marquee at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood.
The line outside the Loews Astor Plaza in NYC.
When Columbia Pictures revised their logo in 1991, they did a photo shoot with a statuesque Louisiana home maker, Jennifer Joseph, who was not a professional model, and never did anything in showbusiness again.
In case you’re wondering who the woman in the Columbia logo is supposed to be, she is Columbia, a warrior goddess-like personification of the United States America. A lot of 19th Century art, including the famous “Go West, Young Man” illustrations personified the US not as Uncle Sam (which only came in vogue in the 20th Century) but as a woman, Columbia.
Previously, the longest served logo for Columbia Pictures was this one:
The identity of the woman who posed is not known, but the best guess we have is that it was the unreally beautiful Evelyn Venable, who was also the voice and model for Disney’s Blue Fairy in Pinocchio:

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“And you write until the rust comes out of the faucet, and it’s clear water, and then you write down the clear water.”
—
Lin-Manuel Miranda (
@linmanuel
) talking about writing on Charlie Rose (
x
)
Art Comparison:
Salvador Dalí - The Meditative Rose, 1958. René Magritte - The Tomb of the Wrestlers, 1960.
If the world ever leaves you feeling hopeless, remember that Star Trek was cancelled twice and deemed an utter failure; then rose from the ashes to become the flagship for all of science fiction, spawning six spin-offs, fourteen movies, and enough novels to keep the fires burning through the Long Night. Oh, and inspired new technology, popularized fan fiction, created slash, forged the foundation for modern fan culture, and pushed young people to the sciences. A show that was fucking cancelled. CANCELLED!
So. When it gets bad out there, just… be Star Trek.
BE STAR TREK.
Charles Farrell and Greta Nissen in a publicity still for Paid to Love (1927). Howard Hawks was not impressed with Charles' performance.
IT'S LOVE I'M AFTER (1937) — Dir. Archie Mayo

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Louis Jouvet and Jean Gabin Les Bas-fonds (The Lower Depths) 1936 | Jean Renoir
Five Easy Pieces (Bob Rafelson, 1970)