Tag Archive: lou reed


Perfect Days directed by Wim Wenders (Japan/Germany, 2023)

Up until now, my favourite toilet cleaner in popular culture has been Raymond Briggs’ ‘Gentleman Jim’, a cartoon character from 1980 who dreamt of breaking out of his humdrum existence and dead end job. In stark contrast, the character of Hirayama in ‘Perfect Days’, played brilliantly by Kōji Yakusho, is more than content to follow a daily routine that borders on a zen-like ritual as an employee of a Tokyo toilet cleaning company.

It helps that the facilities he works in are in a series of incredible buildings commissioned by the Nippon Foundation in 2018. This unique architectural project was coordinated by Yamada Akiko who set out to counter the image of public toilets as “dark, dirty, smelly and scary” places that were best avoided Through unfortunate timing, these buildings were completed around the time that the pandemic struck. Post lockdown, the esteemed German filmmaker Wim Wenders was asked if would be interested in making a documentary to publicise this enlightened initiative. He leapt at the chance but happily decided to turn the film into a work of fiction.

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If a biography is judged solely by its length and detail, then Blake Gopnik’s 900-page doorstopper about Andy Warhol can be safely adjudged to be definitive. But while I have no doubt that the book covers the key facts of the artist’s life, there still seems to be something missing.

Time and again, Gopnik tells us about Warhol’s shyness and social awkwardness but it is not made sufficiently clear how he still evolved to become such a charismatic and influential figure. In other words, we never get to the root of the magnetism that drew such a devoted following, particularly among life’s misfits, mavericks and outsiders. Continue reading

Nico: a faded femme fatale

NICO, 1988 directed by Susanna Nicchiarelli (Italy/Belgium, 2017)

Nico-1988By common consensus, the career high of Nico (Christa Päffgen b. 16th October 1938 d. 18th July 1988) came in the late 1960s as a Warhol superstar in Chelsea Girls and as the singer of three songs on the The Velvet Underground’s groundbreaking debut album.

While a conventional biopic would have centred on this heady, decadent period, Susanna Nicchiarelli chooses instead to focus on the last three years of Nico’s life. At this point, the artist’s striking looks had declined to the point that she openly conceded that she’d become “a fat junky”.

As the film shows, Nico never stopped being feisty and firey but makes no bones about the fact that the looks which brought her fame had suffered through a life of excess. She is no longer the stunning blonde model whose long list of lovers included cult celebrities like Alain Delon, Brian Jones, John Cale and Jim Morrison. Continue reading

The prettiest stars of Glam Rock

SHOCK AND AWE – GLAM ROCK AND ITS LEGACY by Simon Reynolds (Faber & Faber,2016)

“Got your mother in a whirl ‘cos she’s not sure if you’re a boy or a girl” – David Bowie (Rebel Rebel)
“Even the greatest stars live their lives in the looking glass” – Kraftwork (Hall Of Mirrors)
“There’s something in the air of which we will all be aware yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah” – Sweet (Teenage Rampage)
“Whatever happened to the heroes?”- The Stranglers (No More Heroes)

glamIt’s fair to say Glam Rock has never really been taken all that seriously. Being casually dismissed as a joke genre is partly what drove Simon Reynolds to write this impressively weighty tome.

In so doing, he proves that this musical phenomenon deserves to be more than just an amusing footnote in the story of popular music. The author doesn’t claim that all the music tagged as Glam (or Glitter is you’re American) is of a universally high standard yet, even at its most crass and commercial, Reynolds endorses the viewpoint of Noel Coward who once wryly observed : “It’s extraordinary how potent cheap music is”. Continue reading

xmas-reed+cale

Hoping your Christmas Day experience is a merrier one than that of Lou Reed & John Cale in 1977