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SAVING YEMEN’S HISTORY

SAVING YEMEN’S HISTORY

STANDING AT THE BOTTOM of a dusty wadi, I crane my neck to take in the huge structure rising above me: row upon row of precisely cut stone, set seamlessly without mortar some 2,500 years ago, soaring 50 feet into the fading desert sky. To call this ancient engineering marvel a mere dam feels almost derogatory. When the Great Dam of Marib was built in what is now Yemen, its earth-and-stone walls spanned an area nearly twice as wide as Hoover Dam. The still standing colossal sluices were part of a sophisticated system that controlled the flow of seasonal rains from Yemen’s highlands to its parched desert in the east, nurturing agricultural oases across almost 25,000 acres of wasteland. And in the middle of it all, a thriving economic hub: Marib,…

GIVING IT LARGE

GIVING IT LARGE

@JORDANFARLEY It's like a mini-Avengers movie,” says returning director David F. Sandberg of Shazam! Fury of the Gods, the sequel to his 2019 hit Shazam! ‘That's how I saw it because there are so many characters. You have all these heroes, you have the villains, you have the monsters… It's a lot of movie packed into its runtime. And it's complicated. Just shooting and staging up to 11 characters in a scene… Where do you put everyone? It's really hard!’ Playing like Big-meets-Superman, the first Shazam! movie was, by superhero standards, an intimate, light-hearted affair, zapping the gloomy DCEU with a ray of joy. In it, 14-yearold foster kid Billy Batson (Asher Angel) is granted superpowers by an ancient wizard (Djimon Hounsou), and finds himself transformed into a ripped adult superhero (Zachary…

Toutes les croyances voient en l’arbre le symbole extrêmement fort du renouveau. »

Toutes les croyances voient en l’arbre le symbole extrêmement fort du renouveau. »

Cahiers de Science & Vie: L’arbre est un thème mythologique absolument universel. Comment l’expliqueriez-vous ? Alain Baraton : Par la fascination des hommes face aux arbres, seuls êtres vivants que vous pouvez côtoyer toute votre vie sans qu’ils ne bougent jamais. L’arbre est un repère pour l’homme. Il indique d’abord le temps qui passe par la largeur de son tronc, et annonce les saisons par la présence et la couleur de ses feuilles. Il incarne la continuité, la fidélité et se fait témoin silencieux de l’histoire de notre espèce, de l’évolution de nos sociétés. Mais également de notre passage sur Terre, de nos peines, de nos choix… L’arbre est le métronome de notre vie, surtout quand les hommes étaient plus sédentaires. C’est aussi un repère géographique, un lieu de rendez-vous. Sans…

THE EXAMINED LIFE

Try, if you can, to imagine a world without art and culture. No theatres or concert halls or art galleries. No dance, opera, classical music, plays, musicals, cabaret or circus. The little bar in your suburb that hosts live bands would be gone, along with your child’s dance school. Say goodbye to novels, cinema, television dramas, radio, pop music, video games, graphic design and fashion. It’s hard to get your head around just how many things that we take for granted would no longer be there. In fact, you probably need an artist to help you imagine what such a world would be like. But artists do more than make art. They entertain and uplift us. They tell us about ourselves and the world we live in. They allow us to undl&tand…

THE EXAMINED LIFE

When Your Agent Isn’t a Good Fit

Finding representation is one of the biggest hurdles in the publishing process. Once you’ve signed with an agent, it’s easy to believe that it will be smooth sailing from there. But this isn’t always the case. Besides the challenge of securing a deal with a publishing house, sometimes writers figure out that their agent is not the best fit for them. Here’s advice from two authors who found themselves in that situation. AMY ROOST Amy Roost produced a podcast about a family secret that was subsequently picked up and retold by The New York Times. After the story went viral, Roost received several inquiries from agents interested in representing her. One of the inquiries came from a powerhouse agent prepared to handle both book and film rights—an attractive offer to Roost. But after…

When Your Agent Isn’t a Good Fit

LA NOURRITURE DU FUTUR

Le 15 novembre 2022, le compteur terrestre atteignait 8 milliards d’habitants. En 2050, il devrait grimper à 9,7 milliards et il passera le cap des 10 milliards en 2080 selon les projections démographiques de l’ONU. Les chiffres s’envolent tandis que les ressources naturelles et les sols de la planète s’épuisent. Dans ce contexte, repenser notre alimentation devient une question de survie. Cela tombe bien, les chercheurs et entrepreneurs mettent déjà en place des solutions ingénieuses, qui promettent quelques surprises gustatives… SEMER DEMAIN “Le choix le plus crucial pour l’avenir de la planète est : que mange-t-on? Quelle agriculture soutenons-nous? Régénérons-nous ou détruisons-nous la Terre ?”, déclare David Bronner, activiste et fondateur de la marque Dr Bronner’s dans le documentaire Kiss the Ground, de Josh et Rebecca Tickell (sur Netflix). Les techniques d’agriculture…

LA NOURRITURE DU FUTUR

ON FULL DISPLAY

You two should know each other. You have so much in common.” It was this typical friend’s refrain that set things in motion. Los Angeles gallerist Shulamit Nazarian first met designer Pamela Shamshiri at the suggestion of creative director Michael Reynolds. Reynolds’ instincts proved providential — Nazarian and Shamshiri did in fact have much in common. Both were independent women of Persian descent, born in Iran and transplanted to LA with their families in the wake of the Islamic Revolution. Both were divorced mothers raising sons. And both owned architecturally significant houses designed by mandarins of Southern California modernism. At the time, Shamshiri inhabited Rudolph Schindler’s 1948 Lechner House, while Nazarian occupied A Quincy Jones’s Smalley House (1969–73) in Holmby Hills, one of the architect’s largest single-family residences. “We were both…

ON FULL DISPLAY

Magic SHOW

In the art of seduction, a certain air of mystery is considered to be the secret element in making a person—or a timepiece, in the case of the Cartier’s 2022 offerings—all the more exciting. For this year’s watches present fascinating shapes and technicalities to bemuse you, and innovations that will pave the way for many others in the near future. Cartier’s command over fine jewellery and watchmaking, it’s known, is one of its hallmarks. Take the Mystery Clocks, for instance: inspired by the French magician Houdin, the father of modern conjuring, these feats of horological and technical invention have captured the fancy of collectors’ since they were first created in 1912. At the turn of the 19th century, Louis Cartier (the founder’s grandson, 1875–1942) and horologist Maurice Coüet (1885–1963) created the…

Magic SHOW

Diving Under the Pyramids

I COULD FEEL MYSELF SUFFOCATING. Each step down the bedrock passageway brought me closer to what I’d long imagined: the pool of khaki water, the flooded tunnel it hid, and the moment I’d have to enter that darkness. The crumbling grandeur of a pyramid loomed above. Here, at the ancient necropolis of Nuri in Sudan’s northern desert, Kushite royals were laid to rest millennia ago in a series of underground burial chambers beneath mighty pyramids. Now the chambers were flooded with groundwater leaching from the nearby Nile. Archaeologist Pearce Paul Creasman, funded in part by a National Geographic Society grant, was leading a team that would be the first to attempt underwater archaeology below a pyramid. Initially, I’d been calm, even excited, about going along to photograph this ambitious and risky…

Diving Under the Pyramids

Rendre la Seine baignable a-t-il réellement du sens ?

D’ici au mois de mai 2024, il sera possible de se baigner dans la Seine et la Marne ! Un programme de 1,4 milliard d’euros, le Plan baignade, soutenu par le président de la République Emmanuel Macron, est en effet destiné à améliorer les systèmes d’assainissement franciliens et à assainir ces fleuves. Le but ? Rouvrir ces eaux au grand public après plus d’un siècle d’interdiction pour cause de pollution – notamment d’origine fécale –, et même y organiser certaines épreuves aquatiques des prochains Jeux olympiques. Mais est-ce réellement le seul objectif ? Décryptage avec deux spécialistes. Science & Vie : Hormis pour les Jeux olympiques, assainir ces fleuves a-t-il un quelconque intérêt ? Vincent Rocher : Oui ! Améliorer la qualité des eaux fluviales n’a pas pour seul but d’accueillir les…

Rendre la Seine baignable a-t-il réellement du sens ?
TEASERS TOMORROW’S WORLD

TEASERS TOMORROW’S WORLD

MARVEL Phase 4 of the MCU is nearly over, but there’s plenty on the horizon for The Multiverse Saga. Among the most tantalising projects unveiled at D23 was Thunderbolts, an antihero team-up movie uniting Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan), Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh), Red Guardian (David Harbour) and more. Marvel’s The Suicide Squad? Maybe. “I think it’ll be unique in the MCU in the sense that it’s got a very different flavour to it,“ says Harbour. Talking of team-ups, Hall D23 also thrilled to the energetic trailer of The Marvels, which picks up where Ms. Marvel’s end-credits sting left off, with Carol Danvers, Kamala Khan and Monica Rambeau trading places in an epic-looking adventure. “I’m excited to get three heroes that I love together and see how they work together,” says director Nia…

BRITAIN’S STONE AGE BUILDING BOOM

BRITAIN’S STONE AGE BUILDING BOOM

SOMETHING MOMENTOUS was in the air in the south of Britain about 4,500 years ago during the dying days of the Neolithic era, the final chapter of the Stone Age. Whatever it was—religious zeal, bravura, a sense of impending change—it cast a spell over the inhabitants and stirred them into a frenzy of monument building. In an astonishingly brief span of time—perhaps as little as a century—people who lacked metal tools, horsepower, and the wheel erected many of Britain’s huge stone circles, colossal wooden palisades, and grand avenues of standing stones. In the process they robbed forests of their biggest trees and moved millions of tons of earth. “It was like a mania sweeping the countryside, an obsession that drove them to build bigger and bigger, more and more, better and…

la dolce menswear

la dolce menswear

WE WERE SOMEWHERE IN NORTHERN ITALY, BETWEEN TRIVERO and Milan, when the speedometer on the Mercedes hit 235 kilometers per hour. The three American passengers tried to play it cool, as if we’d gone this fast before. From the back seat, I Googled the conversion: 146 miles per hour. Our driver, Vincenzo, looked at ease while staring at the dark, empty highway ahead. As the car sped faster, our we’ve-done-this-a-hundred-times facade began to crack. Esquire style director Jonathan Evans, riding shotgun, started twisting his beard between two fingers—an obvious tell. I peeked at the dashboard. 240 kph. 243 kph. The car bore no signs of our speed; it neither shook nor droned. The only sound was that of Third Eye Blind’s “Semi-Charmed Life” on Vincenzo’s preferred ’90s station. I didn’t like…

Work-From-Home Regulations Are Coming. Companies Aren’t Ready.

Work-From-Home Regulations Are Coming. Companies Aren’t Ready.

Debates over the trade-offs of remote work arrangements have tended to focus on challenges related to maintaining worker productivity, building company culture, and upholding boundaries between work and home. Now, employers are faced with an additional challenge: complying with a growing set of regulatory frameworks governing remote work. For most workers, working from home was once a seasonal perk or a special arrangement their employer offered. Now, what started as an emergency response to the COVID-19 pandemic has become routine. Between 2019 and 2021, the number of people working primarily from home increased from 5.7% to 17.95% of all workers in the United States and from 14.6% to 24.4% in Europe. With new data showing that remote work could save companies up to $10,600 per employee annually, and major employers such as…

INNER SANCTUM

INNER SANCTUM

Stepping through the front door of this neoclassical-style Parisian townhouse, you would never guess that in its basement is a fully functioning, professional-standard spa zone. Located in a peaceful – and covetable – area in the west of the French capital, the house, which dates back to the 18th century, is a masterpiece. At the heart of the renovation – led by Le Berre Vevaud, an interior design studio founded in 2008 by friends Raphaël Le Berre and Thomas Vevaud – was the homeowners’ desire to live in a contemporary interior that would be the perfect showcase for their artwork. ‘The relationship between art and design has always played a central role in our creative philosophy, so we were excited for the opportunity to work with a client who had…

The Silk of My Dreams

India is logically destined to be the fashion capital of the world,” says Radharaman Hari Kothandaraman, creative director and founder of Alamelu, the recently launched luxury ready-to-wear label headquartered in Bengaluru. Its first international collection—which debuted at Mumbai’s Le Mill in April and is set to hit stores in late August—is a selection of sharply tailored blazer-and-shorts sets, long dresses with plunging backs, light-as-air sheer silk shirts, wrap coats that double as dresses, all of which move easily from day to night. A subtly hued colour palette, from ice grey to muted ochre, anchors the collection. Steeped in a 600-year-old textile-weaving family legacy, Radharaman, 42, studied engineering at Cornell University and his capability in textile innovation is evident from the brands he successfully built prior to establishing Alamelu. These include the…

The Silk of My Dreams

YOU TALKIN’ TO ME?

IN THE CROSSHAIRS THIS MONTH… WILL POULTER You talkin’ to me? Yes I am, and very glad to. I’m a big Total Film fan. As a kid I read it a lot, and any time I was lucky enough to be involved in something featured in the magazine it was very exciting. Do you have an ‘off’ switch? I’ve been working on it! Especially on set, I’ve been trying to make sure that when my switch is off, so to speak, I’m making good use of my time, reading or listening to something informative. Previously I’ve found myself nervously foot-tapping or staring into space, which doesn’t make for the most relaxed transition back into shooting. Who’s the more foolish, the fool or the fool who follows him? I want to say the fool who wrangles all the…

YOU TALKIN’ TO ME?

CONFESSIONS OF A MALE MODEL

BACK IN MY SALAD DAYS, I CARRIED MYSELF WITH SWAGGER. The dashing raconteur—that’s the role I liked to play. But today, I never turn on the charm the way I used to years ago. These days, I make a conscious effort to mellow my manner in mixed company. I’m talking about man issues, which for decades I had confused with girl problems. That confusion sent me on a quest leading to some of the most desired and objectified women in the world. If I’d read different books, watched different movies, and looked up to different role models as a kid, I might’ve figured things out earlier. Instead, here I am with my hair turning gray and I’m still revising my understanding of the man I want to be. My self-diagnosed girl problems…

CONFESSIONS OF A MALE MODEL
OUR HUNT FOR MAGICAL BERRIES

OUR HUNT FOR MAGICAL BERRIES

IN THE FANTASY BOOKS I loved to read as a kid, when children entered a magical world there was always a threshold—a wardrobe, a tollbooth, a certain pattern of turnings through the labyrinth, some borderland to cross between humdrum reality and the world beyond. Every summer for most of my childhood, my family and I vacationed on an island. Islands are a kind of fairyland too; we’d take a trip across the nameless, featureless borderland of water (on a ferry that swallowed up our wood-paneled station wagon with us inside it). Then we were there, in that other place, and everything was different. Everything was tinged with magic. I’ve read and heard several different versions of the story of the Buddha’s enlightenment. In all of them, after mastering the austerities of various…

DANTE 700 YEARS OF THE INFERNO

DANTE 700 YEARS OF THE INFERNO

Michelangelo placed him in heaven in his“Last Judgment”; Sandro Botticelli re-created the circles of hell created by his poetic imagination; and Hieronymus Bosch, William Blake, and Gustave Doré imagined his infernal visions in brilliant works of art. Even today, when the theology and politics of late medieval Florence seem so remote, Dante Alighieri’s masterpiece, The Divine Comedy, still fascinates and inspires readers the world over. Completed just before Dante died in 1321, it consists of three parts—Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso—The Divine Comedy is a long poem recounting the author’s journey among the damned in hell, guided by the Roman poet Virgil. Later, he is reunited with his beloved, Beatrice, who guides him up to purgatory, and then to Paradise, where, in a moment of ecstasy, Dante glimpses God. In naming his lifework…

CLEAN sweep

When walking around Angelique and Joseph Gloistein’s Gisborne home, you could be forgiven for thinking you’re at a chic Byron Bay resort, complete with poolside cabana. However, the relaxing vibe belies the hard work it took to get to this point. Builder Joseph (Joe) spent eight months working full-time on building this dream home for his family. At the time, five years ago, the couple had two toddlers, so life was busy and living on a dusty, dirty building site wasn’t really an option. “We were super lucky with the timing – my mum had just downsized so we were able to live in my family home,” Angelique says. “This really took the stress off and is what made it possible for Joe to work on the house. We initially thought Joe…

CLEAN sweep
THE DISCOVERY THAT ALMOST WASN’T

THE DISCOVERY THAT ALMOST WASN’T

LADY FIONA HERBERT, the eighth Countess of Carnarvon, turns the folio pages of a leatherbound guest book, pointing out the signatures of illustrious visitors who frequented her famous home a century ago. We are high in Highclere Castle, the grand country estate some 50 miles west of London that in recent years became the setting for the popular period drama Downton Abbey. Now every table, chair, and much of the floor in Lady Carnarvon’s small study is stacked with books and original documents from the 1920s: letters, diaries, and yellowed photographs mounted in albums or rolled up like ancient papyrus scrolls. The guest register contains the cast of characters for a book Lady Carnarvon is writing about her husband’s forebear, George Edward Stanhope Molyneux Herbert, the fifth Earl of Carnarvon.…

Celtes: des bois sacrés à l’arbre pilier

Celtes: des bois sacrés à l’arbre pilier

De l’océan Atlantique aux Carpates et des plaines du nord à la Méditerranée, les Celtes ont autrefois constitué des civilisations du bois. Omniprésent dans leur quotidien, il était essentiel, et à ce titre vénéré. Est-ce la raison pour laquelle ces peuples ont adhéré au mythe faisant de l’arbre le pilier autour duquel l’univers était organisé ? Quand et comment cette croyance s’est-elle construite dans les terres celtiques ? L’Antiquité ne nous dit rien, ou presque. Exceptées de rares dédicaces à un dieu rouvre (deo robori), un dieu hêtre (baconi), un dieu if (ivavus), ou quelques autres, il est seulement question de bois sacrés chez les auteurs latins, et en particulier dans la poésie épique d’un Romain du Ier siècle de notre ère. Ses vers ont colporté bien des légendes, dont celle…

CHOCKS

MY FRIEND, THE late Bill Kershner, who encouraged me to write my flight testing book, wrote his own book titled Logging Flight Time, published by Iowa State University Press. It’s about Bill’s humorous experiences during his flying career. In that book he had a chapter entitled “Chocks.” Bill thought that most everyone in aviation has had a humorous experience with those devices used to keep an airplane from rolling on the ground. I believe that Bill was correct; I certainly have my own. After spending 10 years in the industry as a test pilot and having had to exit two test airplanes via ‘nylon letdowns’—also known as parachutes—I decided that academia might be a little less hazardous. So I became a professor of aviation systems at the University of Tennessee Space…

CHOCKS

NEWS

JUSQU’EN SEPTEMBRE, UNE EXPOSITION ITINĒRANTE RETRACE 40 ANS D’ARCHITECTURE SUR LE LITTORAL DE LA CHARENTE-MARITIME. DE ROYAN Ā LA ROCHELLE ET DE L’ART DĒCO AU BRUTALISME, UNE PLONGĒE PASSIONNANTE DANS UN PATRIMOINE BĀTI ENCORE MĒCONNU. (INFOS SUR CAUE17.COM) LAURENCE DES CARS, PRĒSIDENTE-DIRECTRICE DU MUSĒE DU LOUVRE, SERA LA PROCHAINE PRĒSIDENTE DU JURY DU PRIX LILIANE BETTENCOURT POUR L’INTELLIGENCE DE LA MAIN. CRĒĒ EN 1999, CE PRIX RĒCOMPENSE L’EXCELLENCE, LA CRĒATIVITĒ ET L’INNOVATION DANS LE DOMAINE DES MĒTIERS D’ART. DEVENU UN LABEL D’EXCELLENCE, CE CONCOURS A CONSACRĒ DĒJĀ 123 PERSONNALITĒS. (FONDATIONBS.ORG) Rodrigo Lopes; A. Mole, courtesy Semiose, Paris/Adagp, Paris, 2023; Hervé Plumet/Adagp, Paris, 2023; presse. Paris Musées/Musée Carnavalet Histoire de Paris; presse. Alessandro Sala Cesura; Eric Delage; Francis Amiand; Deïdi von Schaewen; presse…

NEWS

Le baobab, un être social

Un haut tronc trapu, tranchant avec la légèreté de sa cime hirsute, domine la savane sèche. La silhouette du baobab, qui s’épanouit dans les zones sahéliennes du continent africain, peuple les premiers récits des voyageurs, tant l’espèce végétale aux proportions uniques impressionne. S’il ne le nomme pas encore, son identité se devine dans les descriptions de l’écrivain voyageur d’Afrique du Nord Ibn Battûta (1304-v.1373) qui le découvre alors qu’il arpente le bassin du Niger. Fasciné par sa rencontre avec le végétal, le naturaliste français Michel Adanson (1727-1806) inspirera au botaniste Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu (1748-1836) le nom scientifique de sa variété qu’on trouve en Afrique continentale, l’Adansonia Digitata – les sept autres se trouvent à Madagascar et en Australie. Subjugué par l’imposant végétal qu’il découvre au Sénégal, le jeune scientifique en…

Le baobab, un être social
DREAM WORKS

DREAM WORKS

For The Sandman, patience is about to be rewarded. Netflix’s incoming TV adaptation sees the personification of Dream – aka Morpheus (Tom Sturridge) – waiting a century to regain his kingdom after he’s captured by overreaching occultists. Offscreen, writer Neil Gaiman (Good Omens, American Gods) has waited 30–plus years for his revered comic–book epic to reach screens, holding tight to his patient faith in one absolute. “I didn’t have faith that we’d always get here, ” says Gaiman, “but I had faith that the important thing was to stop bad versions being made. Once a bad version is made, you never quite come back from that. It may sound silly, but when I was 14 or 15, my favourite comic was Howard The Duck. Steve Gerber, Gene Colan, Frank Brunner, satire,…

Brazil Is Back

IN A HOTEL IN DOWNTOWN SÃO PAULO PACKED with international press, Lula supporters waited with fingers crossed. The early election returns on October 30 showed the far-right President Jair Bolsonaro with a strong lead over the leftist former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. That was to be expected, since the first results came in from Bolsonaro strongholds. But you could feel the mood shift as the vote count reduced the gap. A few minutes before 8 pm, cheers broke out—the lines on the TV’s voter graph had met, and Lula proceeded to edge into the lead. The final tally for the election showed 50.9 percent for Lula to 49.1 percent for Bolsonaro. Lula made his triumphant entry shortly thereafter, as photographers yelled at supporters to get down off the chairs.…

Wounded stories

In some corners of the internet, you’ll find people sharing and comparing photos of their ‘bug-out bags’. These are backpacks or duffle bags stuffed full of things their owners believe they’ll need in an emergency, from water and bandages to flares and gas masks. Keeping such a bag packed sounds quite prudent, especially for people who live in areas prone to flood or wildfire, or who may need to escape an unsafe environment. Disaster can strike anytime, so it’s good to be prepared. However, many of these bags are clearly built around survivalist fantasies of rugged self-reliance, rather than real-life emergencies. (The suspiciously high prevalence of weapons is a giveaway. You rarely need to shoot a forest fire). As one online wit pointed out, when the time comes that you really…

Wounded stories

THE WD INTERVIEW Alice Hoffman

Alice Hoffman specializes in magical writing that tells the realest of stories. She published her first novel in 1977 while still at Stanford University and has written more than 30 works of fiction since, including the novels The Marriage of Opposites, Faithful, The Red Garden, The Museum of Extraordinary Things, The Dovekeepers, and the Oprah’s Book Club book Here on Earth. She’s also written many books for young adults, including Aquamarine, Green Angel, Green Witch, and Incantation. Her books have been adapted for film and television and have been translated into more than 20 languages. Her fans love her style, which blends magical realism and historical fiction. She may be most known for her bestsellers Practical Magic and The Rules of Magic. These novels follow the Owens family, strong women who…

THE WD INTERVIEW Alice Hoffman

MAXING IT OUT

DINING ROOM ‘I wanted this home to feel young and mature at the same time,’ says Ruchi (pictured). Antiques deliver the grown-up side. LIVING ROOM ‘This space is where a lot of conversations happen over movie nights and general lounging,’ says Ruchi. finding the perfect place for three people and a cat was no easy feat,’ remembers art therapist and illustrator Annie Jefferson, who shares her home on a tree-lined historical part of Brooklyn – not far from the downtown area – with her two best friends. Given the reality of an expensive NYC real estate market, the proximity of this property to Manhattan – which was key for all three flatmates – helped swing it. That and the idea of being able to enjoy life in Brooklyn, where they could get to know…

MAXING IT OUT
FAREWELL TO THE FLESH

FAREWELL TO THE FLESH

“Long live the new flesh.” Words that, as any David Cronenberg fan will know, were spoken at the very end of Videodrome, his 1983 cult hit about the mind-and-body altering power of television. Words, also, that could apply to his latest film, Crimes Of The Future, which sees the Canadian back behind the camera after an all-too-long eight-year hiatus. The “new flesh” – the metamorphosis of our bodies into something more advanced, more poisonous perhaps – is embedded in his entire work. Or as the 79-year-old director now puts it: “The human condition is the human body.” After his last film, the satire Maps To The Stars, Cronenberg sidestepped into novel-writing with 2014’s Consumed, a story that saw him tackle strange sexual fetishes and technology run amok. Crimes… continues this re-embracing…

THE ANXIETY EPIDEMIC

NGIE LANDEROS KNEW HER DAUGHTER had always been shy. “Very, very shy,” she says. “She always felt awkward talking to other kids her age.” Then came the COVID-19 lockdowns in March, 2020. Ten years old, Landeros’ daughter began feeling unbearably self-conscious seeing herself on the computer screen during Zoom lessons. When her elementary school went to a hybrid format that required most kids to attend in person, some days she’d refuse to go. Once she had a full-blown panic attack in the car and began kicking and screaming. On another day, says Landeros, “she literally ran out the door to hide from us.” Since Landeros and her husband, Michael Bloch, are psychiatrists at the Yale Child Study Center, they knew what their daughter was going through: social anxiety disorder. She wasn’t the…

THE ANXIETY EPIDEMIC

BETWEEN TAKES

What’s the first thing you do when you arrive on set? Usually, when I arrive in my trailer, I put the kettle on [laughs]. I maybe light a scented candle and figure out my playlist for the morning. If I’ve got extra time, I’ll roll out my yoga mat. But usually, things are run with military precision. What do you take on set with you? I always have music with me. It depends on the vibe of the set, and the vibe of the role, and what’s required. Sometimes you want to tune into something for a scene, and sometimes you want to tune out all the hectic moving around and the crew energy. Hot or cold lunch? Always hot, for sure. It depends on the catering, and also where I am. I was just…

BETWEEN TAKES
Forever Green by Carlos Mota

Forever Green by Carlos Mota

Everything that Carlos Mota does is touched by his unfettered love for colour. The stylist, taste-maker, and globe-trotting aesthete is known for injecting a certain joie de vivre in every space he imagines, a trait that he now seamlessly extends to his debut range of fabrics. While his love for dazzling hues can be traced right back to his childhood spent in Venezuela—“We were constantly surrounded by jungles, beaches, mountains, birds, and orchids; it was impossible to not let colour become a part of my DNA,” he once told AD—his love for textiles was fanned by his travels. “Fabrics—especially vintage, found textiles—became a big part of my life when I began travelling, especially to countries like Morocco, India, Spain, and Portugal. Whenever I’m in a new place, I try to…

Uncertain times

Uncertain times

When Vladimir Putin ordered Russian nuclear forces onto high alert, days after he invaded Ukraine, people far from the warzone began to report bone-deep feelings of uncertainty. Media accounts suggested a sudden spike in insomnia, and an epidemic of compulsive social media ‘doomscrolling’. Meanwhile, anxious parents wondered how to discuss the unfolding crisis with their children, and the phrase “in these uncertain times” started cropping up in more than a handful of news stories and politicians’ speeches. Search Google’s digitised archive of scholarly and historical literature, though, and you’d find that phrase recurring in hundreds of journals and books, in almost every decade, back to the 17th century. The belief that things are unprecedentedly uncertain right now, it turns out, is one that people almost always hold about the era in…

DESTINOS VITAMINA

VITAMINA B12 MARSELLA Colorida y festiva, resulta fácil sucumbir a su ‘charme’. Además de regalar unas fabulosas vistas al Mediterráneo, Les Bords de Mer, un coqueto hotel asomado a las luminosas aguas de la Costa Azul, es perfecto como cuartel general para descubrir algunas joyas de esta fascinante ciudad del sur. Comienza poniendo rumbo hacia el Vieux Port, donde turistas y lugareños se dan cita en las animadas terrazas de los restaurantes y cafés que lo circundan y regatean en el mercado de pescado. A pocos pasos, en el Cours d’Estienne d’Orves -una elegante plaza peatonal con librerías, bares y galerías de arte-, te toparás con la tienda de moda más chic, Agnes b (agnesb.eu), ubicada en un antiguo hangar naval. Junto a ella, en La Savonnerie, podrás surtirte del famoso jabón de…

DESTINOS VITAMINA
RETURN OF THE RINGS

RETURN OF THE RINGS

In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit – and a few thousand years before that, there lived a harfoot. While these peoples of diminutive stature may have the same hairy feet and knack for going on unexpected journeys as their more famous ancestors, the Harfoots occupy a very different Middle-earth. Morgoth, the great enemy, has just been defeated and his chief lieutenant, Sauron, gone into hiding. Gil-galad rules the prosperous Elven realm of Lindon, and the Dúnedain, long-living men, keep to themselves on the isle of Númenor. The Dwarves eat well in the lavish, doomed halls of Khazad-dûm, and somewhere in the distance, a nameless shadow is stirring. This is the Second Age of Middle-earth, and the setting of The Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of…

The Plotshare

Beth O’Leary captured accolades such as “the romantic comedy read of the summer” from USA Today and “Sleepless in Seattle for the 21st century” from Sunday Express for her debut novel The Flatshare. Published by Quercus in the U.K. and Flatiron Books in the U.S., O’Leary’s debut subverts the tropes of the rom com genre and tells a funny, witty story that also touches on poignant topics like dealing with emotionally abusive partners, the importance of therapy, being kind to others in need, and the consequences of being wrongly convicted of a crime. The two main characters, Tiffy and Leon, come together when Tiffy answers an ad Leon placed for a roommate. Tiffy is an assistant editor for a small publishing house making a subpar salary. She has left her abusive…

The Plotshare

L’homme, dans l’ombre portée des arbres

Considérez un arbre. Considérez un homme. Rien à voir ou presque. L’un se décline en 70000 espèces, au bas mot, l’autre constitue le seul représentant de son genre. L’un prospère sur Terre depuis plus de 380 millions d’années, l’autre depuis 300000 ans. L’un est immobile, silencieux, non violent, l’autre marche, parle, fait la guerre. L’un peut mesurer jusqu’à deux fois la hauteur de l’Arc de triomphe (100 m), l’autre, en comparaison, est haut comme trois pommes. L’un est potentiellement immortel à condition qu’on ne lui en fasse pas voir des vertes et des pas mûres (une colonie de peupliers fauxtrembles, dans l’Utah, affiche plus de 80000 ans), l’autre est condamné à mourir. L’arbre et l’homme? Deux créatures verticales mais hautement dissemblables. Reste que ces deux-là forment un couple. Aussi vitale, charnelle,…

L’homme, dans l’ombre portée des arbres
The Horror of Relations

The Horror of Relations

As a result of the explosive growth of ecological thinking, the idea of interdependence is all around us. Fundamental to the idea is the view that, in some way, ‘we’re all connected’ – to each other, to other organisms, and to our environments, both analog and digital. And usually implicit here is the idea that this connectedness is a good and beautiful thing. Being connected makes us stronger, healthier, more engaged, and more thoughtful. Yet lurking under this positive view of our relatedness is a darker view – that being inextricably interconnected is existentially horrifying. Being connected in the strong sense of being interdependent with others, threatens what it is to be a self, and what it is to be an individual. This dark side of interdependence is revealed when…

DJINN & TONIC

@JORDANFARLEY Good things come to those who wait. Even George Miller. The genial Australian director has spent over 20 years, on and off, getting his latest film, Three Thousand Years Of Longing, to the screens. He first read A.S. Byatt’s novella, The Djinn In The Nightingale’s Eye, in the late ‘90s, snapping up the film rights from the Booker Prize-winning author after paying her a visit. He then started noodling away on the script with daughter Augusta Gore, although other projects – Happy Feet and Mad Max: Fury Road – took precedence. Finally, Miller’s gotten around to making it – a beguiling love letter to the art of storytelling and a film that he’s already dubbed “the anti-Mad Max” for its palate-cleansing properties. Arriving seven years after Fury Road roared its way…

DJINN & TONIC
ESPACIOS ORGÁNICOS

ESPACIOS ORGÁNICOS

El título In Praise of Caves se inspira en un capítulo del mismo nombre, de la obra de Bernard Rudofsky, The Prodigious Builders: Notes Towards a Natural History of Architecture (1977), en donde el autor le presenta a sus lectores modernos ejemplos de viviendas en cuevas alrededor del mundo. A través de una selección de proyectos de arquitectura orgánica mexicana, The Noguchi Museum, en Nueva York, presenta In Praise of Caves: Organic Architecture Projects from México by Carlos Lazo, Mathias Goeritz, Juan O’Gorman, and Javier Senosiain, una exposición que explora los beneficios de la vida bajo tierra y las ventajas medioambientales que tiene la adaptación de estructuras naturales a la vida actual. Estos cuatro visionarios mexicanos equiparan la salud y la felicidad con el hecho de vivir no sólo en…

dead end

dead end

It was 4am in Savannah, Georgia when Jamie Lee Curtis said goodbye to Laurie Strode. Owing to the practicalities of production, Curtis’ final scene as Strode wasn’t the conclusion of Halloween Ends. Neither was Curtis filming the long-awaited showdown with babysitter butcher Michael Myers. Instead it was a quiet, contemplative moment featuring Laurie alone in her car by the side of the road. Shortly after, as Curtis watched playback of the shot from basecamp over the shoulder of sequel trilogy director David Gordon Green, the magnitude of what she was looking at hit like a chef’s knife gliding between the ribs. “I realised that would be the last time I ever saw Laurie Strode,” Curtis tells Total Film, on the verge of tears – and not for the last time – while…

CONTRIBUTORS

MAYANK MANSINGH KAUL WRITER An expert in the post-independence histories of textiles and design in India, Kaul writes about the work (pg 72) and home (pg 80) of Monika Correa. “It was great to capture the two worlds of Monika Correa—that of the extraordinary textiles she weaves and her Goa home, where she goes to rejuvenate and take time off. There are so many seamless connections between the two….” ADITYA AHUJA WRITER Designer Aditya Ahuja is the CEO of Lola & Veranda, an online bedlinen brand. He joined SHYAM AHUJA right out of college, working his way up to CEO before leaving to begin his own company, Aditya Ahuja Design House, in 2019. In this issue, he charts his late grandfather’s journey (pg 66), one that culminated in “the rejuvenation of a moribund…

CONTRIBUTORS
New tv Powering the future of home entertainment

New tv Powering the future of home entertainment

From Ted Lasso to Top Gun: Maverick, 2022 has been a big year for entertainment. With the all-new Apple TV, Apple’s making it easier than ever to access the world’s best content from the comfort of your sofa, revolutionizing the home entertainment experience once again. INTRODUCING THE SEVENTH APPLE TV Whilst the all-new Apple TV 4K is only its third generation; it represents the seventh overall Apple TV set-top box from the Cupertino company. It serves as another significant leap forward for Apple. Sure, the box might look remarkably similar to its predecessor, but it’s what’s on the inside that counts. Apple says that the new model offers “impressive cinematic quality” and uses the A15 Bionic chip, the same chip used in the iPhone 14 and 14 Plus, to offer world-class home…

THE ACCIDENTAL SUCCESS: THE STORY OF EBAY

THE ACCIDENTAL SUCCESS: THE STORY OF EBAY

The Pez is a Lie Throughout the centuries, men have always tried to impress their girlfriends, and this was no different for Pierre Omidyar. Wanting to impress and help out his then-girlfriend in collecting Pez dispenser, Omidyar set in motion a career trajectory that would turn him into a billionaire. Yet let’s go back to the beginning. Born in Paris in 1967, Pierre Omidyar soon found himself in Baltimore, USA when his father relocated his entire family to begin his medical residency at the Johns Hopkins University Medical Center. From an early age, Omidyar had a fond interest in computers and the potential they had within them. During his high-school years, Omidyar would sneak out of physical-education classes to secretly go play on the school computers. He was busted of course,…

BREAKING CONVENTION

@JORDANFARLEY 1 MARVEL STUDIOS Following a seemingly rudderless Phase 4 so far, Marvel’s return to the famous Hall H had to deliver something special, and Kevin Feige’s slew of announcements was an exhilarating display of grandiose forward thinking. The entirety of Phase 5 was revealed within a frantic 10 minutes, including a Daredevil series and a Thunderbolts movie. Feige went one step further, divulging that Fantastic Four will kickstart Phase 6, and two Avengers movies – subtitled The Kang Dynasty (directed by Shang-Chi’s Destin Daniel Cretton) and Secret Wars – will bring the newly-minted Multiverse Saga to an end. As per tradition, there was also exclusive footage shown only to those in attendance. Teasers can report that the trailer for Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol. 3 was an extremely emotional affair. Chris Pratt’s…

BREAKING CONVENTION

Messages on the Mountains

For ancient peoples living in and around the AlUla Valley, the sandstone mountains rising from the desert were not just part of the landscape, they were surfaces on which words and images could be engraved. Some are simple—a personal name, an animal—while others comprise long inscriptions reflecting the activities and rituals of society, from agriculture and worship to religious ceremonies and prayers. They are these people’s legacies, carved in stone. Many of the grand sandstone cliffs that tower in and around the AlUla Valley display depictions of human figures or animals known as petroglyphs, a term derived from the Greek words petra, meaning “rock”, and glypho, meaning “to carve”. Ancient artists would use stones or tools to scrape images onto the surface of cliffs and freestanding rocks—or, in some instances, they…

Messages on the Mountains