The Checkout Counter #21
July 2024
Ripley
Ornamentalism
The Promised Land
Series
  • Ripley, 2024i was a tiny bit skeptical going into this, since the talented mr. ripley (1999) is one of my favorite movies ever—but after just one episode of ripley, i was completely immersed. the black and white is gorgeous, creating a much colder and noir-ish italy than the vibrant postcard picture we're used to in the '99 version.

    time is what the tv format offers to make ripley truly shine: we get long stretches of wordless scenes where tom goes up and down staircases or fumbles around with a dead body, which are all incredible to watch. the series never feels slow or padded out—its length provides us with meticulous details, beautiful lingering shots of nothing in particular, and the strange intimacy that comes with disposing a body.

    we're so lucky to have two completely distinct adaptations that are both perfect at what they're trying to achieve. i placed a hold on the book at my local library right after finishing.

    Miniseries, drama, thriller. A con artist travels to Italy to convince a wealthy man's son to return home. Based on Patricia Highsmith's The Talented Mr. Ripley.
Film
  • The Promised Land (Bastarden), 2023a bit of a western, and revenge thriller, and anti-royalty historical piece. some really beautiful shots here.
    Historical drama. In 18th century Denmark, an impoverished veteran sets out to farm a vast and desolate grassland where seemingly no crops can grow.
Music
Books
  • The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher, Hilary Mantel
    Short fiction collection.
  • When They Severed Earth from Sky: How the Human Mind Shapes Myth, Elizabeth Wayland Barber & Paul T. Barber
    Nonfiction, history, mythology. Details how ancient myths were used to transmit important information for future generations to remember within non-literate societies.
  • Ornamentalism, Anne Anlin Chengthis was a dense read. i have so many highlighted passages to go back to. there were plenty of times when cheng's ideas just clicked for me, putting to word so deftly things that i had passing thoughts about before—and then there are sections that i can't grasp at all. the whole chapter about sushi and enfleshment went right over my head. so many ideas to mull over!
    Nonfiction, theory. A theory on the "yellow woman" and Asiatic femininity in western culture.
Articles & essays
Around the web
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