Dear People,
I apologise for a thought sent out of the columns,
the redundancy of the message with such an object,
its amplification soundless, had led me to
remember the good movie with Benigni,
and precisely the sequence where somebody
greets him with "fuck yourself" and he does
(as applying those stupid grammar structure
of some english course's books you can found
in italy) "Fuck yourself, too" and then he goes away
repeating with himself like a student homework,
fastly playing like "to be" involved in a formal greeting
"Fuckyourself"
"Ha, fuckyourself, too"
like a normal formal ritual of greeting's exchange.
I think that the comicity comes from
the contrast between the istitution of communication
and its daily reality, and thus from what Eugenio Barba
calls in its anthropology of theatre,
the contrast between daily and "extra-daily" which
seems to be the daily work of an artist.
The movie is "Down by Law" with a good director
and an excellent cast, in black and white,
as the world seems sometimes to be,
best wishes
Paolo
:_:_:_:_::_:_:_:_::_:_:_:_::_:_:_:_:
> baris kilicbay wrote:
>
> >Computer literacy, knowing all the technical details about mailing
lists
> >and other stuff on the Internet have nothing to do with being
> >intellectual. If a subscriber doesn't know how to unsubscribe it
doesn't
> >mean that he/she is silly and you are smart.
>
> In order to subscribe to this list, one must first gain knowledge
about the
> list, and then go through the subscription procedure. That someone
can do
> so without ever realizing that there might be a similar process for
> unsubscribing is a bit strange. Even stranger is that people who
don't know
> the first thing about mailing lists fail to read and/or understand the
> introductory message, in which many things -- including instructions
for
> how to unsubscibe -- are mentioned.
>
>
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