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The Phoenician Scheme (Wes Anderson, 2025)

 A review: THE PHOENICIAN SCHEME (2025) • Frame Rated After the fragmented indulgence of  The French Dispatch  and the overwrought complexity of  Asteroid City ,  The Phoenician Scheme  emerges as a recalibration in Wes Anderson’s cinematic trajectory. Echoing the refined balance of his most acclaimed works, his latest endeavour deftly marries his meticulously crafted visual grammar and idiosyncratic comedic rhythms with a more grounded and straightforward narrative. However, beneath its ornate veneer lies a quietly devastating meditation on the fragile intricacies of human connection. Although the emotional core may be obscured by the auteur’s ornate pageantry and curated whimsy, it pulses with sincerity, suggesting the emotional bonds we forge are the richest. Taking place against an early-1950s Middle Eastern backdrop, “Zsa-zsa” Korda (Benicio del Toro) may be one of the wealthiest aristocrats in Europe. He’ss a ruthless industrialist who aims to build a...

Ḥayy ibn Yaqẓān (Philosophicus Autodidactus)

Hayy ibn Yaqdhan - Wikipedia Ḥayy ibn Yaqẓān is an Arabic philosophical novel and an allegorical tale written by Ibn Tufail (c. 1105 – 1185) in the early 12th century in al-Andalus. Names by which the book is also known include the Latin: Philosophus Autodidactus ('The Self-Taught Philosopher'); and English: The Improvement of Human Reason: Exhibited in the Life of Hai Ebn Yokdhan. Ḥayy ibn Yaqẓān was named after an earlier Arabic philosophical romance of the same name, written by Avicenna during his imprisonment in the early 11th century, even though both tales had different stories. The novel greatly inspired Islamic philosophy as well as major Enlightenment thinkers. It is the third most translated text from Arabic, after the Quran and the One Thousand and One Nights. The story revolves around Ḥayy ibn Yaqẓān, a little boy who grew up on an island in the Indies under the equator, isolated from the people, in the bosom of an antelope that raised him, feeding him with her milk...

[OW] On the writing of a chronicle of the year 1145 a.d.

 When I was a young man (starting college or perhaps even still in high school),  I wrote a short story - inspired perhaps by my love of encyclopedic things, of learning of the Herculean undertaking of who Denis Diderot, an Enlightenment polymath who single-handedly put forth an Encyclopedia, and no doubt also influenced by the pre-eminence of the scriptorium The Name of the Rose in which a man, perhaps a young man, but I imagined him as old, sets about to perfect a Yahrbuch or almanac, a chronicle of a particular year. (1145 a.d. I believe - chosen perhaps because I could think of nothing of note happening in that year). He is located in a remote and obscure monastery and purports to perfect this chronicle for the Emperor, as a gift. The story focused on the trapping of scholarship in the medieval period, notably, the difficulty in getting paper and the use of particular tools, inks, brushes, etc.  Pumice stone, used to scrap the vellum clean, etc. I did not go into the ...

"The smiler with the knife under the cloak," Julio Cortazar

The image contains a poem and a piece of prose in Spanish, alongside an illustration of an elephant with people riding on it. Published in Around the day in eighty worlds . Here is a summary and translation of the text: Poem (Left Side) Title: "The smiler with the knife under the cloak" Original Spanish Text:   Justo en mitad de la ensaimada  se plantó y dijo: Babilonia.  Muy pocos entendieron que quería decir el Río de la Plata.  Cuando se dieron cuenta ya era tarde,  quién ataja a ese potro que galopa  de Patmos a Gotinga a media rienda.  Se empezó a hablar de vikingos  en el café Tortoni,  y eso curó a unos cuantos de Juan Pedro Calou  y enfermó a los más flojos de runa y David Hume.   A todo esto él leía  novelas policiales. Translation:   Right in the middle of the spiral[?] he stood and said: Babylon.  Very few understood that he meant the River Plate.  By the time they realized it was too late,  who ...