[stylist] O magazine E mail link & other ways to speak out on Saramago's "Blindness"
Donna Hill
penatwork at epix.net
Tue Nov 11 21:12:12 UTC 2008
Hello Fellow Federationists,
This e mail contains several easy ways to comment on Saramago's
book/movie "Blindness, several not-so-easy ways and the text of the O
magazine review of the movie (not yet up on their site at this point).
Please forward it to whomever you think might help. Thanks,
Donna Hill, Head of Media Relations
Performing Arts Division, National Federation of the Blind
dwhill at epix.net
***
Section 1: Three easy ways to comment
1. Are you one of the people who gave up on O's crazy online form?
Here's a way that won't leave you tearing your hair out. Pat Towers is
the Features Director for O magazine. E mail Pat at:
ptowers at hearst.com
2. There's a review of the movie by Maria Realf on Eye for Film. I've
already used their Contact option which has a regular e mail link. I
received a very thoughtful response from their Content Director Jennie
Kermote (herself visually impaired) , who has passed my comments on to
the next person who will review the movie; she also expressed an
interest in doing a news piece about our concerns. The review is at:
http://www.eyeforfilm.co.uk/reviews.php?film_id=15476
To respond via e mail, enter on Contact, there's an e mail link below
their address. Or, here it is:
eyeforfilm at yahoo.com.
If you're adventurous, they also have a forum for posting questions and
comments
3. I would like to write a piece about the reaction of the blind
community to pitch to various publications. At the very least, it will
be posted on Craigslist and as a letter to the editor in our local
papers. If you want to go on record in such a piece, I need your name,
contact info (not to be published), age, city (they always want age and
location) some general details such as profession, education, reason for
blindness (only if you're comfortable with this) and interests. You
can e mail me at:
dwhill at epix.net
Don't worry about sprucing up you're comments. Be candid and I will
submit whatever I write to you for your approval prior to sending or
posting it anywhere.
Section 2: Not so easy ways: these are sites with reviews and comment
forms which have CAPTCHA's, so you should have Firefox 3 and Web Visum.
I have posted comments in all cases. If you don't know about Web Visum,
you need to be refered by a subscriber which I can help with. It's free
and the CAPTCHA retrieving tool is the best thing since sliced bread.
Learn more about Web Visum at:
http://www.webvisum.com
1. Review by Rollie on GoSeeAMovie.com. He responded to my comments
and I have responded to his response.
http://go-see-a-movie.com/2008/11/10/review-blindness.aspx?ref=rss11/11-08
Comment via online form with Captcha and descriptions below edit fields,
option to get e mail alerts of replies to your comment.
2. Rollie's review is also posted on the site of the Daily Nebraskan
http://media.www.dailynebraskan.com/media/storage/paper857/news/2008/10/07/Features/blindness.A.Typical.Glimpse.Of.Bleak.Social.Commentary-3473288.shtml
Comment via online form, descriptions above edit fields, CAPTCHA after
initial submit. You must register to get e mail alerts.
3. Review of book by Teresa on Shelf Love
http://shelflove.wordpress.com/2008/11/10/blindness-review/
Comment via online form "Leave a Comment" descriptions above and below
edit fields.
Section 3: Text of O magazine review
[Note: the following was transcribed by our local librarian]
Block quote
p. 68, 10/08 O Magazine
Housewife Saves the World!
At last, a movie that portrays women's work as a heroic calling
It is a truth universally acknowledged that good actresses in Hollywood
are in want of good parts, and even the juicy roles are too often
defined by the
character's connection to a man. She's the wife, the secretary, the
mistress. She's strictly support staff. So it is with Blindness, adapted
from Jose
Saramago's novel about a mysterious illness that makes a nation go
blind. The female characters are ID'd as if they were possessions: the
Doctor's Wife,
the First Blind Man's Wife, etc. (There's also the Woman with Dark
Glasses, but that's a euphemism--she's actually the Woman Who Sleeps
with Men for Money.)
What's startling about Blindness is that for once, the housewife gets to
be the visionary. Literally: The Doctor's Wife (Julianne Moore) is the
only one
who's immune to the blinding virus, though she loyally follows her
husband (Mark Ruffalo) into the quarantine wards, which soon descend
into squalor and
madness. The Wife starts out as a tippling, flute-voiced homemaker; as
the situation worsens, her pitch drops, her jaw sets, and a gunmetal
gleam of resolution
lights up those functioning eyes as she labors doggedly to keep herself
and her insta-family of fellow detainees from plunging into utter
depravity. Blindness
conjures a world where an ordinary gal has a uniquely menial kind of
greatness thrust upon her, where the drudgery of mopping and laundering
is a noble
calling and procuring groceries is a do-or-die blood sport--a test of
leadership, in fact. Who would have thought it: women's work as the
stuff of movie
heroism. --J.W.
--
Hilary Caws-Elwitt, Systems & Public Services Librarian
Community Information Network Administrator/Programmer
Susquehanna County Library, 2 Monument Sq, Montrose PA 18801
Phone 570-278-1881 -- Fax 570-278-9336
info at susqcolibrary.org --
http://www.susqcolibrary.org
info at susquehannaCIN.net --
http://www.susquehannaCIN.net
Block quote end
For my bio & to hear clips from The Last Straw:
http://cdbaby.com/cd/donnahill
Apple I-Tunes
phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?playListId=259244374
Performing Arts Division of the National Federation of the Blind
www.padnfb.org
E-mail message checked by Spyware Doctor (6.0.0.386)
Database version: 5.11100
http://www.pctools.com/en/spyware-doctor-antivirus/
More information about the Stylist
mailing list