Interview with Henry Miller Screener

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • Screener for Interview with Henry Miller
    DVD available online at
    www.artfilms.co...
    Code: SRC-Mill
    In this brilliant interview, Henry Miller (1891-1980) describes the motivation and inspiration that guided his writings. He talks about his self-imposed exile to Europe and Paris, his return to the U.S., censorship, fame and the importance of reading. In English, b/w, 1969, 60 mins. Transcript available with the film on request.

Комментарии • 28

  • @wasteland70
    @wasteland70 15 лет назад +19

    He saved me at 24. Bless him is right.

  • @JaxNico
    @JaxNico 14 лет назад +17

    After reading several Henry Miller books (I'm currently reading one now) I've often wondered what his voice sounded like. I'm absolutely ecstatic to hear that it's just as I imagined it to be. I honestly feel like it was destiny that led me to his books because otherwise I'd be so lost in my own conclusions of the world and feel utterly alone in said conclusions. Thanks to whoever posted this!

  • @AlongtheFarClimbDown843
    @AlongtheFarClimbDown843 15 лет назад +6

    "At the bottom of every frozen heart is a drop or two of blood--just enough to feed the birds." -- (paraphrase) Henry Miller, 1891-1980

  • @AlongtheFarClimbDown843
    @AlongtheFarClimbDown843 15 лет назад +3

    Henry Valentine Miller 1891-1980, was described by Norman Mailer in his 1976 "Genius & Lust," as America's greatest living writer.

  • @greenmountain5491
    @greenmountain5491 Год назад +1

    헨리밀러의 북회귀선은 외설과 예술의 경계를 아슬아슬하게 넘나드는 미묘한 감성의 컨훼션!

  • @Unosis11
    @Unosis11 12 лет назад +1

    I just can't get down in a few words what I have learned from the lives of" Those Miller's " Anais Nin,Hugo Guiler-mon ami.Super happiness. Always merry and bright-as much as possible in this ragged age

  • @Gene-XL
    @Gene-XL 13 лет назад +1

    I tried to read BlackSpring when I was in my twenties. I couldn't "get it" at the time. I think I may have to try again. I really like Henry Miller the man.

  • @christopherscotellaro5027
    @christopherscotellaro5027 2 года назад +1

    Miller, Nin n’ Bukowski with a spice of Joseph Campbell shaped the man I am tday. Hell’s Kitchen most of all bk in the 1980s.

  • @AlongtheFarClimbDown843
    @AlongtheFarClimbDown843 15 лет назад +1

    The human intellect isn't expansive enough to fathom the workings & impetus of things metaphysical.

  • @nogololo
    @nogololo 13 лет назад +1

    @goback3spaces
    the morals of society have left you crippled!
    this man squeezed the earth to make the mountains a little higher and you mean to tell me that
    all you can focus on is how many times he said FUCK while doing it?
    give it another go!

  • @alexio222
    @alexio222 13 лет назад

    Grande scrittore

  • @PATYPUS3
    @PATYPUS3 14 лет назад +3

    I guess that it is Brooklyn-French.

  • @TheFutureUnquiet
    @TheFutureUnquiet 14 лет назад

    Teresa Teng was the most significant songstress of the modern era.

  • @jab3785
    @jab3785 13 лет назад

    @GeneLattanzi I find that 'Black Spring' has some of his best and some of his worst writing. 'The Tailor Shop' about the colorful people in his father shop is a masterpiece. 'The Fourteenth Ward' about his early childhood and 'A Saturday Afternoon' are also excellent. There's one or two others that are pretty good unfortunately most of the stories toward the last half of the book don't do anything for me.

  • @goback3spaces
    @goback3spaces 13 лет назад

    @nogololo Must I? I'm into Charles Bukowski these days. Have you read him? Wonderful stuff!

  • @hjakroon123
    @hjakroon123 2 года назад

    And pour Beatrice?

  • @m0n0p0lized
    @m0n0p0lized 15 лет назад

    oh i see, this is a company seeling dvds! now i understand what you mean. $180 is steep... and it's not even a documentary but an interview from either french or french-canadian television. if anyone can afford one of these they should make me a copy (and one for Ioannakis too). it'd be great to listen to him talk for an hour - but damned if i've so many australian dolars spare. a shame. a real shame.

  • @fabula259
    @fabula259 11 лет назад +1

    HENRY MILLER was perfect :'(

  • @Misserbi
    @Misserbi 4 года назад

    I think America is great but the regression and false sense gets to people. That is when they pour the rest of the recipe in. It has to do with suffering and memory. The idiot repeats an action thinking it will have a different outcome. Imagine 100 times no and you know America. It is not stubbornness as much as a line you either step out of and lose a spot or else cut ahead to steal your prize. I think the hardest thing is waiting patiently for your turn. That is what we are taught and that is the law for all I know.

  • @anouman9883
    @anouman9883 11 лет назад

    Even so, he should show a bit more respect towards one of the world's greatest writers.

  • @HigherPlanes
    @HigherPlanes 13 лет назад

    @ricktennyson10 Didn't you make a similar comment about Henry Miller in a different video? What are you, some kind of gay troll?

  • @ahmeddobrev4475
    @ahmeddobrev4475 Месяц назад

    Speaks French with an American accent

  • @Ioannakis
    @Ioannakis 15 лет назад

    One hundred and eighty dollars for an hour-long documentary? That's grotesque.

  • @goback3spaces
    @goback3spaces 14 лет назад +1

    Tried to read TROPIC OF CANCER once. Couldn't get through it. The thing seemed awfully juvenile to me. It was all just fuck this and fuck that, the word fuck repeated endlessly, and that's all I remember. The book read as if it'd been written by an anguished fourteen year old.