Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

Activity

You added a note
2 years, 5 months ago

it simply watches the screen

[...] Perhaps Friend's most lastingly memorable piece was At the Drive-In (1959), a documentary recording of a screening of Rebel Without A Cause at a drive-in theatre in California. After some shots of cars arriving and young couples buying popcorn, the camera finds a spot and doesn't move. Un…

—p.88 Fictional Film Club DIJONNAISE - Walter Friend, 1933 (81) by Mark Savage
You added a note
2 years, 5 months ago

he sold the name to Heinz

Dijonnaise's title has no obvious connection to the subject matter, unless we see it as a clue to what is in the man's bowl. The cut-and-shut combination of the words Dijon mustard and mayonnaise was actually a Friend invention, and he sold the name to Heinz in 1951 for an amount far greater …

—p.86 DIJONNAISE - Walter Friend, 1933 (81) by Mark Savage
You added a note
2 years, 5 months ago

removed six days from the calendar of potential

[...] He picked on L. She blushed. She was usually quiet in class. But after some prompting she went on to talk more than I'd ever heard her talk before. Her voice was scratchy and thin, and her sentences would periodically drift into uncertain noises, rather than come to a deliberate end. But her …

—p.76 MENSCH VERSUS MITTWOCH (MAN AGAINST WEDNESDAY) - F.G. Hoch, 1930 (69) by Mark Savage
You added a note
2 years, 5 months ago

threatens to rip the film almost completely away

There is a sequence in E.G. Hoch's Mensch Versus Mittwoch in which Eli, played with brilliant care by Emil Jannings, leaves a bar and walks drunkenly down a Berlin alleyway. He is set upon by an unseen assailant, who beats him to a bloody mess. The attack is shown reflected in the eye of a cat, who…

—p.71 MENSCH VERSUS MITTWOCH (MAN AGAINST WEDNESDAY) - F.G. Hoch, 1930 (69) by Mark Savage
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2 years, 5 months ago

the printing felt like enough

[...] I could explain my process. I made a document called CONTENTS with a long list from which I would make the final selections. They were ordered chronologically. (By the year of their fictional release, not the order in which I wrote them.) Some of them were just a name with no film attached. I…

—p.29 INTRODUCTION Or THE CHOCOLATE CASSETTE (11) by Mark Savage