As to the tracksuits, googling reveals they were designed exclusively for tonight’s performance. That's a relief then that we won't have to see them again. I like Stella McC's designs for the kit they'll wear when competing. (Shame GB Archery team have been knocked out before things have got going!!)
Olympinonsense
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Anna
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Resurrection Man
In case anyone would like to see more of the work by the creator of the cauldron - Thomas Heatherwick - can be seen here http://www.heatherwick.com/category/large/
I'd like to know who the 'heroine' was in the pop music sequence...the girl with the amazing hair....her smile lit up the stadium.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBeing joyous and enthusiastic is fine. But you don't have to be a crass exhibitionist to express this. The rest of the world showed them up.
I particularly liked Boyle's cutting up of film and live performance in a scrapbook style. It reminded me a little of the theatre version of 'Tommy' I saw many years ago. A lot of vivid impressions were created through the imagery and colour. I thought he found that historical meeting point of socialism and conservatism where politics can be literally undermined to reveal something more visceral and even slightly pagan in the British character. Not tension exactly but more a barely controlled pandemonium as he described.
As for the more recent, yes, it was very much a modern mash-up, but he also clearly had a strong feel for the seventies. Tubular Bells and the Pistols are both somehow quintessentially the London of that decade when, as with the writing of Ackroyd, all that earth and stone of history were culturally churned. Perhaps it had to be to usher in a digital age so precise that it can only be negotiated in the haze of permanent raves. The drama was wholly insular as befits this country and yet simultaneously wonderfully subversive. A celebration of all the world's cultures while completely ignoring globalisation, counter to the entrepreneurs' aims.
It is fascinating how you can look at sport through the prism of politics and it seems bloody awful. Then you can look at it through art and suddenly find a lot of cosier connections. I was prepared to choose the latter for the duration but I also feel that it is a sort of trickery. Sure, it has been carried across into today and I am happy for it to work for me on those lines where it suits. But to forget the terrible cost of it is to take one's eye off the ball. Athletes stay real and are always aware of strong opponents.
Does anyone know what that grey thing in a bed at the end of the NHS section was intended to be? I would genuinely like to know. Someone said it was an ill person but given that there was at one point a bike in the sky, I wondered if it was ET.Last edited by Guest; 29-07-12, 10:27.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View Post
Does anyone know what that grey thing in a bed at the end of the NHS section was intended to be? I would genuinely like to know. Given that there was at one point a bike in the sky, I wondered if it was ET.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostClose but not as cuddly, Lat - I think it was Andrew Lansley
Don't think so. It might have been a baby as John Wright says. I would still really like to know.
Thank you to mangerton for earlier comments about the National Anthem. I note and respect them but other people have replied and I don't have anything to add at this stage.
I agree with kernelbogey that it was good to have had a lot of ordinary people performing. Many of the bigwigs have spoken about the peoples' games without meaning a word of it. I think Boyle injected something of that into this event, albeit at terrible cost.
When the cameras caught Cameron and Johnson unawares, I thought they looked like thunder. That was worth a little of the money in itself.
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Anna
Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostI'd like to know who the 'heroine' was in the pop music sequence...the girl with the amazing hair....her smile lit up the stadium.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAfter all the hype and meeja build-up I just couldn't bring myself to watch. And after hearing the descriptions on the radio this morning and reading more on here, I'm glad I didn't.
S_A with all due respect I think your decision was mistaken. You've missed out. See e.g. kernel and ammy51 at ##514 & 516 above. Do give it a try"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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'Essex Girls Night Out':
No, I'm afraid Team GB's 'Essex Girls Night Out' (sorry genuine Essex county folk) behaviour was terribly demeaning. Fair enough, they'd been given those naff shell suits to wear, but they seemed to have entirely forgotten that we are the host nation. That involves a high degree of responsibility and with it, surely, a sense of some gravitas and dignity is a minimum.
'Natalie Notatalleasytopronounceavitchsillybitch':
Apparently the UK tv audience was 27 million which is tremendous, especially, given how diminished our sense of nationhood is these days, but, saints preserve us, the inanity of the so called commentators and their crass dribble as the teams entered the arena. It was pure Colemanballs time as they sweated and giggled over 'foreign' names, one competitore being called 'Scheidt' ... ha ha ha, 'and every commentators delighted that 'Natalie Notatalleasytopronounceavitchsillybitch' hasn't made her nation's team this year due to a n injury ... phew!'
'Apart from that, Mrs.Lincoln ... how was the play?!'
So, what did the Queen make of it all? I think that ill timed cut away shot of her inspecting her finger nails said it all. Meanwhile, the Duke of Edinburgh's only consolation could have been that he's got lots of new material to last out his remaining days. Still, it seems a cruel evening treat (four hours plus) for a very elderly couple.
Highlights:
The virtual doves ... the teams that DID march with dignity ... the depiction of the forging of the rings (astonishing) ... the torches passed to the young athletes for the lghting of the flame ... edgy, gritty pop music with an energy and execution that I didn't expect to like at all, but loved ... and Daniel Barenmboim as one of the Olympic flag bearers (indeed, I stayed up a further three hours watching the Beethoven 5th & 6th Symphonies with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra).
And finally ...
It was certainly a unique occasion and one that is the talk of the world, albeit with the odd guffaw in there, but the Games are now underway and we can only wish all the competitors the very best and the all the visitors great moments to treasure.
SHB
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marthe
Originally posted by mercia View Postoh, fair enough. I shall pack away my cynicism.
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Anna
Originally posted by pilamenon View PostYes, there was ambition, originality, and has any other opening ceremony dared to do comedy?
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