Naked Lady of the Week: Gabriella

Fabrizio del Wrongo writes:

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Ah, the cool blonde. Is she ever really out of fashion?

The Hungarian Gabriella, sometimes known as Gaby or Mia, was one of the top nude models in Europe before she threw in the towel earlier in the year. This despite the fact that she has smallish boobs and mostly keeps her legs closed.

The latter custom seems to have caused some consternation among her fans. Says one inconsiderate horndog: “She is absolutely gorgeous. But there are now 3 photo sets and I am still waiting for a good shot of that pussy. What does it look like? I don’t yet know.”

Fortunately, we know what she thinks of such complaints. She wrote the following on the message boards of TheNudeEU:

you know there is life beyond being a porn actress and showing pink all over the internet for little money. I have respect for girls who does, and intelligent enough not to spend the money for drugs, but it is just not my thing.

and Just because you do not know about other, better, well paid modeling work, does not mean it does not exist. And maaaybe you cannot imagine, but not all of the girls are dumb as hell, and can manage life without showing pussy all over. I never wanted to show more than I am comfy with, just for bucks! And I will never do even for a million dollars. That is not what I worked for until now.

so go ahead and look at those who did!

thanks for the cute words though, best wishes

the model

Strong and perhaps admirable words. But I do wonder about the contradiction wherein nude models who “show pink all over the internet” make “little money” and those who do not are “well paid.” Maybe she means that a model of her stature need not sacrifice modesty in order to be well compensated? I think that’s probably it. She’s saying, “I’m good enough to be successful without submitting to that.” Fair enough.

Speaking of money, I often find myself wondering about the economics of the nude-modeling biz. And since no one has bothered to make a good documentary or Netflix series on the topic, my understanding is limited to vague assumptions and whatever I can glean from an interview or public comment. Like some other popular models, Gabriella founded her own website, called Fall In Lust. I imagine this allows a model to cut out the middle man and take a larger percentage of the profits generated by her pictures. But there are obvious downsides to such an arrangement. For one thing, you have to hire solid photographers, and they cost money. For another, the commodity in which you’re dealing is endlessly reproducible and accessible free of cost.

Gabriella addressed some of these downsides in her final post on TheNudeEU:

Hi Everyone,

This is Gaby here. I wanna apologize for not updating on my website for a very long time. The site made literally no money which I could use for making new series regularly and my life went through lots of change as well.

So Indeed, I needed to close it. I will refund every charge which happened this, 2017 year. I did not fully count on people stealing and spreading all the images for free, instead of considering to pay the subscription fee. This saddened me because I really did try to put something nice out there, even though it wasn’t anything groundbreaking or unique and people did not get that there is no one else behind the site but me. If nobody pays for it, it is just not gonna sustain itself, eventually. I could not keep up with all the work for almost no money.

I appreciate everyone who took any interest in the work I did over the years, even though it is an attention I did not really wish for. I somehow ended up liking modeling and I found no problem with tasteful nudity either. Sometimes attention went a little too far and I was not into that. I did not wish for that part of the deal. It might seem that I am an exhibitionist but I actually have a pretty shy personality. I am just very curious to new things in life. There was a lot of great stuff coming out of this job, and I am glad I did it. I would not be where I am now. It shaped me and helped me to get to know myself and change my shyness for the better too. But lately, I got to a certain point in life where I started to doubt that having lots of attention from the internet, social media etc will have nothing to do with my happiness. So the need for a change just organically happened.

Anyways, not sure any of this makes sense, just wanted to put the word out there since I stumbled upon these wondering comments about me.

You all have a great day and thanks for reading!
G

A touching and seemingly very candid summation of her career. I note that she recently turned 30, a fact which — just playing devil’s advocate here — may have played a not-inconsiderable part in her decision to call it quits, whether she’s conscious of it or not. But, then, the best rationalizations are both convenient and true.

Here’s hoping she’s enjoying the next stage of her life.

Nudity below. Enjoy the weekend.

Continue reading

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21st Century Movies: The NYT v. Us

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

Manohla Dargis and A.O. Scott, the two main film critics at The New York Times, have released their list of the best movies of the 21st century so far:

1. There Will Be Blood
2. Spirited Away
3. Million Dollar Baby
4. A Touch of Sin
5. The Death of Mr. Lazarescu
6. Yi Yi
7. Inside Out
8. Boyhood
9. Summer Hours
10. The Hurt Locker
11. Inside Llewyn Davis
12. Timbuktu
13. In Jackson Heights
14. L’Enfant
15. White Material
16. Munich
17. Three Times
18. The Gleaners and I
19. Mad Max: Fury Road
20. Moonlight
21. Wendy and Lucy
22. I’m Not There
23. Silent Light
24. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
25. The 40-Year-Old Virgin

A mixture of overpraised critical darlings (“There Will Be Blood”, “Million Dollar Baby”, “Inside Out”, “Boyhood”, “The Hurt Locker”, “Mad Max: Fury Road”, “Moonlight”), film festival stalwarts (Assayas, Wiseman, Dardenne Brothers, Varda), awful indies (“Wendy and Lucy”, “I’m Not There”), and the safe obligatory curveball (“The 40-Year-Old Virgin”). In other words, pretty much what you’d expect from an Establishment rag. The one surprise for me was “Munich”, a movie I haven’t heard anyone talk about since the end of its original run.

Token NYT conservative Ross Douthat offered his riposte to the Dargis-Scott list:

1. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
2. The 40-Year-Old Virgin
3. Max Max: Fury Road
4. Mulholland Drive
5. The New World
6. Pan’s Labyrinth
7. Moulin Rouge!
8. The Squid and the Whale
9. The Social Network
10. The 25th Hour
11. Ida / The Gods of Men / Cavalry
12. The Passion of the Christ / Apocalpyto
13. The Lives of Others
14. No Country For Old Men
15. The Royal Tenenbaums
16. The Queen of Versailles
17. Arrival
18. Inglorious Basterds
19. Lord of the Rings
20. Grizzly Man
21. Eastern Promises
22. The Incredibles
23. Gladiator

Any list that contains “MM:FR” is by definition disqualified. While defending his choice of “No Country For Old Men” over the other Coen Brothers offerings, Douthat says, “Better safe than wrong.” Spoken like a real schoolboy suck-up, Ross. Here at UR, we say better interesting and wrong than safe.

Which brings me to our lists, which we offered last summer. I might make a couple of adjustments here or there given the last year’s offerings, but I think we all still basically stand by our choices. While looking over the above, I realized I never did a follow-up post where I tallied our shared favorites. Herewith I rectify that shameful oversight and submit our meta-list as a counter to those offered by our cultural overlords at the Times:

margaret

4 votes:
1. Margaret (Lonergan, 2011)

3votes

3 votes:
2. Training Day (Fuqua, 2001)
3. Mulholland Dr. (Lynch, 2001)
4. Apocalypto (Gibson, 2006)
5. Black Book (Verhoeven, 2006)
6. A Serious Man (Coen Bros., 2009)
7. Oslo, August 31st (Trier, 2011)
8. The Trip to Italy (Winterbottom, 2014)

2votes

2 votes:
9. Unbreakable (Shyamalan, 2000)
10. Yi Yi (Yang, 2000)
11. Cast Away (Zemeckis, 2000)
12. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (Jackson, 2001)
13. Cocaine Cowboys (Corben, 2006)
14. The Last Mistress (Breillat, 2007)
15. Michael Clayton (Gilroy, 2007)
16. Crank: High Voltage (Neveldine/Taylor, 2009)
17. True Grit (Coen Bros., 2010)
18. The Trip (Winterbottom, 2010)
19. Sucker Punch (Snyder, 2011)
20. Byzantium (Jordan, 2012)
21. Blue is the Warmest Color (Kechiche, 2013)
22. Only God Forgives (Refn, 2013)

I’ll round it up to 25 by adding:

23. The Blue Planet and Planet Earth (Fothergill, 2001 and 2006)
24. Two Lovers (Gray, 2008)
25. A Separation (Farhadi, 2011)

Strikes a pretty good balance, if you ask me. For starters, there’s a refreshing lack of take-your-medicine foreign and indie movies. There’s mainstream Hollywood pop (“Training Day”, “Cast Away”, “True Grit”, “The Fellowship of the Ring”), a healthy dose of eroticism (“Blue is the Warmest Color”, “Black Book”, “The Last Mistress”), a lesser-seen franchise (Winterbottom’s “The Trip” series), a lesser-seen vampire movie (“Byzantium”), arthouse edginess (“Mulholland Dr.”, “Only God Forgives”), alpha males (“Apocalypto”, “Cocaine Cowboys”), proof that literariness doesn’t have to be boring (“Margaret”, “Two Lovers”, “A Separation”), and the just plain drugged-out and disreputable (“Crank: High Voltage”).

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The Art of the Opening Title: The Americans, Season 4

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

An interview with an animator who created it. He also worked on the opening titles for TRUE DETECTIVE.

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Juxtaposin’: Italian Midlife Crisis Death

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

https://youtu.be/GgZQsHV0Z58?t=1h31m56s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rnT7nYbCSvM

The ending of David Chase’s THE SOPRANOS seems too similar to the ending of Elio Petri’s I GIORNI CONTATI to be a coincidence. Petri’s film was never released in the United States, but given that it’s an Italian film and the main character is a middle-aged man in the throes of an existential crisis named Cesare — which happens to be David Chase’s family name before it was Anglicized (Chase’s daughter goes by the last name DeCesare) — I wonder if Chase hasn’t somehow seen it and borrowed from it either consciously or unconsciously.

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Movie Du Jour: “Cluny Brown” (1946)

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

Lubitsch’s last completed movie which, for some reason, isn’t discussed or cited as frequently as his other classics. Charles Boyer and Jennifer Jones are excellent. Pauline Kael wrote:

A girl with a passion for plumbing is terribly repugnant to stuffy people who don’t want to admit they have drains. This wonderfully suggestive idea is at the center of Ernst Lubitsch’s mischievous satire of English propriety, set in contemporary rural England. Jennifer Jones is Cluny (it’s her lightest, funniest performance, rivalled only by her dippy blonde in Beat the Devil) and Charles Boyer is a debonair scrounger — a displaced European sophisticate who encourages her to flout social conventions. These two are surrounded by a prime collection of English class and mass types. It’s a lovely, easy-going comedy, full of small surprising touches.

You can watch it on YouTube.

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Architecture and Color

Paleo Retiree writes:

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Quote Du Jour: This Is Your Captain Speaking

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

Anyone who travels very much on airlines in the United States soon gets to know the voice of the airline pilot…coming over the intercom…with a particular drawl, a particular folksiness, a particular down-home calmness that is so exaggerated it begins to parody itself (nevertheless! — it’s reassuring)…the voice that tells you, as the airline is caught in thunderheads and goes bolting up and down a thousand feet at a single gulp, to check your seat belts because “it might get a little choppy”…the voice that tells you (on a flight from Phoenix preparing for its final approach to Kennedy Airport, New York, just after dawn): “Now, folks, uh…this is the captain…ummmm…We’ve got a little ol’ red light up here on the control panel that’s tryin’ to tell us that the landin’ gears’re not…uh…lockin’ into position when we lower ’em…Now…I don’t believe that little ol’ red knows what it’s talkin’ about — I believe it’s that little ol’ red light that iddn’ workin’ right”…faint chuckle, long pause, as if to say, I’m not even sure all this is really worth going into — still, it may amuse you…”But…I guess to play it by the rules, we ought humor that little ol’ light…so we’re gonna take her down to about, oh, two or three hundred feet over the runway at Kennedy, and the folks down there on the ground are gonna see if they caint give us a visual inspection of those ol’ landin’ gears” — with which he is obviously on intimate ol’-buddy terms, as with every other working part on this mighty ship — “and if I’m right…they’re gonna tell us everything copacetic all the way aroun’ an’ we’ll jes take her on in”…and, after a couple passes over the filed, the voice returns: “Well, folks, those folks down there on the ground — it must be too early for ’em or somethin’ — I ‘spect they still got the sleepers in their eyes…’cause they say they caint tell if those ol’ landin’ gears are all the way down or not…But, you know, up here in the cockpit we’re convinced they’re all the way down, so we’re jes gonna take her on in…And oh”…(I almost forgot)…”while we take a little swing out over the ocean an’ empty some of that surplus fuels we’re not gonna be needin’ anymore — that’s what you might be seein’ comin’ out of the wings–our lovely little ladies…if they’ll be so kind…they’re gonna go up and down the aisles and show you how we do what we call ‘assumin’ the position'”…another faint chuckle (We do this so often, and it’s so much fun, we even have a funny little name for it)…and the stewardesses, a bit grimmer, by the looks of them, than that voice, start telling the passengers to take their glasses off and take the ballpoint pens and other sharp objects out of their pockets, and they show them the position, with the head lowered…while down on the field at Kennedy the little yellow emergency trucks start roaring across the field — and even though in your pounding heart and your sweating palms and your broiling brainpan you know this is the critical moment in your life, you still can’t quite bring yourself to believe it, because if it were…how could the captain, the man who  knows the actual situation most intimately…how could he keep on drawlin’ and chuckin’ and driftin’ and lollygaggin’ in that particular voice of his —

Well! — who doesn’t know that voice! And who can forget it! — even after he is proved right and the emergency is over.

That particular voice may sound vaguely Southern or Southwestern, but it is specifically Appalachian in origin. It originated in the mountains of West Virginia, in the coal country, in Lincoln County, so far up in the hollows that, as the saying went, “they had to pipe in daylight.” In the late 1940’s and early 1950’s this up-hollow voice drifted down from on high, from over the high desert of California, down, down, down from the upper reaches of the Brotherhood into all phases of American aviation. It was amazing. It was Pygmalion in reverse. Military pilots and then, soon, airline pilots, pilots from Maine and Massachusetts and the Dakotas and Oregon and everywhere else, began to talk in that poker-hollow West Virginia drawl, or as close to it as they could be their native accents. It was the drawl of the most righteous of all the possessors of the right stuff: Chuck Yeager.

Tom Wolfe, The Right Stuff

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A Selfish Mode of Gratification

Fabrizio del Wrongo writes:

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When at length the new house at Fontenay was ready and fitted up in accordance with his wishes and intentions by the architect he had engaged; when nothing else was left save to settle the scheme of furniture and decoration, once again he passed in review, carefully and methodically, the whole series of available tints.

What he wanted was colours the effect of which was confirmed and strengthened under artificial light; little he cared even if by daylight they should appear insipid or crude, for he lived practically his whole life at night, holding that then a man was more truly at home, more himself and his own master, and that the mind found its only real excitant and effective stimulation in contact with the shades of evening; moreover, he reaped a special and peculiar satisfaction from finding himself in a room brilliantly lighted up, the only place alive and awake among surrounding houses all buried in sleep and darkness,—a sort of enjoyment that is not free from a touch of vanity, a selfish mode of gratification familiar enough to belated workers when, drawing aside the window curtains, they note how all about them the world lies inert, dumb and dead.

Slowly, one by one, he sifted out the different tones.

Blue, by candle light, assumes an artificial green tinge; if deep blue, like cobalt or indigo, it becomes black; if light, it changes to grey; it may be as true and soft of hue as a turquoise, yet it looks dull and cold.

Yes, it could only be employed as a supplement to help out some other colour; there could be no question of making blue the dominating note of a whole room.

On the other hand, the iron greys are even more sullen and heavy; the pearl greys lose their azure tinge and are metamorphosed into a dirty white; as for the deep greens, such as emperor green and myrtle green, these suffer the same fate as the blues and become indistinguishable from black. Only the pale greens therefore remained, peacock green for instance, or the cinnabars and lacquer greens, but then in their case lamplight extracts the blue in them, leaving only the yellow, which for its part shows only a poor false tone and dull, broken sheen.

Nor was it any use thinking of such tints as salmon-pink, maize, rose; their effeminate note would go dead against all his ideas of self-isolation; nor again were the violets worth considering, for they shed all their brightness by candle light; only red survives undimmed at night,—but then what a red! a sticky red, like wine-lees, a base, ignoble tint! Moreover, it struck him as quite superfluous to resort to this colour, inasmuch as after imbibing a certain small dose of santonin, a man sees violet, and it becomes the easiest thing in the world to change about at will and without ever altering the actual tint of his wall hangings.

All these colours being rejected, three only were left, viz. red, orange, yellow.

Of these three, he preferred orange, so confirming by his own example the truth of a theory he used to declare was almost mathematically exact in its correspondence with the reality, to wit: that a harmony is always to be found existing between the sensual constitution of any individual of a genuinely artistic temperament and whatever colour his eyes see in the most pronounced and vivid way.

In fact, if we leave out of account the common run of men whose coarse retinas perceive neither the proper cadence peculiar to each of the colours nor the subtle charm of their various modifications and shades; similarly leaving on one side those bourgeois eyes that are insensible to the pomp and splendour of the strong, vibrating colours; regarding therefore only persons of delicate, refined visual organs, well trained in appreciation by the lessons of literature and art, it appeared to him to be an undoubted fact that the eye of that man amongst them who has visions of the ideal, who demands illusions to satisfy his aspirations, who craves veils to hide the nakedness of reality, is generally soothed and satisfied by blue and its cognate tints, such as mauve, lilac, pearl-grey, provided always they remain tender and do not overpass the border where they lose their individuality and change into pure violets and unmixed greys.

The blustering, swaggering type of men, on the contrary, the plethoric, the sanguine, the stalwart go-ahead fellows who scorn compromises and by-roads to their goal, and rush straight at their object whatever it is, losing their heads at the first go-off, these for the most part delight in the startling tones of the reds and yellows, in the clash and clang of vermilions and chromes that blind their eyes and surfeit their senses.

Last comes the class of persons, of nervous organization and enfeebled vigour, whose sensual appetite craves highly seasoned dishes, men of a hectic, over-stimulated constitution. Their eyes almost invariably hanker after that most irritating and morbid of colours, with its artificial splendours and feverish acrid gleams,—orange.

What Des Esseintes’ final choice then would be hardly admitted of a doubt; but indubitable difficulties still remained unsolved. If red and yellow are accentuated under artificial light, this is not always the case with their composite, orange, which is a hot-headed fellow and often blazes out into a crimson or a fire red.

He studied carefully by candle light all its different shades, and finally discovered one he thought should not lose equilibrium or refuse to fulfil the offices he claimed of it.

These preliminaries disposed of, he made a point of eschewing, so far as possible, at any rate in his study, the use of Oriental stuffs and rugs, which in these days, when rich tradesmen can buy them in the fancy shops at a discount, have become so common and so much a mark of vulgar ostentation.

Eventually he made up his mind to have his walls bound like his books in large-grained crushed morocco, of the best Cape skins, surfaced by means of heavy steel plates under a powerful press.

The panelling once completed, he had the mouldings and tall plinths painted a deep indigo, a blue lacquer like what the coach-builders use for carriage bodies, while the ceiling, which was slightly coved, was also covered in morocco, displaying, like a magnified œil-de-bœuf, framed in the orange leather, a circle of sky, as it were, of a rich blue, wherein soared silver angels, figures of seraphim embroidered long ago by the Weavers’ Guild of Cologne for an ancient cope.

After the whole was arranged and finished, all these several tints fell into accord at night and did not clash at all; the blue of the woodwork struck a stable note that was pleasing and satisfying to the eye, supported and warmed, so to say, by the surrounding shades of orange, which for their part shone out with a pure, unsullied gorgeousness, itself backed up and in a way heightened by the near presence of the blue.

As to furniture, Des Esseintes had no long or laborious searches to undertake, inasmuch as the one and only luxury of the apartment was to be books and rare flowers; while reserving himself the right later on to adorn the naked walls with drawings and pictures, he confined himself for the present to fitting up almost all round the room a series of bookshelves and bookcases of ebony, scattering tiger skins and blue-foxes’ pelts about the floor: and installing beside a massive money-changer’s table of the fifteenth century, several deep-seated, high-backed armchairs, together with an old church lectern of wrought iron, one of those antique service-desks whereon the deacon of the day used once to lay the Antiphonary, and which now supported one of the ponderous volumes of du Cange’s Glossarium mediæ et infimæ Latinitatis.

The windows, the glass of which was coarse and semi-opaque, bluish in tinge and with many of the panes filled with the bottoms of bottles, the protuberances picked out with gilt, allowed no view of the outside world and admitted only a faint dim “religious” light. They were further darkened by curtains made out of old priestly stoles, the dull dead gold of whose embroideries faded off into a background of a subdued, almost toneless red.

To complete the general effect, above the fireplace, the screen of which was likewise cut from the sumptuous silk of a Florentine dalmatic, midway between two monstrances of gilded copper in the Byzantine style which had come originally from the Abbaye-aux-Bois at Bièvre, stood a marvellously wrought triptych, each of the three separate panels carved with a lacelike delicacy of workmanship; this now contained, guarded under glass let into the triple frame, copied on real vellum in beautiful missal lettering and adorned with exquisite illuminations, three pieces of Baudelaire’s: right and left, the sonnets called “The Lovers’ Death” and “The Enemy,” in the middle, the prose poem that goes by the English title of “Anywhere out of the World.”

— Joris-Karl Huysmans (translator unknown)

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Juxtaposin’: Wisdom Literature

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

In the New Yorker, Richard Brody writes:

Of course, “Wonder Woman” is a superhero movie, and it fulfills the heroic and mythic demands of that genre, but it’s also an entry in the genre of wisdom literature that shares hard-won insights and long-pondered paradoxes of the past with a sincere intimacy.

Wikipedia:

Wisdom literature is a genre of literature common in the ancient Near East. This genre is characterized by sayings of wisdom intended to teach about divinity and about virtue. The key principle of wisdom literature is that while techniques of traditional story-telling are used, books also presume to offer insight and wisdom about nature and reality.

The genre of mirrors for princes writings, which has a long history in Islamic and Western Renaissance literature, represents a secular cognate of biblical wisdom literature. In Classical Antiquity, the advice poetry of Hesiod, particularly his Works and Days has been seen as a like-genre to Near Eastern wisdom literature.

The most famous examples of wisdom literature are found in the Bible.[1][2]

The term Sapiential Books or “Books of Wisdom” is used in biblical studies to refer to a subset of the books of the Hebrew Bible in the Septuagint version. There are seven of these books, namely the books of Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, the Book of Wisdom, the Song of Songs (Song of Solomon), and Sirach (Ecclesiasticus). …

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Couldn’t Do It Today: “Sweet Deceptions” (1960)

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

Via Wikipedia:

The film tells one day in the life of a young adolescent girl who is discovering her sexuality. Francesca (Catherine Spaak), a 17-year-old girl, who has a vivid dream of making love to Enrico (Christian Marquand), a 37-year-old divorced architect and family friend. She skips school to watch lovers as she contemplates whether she should act on her feelings.

And via YouTube, here’s the first four minutes of the movie (it’s not the trailer):

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