Thomas Sutcliffe
Tom Sutcliffe: When a film is not a film
When the Cannes organisers invited Disney/ Pixar to present Up as the opening film of the 2009 festival they made history.
Recently by Thomas Sutcliffe
Tom Sutcliffe: No fair trials in the court of public opinion
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
I heard the phrase "the Court of Public Opinion" quite a few times yesterday morning – prompted by interviews and discussions anticipating the fact that MPs were all going to get a letter from Sir Thomas Legg and a lot of them weren't going to like it.
Tom Sutcliffe: Ban an image and the more it is noticed
Tuesday, 6 October 2009
I can't recall attending a redacted exhibition before, but by the time I got to Tate Modern's new show "Pop Life" it had, in the dictionary definition of that word, been put in an appropriate form for publication, at least as far as the police were concerned. The odd, chapel-like enclosure in which Richard Prince's Spiritual America is displayed was sealed off from gallery-goers while negotiations continued about the lawfulness of an image of the 10-year-old Brooke Shields, naked and precociously sexualised.
Tom Sutcliffe: Drugs busts do little to crack the problem
Tuesday, 29 September 2009
Is there anything more depressing than a showcase drugs bust? There was a fine example this weekend when HMS Iron Duke made its way into the interdiction book of records by seizing five and half tonnes of cocaine off the coast of Colombia – an event that was predictably greeted as a triumph by the Armed Forces minister Bill Rammell and by the ship's captain, Commander Andrew Stacey. And, following the well-established rules of the drug-bust news item genre, we were then shown the secret compartment where the stash was found and given the estimated street value of the drug (in this case £240 million) – a piece of information that is never omitted, but always seems to me to send an oddly mixed message. Just look at how much this stuff is worth, it seems to say, and how relatively easy it is to hide it. Isn't this a business you should be thinking of getting into?
Tom Sutcliffe: How to bring death to life
Friday, 25 September 2009
You wait for years for a good corpse-sniffing description to come along and then two arrive at once.
Tom Sutcliffe: Please stop asking if my meal is OK
Tuesday, 22 September 2009
A scene from modern life: I'm in a burger bar, one of those chains that charge the gastronomically snobbish a modest premium so they can pretend that they're not actually eating in a fast-food restaurant.
Tom Sutcliffe: The art of the recession
Friday, 18 September 2009
What will unemployment do for art? In the case of the Lehman employees, reported on in this paper earlier this week, the answer was relatively straightforward.
Tom Sutcliffe: Working-class culture... that's so middle class
Tuesday, 15 September 2009
"It pains me that working-class culture is sneered at and ridiculed. Fifty years ago it was seen as noble and dignified." This is Jon Cruddas, in yesterday's paper, answering a reader's question as to whether he thinks of himself as a class warrior. It was a remark that the sub-editor responsible thought sufficiently striking to pick out in large, red type as a pull-quote... and it struck me, for two reasons. First, I wondered who was supposed to be doing the sneering and then, more to the point, I found myself asking what would count as "working-class culture", both now and 50 years ago.
Tom Sutcliffe: The word on the street art
Friday, 11 September 2009
There's a proposal coming up before Bristol City Council shortly that local citizens should be allowed to vote on whether graffiti – or street art – should be power-hosed or preserved.
Columnist Comments
• Howard Jacobson: A sense of humour gets you into trouble
As long as you keep making jokes you don’t have to listen to anybody else.
• Andrew Grice: Brown has shot his own troops
"Gordon has turned us into criminals," one Labour MP said.
• Brian Viner: Motty still puts heart into art of commentary
Motty is the last survivor of the golden age of football commentary.
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8Geoffrey Wheatcroft: Hateful views we should not suppress





