Karavansara

East of Constantinople, West of Shanghai


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Insomnia Movies: The Stone Tape

Yesterday my friend Lucy did a great post about Quatermass and the Pit (the article is in Italian, but you can use Google Translate) so I decided I’d like to watch it again. To me Quatermass and the Pit in color is always a strange experience because I first saw it on the telly, when I was a kid, and it was in black and white and I still remember it in black and white.

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But anyway, I was not able to find my copy, that lies buried somewhere. So, as I was going through a bout of insomnia and I was in a Quatermass kind of mood, I picked up another thing by Quatermass creator Nigel Kneale, and I re-watched The Stone Tape. And then I thought I’d do a post about it.
Here we go. Continue reading


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Hope & Glory – some music

I just found this online and I am absolutely delighted – this is the sort of thing I had in mind when designing Hope & Glory, and it’s good to feel like we got the zeitgeist right.

Check this video out, enjoy the music, and then consider the option of supporting the artist (yes, for a change I am pushing someone else’s Patreon)


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Seven Golden Men

OK, this one is complicated, so we’ll have to be careful. It’s one of those rabbit hole things where you know where you start, and not where you are going to end up.
But let’s try.
And we’ll start from the bottom, and climb up the rabbit hole: our story sort of begins in 1950, when an 11-men gang of robbers hits the Brink Building in Boston, Mass. stealing 2.775 million dollars of the time (over 28 million at the current rate) – the largest robbery in American history.
Five years later, they made a movie based on the Brink Building Robbery – a noir called Six Bridges to Cross, featuring Tony Curtis (Clint Eastwood had auditioned for the part, but was rejected).
And three years after that, in Italy, a group of small-time criminals saw the Tony Curtis movie and thought… why not?
On the morning of the 27th of February 1958, seven men attacked a money transport in Via Osoppo, Milan.

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They hit (literally, they crashed into it with a truck) the armored van and made good their escape with 500 million Lire (back then, the average monthly salary for a white collar job was 50.000 Lire).
The heist was carried out in full daylight, without shooting a single bullet and under the eyes of the people living on the street. Famously, while the guys were loading the loot on a car, a lady shouted from a window “Go get a job!”, to which one of the men replied “What do you think is this we’re doing?”

They were caught, and for six years their trial made the headlines. And when they were finally sentenced to jail, in 1964, the public was sort of let down: the guys were working class lowlifes, common people, and they had beat the system and stuck it to the Man. The money they had stolen belonged to a bank, and the crime elicited little sympathy: like Berthold Brecht wrote, if robbing a bank is a crime, then what is founding one?
The press had a field day, of course, and called the robbers The Academy of Crime and also I Sette Uomini d’Orothe Seven Golden Men.
And this is where our story really begins. Continue reading