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"Dark Stars Rising" is thankfully void of pretension
and grandstanding and more about setting the light
on some of the most provocative individuals we've
ever read about. Since "Fast Pussycat! Kill! Kill!"
is one of my all time favorite films, I naturally
turned to the chapter featuring the great Tura
Satana and there are explorations in to her life
that are shocking and often times entertaining.
Satana allowed author Rupe two hours of her time and
she unfolded her life for him for the sake of the
reader explaining her life in an internment camp,
her early development in to puberty, her training in
martial arts, her communication with her mother who
was also forced to live in an internment camp, her
first marriage at thirteen years of age, her
horrible rape, and her confrontation with a group of
classmates that led to her beating the piss out of
the head bully. Satana is a woman with the cards
stacked against her, born from a mixed Race of
Asian, Native American and the like, and given the
gift of sheer beauty, all of which ended in pure
pain and misery. She of course took that turmoil and
turned herself in to an icon for feminism and cult
cinema.
Yet
another incredible discussion is with director
Gasper Noe, a very volatile entity in modern
filmmaking who has constantly challenged audiences
and offended dozens of cineastes. The interview with
Noe makes for some rather engrossing content as
author Rupe engages in intelligent conversations
with Noe that delves in Noe's life in Paris, the
imprisonment of left wing artists, the idiocy of
censorship with his films and general art house
filmmaking, masturbation, pedophilia, and Noe's
absolutely provocative films that have garnered
rabid buzz and backlash. The conversation with Chas.
Balum leads in to discussion about filmmaking, his
working with and deriding of George Romero, and the
phony facade of Hollywood. A conversation with
Divine reveals a gentle, kind, and morally upright
persona who is confident in their ability to
entertain and convey their art for their fan base.
The interesting and fantastic element about the book
is that author Rupe is not a silly fan boy who sucks
up and gives us knowledge we already know. Rupe is a
man who is capable of sitting down and speaking with
these iconic folks at a common level and is able to
influence them in opening up and providing some
thoughts from them that many will be surprised to
read.
The
central theme of "Dark Stars Rising" is that every
single person featured are interesting and are very
deserving of their own books, and author Shade
Rupe allows us a chance to take a gander in to
these people who have led fascinating, and shocking
lives of merit and pain. They grabbed a hold of the
pain and turned it in to art. Rupe feels like a man
who is not intent on merely hobnobbing but bringing
the readers some valuable bits of insight in to old
souls who have something to offer the readers. And
with the wide experience from Mr. Rupe, it's not
surprising his book is not just a compendium of
interviews, but tales from people who will leave
something behind when they've passed on. Author Rupe
seems to understand that there's something to be
taken away from reading about someone like Jim
Vanbebber and he's right. Author Shade Rupe has
compiled a marvelous assortment of discussions in to
the darker corners of pop culture and the
underground. For readers looking for a visit in to a
zone beyond the diluted mainstream pabulum, "Dark
Stars Rising" is a stellar book that deserves to be
read and preserved.
To
purchase "Dark Stars Rising," and to learn more
about the book visit
the official website for The HeadShop. |