Looking for bands/ singers/ artists whatever you call your self, that represent some future new wave that hasn't really happened yet, to contribute to the soundtrack of my upcoming short film... get exposure.. send me your CDs etc with more than just what's on your Myspace.. looking for all genres, but especially those that are not easily classified
La haine, All or nothing, NAked, secrets and lies, high hopes, Kes, The Lives of Others, Resevoir Dogs, Jackie Brown, Pulp Fiction, Carla's Song, If.., Hideous Kinky, Heavenly Creatures, Godfather 1, Amore es Perros, Paradise Now, Ahlaam, A Clockwork Orange, A matter of life and death, Volver, BAd education, Talk to her, West Beirut, My beautiful lauderette, Psycho, the birds, Rope, Rear Window, Blow up, Don't look now, Old Boy, Carnival of Souls, city of God, 2046, Titanic, Taxi Driver, Rumble Fish, Ghost dog way of the Samarai, Leon, Fight Club, Under Milk Wood, Whose afraid of Virginia Wolfe?, Adaptation, Coming to America, Monsoon Wedding, Maria full of grace, Dirty Dancing, Twelve Monkeys, House of Flying daggers, crouching tiger, hidden dragon, three iron, carlito's way, Dead zone, My own private idaho, Indochine, betty bleu, cave of the yellow dog, The Talented Mr. Ripley, billy elliot, memento, Apocolypse Now, The white ballon, under the skin of the city..
Jonathan Kaplan, the dressing station. Ernest Hemmingway, For whom the bell tolls, the Old man and the sea, Fiesta, Chinua Achebe Things Fall Apart, Graham Greene, The Quiet American, Brighton Rock, the Heart of the Matter and pretty much all the rest of his work, John Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men, Grapes of Wrath, East of Eden, Tortilla Flat, The Red Pony, George Orwell, Down and Out in Paris and London, Homage to Catalonia, Raymond Carver, Laurie Lee, Virginia Wolfe, Roald Dahl, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Kurt Vonnegut, Arundhati Roy ('The End of Imagination' and other political writings as well as fiction), Alan Patan, Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Martin Amis, Hanif Kureshi, Lorca, Edgar Alan Poe, TS Elliot, Ted Hughes, Shakespeare, John Donne, 'Tom Jones'