M Magazine

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出版者:M Magazine
作者:M Magazine
出品人:
页数:0
译者:
出版时间:2013-6
价格:0
装帧:平裝
isbn号码:9780800020415
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图书标签:
  • [歐美]
  • AlexanderSkarsgård
  • (自有)
  • 时尚杂志
  • 潮流文化
  • 生活方式
  • 艺术
  • 摄影
  • 设计
  • 美容
  • 时尚穿搭
  • 名人访谈
  • 流行趋势
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具体描述

Alex is cover of M Magazine Spring issue, with a new photoshoot held at Fortune’s Gym, in LA – the same gorgeous photos used on our new temporary layout. Check it:

Alexander Skarsgård, born in ’76, is the oldest of eight children. Two of his brothers are working actors, with Bill appearing in the Netflix series Hemlock Grove and Gustaf playing the role of Floki in the History Channel’s Vikings. Skarsgård’s mother, My Skarsgård, is a physician in Stockholm who specializes in working with addicts. His father, Stellan Skarsgård, is a veteran of the Stockholm stage and such Scandinavian films as Lars von Trier’s Breaking the Waves.

In recent years, Stellan has made a place for himself in Hollywood as a key cast member in two separate blockbuster series, The Avengers and Pirates of the Caribbean. At the same time, after 35 years of marriage, he and his wife split up. Stellan now has two sons with his second wife, Megan Everett Skarsgård.

Stellan and Alexander faced off against each other, to good effect, in von Trier’s apocalyptic nightmare, Melancholia, a 2011 film that includes a line that pushes the bleakness of Scandinavian drama to its limit: “All I know is, life on earth is evil.”

In the movie, the Skarsgård père plays a gamey rogue, while Alexander, smiling sweetly, is a submissive groom who understands little about his bride-to-be, a spirited depressive played by Kirsten Dunst.

As actors in that one, both Skarsgårds did what they usually do to win over audiences: Stellan went out and grabbed them, Jack Nicholson–style, with his sharp tongue and glinting eyes, while Alexander drew them in by keeping himself quiet in his body and gentle in his speech. The father conquers. The son seduces.

Henry-Alex Rubin, the director of Disconnect, compares Alexander to a long-ago Swedish actor-director who got his start in the silent era: “He’s less like his father,” Rubin says, “and more like Victor Sjöström in Wild Strawberries—a great Swedish actor who did a lot with very little. As opposed to a lot of Americans, who come from the Stella Adler school, Alex comes from the Swedish school of doing a lot with very little. There are a lot of shots [in Disconnect] where he does absolutely nothing on screen. Just a tiny shift in the eyes. And that’s his choice.

“True Blood capitalizes on his brooding, mysterious quality, but in real life Alex is very sweet and thoughtful and even kind of boyish. At festivals or when we’re out socially, I watch as he spends his time taking pictures with these middle-aged housewives and grannies. It’s little things like him bending at the knees, not to dwarf them in pictures. It reminds me of what I’ve read about James Dean, how respectful he was around women, which is a contradiction, because he was such a handsome boy. In a similar way, Alex doesn’t act like a handsome lady-killer. He’s very respectful, and that’s something you wouldn’t expect, because women find him to be a sex symbol, and he’s got these screaming True Blood fans. But he doesn’t exploit or even take advantage of his looks, and I think that’s telling.

“He has never said this to me, but I imagine he is tired of playing a vampire and wants to explore different sides of himself. I think, in the past, he has been underestimated, which is a great place to be, because then you can blow people away.”

Rubin has been out on the town with Skarsgård as well and reports, “He’s a really loving drunk. I probably shouldn’t say that, but you know how people’s personalities come out when they’re drunk.”

The director also talked about the filming of a key scene in Disconnect, when Skarsgård’s character finally loses it: “When he broke down and cried like a baby, even the crew was shocked. He really cracked—and when he cried, it was real. It wasn’t fake crying. He reached inside. He went in deep and he found it and he cracked. It was very emotional to experience, watching him do that on set. I imagine that it is difficult for anyone in Swedish culture, because they are incredibly restrained people who don’t often wear their emotions on their sleeves.”

We meet Alexander Skarsgård at the sweet spot in his career, when he is morphing into a movie star. To commemorate the change, M set him up at Fortune Gym, on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, to re-create the sweaty Hollywood glamour of Somebody Up There Likes Me (starring Paul Newman, 1956), or Champion (Kirk Douglas, 1949), or maybe Kid Galahad (Edward G. Robinson, 1937). At left is former heavyweight professional and current gym proprietor Justin Fortune, who fought Lennox Lewis back in ’95. “I was six-two when I went in the ring,” Fortune says, just before working with Skarsgård. “Now I’m five-foot-nine.”

His film career got its start in 2001, while he was visiting his papa (actor Stellan Skarsgård) in Los Angeles. “My dad’s agent said, ‘Oh, I’ll send you out on a meeting,’” Skarsgård says. “I auditioned for Zoolander and got it.” It was the small (but crucial!) role of Meekus, a dim-bulb fashion model who perishes in a gasoline fight. It did not hint much at what was to come for the star of HBO’s True Blood, who is now making his name in three movies playing at the same time: The East, What Maisie Knew, and Disconnect.

“He’s a good mover,” says film director Henry-Alex Rubin, who made the Oscar-nominated 2005 documentary Murderball and cast Skarsgård in the recent Disconnect. “The way an actor moves through space is essential to believing them. Alex moves like a soldier. More important, there’s a mystery to him. You don’t meet Alex and immediately think, ‘I understand him.’ It takes a long time. If I were to compare him to someone that he is going to grow into, he reminds me of Clint Eastwood.”

When gym proprietor Justin Fortune saw Skarsgård lying on the canvas, he said, “Don’t get used to that fuckin’ position, all right?” The actor lifted his head and laughed. He has been down before. Roughly 10 years ago, he found himself auditioning for stupid parts. Then he saw something he wanted—the role of U.S. Marine Sgt. Brad “Iceman” Colbert in the HBO miniseries Generation Kill, which was co-produced by The Wire’s David Simon and Ed Burns. “I got lucky,” Skarsgård says. “I got the part.”

Skarsgård is six-foot-four. His arms are like ropes. Those attributes (and his linguistic skill) made him right for the role of a Mississippi golden boy turned rapist in Rod Lurie’s brutal and effective 2011 remake of Sam Peckinpah’s Straw Dogs. In real life, though, as if to compensate for his physical gifts, Skarsgård has a gentle manner, which he shows off to good effect in What Maisie Knew. In that one he plays a slouchy bartender who impulsively marries a self-involved musician (Julianne Moore). Little by little he becomes a doting father figure to her neglected daughter, Maisie (Onata Aprile), in the sweetest cinematic pairing of an adult male and a young girl since Ryan and Tatum O’Neal starred in Peter Bogdanovich’s Paper Moon (1973).

Skarsgård was famous as a kid, after appearing on a popular Swedish TV show, but he hated being recognized—so he quit acting for his teenage years. Now, at age 36, he doesn’t mind being approached by even the most smitten True Blood fan. “I’ve learned to be genuinely happy if someone likes what I do,” he says. It helps that he’s a fan himself. “I love Spencer Tracy. And Marlon Brando was phenomenal—I’m a huge fan of his. Paul Newman, as well, with Hud. There was a darkness and also something very naturalistic about the way they acted that you didn’t see so much of before that. They weren’t theatrical. James Cagney had it, too. That intensity. For a leading man, to have that darkness, and to be able to explore that, back when a lot of them were just flashy leading men… Cagney was awesome. Awesome.”

Skarsgård began making his own way at age 19, when he joined the Swedish army. “My dad is an actor,” he says as he sits on the bike behind Fortune Gym, “and all his friends are artists, painters, musicians, actors—so it was great, growing up with these super-creative, interesting people. There were big dinner parties, and my dad loves to cook. Tons of wine—it was a crazy household, but so much love, as well. So I come from a family of these super-left-wing pacifist bohemians and wanted to challenge myself and do something completely different from what I was used to.” As a member of a special operations unit called SakJakt, he picked up a lot of what he has used as an actor—skills that may come in handy once more if Warner Bros. decides to go ahead with Tarzan as its new tentpole franchise, with Skarsgård in the loincloth.

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翻开这本《M Magazine》,我立刻被那种充满实验性的文字风格所吸引。它拒绝使用那些陈词滥调的时尚术语,而是用一种近乎诗意的语言来描述和评论设计。特别是那篇关于新晋设计师访谈的版块,文字的节奏感极强,如同音乐的起承转合,时而急促,时而舒缓,将设计师那些跳跃的灵感火花捕捉得淋漓尽致。我甚至能从文字中“听”到设计师创作时的心跳和呼吸。这种高度个人化的叙事方式,让原本可能枯燥的行业观察变得生动有趣,极富感染力。我甚至需要放慢速度,反复咀嚼那些精妙的比喻和措辞,生怕错过了其中蕴含的深层含义。这本杂志的编辑团队显然对语言有着极高的敏感度和掌控力,他们成功地将纯粹的视觉体验升华到了文学的境界。

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这期《M Magazine》简直是视觉饕餮!封面设计大胆前卫,色彩的碰撞和构图的精妙让人眼前一亮,一下子就抓住了我的眼球。内页的摄影作品更是令人惊叹,那种光影的运用、模特的眼神捕捉,简直是教科书级别的存在。我特别喜欢那组关于城市夜景的专题,摄影师对于高对比度和霓虹灯光的处理,营造出一种既疏离又迷离的氛围,看完后让人忍不住想立刻拿起相机去捕捉属于自己的城市瞬间。排版上,杂志的留白处理得恰到好处,既保证了文字信息的易读性,又凸显了图像的冲击力,整体感觉非常流畅和高级。阅读过程中,我感觉自己像是在参观一个精心策划的当代艺术展,每一页都充满了艺术的张力和对美的极致追求。这不仅仅是一本杂志,更像是一本可以收藏的艺术画册,装帧和印刷质量都达到了很高的水准,拿在手里就觉得物有所值。

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坦白说,我过去对很多强调“先锋”的刊物都敬而远之,觉得它们过于晦涩难懂,但《M Magazine》这次的“前沿探索”栏目处理得非常人性化。它没有高高在上地展示那些遥不可及的概念,而是用一种充满好奇心的姿态去解构和呈现最新的科技对时尚产业带来的冲击。比如,对可穿戴技术与面料革新的报道,深入浅出地解释了复杂的科学原理,并且配以大量清晰的示意图和概念图。读者可以轻松理解那些未来感的设想是如何一步步落地的。这种既保持了学术的严谨性,又兼顾了大众可读性的平衡,实属不易。它成功地激发了我对未来生活方式的想象,不再是科幻电影里的空谈,而是触手可及的、正在发生的变革。这本杂志确实在引领一种更具思辨性的消费文化。

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这次的《M Magazine》在跨界合作方面做得非常出色,那种毫不设防的跨界融合让人耳目一新。我惊喜地发现其中穿插了好几页关于现代建筑美学的分析,而且这些分析与服装设计之间的关联性探讨得非常到位。比如,他们将某位建筑师对几何线条的偏执,巧妙地映射到T台上的廓形剪裁中,这种触类旁通的思维方式,极大地拓宽了我对“美学”的定义边界。它不再局限于单一的领域,而是鼓励读者在不同艺术门类之间建立联系和对话。这种“知识的跳跃”处理得非常自然,没有生硬的转折,更像是一种水到渠成的启发。阅读体验是层层递进的,每一部分的看似不相关,最终都汇聚成一个宏大而统一的审美观,让人读完后感觉整个思维都被重新梳理了一遍。

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老实说,我对时尚杂志通常是抱着一种“翻翻看”的心态,但《M Magazine》这次的表现完全超出了我的预期。它不像一些主流刊物那样过度追逐潮流的表象,而是深入挖掘了设计背后的文化根源和哲学思考。其中一篇关于可持续时尚的深度报道,观点犀利而独到,作者不仅采访了业界的大咖,还走访了幕后的手工艺人,将冰冷的概念赋予了温暖的细节,让我对“慢时尚”有了更深层次的理解和认同。文章的论证结构非常严谨,逻辑清晰,引经据典却又不失趣味性,读起来毫不费力,反而是一种知识上的享受。这种深度和广度兼具的内容,让《M Magazine》在众多浮光掠影的读物中脱颖而出,它提供给读者的不只是“穿什么”,更是“如何思考时尚与世界的关系”。

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