Is it any good? is he talented?

is it any good? is he talented?

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>Rich and privileged handsome white male
>good

Pick one

Both sound good desu.

youtube.com/watch?v=6l1Z-sUdx3A

Listen to him talk about his favorite author.

>privileged
that's your own problem, not everyones

Hows it feel being the targeted race whitey?

Shh you're not allowed to complain. That will just allow nonwhites to claim you're to ornery and don't know your place. Shut up now.

not for everyone but for society
so as long you pertain to society
it is your also
fuck off from society if not!
(society by definition as a group of different people)

What?

Oooooh yes massa

>implying he's white
wew

Great thread

Still haven't heard a single thing about the fuckin' book

>He comes to Veeky Forums to talk about the book.
You're in the wrong place, lad.

I can see that now

Is this another board that /pol/ has run into the ground?

Veeky Forums doesn't read books, just shitposting about the same 15 books and how much we hate popular stuff

I've been meaning read this with an open mind free of prejudice but I'm not sure I could get over it being by Franco and I'm sure that would unfairly taint my impression of it regardless.

I don't want to pay Franco and it's not at my local library because I live in Japan.

From what I've read it's pretty standard edgy I-read-Kerouac-Bukowski-and- Denis Johnson-in-workshop-core.

yes.

go home faggots

Didn't know he wrote a book, interested to hear how it is

Man if i was ever in franco's position i'd just publish it under a pseudonym. You clearly dont need the money at that point, and people who did read it would be honest and unbiased about it. if people hail it as a fuckin modern classic i mean i'd make myself public for sure but like dude use this opportunity to better yourself and your craft.

Franco is attention whore

does he sit weird or is that the camera angle?

Manspreading

>jew
>white

never

it is impossible to remove yourself from society.

you can't manspread on a single chair with no chairs beside you. But seriously, is he sitting weird?

He's good at making hipster girls' pussies wet, and that's all he really needs

I've read a few reviews he's written that were really fucking good.

As far as his writing, everything I've seen of his was basically 8th grader trying to be profound type shit. Haven't read a whole lot of him though...

very telling on why his film adaptations of Faulkner completely miss the point

His preview thing of Blood Meridian was also way off. Guy's an idiot.

James Franco's foreword to Demian, totaling around 4 full pages of dense, visionary criticism, which was actually published in the latest edition by Penguin:

>I remember reading Demian for the first time. It was the beginning of summer, I had turned nineteen in April, and I was working at a café on the UCLA campus, selling deli sandwiches, microwaved pizza, cheap Mexican hash, and glistening Chinese. I had spent the previous school year studying English literature but had recently taken the plunge into the raging sea of film acting and was freshly making my way through the tide pools of acting school. I had not auditioned for the UCLA theater program and thus had been forced to take classes in the Valley, and just before the spring quarter at UCLA had ended I decided to devote myself full time to acting. My parents didn’t object, saying only that they would support me as long as I studied at the university, but if I wanted to be an artist I had to find my own way.

>Working at the north campus eatery, I was serving the students who once had been my classmates. My boss was a graduate student with a shaved head except in two spots that he dyed red and gelled into six-inch horns. I’ll call him Bill. I remember liking Bill if only because he was closer to my age than any boss I’d ever had, but he was still a boss. I was working to support my dream (one of a few) to become a film actor, and my employer looked like the devil.

>On my breaks I read plays by O’Neill, Tennessee Williams, Shaw, Ibsen, Chekhov, and anyone else who might help me understand my chosen profession. It turned out that the grinding aspect of the job was not Bill’s constant watch as I loaded meat and mustard on sandwiches or scooped chili rellenos from the tin, depending on the day of the week; it was the boredom. I know now that I learned much about responsibility, dedication, and service from that humble job, but back then I had dreams of grandeur. I had left school in order to become the best actor in the world, and here I was, back on campus serving the very people who had been inviting me to frat parties a few months prior. I seemed to have taken five steps backwards, and the fact that I had left a top-rated university to join an army of hopefuls trying to break into a famously competitive industry often seemed like a fool’s quest.

>On the wall next to the pizza service section was a framed photo of an elderly Marlon Brando being led by a man in a suit and a football helmet through a throng of photographers and gawkers. I’m pretty sure it was taken around the time of Brando’s son’s murder trial, but it inspired me as I served the slop: Brando was the pinnacle of film acting, and his picture was a reminder of the great tradition I hoped to be a part of.

>After a couple months I started reading Demian. I’m not sure if there was a connection, but one day, without warning, I hung up my apron and walked out the back, never to return. I had planned to work that day, so once taking my exit I didn’t know where to go. With Demian folded in my pocket, I headed into Westwood, full of the passion of what I had done. On the edge of campus I ran into one of my former classmates, a girl I once had flirted with, sunning herself on the grass. I told her what had happened, but it didn’t seem to register. I felt like I had taken another step away from a conformist life and another step toward artistic freedom, but, talking to her, I sounded to myself like I was an immature kid who had quit his job.

>At a café I jumped back into Demian, and I felt like I was understood again. Emil Sinclair, the narrator, is also on a search. His vacillation between good and bad, between expected pursuits and his own artistic path, seemed to mirror mine. Like so many young people in the ninety years since its publication, I felt like Hermann Hesse was describing my own interior and exterior struggles. Sinclair had Demian to help guide him, but I had yet to find my artistic mentor. Instead I had the book.

>Demian became my Demian, a voice I could listen to and contemplate as I tried to find my way from childhood to adulthood and into the world of art. Of course there were many turns in the road ahead — I would get a job at McDonald’s, get work as an actor, grow to hate much of the work I did, expand my artistic horizons (Hesse became not just a writer but also a celebrated painter) — but reading Demian was an important step in the direction of a life that resonated with my ideals.

>From Demian by Hermann Hesse. Reprinted by arrangement with Viking, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, A Penguin Random House Company. Foreword Copyright © Whose Dog RU International, Inc., 2013.

Is he a victim of lead poisoning?

holy fuck you weren't lying

i googled it and it's actually real

Atleast Oxford never has stooped this low in recent history.

Penguin has no shame and should be avoided, also Franco is a meme who wants to be an intellectual genius writer/artist/film maker but doesn't have the insight or dedication into it.

James Franco can't get over how much James Franco loves James Franco.

This is honestly embarrassing for Penguin.