Saturday, January 31, 2015

Guns, Girls and Gambling (2012): Elvis Impersonators Steal a Native American Artifact


     Written and directed by Michael Winnick, Guns, Girls and Gambling (2012) borrows much from the style of Quentin Tarantino… in both non-linear storytelling and stylized violence. The story concerns the theft of a valuable ancient Native American Mask (either Hopi or Apache) from a Casino, seemingly by one in a group of 5 Elvis impersonators. Both the Cowboys and Indians are out to retrieve the $1,000,000 artifact, as well as a lethal and sexy blonde female assassin with a penchant for quoting the poetry of Edgar Allen Poe. Art theft, graphic violence, plot twists, western landscapes and visual flare are mixed together. Christian Slater is good in the lead role as the aptly named John Smith. Helena Mattsson steals the show as the blonde hit-girl, Annabel. The supporting cast is good as well, including Gary Oldman, Powers Boothe, Tony Cox and Megan Park.

Christian Slater: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Helena Mattsson: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Gary Oldman: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Helena Mattsson: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Christian Slater: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Powers Boothe: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Helena Mattsson: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Christian Slater and Megan Park: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Chris Kattan and Dane Cook: Guns, Girls and Gambling

: Guns, Girls and Gambling

: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Tony Cox: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Christian Slater and Megan Park: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Helena Mattsson: Guns, Girls and Gambling

: Guns, Girls and Gambling

: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Gary Oldman and Helena Mattsson: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Christian Slater: Guns, Girls and Gambling

: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Helena Mattsson and Christian Slater: Guns, Girls and Gambling

$2,000,000: Guns, Girls and Gambling

Helena Mattsson: Guns, Girls and Gambling

"Guns, Girls and Gambling"- movie trailer

Friday, January 30, 2015

Portrait of Julian Radcliffe, Founder of The Art Loss Register. by Travis Simpkins

Julian Radcliffe, 2015. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Julian Radcliffe
Founder and Chairman of 
The Art Loss Register
by Travis Simpkins



Julian Radcliffe: Art Theft


For more info, please visit:


Julian Radcliffe. by Travis Simpkins. The Art Loss Register

Thursday, January 29, 2015

"The Rembrandt Affair" by Daniel Silva



"The Rembrandt Affair" by Daniel Silva
Putnam Publishers, 2010
Review by Travis Simpkins

     In The Rembrandt Affair, the tenth installment in the Gabriel Allon series of Espionage/Art Crime novels, author Daniel Silva delivers a tour-de-force of research and storytelling. A priceless long-lost portrait by Rembrandt has been stolen, and the art restorer to which it was trusted was murdered during the theft. Although retired from the Office, Israeli Special Agent Gabriel Allon is called upon to aid in the search for the missing masterpiece. Reluctant at first, Gabriel Allon's fascination with the case turns to obsession as the dirty details and secrets regarding the painting's history come to light. Stolen from Holocaust victims by a ruthless Nazi during World War II, held by a Swiss bank during the post-war hideout and possessing a devastating secret in it's relined canvas, the Rembrandt painting has ties to one of the most horrific genocides in human history... and it holds a key that could destroy one of the world's most prominent businessmen, a seemingly-venerable man who has hidden ties to one of the modern world's biggest terrorist threats. It is a painting so dangerous that men are willing to kill for it. From Cornwall to Paris, Holland, Argentina and Lake Geneva, the fast-paced events play out in entertaining and intriguing fashion, conjured up on the yellow legal-pad of Daniel Silva. Gabriel Allon remains one of the great characters and paradoxes in modern fiction, possessing both the gentleness to lovingly restore fragile paintings, and the brutality to kill targets at will (with his bare hands, if need be). Interesting characters abound in the book, including the beautiful Zoe Reed, a British reporter that gets pulled into the fiasco. Although the events, characters and associations are fictional, some obvious parallels can be found in reality. Silva invented the long-lost Rembrandt, but admits that if the painting existed, it would look like Rembrandt's "Portrait of Hendrickje Stoffels," which resides in London's National Gallery. The villain in the book, Martin Landesmann, bears more than a passing resemblance to Bernie Madoff (who was embroiled in scandal at the time). The book mentions a "Rembrandt Committee" which seems to allude to Ernst van de Wetering's Rembrandt Research Project (RRP). The book is well-written, without a doubt, but one of it's greatest virtues rests with the research and attention to detail that Silva assigns to the subject. The Rembrandt Affair is a wonderful effort all-around, one of the best in the Gabriel Allon series, and is well worth the time spent reading it.

Portrait of Hendrickje Stoffels, by Rembrandt: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva on The Today Show: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

The Rembrandt Affair in foreign markets: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

The Rembrandt Affair by Daniel Silva


Daniel Silva on "The Today Show" : The Rembrandt Affair