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Archive for June, 2008June 20
by Pat Graham at 5:53 p.m.
This isn't Alphaville, this is Zeroville! —private eye Lemmy Caution, as quoted in Steve Erickson's Zeroville Which is pretty much where I've been the last couple months myself—disabled, mostly movieless—but when you can't score the hard stuff, the raw rush of celluloid, then arguably you go looking for surrogates. Like novels about films and filmgoing, that reproduce the cinematic mentalite, the cloistered sensation of sitting and staring in the dark. Not the sort of thing I'd normally care to indulge—since movies and novels work from opposite ends of the brain, deliver different kinds of frissons, one imagistic and spatial, open to interpretive whim, the other more conceptually prepackaged—but it's an emergency, so what the hell . . . Steve Erickson, longtime SF/fantasy novelist and film writer, is fond of the big alpha-omega statement, the kind of expansive, universalizing claim—"The movie is in all times, and all times are in the movie. . . . All scenes anticipate and reflect each other," etc—that evaporates on inspection, and in Zeroville (Europa, 2007), his eighth long work of fiction, he's frequently on the verge of swallowing his own rhetorical tail. Not that there's anything wrong with that necessarily—e.g., Wittgenstein's devilishly deadpan "The world is everything that is the case" comes as near to saying nothing as saying something can ever get—and Don DeLillo follows a similar strategy in his '82 novel The Names (his masterpiece, I think), where words rather than films hold the arcane secrets of universe. But DeLillo convinces through the effects he achieves, his claims the product of the writing, not a starting point for it. Language, history, movies, economics, Jesus—change the metaphor and it's a party game anyone can play. But whether there's anything solid behind the rhetorical bluff and patter—an Archimedean point of rest, a lever and a place to stand—is another matter entirely. There's also the problem of Erickson's auteurist preferences, which will only seem fresh and provocative if you haven't read much film criticism (specifically the Sarris-induced kind) in the past 40 years or so. Long, familiar riffs on Now, Voyager's talismanic cancer sticks, or on Hawks's Red River and Ford's The Searchers, with worshipful nods to the 40s hucksters and studio studs who dared redefine "masculine" sociopathy as aaarrtt (shades of Veit Harlan—or of Soviet-era class-revenge fantasies, with tractors running to fists, etc): we know what that's about, even with thieves and ex-theology students as duly authorized spokesmen. Not to mention the meticulous, shot-by-shot analysis of Stevens's A Place in the Sun, less the immortal object of Erickson's retelling than a lugubrious monstre sacre, which arguably sets its mark on film posterity in all the wrong ways (x shot = y emotion, everything overdetermined and literal, etc). Just a nominal voice of protest amid the fan-boy flights, from Zazi, Zeroville's least articulate character, but in Erickson's cinematic heart of hearts, it's Viking Man's megalomania that gets the best lines. More successful as emergency cinema substitute is Stephen Graham Jones's Demon Theory (MacAdam Cage, 2006), which masquerades as a trilogy of screenplays (with continuity arrows, abbreviational markers, and other expendable chaff) while paying deconstructive homage to the Wes Craven brand of schlock commercial horror. Not that I've much stomach for this sort of thing, but the intensity finally gets to you—the flayings, guttings, and gougings, the decapitations and mutilations, with endless limbs wrenched from disobliging sockets, etc. Like a trip to an animal rendering plant or a pathological cut-and-paste weekend with Marina de Van. ("In my skin"?—more like under and out of it.) And if all the characters are unapologetically pasteboard—love, terror, honor, pain, stoicism, endurance . . . so what else you got for me?—then even pasteboard has its uses, if only as neutral aesthetic foil to the baroquely proliferating grue. Which somehow puts me in mind of A.O. Lovejoy's great chain of being (or maybe in this case nonbeing), the way every imaginable existential gap is filled to bursting, with bodies and beasties and physical mutations that drip, pustulate, and ooze. Medieval horror vacui in action! Not to ignore the "scholarly" apparatus at the end, with hundreds of free-associating footnotes that beg to be read as a kind of parallel text. If Erickson loves le cinema, what then to make of Graham Jones's more visceral attachments? Just about every exploitation movie of the last 20 years makes a cameo appearance here. But whoever Demon Theory's editor was, I wish he/she'd caught more of the typos. A maverick commitment like this deserves something better.
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Tags: Veit Harlan, Alphaville, Zeroville, Steve Erickson, Don DeLillo, Ludwig Wittgenstein, The Names, Archimedes, Now, Voyager, Red River, The Searchers, John Milius, George Stevens, A Place in the Sun, Stephen Graham Jones, Demon Theory, Wes Craven, Arthur O. Lovejoy, Marina de Van, In My Skin, Great chain of being, Lemmy Caution
June 5
by Pat Graham at 4:29 p.m.
More or less. Bloodied but unbowed ... or at least bloodied. Though perhaps the hardest thing about gimping around in a 24-hour truss is the restricted movie diet. No DVDs or superplasma TVs to ease you through the famine—or at least ease me, since we're nothing if not Luddites at our house—and the only alternative is schlepping out to one of the commercial sit-down theaters in town. Which proved to be almost impossible, since I really wasn't able to schlepp or sit. Just a pair of new releases then—Iron Man and Redbelt—in the space of four convalescing weeks, along with despairing thoughts on the parlous state of our hypermuscular movie culture. Is this the best our commercial future has to offer, guys lurching around in metal containers or pummeling each other half to death? But at least Downey's Iron Man flies straight and true, with brute acceleration and inertia, like a Japanese bullet train or a packet of supercharged ions in a particle collider—which makes him/it inorganically intriguing, the lack of flexibility and flow, or of anything resembling ordinary human motor coordination. And if anyone still wants to argue that Academy Award cinematographer Robert Elswit was somehow responsible for all the mise-en-scene goodies in P.T. Anderson's echt Stroheimian There Will Be Blood (see comment log here), then take a look at his pedestrian work for Mamet in Redbelt, or the earlier, run-of-the-mill Heist (not to mention Savage Steve Holland's How I Got Into College—arguably the most excruciating filmgoing experience I've ever had, with or without a truss). Yet another indicator of who controls what at the level where—aesthetically, auteuristically—movies start coming together. Maybe convalescing's good for something after all ... Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ Φ It'll still be a while before I'm up to full movie speed, but thanks to everyone for the kind words and encouragement. Also for the unkind words, expressed or unexpressed, since every last bit of attention helps. And now back to the cinematic trenches—let the arguments recommence! June 4
by J.R. Jones at 1:19 p.m.
The New York Times reports that more than a thousand prints were destroyed in the blaze this weekend at Universal Studios. Though the negatives still survive, the cost of replacing each print—$5,000 a pop—suggests some titles may not be available for exhibition on the repertory and festival circuit for some time. "We know what business was lined up for the next six months," Bob O’Neil, vice president of image assets and preservation, told the Times. "We'll make a concerted effort to make new prints of those films as quickly as we can."
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