Friday, March 6, 2015
Book Review: Silver Screen Fiend by Patton Oswalt
Oswalt confesses he always dreamed of being a film director so he set out to watch as many films as possible, sometimes going 3-4 nights a week, while holding down a day job at Mad TV. At the legendary New Beverly theater in Los Angeles Oswalt viewed a Billy Wilder double feature, Sunset Boulevard and Ace in the Hole and never looked back. Thus began four years of obsessive film going.
As his obsession grew he alienated friends, lost his job, and let his health suffer. Through it all he continued working as a stand up and gained some acting roles. After four years of compulsive film going, Oswalt gained an insight:
Movies, to [a] majority of the planet, are an enhancement of life. The way a glass of wine enhances a dinner. I'm the other way around. I'm the kind of person who eats a few bites of food so that my stomach can handle the full bottle of wine I'm about to drink.
Another important moment arrived when, after four years of attending the New Beverly, Oswalt decided to start writing his own screenplays. After watching the premiere of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace Oswalt recalled spending hours with his friends discussing how much they hated what Lucas had done to Star Wars, after which he gained another epiphany:
I [failed] to see that the four hours of pontificating and connecting and correcting [Lucas's] work could be spent creating two or three pages of my own.
A useful insight for any critic: write your own stuff instead of tearing other's work apart. Since then Oswalt's career has taken off with a recurring role in The King of Queens and dramatic acting roles in Big Fan and Young Adult.
Oswalt shares many hilarious anecdotes about the comedy scene in the 90s. A group of comeptitive comedians trying to distant themselves from mainstream comedy. Many notable comics make cameo appearances including Louis CK, Marc Maron, Andrew Dice Clay, and Bob Odenkirk.
Although we are still waiting for Patton to make his Citizen Kane, reading the book will make you want to seek out the great films and revisit the ones you love.
Oswalt, Patton. Silver Screen Fiend: Learning About Life From an Addiction to Film. New York: Scribner, 2015. 222 Pages
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Farewell Mr. Spock
Star Trek aired on NBC from 1966-69 and Nimoy went on to revisit the role in seven feature films. In Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, Spock sacrificed himself to save the USS Enterprise. Of course, he returned in subsequent films, proving a great fictional character never really dies.
Nimoy also directed Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984) and Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986). In the The Voyage Home, the crew traveled back in time to the 1980s, where Spock is perplexed by all the profanity he hears in the 20th century - and hilarity ensues. Spock always got the best laughs.
Although Nimoy never quite shook off the "Spock" persona, he appeared in many other roles on film and television. He wrote two autobiographies, I am not Spock and I am Spock, both about his life in and out of Star Trek. From 1976-82, Nimoy hosted the cult TV series, In Search Of, a documentary dedicated to investigating all sorts of mysteries.
Nimoy delivered a memorable performance in Phillip Kaufman's 1978 remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. As a devious self-help guru who proselytized a bland "I'm ok, you're ok" type message, Nimoy created a memorable villain.
Few actors have left such a distinct mark on the cultural memory. He will be greatly missed. Live long and prosper.
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
In Search of . . . DVD Review
Many of the shows were unintentionally hilarious. Their "investigation" of the Bermuda Triangle hinged upon an obvious prank call to a radio station. Many episodes also dealt with ancient civilizations, conspiracy theories surrounding historical conundrums, or New Age trends like talking to plants. The most informative ones speculated on the future of science and foresaw the coming of cloning and stem cell research.
Some of the subject matter dates itself. Remember the coming ice age? A Killer Bee Invasion from Mexico? I believe they also predicted a fire ant invasion. Thankfully we are not having snowstorms in July or living in domes to escape the bees! NOT YET ANYWAY!!
In Search Of is not only a splendid time capsule of its era, but a forerunner of the future shows like The X Files and the ever popular late night radio show Coast to Coast AM (night owls know what I'm talking about). In its own unique way, In Search of played a crucial role in inventing an entirely new genre of popular culture.
Leonard Nimoy made for the perfect host. Who better than Mr. Spock guide you through all the strange mysteries? His calm and detached narration brought calming effect to the program.
Episodes often weaved between real science with pseudo-science. Each show made it clear the producers were only suggesting solutions, not definitive answers. Many of the topics still recur on mystery/documentary shows such as UFO's, ancient prophecy, and crypto-biology. For a sort of cult history of the late 70s and early 80s, In Search of provides plenty of intriguing subject matter.
Thankfully, the show never took itself too seriously. Usually In Search of gave equal time to believers and skeptics alike. At the end of the day it was great fun. Also, there's nothing like the theme music, such sounds could only emanate from 1977.
A brief revival appeared in 2002 on the Sci-Fi channel with Mitch Pileggi as host, those episodes are included in DVD package as well.
Friday, February 6, 2015
Autumn in Maine
Remember when you could drive into
any old American town and find a tavern with character. Those places
where cigarette smoke oozed out of the walls and almost hypnotized you.
Nowadays every suburban dystopia has the “sports bar,” typically frequented
by yuppies who scarf down chicken wings and guzzle beer as they endlessly
discuss . . . sports. Such establishments have all the appeal of a
concentration camp. One could still traverse through the American landscape of the 1970s with echoes of the Kerouac energy. But Kerouac had been gone for a few years, a drunken and bloated pro-Vietnam zealot in his final days.
Autumn evenings in Maine behoove one to
get drunk and pontificate late into the night on obscure subjects. My
kind of place.
As I drove into a small town somewhere
around Bangor, I noticed a watering hole on the corner with neon sign blinking TOWARD
ETERNITY. Inside a collage of tables with four chairs and a bar.
Pall Malls dominated the air. Like most taverns in New England
the walls were covered with Red Sox memorabilia and snapshots of Ted Williams
and Carl Yastrzemski. Pictures of writers classed up the piece tenfold. American
literature pulsated from the anxious New England mind - Hawthorne, Melville,
Emerson, Longfellow, Dickinson - those nervy temperaments of the WASP
persuasion. A quote from Emerson, hung on the wall in gothic script, “All
life is an experiment. The more experiments you make the better.”
My kind of place.
I grabbed a stool beside two young men with
longish hair and coke bottle glasses. They were having an intense
discussion about Night of the Living Dead.
. . .
.”Romero made the film of the 60s man. Social breakdown. People
literally eating each other to death - having their babies for breakfast -
that’s where it’s going man!”
His friend replied, “Whatever you say Steve.
You need to slow down on the ale buddy. I'm going home.”
“Come on man, it’s 10pm Friday night. These
High School kids have pushed me to the brink of sanity.”
As his bewildered friend was leaving, he implored, “Your better go home to your wife Steve.”
“She likes her alone time.”
Intrigued, I took a stool beside the boisterous guy,
“Sounds like you're a horror fan?”
He looked at me with bemusement, “That’s
right, we got nothing better to do up here. The isolation induces a little
madness now and then.”
He offered his hand, "Steve King, nice
to meet you man."
"Good to meet you. Name's Henry."
“So, Henry, you don't look like you're from these parts?”
“I’m from Boston, but now live in L.A. I'm
scouting locations, looking old haunted houses for a movie that may shoot here. I love New England -
feels like home."
His face
lit up, 'That's really cool man!"
“Let me buy you a beer. What do you do
for a living?”
“I teach High School English."
“What's
that like?"
“Well, the kids are cool for the most
part. But the hours suck and the job takes up all my time. No fucking time to write!”
“So, you want to write horror?”
"It's
my favorite genre, some of the best writing of the 20th century came from
horror- Shirley Jackson, Richard Matheson, Ray Bradbury - those are the writers I
admire."
"What
drew you to horror?"
A sudden, almost theatrical, darkness came across his face: “Goes
back to my childhood. One day I saw a kid get run over by a train.”
He flashed a deadpan look directly
into my eye and then laughed.
“Just joking, if I ever get famous that’s
what I’m going to tell people. Because if you write horror, they always
want to know what fucked you up as a kid.”
I laughed, amused at his zany nature.
We watched the World Series with some interest, the A’s and the Reds.
Catfish Hunter threw a masterpiece that night. He went on about his
college experience with the professors.
“- No seriously man, in college they
throw all that serious literature at you. The professors have awful tendencies when it comes to what counts as "literature". No respect for pop
culture. But it’s the wave of the future man - Psycho proved it.”
“Right, Hitchcock took a pulpy novel and turned it into high art.”
The bartender came over and I ordered
another round.
I could tell he liked an audience; he
possessed an infectious enthusiasm. “We’re a pop culture nation now.
The professors don’t get that. The generation that grew up on
television is now coming of age.”
“We all worship the Glass Teat.”
“Maybe, maybe not. I embrace it all. I don't care.”
I replied, “As times get crazier horror
will get more popular. People love the idea of paying for their scares.”
“I
suppose so, man.”
The jukebox was blasting “96 Tears” by ? And
the Mysterians.
“So, who are you going to vote for - Nixon
or McGovern?”
“Let me tell you something man, I used to
be as conservative as they come. Hell, I cruised into college with a
Goldwater sticker on my beat up chevy. My consciousness changed with some chemical stimuli - I ended up the
barricades in '68 and got myself teargassed by the Chicago PD.”
“So, McGovern, I presume.”
“You got it, the last decent man in
politics.”
I agreed, “Nixon’s like a demented
Richard III you’d see in a third rate college production.”
“I know man. America has always been built on
corruption, but we're in a whole new thing now. Calling it corruption is way
too easy, it's something worse than corruption. We don't have a vocabulary for
it yet - whatever "they" are up to. That‘s what I want my
fiction to explore. But hey man, it’s a beautiful fall night. Why go
there?"
‘You’re right, but back to your point on pop culture. The Manson thing is already mythology, all the nonsense about the Beatles inspiring the whole thing.
Intrigued, he asked, "I hear you man, but
how so?”
“All the mayhem in the music and all the mayhem it supposedly triggered.”
He smiled, "Any type of art which
inspires a bunch of crazies must have something to it.”
Now on maybe his eighth at least, he looked at me
thoughtfully: “It is something. All the influence of the Beatles - there's
something biblical about them."
We continued drinking as we watched the A's beat the Reds. Everyone started to clear out. He had way too many beers to drive, so I offered to take him home.
"That would be great!"
Before getting into the car he asked me, “Before you go home - want to experience something truly frightening. Remember the story about the train.”
I chuckled nervously, “Oh yeah?"
“Wanna go see where it happened, maybe it would a good location for your movie.
"Sure," I replied with trepidation.
“Then, let's roll!"
Three miles outside of town on a dark country road, I mean dark, he told me to pull over, “Come on man, we're close. We’re gonna have to walk the rest of the way.”
I perceived an odd fear in the young man’s
eyes, he looked at me as if I was otherworldly. His look changed.
“Here it is."
The night had turned cold. I could see my own breath. The trees grew thicker; the moonlight barely glowed. We arrived at a clearing in the woods, I saw the old railroad tracks.
“Are these tracks still in service?”
I asked.
“Nope they stopped this line years ago.
Some still claim to hear them - phantom trains.”
“So, this is where it happened?”
He shivered as he spoke, “To the best of
my knowledge. This is it. I was maybe six or seven years old. We
were just here playing hide and go seek in the woods. Suddenly, there was
a horrible bang and then a silence. I caught a glimpse of the remains. It
was awful.”
He paused and continued to speak in a lower
tone:
“The image of something alive and
vibrant transforming into something inhuman and ghastly remains the ultimate
horror."
I stood there in silence with him, lost
in the past. Finally, he spoke like Nicholson in The Last Detail,
“Well, there man, you’ve seen it. Let's get the fuck out of here.”
Before I answered a sudden gust of howling wind and the unmistakable sound of a train whistle. Then an animal like screech, probably an owl, maybe a Wendigo.
We hurried back to the car. He had sobered up by the time we arrived at his home, a dingy trailer.
He shook my hand, "Good luck on the movie Henry."
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Crime Story: Epic 1980s Televison
Starring Dennis Farina (Mike Torello), a real life Chicago police officer turned actor, as captain of the Chicago PD organized crime unit. Imagine a Popeye Doyle with a heart and moral compass. Set in 1963, Torello and his crew are in an all out battle for the streets of Chicago with organized crime, personified by Ray Luca (Anthony Denison). Luca began the show as a low level operator who had a meteoric rise into the upper echelon of a major crime syndicate setting its sights on Las Vegas. Denison brought a silent menace and a comical wit to Luca. John Santucci added comic relief as Luca's sidekick Paulie.
Midway through season one the scene shifted to Las Vegas as leaders of the organized crime syndicate have chosen Luca as their point man in taking over Las Vegas. Torello and his crew follow in pursuit. The new setting allowed the story to go in more interesting directions exploring the military-industrial complex of the American West. The political and social forces of the Cold War often obstructed Torello's quest for justice.
Unfortunately, Crime Story began to falter during the second season. Too many stand alone episodes about the culture of Las Vegas stole the focus from the Torello-Luca conflict. A lack of character development and lack of compelling female characters both hindered the show as well.
Despite its limitations, there are many reasons to revisit Crime Story. The look and feel of the show channeled the mid- 60s. The music, fashion, dialogue, and cultural references all exude a cool authenticity Also, Crime Story proved a showcase for up and coming actors including Julia Roberts, Gary Sinise, and Kevin Spacey to just mention a few. Andrew Dice Clay appeared in several episodes as Luca's partner in crime. Joseph Wiseman, who played the original Bond villain Dr. No, is brilliant as the elder syndicate leader who mentors Luca.
Many have credited Crime Story as an influence over serial shows like The Wire and Homeland. Mann envisioned an epic story designed to unfold like a novel over several years. Unfortunately Crime Story arrived too early, yet left its own mark etched in neon lights and jukebox music.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Book Review: Days of Fire: Bush and Cheney in the White House
Baker begins the book with a parallel biography of Bush and Cheney before they joined forces in the 2000 campaign. A native of Wyoming, Cheney flunked out of Yale briefly worked as lineman for the electric company. Like Bush, he enjoyed drinking, cleaned up his act, and dived into politics. A protege of Donald Rumsfeld, hawkish Cold Warrior with presidential ambitions, Cheney rose quickly in the post-Watergate Ford administration. A ruthless bureaucratic warrior, Cheney knew how to stifle dissent in the ranks. During the Bush 41 administration he ran the defense department and oversaw the first Gulf War. He opposed marching into Baghdad fearing it would create chaos in the Middle East.
Cheney's grim determination rattle America's saber at any country wore thin. He imagined himself as an American Churchill, evidenced by his personal library. But Churchill knew about war at firsthand. Would Cheney have thought differently if he had been in the military?
Baker provides a dramatic account of September 11, 2001. Bush appeared confused and indecisive at first, but regained his footing. Cheney immediately set his sights on Iraq, convinced they were building nuclear weapons. The war cabinet unleashed the CIA and pursued a policy of no quarter when it came to terrorism. The initial invasion of Afghanistan went smoother than planned despite their failure to capture Bin Laden. Meanwhile the administration passed the Patriot Act, a reversion to the bad old days where any form of dissent spelled social ostracism, even more ominous in age resembling 1984.
Baker never provides a satisfactory answer as to why Bush and Cheney decided to invade Iraq. To a thinking observer, linking Iraq to 9/11 made no sense. Did Bush have a personal vendetta against Saddam? A drive to right his father's mistakes? Isn't this armchair psychology? Does history hinge on such interpersonal minutia? Maybe?
The immediate justification, to prevent the regime from attaining "weapons of mass destruction", came back to haunt them. Were larger issues of geopolitics involved? Great game diplomacy? Later on, the administration's rhetoric linked the war to spreading democracy in the Middle East. Whatever the logic that went into their decision, the consequences were grave.
After Bush won reelection in 2004, Cheney's influence declined significantly. Condoleezza Rice, always close to Bush, took a more moderate approach to foreign policy. The second term saw one disaster after another as Iraq and Afghanistan dragged on, Hurricane Katrina, a more aggressive Russia, and the 2008 economic collapse.
Bush admitted to feeling emotionally drained by the end. Who can blame him? In his final week in the office, Cheney requested a pardon for former aide "Scooter" Libby. Bush refused. The image of Cheney groveling to his boss reads like something in The Godfather - Tessio begging Mike for one more favor before going to the chopping block.
Arthur Schlesinger's A Thousand Days on JFK emphasized heroism and political leadership, I miss those types of histories. Accounts of Bush and Cheney (and their successors) will focus on their corporate mindsets and overblown rhetoric of 2002-03. But I digress, whether you agree or disagree, Days of Fire will shed light on Bush/Cheney years.
Saturday, January 10, 2015
What We Talk About, When We Talk About Pynchon . . . Marc Maron and Paul Thomas Anderson
Of all modern writers, Pynchon holds a special mystique. Few photographs exist of him and he's never granted an interview or made a public appearance. Nevertheless, his fiction has made a profound mark on the culture. Every novel is a fun house maze where no one is who they appear to be. Full of oddball humor and allusions to every subject imaginable, they stare directly into the abyss of "the system."
I recall reading The Crying of Lot 49 sometime after college. It left a vivid impression. Where does one even go for an analogy? Imagine a Twilight Zone story concocted by David Lynch done with the elan of a Chaplin film.
I've made several failed attempts at Gravity's Rainbow, Pynchon's 1973 novel of 700+ pages on rockets, mind control, twisted Nazis and many, many other things. I shouldn't feel too bad, Anderson also admitted to having been unable to finish Gravity's Rainbow, although he has expressed interest in adapting the impossible novel to the screen.
Later I moved on to his debut novel V, a hypnotic tale about randomness and history, a bit of Jack Kerouac and Graham Greene. Pynchon's short story collection, Slow Learner, would be a great staring point for anyone new to his work. The story, "Entropy," seems a blueprint for the future novels.
So, what do we talk about, when we talk about Pynchon? Maron summed it as follows: the politics of drugs, the end of the 60s, politics of subversion, the stakes of being a provocateur and the fate of a sell out. And finally to the question: What is reality anyway? And does it matter in the end?
Maron asked Anderson on whether he's got a response from Pynchon and he sheepishly replied, "I'm waiting on the call." Anderson then spoke of their being "a weird agreement between them." To which Maron interjected, "You've become a Pynchon character!"
Maron brought the right attitude to the interview. Anderson is arguably the best director of his generation and their discussion gave insight into his creative process. I look forward to reading and watching Inherent Vice.
Anderson also talked about having David Foster Wallace as an English teacher at Emerson College back in the 80s. Coincidentally, Wallace also held Pynchon in high regard. Anderson recalled Wallace being the one teacher he admired and calling him up one night to discuss Don Delillo's novel White Noise. Another Pynchonian moment!
We now live (or maybe it's always been like this) in a Pynchon world. The year 2015 is the right time, maybe the only time, his work will grace the big screen. Our brave new world, ever more reliant on technology, paradoxically connects us all, and yet leaves so many feeling disconnected. And the paradoxes just keep piling up. Meanwhile unseen chaos happens in the shadows. And meanwhile . . . A Screaming Across the Sky
![]() |
Thomas Pynchon once appeared on The Simpsons. |