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I’m a freelance writer and editor based in Brooklyn, New York (not pictured). For more about me and what I do, read my complete profile

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Saturday, November 17, 2007

Stolen cinema

I picked up a book entitled My First Movie: 20 Celebrated Directors Talk About Their First Film and on the first page found the Coen brothers reminiscing about their early education in film: a local TV program that featured Fellini films beside Roman sandal movies like Son of Hercules. This was followed by college, specifically the film society at the University of Minnesota "that showed the kind of stuff you wouldn't normally be exposed to," said Joel: "Godard and the Marx Brothers -- who were both kind of hip at the time."

"I guess that doesn't exist any more," Ethan added. "But for a period people would show black and white 16mm prints on some crappy projector in a basement in the university building somewhere. I guess video ended that."

Do we value those early movie experiences more because of how hard it was to have them? I'm still trying to get used to the idea that everything is available all the time, thanks to the internet. I can't quite imagine what it's like growing up with the idea that I can have/see/listen to anything just by Googling the title, or going to Netflix. (Though don't bother searching for "Son of Hercules" -- there were a million Steve Reeves movies with something like that in the title and I think JC meant the name to stand in for all such body-building, history-bending epics.)

When I was a senior in high school, attending a "free school" in Auburn, California, my English teacher told me that if Truffaut's Stolen Kisses was ever playing anywhere (the campus at UC Davis, say, or one of the art house cinemas in San Francisco) I would have to drop everything and go. And not long after that I did: I can't remember if I hitchhiked to SF (three hours) or took a bus, but I went to the Cento Cedar cinema on Polk Street and saw Stolen Kisses on a double bill with the 400 Blows. And then hitchhiked home...

I wonder now if my English teacher had wanted me to see the film (in which Jean Pierre Leaud plays an older version of the kid in 400 Blows, a young man with female trouble) because he was encouraging me to cheat on my girlfriend (we all have ulterior motives) or he was just trying to give some direction to my rather directionless life. The ultimate message of Truffaut's romance (maybe all Truffaut romances) is of the carpe diem variety: All kisses, all love, are stolen from death. Get it while you can.

That's a good thing to hear when you're 17 (hell, that's a good thing to be reminded of when you're 67) but I wonder if the lesson was all the more memorable for me because I had to stand on an off-ramp in the rain just for the privilege of hearing it. Would it be the same, watching in on my iPod while instant-messaging my friends?

Please promise to kill me before I become a grumpy old man.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Laugh about it, shout about it

Watching the candidates arrive at the Democratic presidential debate in Las Vegas was a reminder of how debased the political process has become since Mailer's time. If you've never seen the Nixon-Kennedy debates you'll be surprised not by Nixon's five-o'clock shadow but the detailed, substantial and sound-bite free answers of both candidates. Watching this gang of hopefuls try to hit the right notes, without saying anything that could be offensive to anyone, was like watching Wolf Blitzer try to herd cats.

After a cheesy advance job that treated the debate like a sporting event (with all the commentators agreeing that Hillary had to get tough) the leading lady came out with some scripted gag about her pantsuit being asbestos. Then she was asked about her iinability to give a straight answer to almost any question (the "politics of parsing"), and answered with bland boilerplate about the American people. Everyone talks about the American people as if they were a coherent mass, one that tunes into CNN when they could be watching House or reruns of Mad Men.

"The American people don't give a darn about any of this stuff," Joe Biden declared. Jobs, drug dealers in the hood, soldiers in Iraq -- these are the sorts of things Americans are worrying about. Chris Dodd said "There is a shrillness to the debate," though I found it more fuzzy than shrill.

There were a few surprises. Bill Richardson, when speaking of the looming energy crisis, actually mentioned those American people making sacrfices. And Dennis Kucinich sometimes sounds like the sanest person in the room, as when he said he voted against the Patriot Act "because I read it." (And yes, he has the hottest wife too.)

But it was mostly a bloodless affair. Hillary Clinton is the kind of person who talks about being excited without ever actually seeming that way. The curse of the front runner, the presumptive candidate, is that she cannot risk seeming too lifelike. No one needs to worry about their make-up anymore. Everyone looks fine, if fainter despite all the color.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

A lion in the streets

News of Norman Mailer's death greeted me this morning as I went trawling for reports related to my wife's new job. ( I don't believe that Mailer ever appeared in the pages of Reader's Digest, though I could be wrong.) I've written far too many obituaries in this space but most of the famous dead people I have known or seen have been younger, often dead for no good reason. Mailer was 84 and by anybody's measuring had lived a very full life.

I remember being a freshman in high school and carrying around a copy of Cannibals and Christians, hoping to impress somebody in Auburn, California. I couldn't make head nor tails of much of it, being unfamiliar with most of the writers and politicians he was lancing within its pages, but I do remember reading a rather combative interview he conducted with himself and thinking, "I didn't know you could do that!"

Years later I could always start a brawl in San Francisco just by mentioning that I liked some of his books and his pugnacious attitude. I was living with some hippies in the Haight and they had a long list of things posted in the kitchen that you weren't supposed to buy at the store (Nestles products, Del Monte, Dupont, other fascist brands) and I think there was an invisible list somewhere of writers we weren't supposed to read, either. Mailer was on top of that list, largely because of attitude towards women's liberation and his prejudices against homosexuality.

But what I admired was the way he confronted his critics -- broken bottle in one hand, a lit cigarette in the other -- that often showed a greater sense of humor than that of his enemies. When his second novel was excoriated by critics he took out a full page ad in the New York Times trumpeting the negative reviews ("A bunch of bums!" -- Bosley Crowther). He criticized the Broadway production of Waiting for Godot before he actually saw it in his column in the Village Voice. After seeing the production, and being knocked out, he rode downtown in the back of a cab and glumly acknowledged his wife of the moment when she said, "Baby, you blew it." He took another full page out (this in the Voice, I believe) saying how wrong he was and how great was Beckett.

I have forced my students to read Armies of the Night, and tried to show them how brave it was to allow yourself to look like such a fool, as he does through most of his weekend in Washington. And how getting yourself arrested to aid the nascent anti-war cause, doubly difficult for a member of the "greatest generation" who served in the South Pacific during WWII, when you could be enjoying a nice cocktail party back in Manhattan, was an act of courage of Thoreau-like proportions. He may have been cross-eyed at times but he had vision: he could look out across a political rally for JFK and see America's past, back to the buffalo on the plain, as clearly as he saw the winos in the park gaping at the prince. And he didn't need drugs to do it (though he didn't mind them when he found them).

When we moved to Brooklyn Heights in the early nineties I used to spy him occasionally near the Promenade. He complained when the old coffee shop on Montague and Hicks became a modern yuppie brunch place, with five dollar cappucinos, and seemed to perpetually scowl.

Peg and I ran into him one night when we were leaving a friend's apartment next door to his house on Columbia Heights. It was raining sideways, gale force winds blowing water up under out umbrellas and coats as we ran like babies from the storm. And there came Mailer: no umbrella, no coat, soaked to the skin, looking like some cross between Picasso and Popeye, and he was frowning at us in our discombobulation. He was vanishing breed, like those buffalo, and we will not see his like again.