Every day I read fifty pages of fiction, fifty pages of non-fiction, and I watch a movie. And then I tell you what I think of it all.
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Resolutions were made to be broken, it seems
Despite saying less than a month ago that I would post on this blog every day, illness is forcing me to take a break. I'll be back in the New Year.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Murakami/Rabinowitz/Hobbit
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Hard-Boiled
Wonderland. As I said in my last post, there are a number of connecting
points between the two parts of the novel, but they also diverge significantly.
‘Hard-Boiled Wonderland,’ as befits a narrative clearly influenced heavily by
the crime fiction of Raymond Chandler, is much more action-driven than ‘The End
of the World.’ In this section, the plot surrounding the Calcutec and the skull
given to him by the scientist thickens considerably when some independent
operators break into the Calcutec’s apartment and attempt to intimidate him. It
also appears that the scientist has gone missing, although the scientist’s
exact loyalties and aims are becoming increasingly obscure. The pace of ‘The
End of the World,’ meanwhile, is much more sedate. At the urging of his shadow,
from whom he was surgically separated upon his entry into the town, the
Dreamreader attempts to make an exact map of the town. This proves to be much
more difficult than he anticipates, partly because of the difficult terrain,
and partly because of a pervasive air of threatening unreality that the
Dreamreader feels as he moves about the town. His map-making clearly proceeds
not only out of sense of obligation to his shadow but also out of the
Dreamreader’s own desire to understand his new environment (and perhaps to find
a way to escape from it). It also serves, of course, to give the reader a much
more vivid sense of the setting of this part of the novel.
I also read the
first fifty pages of Paula Rabinowitz’s 2002 book Black & White & Noir: America’s Pulp Modernism. http://www.cup.columbia.edu/book/978-0-231-11481-3/. I remember the first time I read
Michael Denning’s The Cultural Front
being overwhelmed by the range of the work and the huge amount of research that
must have gone into it. http://www.versobooks.com/books/523-523-the-cultural-front Although Rabinowitz’s book is more
modest in scope, it reminds me of Denning in that it also has tremendous range
in its examination of noir. It’s worth mentioning that this range could be a
potential problem. On the whole, I have an issue with the way in which the
definitional scope of the term noir
keeps being expanded in an opportunistic and frequently unthinking manner,
leading to a situation where the term becomes progressively depoliticized as
it’s made over into a lifestyle term. Although Rabinowitz is expanding the term
noir far beyond its conventional
association with film noir, she is repoliticizing
rather than depoliticizing the term by exploring what she calls the noir
sensibility, which she defines as a form of social and political expression
that seeks to uncover and come to terms with the pervasive and persistent role
of violence in American history and culture (in terms of both slavery and class
conflict). This is a very ambitious project and right off the bat two things
stand out about her approach: 1. She spends relatively little time discussing
film noir. 2. The book is hugely eclectic in terms of its subject matter. The
reason for the lack of attention to film noir is simple: as Rabinowitz says,
there’s been a huge amount of excellent critical work on that subject and she
wants to do something different. As for the book’s eclecticism, Rabinowitz
defends herself well from the charge of possible incoherence: “precisely
because the book ranges among seemingly disparate fields of inquiry, it
demonstrates the wild totality possible through interdisciplinary work.” This
kind of argument could easily be self-serving but the delicious phrase “wild
totality” describes exactly what Rabinowitz seems to have achieved in this
book.
I also watched The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug.
Just as with Catching Fire, I watched
this movie with my 13-year-old daughter, who loves Tolkien even more than she
loves Catching Fire (thank goodness).
She didn’t have any problems with the various changes that Peter Jackson made
to the source material in this film and for the most part, I didn’t either (if
you really care about that kind of thing, by the way, this article is a
veritable nerd’s delight: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/The-Tolkien-Nerds-Guide-to-The-Hobbit-The-Desolation-of-Smaug--236566281.html). With that said, I did find the
she-elf/dwarf romance narrative pretty ridiculous, and certainly the most
egregious example of new elements being introduced with seemingly no other
purpose than to stretch the running time enough to allow for a trilogy of films
(though I suppose one could argue that it was done to generate a different
audience for the film?). Desolation
is much better than the first film in the series (no singing dwarves and more
action scenes both represent a huge improvement) but ultimately this is a film
with a lot of visual style and very little substance. It’s a shame that Guillermo
del Toro didn’t stick with this project. I would love to have seen what he
would have done with it. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/guillermo-del-toros-hobbit-what-401909
Monday, December 23, 2013
Murakami/Anderson/TheFall
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Hard-Boiled
Wonderland. The two threads of the story are starting to come together in
the form of a skull and a librarian. After completing the first part of his
assignment, the Calcutec working for the scientist is given a skull by the
scientist, apparently as a gift. The Calcutec doesn’t really know what to make
of this gift until someone paid by the Semiotecs attempts to steal the skull,
and then he starts to realize that there is something significant about it.
Meanwhile, the Dreamreader starts his job in the town library, where he learns
from the Librarian that the dreams he has to read are all contained in unicorn
skulls. The other point of connection is the figure of a Librarian: in one story,
she trains the Dreamreader, and in the other story, she provides the Calcutec
with books and information as he attempts to understand the significance of the
skull he’s been given. Murakami does a masterful job of developing two separate
fictional universes economically and evocatively, so much so that even though
connections are starting to emerge, you would continue to read even if no such
connections existed. Part of the reason for this, I think, is Murakami’s adroit
use of the tropes of genre fiction, including crime fiction and
fantasy/speculative fiction. In this regard, it’s no accident that one of the
books recommended by the librarian to the Calcutec is Jorge Luis Borges’ Book of Imaginary Beings. http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/nov/23/caspar-henderson-rereading-jorge-luis-borges
I also finished
the special issue of New Left Review
written by Perry Anderson on American foreign policy. This final section,
titled ‘Consilium,’ reviews the mainstream literature of the last 20-30 years
on America’s role in the world. I found this section of the analysis much less
interesting than the earlier discussion of American policy, but I still have to
take my hat off to Anderson for plowing through so much grandiose and verbose
prose (although I suspect that Anderson actually enjoys this stuff!). One of
the least surprising but also most depressing features that emerges from
Anderson’s discussion is the sameness that characterizes the available
literature. In other words, although there may be disagreements about the most
immediate or the most serious challenges facing the maintenance of American
hegemony, along with related disagreements about the place of, say, China or
Iran, in American policy, such disagreements are minimal next to the uniformly
held belief that America has a (divine) right to lead the rest of the world.
The insistence on this point seems to me to be a product of a peculiarly American
combination of monomania and megalomania. And the worst of it is, the longer
one spends in this country, the more commonsensical such a belief appears! This
is just one reason why regular trips outside the US are essential for the
maintenance of sanity.
I also watched
episode two of ‘The Fall.’ One of the things that surprised me about the first
episode is that it didn’t make very much use of its Belfast setting. That’s
still true in some ways (the vast majority of scenes take place indoors, for
example) but this second episode is starting to introduce more plot lines that draw
upon the complexities and tensions of policing in Northern Ireland. It’s not
that I’m opposed in principle to introducing the subject of police/political
corruption into a show of this kind (indeed, one might argue that it’s
essential) but there’s no denying that in doing so, ‘The Fall’ is becoming a
police procedural as much as (more than?) a psychological study, and I suspect
the success of the series will depend in part on how well it balances these two
parts of the show. The other thing that strikes me about this episode is the
interesting ways it juxtaposes images of life and death. This is the kind of
thing that could easily seem very corny or hackneyed (in the midst of life we are
in death, etc), but it’s actually done very well in this case. For example, the
scene where the father identifies his murdered daughter and asks if he can
touch her is balanced by a scene featuring the murderer’s wife, who works as a
neo-natal nurse, cradling a baby is very thought-provoking. I know, it sounds
like it shouldn’t work, but it does. Another example of paired scenes involving
hair-washing are powerful and creepy in equal measure. And can I just say that,
up to this point at least, the murderer is blessed with an amazingly
unsuspicious and trusting wife?! Some suspension of disbelief required on that
point…
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Murakami/Anderson/TheFall
Today I read the
first fifty pages of Haruki Murakami’s 1985 novel Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World. http://www.randomhouse.com/features/murakami/site.php.
So far I’m enjoying the novel but expect to spend most of the first fifty pages
figuring out what the hell is going on! The novel oscillates from one plot to
another from chapter to chapter. The odd-numbered chapters tell the story of a
‘calcutec,’ a person trained in data encryption, who is doing a job for a
scientist who is researching, among other things, sound removal. The calcutec
and the scientist both work for the System, unlike the semiotecs, who work for
the Factory and who dedicate themselves to trying to steal information,
including the scientist’s research. The even-numbered chapters are set in an
unnamed walled town possessed of a large number of unicorns, all of whom are
sent outside the town walls each night by the Gatekeeper before let back in at
the start of the next day. The main character of this part of the novel is a
young man who has just arrived in the town to become a dream reader, a process
that involves having his eyes mutilated by the Gatekeeper so that he cannot go
outside during the day. His work as Dream reader takes place in the town’s
library, but what exactly it involves, and whether the two halves of the plot
will have anything to do with each other is as yet unclear. All will
(hopefully) be revealed!
I also read the
next section of the special issue of New
Left Review written by Perry Anderson on the subject of American foreign
policy. In about sixty pages, Anderson covers American foreign policy from the
beginning of the Cold War to Obama’s second term. Obviously, in such a broad
sweep, details are going to be lost, but what one gains is a sense of the
continuities that underlie American conduct and ambitions during this period.
For example, from Anderson’s perspective, the differences between, say, Reagan
and Bush on the one hand and Carter and Obama on the other are so minimal as to
be insignificant. Indeed, one of the most useful contributions of this overview
from my perspective is to underline the perplexity I always feel when so-called
American leftists continue to portray Obama as a progressive. This is where
Anderson’s understated style can be strangely powerful. “Democratic take-over
of the White House in 2009 brought little alteration in American imperial
policy.” Indeed. Anderson also explains why Obama’s championing of drone
warfare has a deadly cynical logic about it. Most Americans have only ever
cared about American aggression abroad when American casualties are involved.
Remove those casualties and Obama can more or less proceed with impunity because
the fact of the matter is that dead foreign civilians are no competition for
most Americans’ need to believe in Obama the savior. Anderson is witheringly
accurate on this point: “No-one would accuse this incumbent of want of humane
feeling: tears for the death of school-children in New England have moved the
nation, and appeals for gun-control converted not a few. If a great many more
children, most without even schools, have died at his own hands in Ghazri or
Waziristan, that is no reason for loss of Presidential sleep.”
I also watched
the first episode of the 2012 television drama series The Fall, starring Gillian Anderson. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00wrk40.
In the interests of full disclosure, I should say that I worship Anderson and
think that she should basically be put in charge of everything (she was the
only good thing in NBC’s awful Hannibal)
so I can’t even pretend to be objective. Her role in this series inevitably
reminds one of Helen Mirren in the Prime
Suspect dramas and it speaks volumes about Anderson’s performance that she
survives that comparison. The other thing that struck me about this opening
episode is how the serial killer character was portrayed: as a family man (wife
and two young kids), as someone with a job (a bereavement counselor, no less!) and
a functioning social life, and as someone who is very physically attractive.
Each of these decisions works to both generate audience identification with this
character, as well as working against the stereotype of serial killers as
either asocial loners or genius-level ubersmenschen.
Spector is a part of his community in multiple ways. The question then becomes
what The Fall will do with the fact:
use it or squander the opportunity it represents.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
O'Neill/Anderson/WhiteWorm
Today I finished
Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland. The
novel ends with a whimper rather than a bang. Chuck Ramkissoon’s murder, which
the reader was informed about earlier in the novel, remains unsolved, but I
don’t have a problem with that lack of resolution, especially as we are
provided with enough information about Chuck’s business dealings to imagine why
he was killed. Instead, the weakness of the novel’s conclusion comes from its
suspension of the more interesting aspects of what O’Neill had been doing throughout
the rest of the novel. The question of Hans’ belonging, for example, is settled
in a very formulaic and predictable manner when he returns to England and is
reunited with his wife. His time in New York City, along with the threads of
the novel that connected to 9/11, to the (post-colonial) status of cricket, and
to Hans’ sense of identity with immigrants, all these things are ultimately
nothing more than an interlude in Hans’ life. O’Neill self-consciously finishes
the novel by placing Hans and his wife and son at the apex of the London Eye,
with a panoramic view of the capital, and presumably with a panoramic view of
everything that has happened to him. O’Neill deliberately frustrates such a
simplistic reading, of course, but one is still left with a disappointingly
mundane sense of resolution. In particular, the exact nature and meaning of
Hans’ friendship with Chuck remains unclear. This could have been a great novel
about the peculiar mix of intimacy and anonymity that defines friendships
between straight men, but that novel remains to be written.
I also read the
first fifty pages of the Sept/Oct 2013 special issue of New Left Review, an issue written entirely by Perry Anderson and
devoted to the subject of “American Foreign Policy And Its Thinkers.” http://www.history.ucla.edu/people/faculty/faculty-1/faculty-1?lid=252
NLR has only had three single-authored special issues in the past (Tom Nairn on
Europe in 1972, Anthony Barnett on the Falklands War in 1982, and Robert
Brenner on hyper-leveraged financialization in 1998), so this really is an
unusual occasion. The issue is divided into two sections: “’Imperium’ examines
the objectives and outcomes of US world power; ‘Consilium’ the thinking of its
power elite.” The first fifty pages cover the evolution of American foreign
policy over the course of the twentieth century, focusing in particular on its
conduct during the two World Wars. Among the points that Anderson makes is the
lack of American appetite for imperial expansion in the wake of World War I, a
situation very different from the end of World War II thanks to the position of
the Soviet Union. Aggressive American expansion during this period was hidden
under the bland term ‘containment,’ and the architect of this term, George
Kennan, is treated by Anderson with the brutal honesty he merits, contrary to
his respectful treatment by other writers. Perry Anderson’s prose style is
characteristically clear and understated, but he is capable of a zinger or two.
For example, in the context of discussing the habit of successive American
presidents to claim that God approves of American world domination, Anderson
writes “America would not be America without faith in the supernatural.” By
Anderson’s standards, this is verbal shade of epic proportions.
I also watched
Ken Russell’s 1988 film The Lair of the
White Worm, (very) loosely based on Bram Stoker’s 1911 novel of the same
name. Ken Russell’s films are always great fun because they’re so over the top,
and Lair is no exception. The
dream/hallucination sequences in particular are gloriously overwrought,
resembling nothing more than a Soft Cell/Culture Club era music video. Amanda
Donohoe is to be commended for her ability to keep a straight face during some
of the more absurd scenes. From the perspective of 2013, one of the most
interesting aspects of the film is to see well-known actors at varying stages
of their careers. We see a pre-Four
Weddings and a Funeral Hugh Grant, who is as annoying as ever, a post-Dynasty Catherine Oxenberg, who looks
puzzled to be back in England, and a pre-Thick
of It Peter Capaldi. And, of
course, Doctor Who fans will enjoy
seeing Capadi at such an early stage of his career. One of my favorite things
about the film is the contrast between the understated Englishness of the
farmhouse scenes and the exaggerated depiction of everything else about the
film. It might be saying too much to claim that there’s an implicit class
critique in the way that the snake-worshipping lady of the manor victimizes the
rural locals, but the nice thing is that with Russell you can never rule
anything out, either. He is the most ‘grab bag-ish’ director I know. This would
make a great double-bill with Russell’s Gothic.
Friday, December 20, 2013
O'Neill/Wee/ResidentEvil
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland.
O’Neill continues to do some interesting things with the theme of belonging. At
one point, Chuck Ramkissoon explains to Hans his theory of cricket as the
original American game. Chuck’s rejection of the American perception of cricket
as an immigrant sport is consistent with his (over)investment in his image of
himself as American. Hans is not persuaded by Chuck’s theory, which suggests
that Hans’ identification is with the immigrant as a dispossessed and rootless
figure, but also as a quintessentially contemporary figure. For example, when
Chuck takes him to a colonial Dutch cemetery, Hans feels no connection to these
early Dutch settlers just because of their shared nationality. In a similar vein,
once Hans moves back to London and is reunited with his English wife, he feels
no particular sense of homecoming, partly because his Dutchness is more
pronounced in England by virtue of the fact that this Dutchness excludes him
from any sense of Englishness. In an interesting moment in this section of the
novel, the subject of 9/11 comes up again and Hans fleetingly identifies
himself with a virtual community of those who were impacted by the witnessing
of this event. Almost immediately, however, Hans admits to himself that this
essentialist claiming of an identity based on a shared experience is spurious
in his case. Given Hans’ repeated rejection of different kinds of belonging, his
friendship with Chuck becomes ever more important to both Hans and the novel as
a whole because it seems to be the one constant during such a changeable period
in his life.
I also
finished Valerie Wee’s Japanese Horror
Films and their American Remakes. In this final section of the book, Wee
discusses Kairo/Pulse and Chakushin ari/One
Missed Call. The chapter on Kairo/Pulse
is one of the strongest in the book because Wee accounts for the differences
between the two films by stressing the industrial context of the remake’s
production. Whereas Kairo has a
philosophical and art horror feel to it, Pulse
instead resembles much more closely the conventional Hollywood approach to
horror (i.e., more violent and bloody special effects) because it was produced
by the same studio that made the Scream
franchise and for the same type of young American audience. I can’t help but
wonder whether this kind of industrial perspective could have been applied
fruitfully to other chapters in the book (the chapter on Ju-On and The Grudge
springs to mind in particular). The chapter on Chakushin ari/One Missed Call was also very interesting for the way
in which Wee stressed the fact that these films are recycling not only elements
of early Japanese films, but also the films discussed earlier in this book; in
other words, these two films are reflections and self-conscious reworkings of
the success of the recent surge of supernatural horror films that is the book’s
subject. Acknowledging this fact helps to further undermine the binary
distinction between original and remake, a binary that must be problematized
thoroughly for any interesting work on adaptation to be done.
I also
watched the first Resident Evil
movie, an embarrassing gap in my movie viewing that I was happy to plug. I will
always have a soft spot for films that the critics hate and audiences love,
partly because I’m a contrarian, and partly because I think it’s always useful
to be reminded of the extent to which critics and audiences look for and expect
different things from film. Critics look at the Resident Evil franchise and see only bad acting, simplistic plots,
and loud and empty special effects. It’s not that the critics are necessarily
wrong when they say this: as much as I love Michelle Rodriguez, for example, I’d
be lying if I said she has a wide range of facial expressions. Indeed, it tells
us a lot when her best acting comes after she’s been turned into a zombie. The
point the critics miss, however, is why these things guarantee the movie’s
success, rather than dooming it to failure. I look at Resident Evil and see a film designed carefully with a very
specific audience in mind. It’s a film reduced economically and skillfully to
its constituent elements and that’s exactly why the franchise has been so
successful. Rather than being puzzled by its popularity, we should instead try
to explain that popularity as carefully and in as much detail as we can,
without relying on the usual truisms about the limitations of mass audiences. http://kotaku.com/5634542/let-milla-jovovich-explain-the-resident-evil-film-franchises-popularity
Thursday, December 19, 2013
O'Neill/Wee/ParanormalActivity3
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland.
At one point, O’Neill’s protagonist, Hans, describes himself as a “political
and ethical idiot” and he’s not far wrong. Political opinions in the
conventional sense, especially concerning America’s post-9/11 conduct, are
instead given to Hans’ estranged English wife, Rachel, and it seems to me that
O’Neill goes out of his way to make these opinions sound strident, clichéd, and
even slightly hysterical. Hans’ almost total absence of political views is
especially striking given his job as a financial analyst of the oil industry, a
job with rich potential if this really were a post-9/11 novel, but with which O’Neill
does practically nothing. In other words, it seems O’Neill is deliberately
staying away from the truisms of a post-9/11 novel and doing something else
instead. But what? One clue comes from the fact that Hans lives in the Chelsea
Hotel, famous for its long history of bohemian residents. http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2013/10/chelsea-hotel-oral-history
O’Neill portrays the 21sy century version of the hotel in the same vein, with
Hans joining an eclectic array of eccentric individuals all of whom are
disaffiliated, in one way or another, from the American norm. This suggests
that O’Neill’s larger theme is the need to belong or connect with others, a
need that Hans feels acutely but is unable to satisfy due to a lack of
imagination and a lack of energy. Perhaps Chuck Ramkissoon and cricket will
fulfill that needs for Hans?
I also read the
next fifty pages of Valerie Wee’s Japanese
Horror Films and their American Remakes, in which Wee discusses Honogurai mizu no soko kara/Dark Water and
Ju-On/The Grudge. A couple of notes
about Wee’s method might be in order at this point. In each chapter, Wee
elucidates the similarities and differences between the original and the remake
and I think she has a tendency to understate the similarities and overstate the
differences. For example, she’s quite right to say that the similarities
between Honogurai and Dark Water can be ascribed to the pervasive
influence of patriarchal thinking in both American and Japanese culture, an
influence that determines the films’ treatment of divorced mothers raising
their daughters, but to say this is not to say very much. It might be more
productive to approach these similarities in generic and narratological terms;
in other words, what are the constituent elements of horror films that tend to
be present in both original and remake, and why are these elements considered
to be indispensable? In terms of stressing differences, my argument with Wee is
not that such differences don’t exist, because they do; rather, my argument is
that these differences do not always have to be the focus of the critical
narrative. I would also add that only certain types of difference seem to count
for Wee and that if one were to consider these films’ intertextual relations
more broadly, a different type of analysis would result. For example, how can
one properly evaluate Sarah Michelle Gellar’s performance in The Grudge without mentioning Buffy?! http://www.foxnews.com/story/2004/10/24/buffy-star-faces-fear-in-horror-remake/
Perhaps
inevitably, I also watched the next film in the Paranormal Activity series, the imaginatively titled Paranormal Activity 3. Although this
entry in the series is subject to the law of diminishing returns that impacts
all franchises, it still has its strong points. One of my favorite things about
this series so far is the fact that it’s organized as a series of prequels,
with 3 being set in 1988. This is an
interesting choice partly for technological reasons, in that the technology of
camera surveillance gets less
sophisticated as the series progresses, a
fact that dictates how each film is structured, and partly for narrative
reasons. Because earlier parts of the story are filled in with each new movie,
the audience also gets to revise its opinion of events and characters from the
earlier movies. For example, what we find out about the childhoods of the
sisters in this episode changes significantly our view of the sister’s
situation in the first two films. To be precise, we understand that they have
been pawns in someone else’s game for a very long time, so that our view of the
decisions they make when they’re adults, decisions that we assume are a product
of free will, we now understand were anything but. This is a great example of
the narrative complexity that cam emerge from genre films when they are
considered together as a series rather than as single films. Not coincidentally,
3 was the highest-grossing movie in
the series so far. http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673022/paranormal-activity-3-box-office-record.jhtml
Oh, and because
I’ve mentioned horror parodies in previous posts, if you want to see one of the
worst films ever made, check out this Paranormal
Activity parody currently streaming on Netflix! http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/70291837?strkid=1531562959_0_0&trkid=222336&movieid=70291837
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
O'Neill/Wee/ParanormalActivity2
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland.
In this section, the postcolonial dimensions of cricket take on a more
prominent place in the novel as we hear of Chuck Ramkissoon’s plan to found a
New York Cricket Club. Part of Chuck’s calculations involve not only the
potential media audience for matches played at such a venue, but also the huge
numbers of West Indian and South Asian immigrants in the New York Metropolitan
area. In this way, O’Neill’s novel is both an immigrant novel in a long
American tradition, but the 21st century version of that tradition
is very different—less focused on assimilation to an American norm and more on
what immigrant cultures can bring to the host country—cricket is a nice symbol
for this inassimilable otherness that immigrants embody. In this respect, it
would be interesting to read this novel alongside CLR James’ classic study of
the relationship between colonialism and cricket, Beyond A Boundary https://www.dukeupress.edu/Beyond-A-Boundary/.
More tomorrow on what O’Neill does with the personal politics (or the absence
thereof) of his protagonist Hans.
I also read the
next fifty pages of Valerie Wee’s Japanese
Horror Films. This sections discusses the different ways in which Hollywood
and Japan approach the subject of the supernatural in film. If one overlooks
the inevitable generalizing, Wee makes an interesting argument about the
difference between the either/or of the Western perspective on the relation
between good vs evil compared with the both/and view of the Japanese
perspective (influenced by Shintoism, Buddhism, and Confucianism). This
difference, according to Wee, leads to a further difference in how the two film
traditions treat the supernatural—it’s something evil that needs to be overcome
in the Hollywood tradition, whereas it’s more a question of restoring balance
and harmony in the Japanese tradition. The next chapter on Ringu/The Ring allows Wee
to ground these generalizations in a close reading of the similarities and
differences between the evil videos in the Japanese original and its American
remake. Perversely, despite the strength of her discussion, I found myself
wanting Wee to also discuss the parody of The
Ring in Scary Movie 3 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxFt3KQhkQA.
What can we learn from parodies of horror movies? And what is it about the
horror genre that makes it so suitable for parody?
Funnily enough,
the parody of Paranormal Activity in A Haunted House that I watched the other
day took me in turn to the sequel, Paranormal
Activity 2. These films are a work of genius in their own way. Just think
of the combination of elements from a financial point of view: a cheap cast (no
stars needed) and minimal special effects (hardly any gore because they’re not
body horror films) and you’ve got a winning combination. I think the suburban
setting is absolutely key to the success of this franchise, not so much because
a suburban audience wants to believe that their habitat is dangerous, but
because that audience wants to see into their neighbors’ homes, especially
prosperous homes, and be convinced that these apparently picture-perfect lives
are anything but. Schadenfreude, in
other words, plays a particularly important role in this type of horror film.
The other reason for their success is that they have a very accurate
understanding of the state of our contemporary surveillance culture. To be
precise, they go beyond the truism that we are being watched by Big Brother and
instead recognize that we are often all too happy and willing to put ourselves
on camera, to survey ourselves in the interests of knowledge and security. This
results in a situation where the actions of the family under demonic siege in
this film both seem rational, in a sense, and where our voyeuristic consumption
of their plight is justified because there is a mystery to be solved. For these
reasons, Armand Mattelart’s The
Globalization of Surveillance would be a very interesting book to read
alongside the Paranormal Activity
films. http://www.polity.co.uk/book.asp?ref=074564510
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
O'Neill/Wee/Cloverfield
Today I read the
first fifty pages of Joseph O’Neill’s 2008 novel Netherland. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7W2ZXzM6wuI.
I’ve heard this novel described as a ‘post-9/11’ novel but I think that misses
the mark, and it would certainly be misleading to group Netherland with novels
like Falling Man and The Reluctant Fundamentalist. It’s true that the novel
begins in Manhattan shortly after the 9/11 attacks, and that the attacks are,
in a way, responsible for the collapse of the protagonist’s marriage, but
beyond those facts, and at least for this first part of the novel, 9/11 is not
the determining event or focus of the book and it remains firmly in the
background. Instead, Netherland is the story of Hans van den Broek, a Dutchman
who moved to Manhattan with his young British wife when they both took up
well-paying jobs in the financial sector. When his wife leaves him and takes
their young son with her back to England, Hans more or less falls apart until
he finds some kind of meaning in his life in the unlikely form of cricket. He
starts playing with a group of amateurs at the Staten Island Cricket Club and
this routine gives Hans a sense of structure and community. Based on the fact
that the other members of the club are overwhelmingly Indian or Caribbean
immigrants (with Hans as the token white guy) I’ve also heard Netherland
described as a postcolonial novel. We’ll see whether this label turns out to be
any more accurate.
I also read the
first fifty pages of Valerie Wee’s Japanese Horror Films and their American
Remakes. http://www.routledge.com/9781134109623.
Oddly, the publication date is listed as 2014, so I feel very cutting-edge
discussing a book from the future! Appropriately, the subject of the book is
very timely, considering the success of films like The Grudge, The Ring, and
One Missed Call, and although a great deal of critical work has been done in
recent years on Japanese and Asian horror, much less has been done on American
remakes of Japanese horror films, a subject that would also allow for
interesting connections with the burgeoning field of adaptation studies. So
far, Wee’s treatment of the subject is well-organized and comprehensive. She
begins by reviewing the arguments for the cultural and aesthetic significance
of horror film and does a particularly nice job of addressing the issue of
whether or not film adaptations should be faithful to their sources. As she
points out, part of the problem with such an argument in relation to Japanese
horror films is that those films can’t be considered ‘original sources’ in the
sense that they are also influenced by earlier films. She then moves on to a
discussion of the representation of ghosts and the supernatural in American and
Japanese horror film. One of the most interesting points she makes on this
subject is that because Japanese culture has a very different relationship to
the supernatural, Japanese horror films are much less concerned than their
American counterparts with finding a ‘rational’ explanation for supernatural
phenomena; instead, the supernatural in JHorror is allowed to exist on its own
terms, as it were.
I also watched
the 2008 film Cloverfield, which could be said to have a connection to Japanese
film in as much as it’s essentially a transposition of the Godzilla genre to
contemporary Manhattan. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvNkGm8mxiM.
I first watched this film on a flight from Chicago to Seoul not long after it
was released. As it was a long flight and it was the only film I wanted to see,
I watched it six times in a row. It wasn’t until I looked out of my hotel room
in Seoul and saw a city not unlike the one I’d just watched being destroyed by
a giant monster for the previous 12 hours that I realized what a bad decision
I’d made; I felt so paranoid I wanted to just hide under my bed until it was
time to go back to the airport! Despite this inauspicious beginning, I still
watch the film fairly regularly because my dislike of models and yuppies is only
matched by my dislike of yuppies that look like models, and so seeing a whole
group of them traumatized and dispatched during the course of this film is very
entertaining. I have to say that to me it’s ironic that this is a described as
a ‘found footage’ horror film. Technically speaking, it is, but the suspension
of disbelief required to accept the fact that the amateur videographer whose
footage constitutes the film would have both the presence of mind, not to
mention the intestinal fortitude, to keep on shooting throughout the film’s
apocalyptic events, is considerable. Although a much less entertaining film,
Barry Levinson’s The Bay (2012) does a much better job of interweaving various
forms of found footage into the film in a consistent and believable manner.
Monday, December 16, 2013
Phillips/LandscapeofMurder/SherlockJr
Today I cheated
and read the rest of Jayne Anne Phillips’ Quiet
Dell because I was so desperate to finish it and move on to something else.
In this last 100 pages, we finally get to the trial, which Phillips managed to
divest of almost all drama, which is no mean feat bearing in mind that it was
held (just like Powers’ actual trial) in an opera house. Although the trial
would have been an obvious moment to flesh out Powers’ character, he remains
little more than a cipher, a boogeyman in whose motives and personality
Phillips remains conspicuously uninterested. As I mentioned before, this would
not necessarily be a weakness in the book if there were other characters about
whom we cared, but there aren’t. Inevitably, Emily ends up adopting Mason the
street urchin as her legal guardian and by the end of the novel, Powers is
safely executed, Mason is safely at boarding school, and Emily and William are
safely on their way to a romantic trip to Paris after exchanging commitment
rings by the graves of the Eicher children (an odd choice!). Nothing could be
more sentimental, predictable, or tedious. Thank goodness I’m done.
On a happier
note (sort of), I also finished Antonio Olmos’ book of London crime scene
photos, The Landscape of Murder. The
main part of the book consists of large reproductions of 79 of the 210 photos
Olmos took for this project, and then all 210 photos are reproduced in
thumbnail size at the end of the book. Each of the photos is accompanied by a
short text that gives the name of the victims and perpetrators, the location
and circumstances of the killing, and the legal conclusion of the case. This
final piece of information seems to me to a weakness in the book in the sense
that it is there as a salve to the reader’s conscience. By implying that
justice has been or will be done, it both gives the reader a sense that our perusal
of these photographs is socially useful and that the circumstances of the
deaths are a little less bleak than they seem. I’m not sure that either of
these implicit claims is true, but it does put the text and images in the book
in a curious tension with each other. One final observation from the
perspective of a British ex-pat who has lived in America for many years: it’s
striking to me how few of these murders feature guns. It doesn’t take much
imagination to figure out how much higher the death toll would be if guns
featured not only in the events depicted in this book but also in the thousands
of punch-ups in which the end result is just cuts and bruises. I think this is
the aspect of the book that would stand out most to an American reader.
As a scholar of
crime fiction, I’m always interested in film adaptations of the genre, so the
title of Buster Keaton’s 1924 film, Sherlock
Jr. caught my eye. As it turns out, only the title is really significant in
this regard, as an example of how early Sherlock Holmes became the ‘type’ of
the detective, but this is a great silent slapstick film for many other
reasons. Keaton plays a movie projectionist who is also studying how to become
a detective, and when he’s accused of stealing from the house of his would-be
love interest, Keaton ingeniously combines these two worlds when his character ‘dreams’
himself into a movie he’s showing as a detective figure. There are the
trademark sight gags and stunts that we associate with any Keaton movie
(including one in which Keaton apparently injured himself quite badly) but the
best part of this film is the self-referential way in which it blends the ‘real’
world with the fictional world of film. There’s a lovely example of this at the
end of the film when Keaton and his love interest are reconciled and Keaton
studies the love scene he’s projecting for cues on how to behave in real life.
This goes smoothly until the film’s reconciliation scene jump cuts to marriage
and children, which gives Keaton’s character pause! Beautifully done.
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Phillips/LandscapeofMurder/CatchingFire
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Jayne Anne Phillips’ Quiet
Dell. Just when I thought this novel could not get any worse, Emily
Thornhill, while getting ready to cover the Powers trial in Clarksburg, VA,
adopts Mason, a street urchin who tries to rob her, and sets about converting
him in Ragged Dick fashion. One new set of clothes and a system of values later
and presto! Mason is Emily’s research assistant. Happily, Emily still had time
to have sex by a deserted skating rink with her bank manager lover William,
having thankfully had the foresight, as Phillips tell us, to leave her
underwear in her hotel room beforehand. I’m going to have a celebratory drink
once I get to the end of this novel.
Fortunately, I
also read the first half of a remarkable book, The Landscape of Murder, by Antonio Olmos http://thelandscapeofmurder.wordpress.com/.
In 2011 and 2012 a total of 210 murders took place in London. Olmos decided to
take photos of each one of the murder scenes, usually a few days after the
murder took place. Although this project has some obvious surface similarities
to the crime scene photographs of Weegee in the 1930s and 1940s collected in
his book Naked City http://gothamist.com/2012/01/04/grisly_crime_scene_photos_from_1930.php#photo-1
I think a better
comparison is the work done by the Los Angeles Times’ Homicide Report http://projects.latimes.com/homicide/about/.
Like the Homicide Report, an important aspect of what Olmos is doing is to
represent those acts of violence that the rest of the media ignores or just
barely acknowledges. Even if just for a moment, Olmos’ camera and the
accompanying text tell the story of a death and in doing so they invest it with
the meaning of a memorial that will endure. Deliberately undramatic, these
photographs capture the dreadful banality of murder, the fact that the
disenfranchised and poor tend to be disproportionately impacted by it, and the
attempts by friends and family to mark the scene of death with tributes to the
person who has been taken from them. This book is essential reading.
I also watched Catching Fire, the second movie in the Hunger Games trilogy starring Jennifer
Lawrence. Watching this movie was a salutary reminder of the fact that the
meaning of a film can depend on whom you watch it with. In this case, I watched
Catching Fire with my older daughter,
who is a huge Hunger Games and
Jennifer Lawrence fan. She loved the movie, while I thought it wasn’t as good
as the first one, being much less invested in character and more in symbols. My
point, however, is that my daughter’s investment in Lawrence’s character, and
in particular the extent to which that character represents female empowerment
for my daughter, gave me a new perspective on the hoary question of whether
films of this kind have any politically progressive potential. The answer, as
always, is ‘It depends.’ In this case, it depended on who I watched the film
with, and the conversation my daughter and I had afterward about the movie.
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Phillips/Perec/AHauntedHouse
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Jayne Anne Phillips’ Quiet
Dell. In this section, we follow Emily Thornhill as she journeys to Iowa to
meet Harry Powers’ father. We learn Power’s real name (Harm Drenth) and the
fact that although he came from good people (horny-handed sons of the soil, no
less) he seems to have been a bad seed (surprise, surprise). We then go to
Chicago with Emily to see the auction of the Eichers’ possessions, which allows
Emily/Phillips to feel some righteous indignation at the ghoulish nature of
people, before going back to Quiet Dell to witness a lynch mob trying to break
into the local jail and deliver summary justice to Powers. Sounds quite
eventful and interesting, doesn’t it? Unfortunately, appearances can be
deceiving. The irony of continuing to keep Powers in the background of the
story is that we yearn for him even more.
I also finished
Georges Perec’s Species of Spaces and
Other Pieces, which includes the following pieces: “Robert Antelme or the
Truth of Literature,” “A Scientific and Literary Friendship,” “The Winter
Journey,” and some examples of Perec’s word games. The most interesting piece
for me was the essay on Antelme, which comes from a much earlier stage of
Perec’s career (1962). Sturrock’s footnote describes Perec’s attitude as ‘more
political’ at this stage of his career than he subsequently became, but this is
not a very helpful observation. It’s true that this essay does have a very
different tone from the other pieces in this volume, resembling much more
closely the traditional engagé type
of French intellectual, rather than the playful tone of later Perec, but there
are still important similarities. For example, in the context of discussing how
various writers have treated the concentration camp experience, Perec singles
out Antelme for praise because, rather than emphasizing the emotive,
apocalyptic, or spectacular, Antelme is instead governed by “a desire for
simplicity, for a previously unknown everydayness.” Even at this early stage of
his career, Perec appreciated the possibilities of an examination of the
ordinary, an examination he would pursue in so many different ways for the rest
of his career.
Did I mention
that my choice of films for discussion in this blog will be eclectic and not
governed by whether or not they are ‘good’ films? If not, I think this point
will be made by the fact that today I watched A Haunted House (2013), a parody of the Paranormal Activity films directed by Michael Tiddes and co-written
by and starring Marlon Wayans. I’d like to say that I don’t enjoy toilet humor,
constant swearing, and comedic stereotypes, but that would be a lie. I love the
Scary Movie franchise, and this film
is very much in that vein. Casting Cedric the Entertainer as a trainee exorcist
recently released from jail is a stroke of genius and Marlon Wayans is an
underrated physical comedian. For all its crassness, this film is valuable not
primarily as a parody but rather as a critique of the assumed whiteness of too
many examples of the horror genre. What happens when you take the threatened-suburban-white-couple
that is the staple of films like Paranormal
Activity and make them black? This film may not have very interesting
answers to that question, but the question is still worth asking.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Phillips/Perec/ReeferMadness
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Jayne Anne Phillips’ Quiet
Dell. The novel is becoming less interesting the more it goes on. The
character of Powers is still firmly in the background and in the abstract one
would think that this decision to keep the killer out of the spotlight would be
one of the most interesting aspects of the novel. The problem, however, is that
Phillips has not been able to generate a character who holds the reader’s
attention as much as Powers himself might have been able to. The reporter,
Emily Thornhill, seems to be the novel’s protagonist, but Phillips doesn’t give
us enough of a reason to care about her perspective on the case. Annabel keeps
flitting in and out of the novel, but again, not enough is done with her to make
her compelling. An example of a road not taken comes when Phillips includes a
scene with Powers’ wife and her sister, emphasizing what kind of knowledge they
did or did not have of Powers’ activities. Telling the story from the
perspective of these characters could have been very interesting, but alas…
I also read the
next fifty pages of Georges Perec’s Species
of Spaces and Other Pieces. This includes pieces originally published in
the collection L’Infra-Ordinaire in
1989. In “Approaches to What?” Perec talks again about the power of the
ordinary, first by noting that it’s always the extraordinary and the
cataclysmic that grabs our attention, and then by asking how we should then
account for that which usually escapes our notice: “How should we take account
of, question, describe what happens every day and recurs every day: the banal,
the quotidian, the obvious, the common, the ordinary, the infra-ordinary, the
background noise, the habitual?” The other two pieces in this section of the
book can be read as answers to this question. “The Rue Vilin” consists of
Perec’s descriptive notes of a single street visited on a number of occasions
over a period of years, whereas “Two Hundred and Forty-three Postcards in Real
Color” (written for Italo Calvino) is made up of 243 banal postcards that list
a location, an activity, and a greeting. Reading all 243 is actually quite
difficult because they are so banal and repetitive but eventually one settles
into a rhythm of reading and then the minute variations in the ordinary start
to become both more apparent and more weighty. Incidentally, for those who know
Slavoj Žižek, I found Perec’s distinction between the extraordinary and the
ordinary reminiscent of Žižek’s distinction between visible and invisible
violence in his short book Violence: Six
Sideways Reflections. According to Žižek, it’s always the first that grabs
our attention, but we need to try and see the second type.
I also watched
the infamous 1936 propaganda film directed by Louis Gasnier, Reefer Madness. http://web.archive.org/web/20060328163318/http://www.reefer-madness-movie.com/history.html
Of course, I’d heard a lot about this film, but this is the first time I’d
actually watched it from start to finish. It certainly lives up to its
reputation in terms of its awful acting, its hysterical condemnation of
marijuana, and its laughable hysteria about the dangers of weed, and yet there
was something else about it that I didn’t anticipate. First, it was interesting
how drugs are not racialized in this movie by having any connection with
African Americans. Instead, both the pushers and the users in this movie are
middle-class white Americans. In this respect, Reefer Madness is unusually accurate in its depiction of who sells
and buy drugs in the US, much more so than most films on this subject. Second,
while Reefer Madness should indeed be
laughed at, we should not assume that we’ve moved on very far from this kind of
anti-drugs hysteria. Here’s a story I came across the other day: https://www.change.org/petitions/president-obama-commutation-for-weldon-angelos-55-years-for-marijuana?utm_source=action_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=43498&alert_id=lTrGzXTBEr_ZFAISBQiCp.
A 55-year mandatory prison sentence for marijuana possession? Reefer madness is
alive and well in the 21st century US.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Phillips/Perec/Dahmer
Today I read the
next fifty pages of Jayne Anne Phillips’ Quiet
Dell. Phillips makes the interesting decision in this section of the novel
to reproduce some photos of Powers’ victims, in addition to quotes from
contemporaneous newspaper coverage of the case. The inclusion of the
photographs (especially as they come about halfway through the book) suggests a
surface similarity between this novel and true crime books, which also often come
with a section of photos in the middle. The meaning of the photos, however, is
different. In true crime books, the photographs heighten the journalistic
flavor of the true crime approach (even if only superficially), thus making the
photographs a guarantor of verisimilitude. Perhaps the same effect is intended
in Phillips’ novel; in fact, the inclusion of the photographs in this case only
heightens the gap between the actual people represented in the photos and
Phillips’ recreation of them. For example, when the spirit version of Annabel
reappears after the reader has seen the photos, still flying above the events
while observing them, we feel Phillips’ strained contrivance even more than we
did before. One can imagine a situation where this readerly self-consciousness
about the inventions of fiction would work to the benefit of the book. This
isn’t one of them.
I
also read the next fifty pages of Perec’s Species
of Spaces and Other Pieces. This consists of short pieces originally
published under the title Penser/Classer
in 1985, including “Notes on What I’m Looking For” and “Think/Classify.” Unlike
the previous section taken from Je Suis
Né, these selections are less obviously autobiographical (thought this
dimension is never entirely absent from Perec’s work). Instead, what comes to
the fore here is what we might describe as the most Barthesian aspects of
Perec’s work, as in “Twelve Sidelong Glances,” in which Perec studies fashion
as a signifying system. Unlike Barthes, however, Perec never lets go of a taste
for absurdity (for example, in imagining the possibilities for generating new
types of fashionable trends) that gives his attempts at (critiquing) taxonomic
enterprises a quality I don’t find in Barthes. Perhaps the best way of
describing that quality comes from the fact that Perec is both obsessed with
taxonomies and at the same time realizes that they inevitably fail. As he says
in “Think/Classify,” “Taxonomy can make your head spin” and consequently the
best one can do is “muddle along.” Perec the structuralist may yearn for a
complete and workable system, but Perec the post-strucuralist enjoys the fact
that such systems are always arbitrary, incomplete, and overwhelmed by the
inexhaustible complexity of reality.
I
also watched Chris James Thomson’s 2012 documentary The Jeffrey Dahmer Files. Having written about the Dahmer case
extensively, I can’t say that I learned much that was new from this film, and I
really disliked the sections of the film featuring a Jeffrey Dahmer lookalike
in recreations of everyday episodes in Dahmer’s life, because I didn’t feel
those sections added anything at all to the film. On the plus side, I liked how
the rest of the film was organized around interviews with three individuals who
all provided different perspectives: one of Dahmer’s neighbors from the Oxford
Apartments, the coroner who autopsied all the victims, and the lead detective
on the case. There are moments that jump out from each of these interviews. The
Coroner at one point describes the experience of taking the lid off the large
plastic barrel found in Dahmer’s apartment, saying that it was “quite
unsettling,” which I presume is very strong language for a Coroner. The
detective explains that the clothes that Dahmer wore during his first court
appearance actually belonged to the detective’s teenaged son, which gives one a
new perspective on the iconic photo of Dahmer on the cover of People magazine. Finally, the neighbor
mentions that as news of the case spread, she had people offering her $50 just
to come inside her apartment and sit on a couch that Dahmer had given her—a mundane
but symptomatic example of the celebrity culture that springs up around serial
killers. And if you have a taste for black humor, you will love the brief clip
from a home movie featuring Dahmer in which he says that he has been eating too
much at McDonald’s recently and that he will “have to start eating more at
home.” Indeed. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7WHSmhx0OQ
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