Music Is Magic. And Janelle Monae Is The Magician.

The video for Tightrope is out, and it's the jam:








I've got extended thoughts about Monae's use of the medium, and contrasting her with Lady Gaga, up at The Atlantic:
Along the way, she developed a striking aesthetic of her own. What Lady Gaga has done for pantslessness, Monae may well do for saddle shoes, pompadours, and the tuxedo. While it often seems that Gaga's music is simply a vehicle for her performance art, her songs catchy but unextraordinary dance tunes elevated by the package in which they're delivered, Monae has a voice strong enough to have considered pursuing a Broadway career. And she deploys that instrument in swoops and chants on her best songs. Where Lady Gaga's best videos are strong, referential pastiches, Monae has created an eerie world in her videos tracing the adventures of her alter-ego, an android named Cindi Mayweather, a universe where magic and technology coexist and interact, and where music and dance are potent but risky weapons of liberation.
Check the whole thing out.

Heart Murmurs

I was flipping aimlessly through Jezebel's gallery of former teen dreams this weekend, when I came across this reminder in the final slide, of tolerance for Justin Bieber maniacs:
Every generation has their irritating, unintentionally hilarious, goofy idol to fall in love with in a completely safe and silly way, and unless you can honestly say that your crush on Jonathan Taylor Thomas or Rider Strong or Devon Sawa or Justin Timberlake in his shiny pants days was somehow more legit, let's just give this kid, and his 11-year-old fans, a break.
And oh my goodness, Devon Sawa.  I haven't thought about him in years!  But man, what girl my age didn't have her dreams of a slow dance shaped by the live-action Casper movie? (Christina Ricci really was the best stand-in a generation of weird little girls could have ever had.)





The memories faded quickly, of course.  I'd forgotten Sawa long before he played Stan in Eminem's music video for the song of the same name, long enough that I didn't recognize him, think to make the connection.  The guy had some talent, once upon a time:




Breathing Fire

Image used under a Creative Commons license courtesy of LorenJavier.

I really like the idea of Angelina Jolie as Maleficent.  And I really like the idea of a live-action movie from the perspective of the Disney villainess.  A woman who has figured out how to turn herself into a dragon absolutely must have an interesting backstory.  And for all the early Disney movies are gorgeous, they're also incredibly myopic, focused on the fates and romances of, let's be honest, some rather dim princesses.  The women who are after them have some scope, some sense of the value of the kingdom, some ambition far beyond a guy on a horse.  That, I'm curious about.

A Violin for Neil Gaiman

Image used under a Creative Commons license courtesy of sentience.

I really do love Neil Gaiman's work, and since I spent my free time last weekend re-reading a big chunk of Sandman, that love is particularly fresh in my mind.  But his "nobody's guide to the Oscars" is really a little irritating.
I ask Deette who's inside the dress, and she tells me it's Rachel McAdams. I want to say hello – Rachel's said nice things about me in interviews – but she's working right now. I'm not. No one wants to take my photo, or, Deette discovers, to interview me. I'm invisible....I walk over to the stairs. A nice young man in a suit asks me for my ticket. I show it to him. He explains that, as a resident of the first mezzanine, I am not permitted to walk downstairs and potentially bother the A-list.  I am outraged.  I am not actually outraged, but I am a bit bored, and I have friends downstairs.
All the complaining about seats, and being invisible might have been sort of charming if told with an actual sense of wonder, by someone who isn't a Very Big Deal in the universe he mostly inhabits.  The idea that Very Big Dealism ought to translate into all dimensions may be something that's generally true if you're Dream of the Endless.  But Gaiman's written enough about the laws of universes to know that you've got to learn them all and obey them if you want to get by, and that power in one realm doesn't entitle you to preeminence in another.  Besides, isn't being a graphic novels badass enough?

Maybe It's Just Me...

But I think I would be more weirded out than comforted by having this many other couples this involved in my marriage:

Soft Focus

Much is being made of the political message and final moments of Erykah Badu's video for "Window Seat," (which is blurred in such a way as to be safe for all but the most conservative workplaces).  But I really do want to talk about some of the things that are happening around the edges:



It's interesting to me that as Badu abandons her clothes, the camera includes in the frame people picking some of them up and following after her, at least for a little while.  The soft focus makes the video look like a watercolor.  I recognize that the style is a direct reference to the Zapruder film of Kennedy's assassination, and that the video's filmed literally in the same location where that tragedy took place.  But I have to admit I was a little bothered by the fact that the reactions of people around Badu were obscured.  You can see some of them turning towards her, but not their expressions.  It's effective, in that it makes what happens to her more surprising.  It might have been less so if we could see disgust or hatred in their features.  And it might have been even more stunning if they noticed her but were generally accepting, and the person who does violence on her was identified, was clearly someone truly deviant from society as a whole.

The Grandness of Hacks




Image used under a Creative Commons license courtesy of sarahinvegas.



You know, for all that he can be sexist, un-evenhanded, someone who doesn't remotely adhere to traditional journalistic principles, but Perez Hilton deserves credit for having consistently strong taste in music and working hard to promote the artists he likes.  I think his upcoming radio countdown show could actually be quite good.

One of the few areas of popular culture I was actually fully caught up with when I was a kid was Casey Kasem's Top 40 countdown.  I used to tape songs off the radio on weekends--the program was the first place I heard "Ms. Jackson," "Unbreak My Heart," No Doubt, a lot of the other music that's lingered with me throughout the years, along with oddities like Madonna's dance remix of "Don't Cry For Me, Argentina":



Listening to it week after week was a fascinating look at evolving American tastes, a weird juxtaposition, a chance to keep up with the things that other people liked but that I was having trouble finding on my own.  For a nerd, countdowns were a public service, a kind of informational bulletin I devoured and was grateful for.

I haven't listened to a countdown program regularly in years; I wised up enough to find music on my own.  But I do regularly check out artists Perez recommends.  Under all that goofy hair dye, terrible clothes, and idiotic photoshop scribbling, the guy's got taste.  Perhaps at some point that'll be enough, and the posing can fall away.  And if the show takes off, I might be tempted to tune in.

Perfect and Boring


Image used under a Creative Commons license courtesy of clairegren.

Jezebel says the era of breast implants in Hollywood might be over.  SEK, blogging over at Lawyers, Guns and Money, notes that a casting call for the next Pirates of the Caribbean movie saying women with implants need not apply, is sexist in its own way: the standard it's imposing might not be encouraging women to have surgery, but it's still a criticism of a choice women have every right to make.  My concern is that this is just another trend, rather than a step towards an embrace of genuine body diversity in Hollywood.  


In that casting call, "real breasts" is just the last item in a list that starts with "Must be 5′7-5′8, Size four or six – no bigger or smaller. Age 18 to 25. Must have a lean dancer body."  In other words, they still want women who are very conventionally skinny and lithe.  And the move away from implants isn't necessarily a move away from a preference larger busts at all, just for the particular strain and rigidity of implanted breasts.  


We live in a time when individual actresses like Gabby Sidibe can break through the expectations Hollywood has for women's bodies, without changing general preferences and expectations at all: the veil closes behind them until a very particular project and a very particular director needs someone else who looks different from a conventional Hollywood movie star.  The truth is that rigid standards of appearance aren't just a matter of sexism and problematic body image.  They make for boring-looking movies, films that look off because they don't look like the real world in its infinite variation.  The same thing is true of movies with weirdly monochromatic casts, too.  Even if studios aren't particularly worried about the body image standards they project, or the characteristics of the population of actors they employ, they ought to worry about whether their movies have some reality to them.

And While We're On the Subject of Almost Famous...

Heh:



It's a good thing I find our culture collapsing in on itself pretty much completely hilarious, or it would be a really, really terrible time to be a critic.

Special Requests: 10 Books Edition

A lot of you asked me to participate in the 10 Books meme in last Friday's special requests thread.  I hope you guys won't be annoyed by this answer, which is a bit of a dodge.  I just finished up a piece for The Atlantic arguing that influence isn't just about the books that affected one's reading or thinking.  It starts like this:




When I was 20 years old, I marched off to get arrested in a pair of gray slacks and a gray sweater that didn't match and didn't suit me. I certainly believed in the reasons and 14 of my friends and I were going to walk into the Yale Admissions Office, sit down, refuse to leave, and proceed to sing folk songs as loudly as possible. Reforming the university's financial aid system seemed like a broadly good idea. But when it came to getting an arrest record for the cause, my decision can be laid at the door of Jean Merrill, a then-82-year-old children's book author who'd never met me in her entire life.

As the "ten books" meme has swept the Internet, prompting writers to declare the importance of everything from Peter Singer's Writings on an Ethical Life to J.M. DeMatteis' Kraven's Last Hunt entry in the Spider-Man line in the development of their thinking, I've found my thoughts turning frequently to Merrill's The Pushcart War. It's not that her satiric portrait of urban machine politics and corporate titans—complete with progressive, pretty celebrities, poker-playing politicians, and truck company owners, plus a children's crusade inspired by a jailed peddler—is the best piece of children's literature ever written. But the memory of a fictional flower-seller and the influence of his arrest was one of the things that helped me say yes when my friends needed one more person to make the sit-in successful.The Pushcart War was one of the books that pushed me, a terminal bookworm, out into the world, that made me not just think, but act.
 I hope y'all like it; this was something I'd been working on even since before the request, and that I care about a lot.  I realize it's a dodge.  But it'll get at least some of my influential books out there for you.

Familiar Faces

So, I was watching All the President's Men again over the weekend as background while I was doing a little writing, and had the great pleasure of noticing on screen who but Ned Beatty, so delightful as Det. Stanley Bolander in a minor role as the Miami State's Attorney.  I really do love Bolander as a character.  The combination of bitterness and hope is irresistible:



And I suppose the happiness I take in noticing things like this is evidence of a terminal preference I have for supporting actors over leading men and women.  All the President's Men is a marvelous movie for those  people who fill in the critically important details of a movie, who determine whether there's oxygen in the world on screen, or just a few people moving in isolation across it.  Jack Warden, Hal Holbrook, Jason Robards alone make a feast.  And everyone else making up the movie's Washington is really very fine too.

Remember Walking In the Sand

I ended up going to Beach House's show at the Black Cat on Friday night somewhat unexpectedly, and it turned out to be quite the pleasure.  I hadn't listened to the band very much before, but even though the exceedingly mellow sound means the group can't build a conventional emotional swell in a set, the show had the feel of a backyard party, with big, pinata-like tinsel-decked objects rotating over the stage, and the crowd bopping quietly along.  I particularly like "Take Care," I think:



One thing I'll say about Beach House though, and this is a problem much more for the show as a live act than as a creator of albums, is the songs tend to meander off at the end.  In an album, they could blend into each other, but there's a tentativeness about it when they're performing live.  It's as if they run out of things to say or do within the structure of a pop song.  And given that that's the medium in which they're working, that might be something for them to figure out.

A Thought Experiment

The trailer for Scott Pilgrim vs. The World looks completely charming and exciting.  It's a great cast up and down, and even for the few seconds he's in it, the trailer became another entry in the case Chris Evans is making for me liking him:



But the trailer shook loose something that's been percolating in my mind for a while.  What would the recent history of movies look like if Patrick Fugit had become the indie darling Michael Cera is, and was taking some of the roles he's taking now.  It may just be because Fugit's six years older than Cera, but where Cera is a blank, Fugit's always struck me as open, and vulnerable: there's something behind those wide eyes.  I never understood why Juno was so nuts about Paulie in Juno, but I absolutely understood why Mary might be terrified and tantalized by Patrick's attention in Saved!  I don't think Cera's ever had a performance that equals Fugit's in Almost Famous.  Superbad is fine, it certainly captures a certain adolescent anxiety, but so does Almost Famous without the intense reliance on vulgarity (which is only a sin when it's a crutch), and with a deep engagement with the transformative power of art.  I wish Fugit worked more, and got the recognition he deserves.  But in Hollywood even more so than in life, things are rarely fair.

Mental Health Break

Guys, I'm taking the rest of the day off from the day job, and from here.  I hope you won't mind.  Consider this a requests thread.  I promise, for once, to honor 100 percent of them.

Through The Liquid Crystal Looking Glass

Tom Bissell's piece about his addiction to video games is a worthwhile read in and of itself, but it's also a very good meditation on how different kinds of art work on people's brains.  On literature, he notes:
Writing and reading allow one consciousness to find and take shelter in another. When the minds of the reader and writer perfectly and inimitably connect, objects, events and emotions become doubly vivid – more real, somehow, than real things. I have spent most of my life seeking out these connections and attempting to create my own. Today, however, the pleasures of literary connection seem leftover and familiar. Today the most consistently pleasurable pursuit in my life is playing video games. Unfortunately, the least useful and financially solvent pursuit in my life is also playing video games.
And this on the power of video games' immersive worlds:
Vice City's sequel, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, was several magnitudes larger – so large, in fact, I never finished the game. San Andreas gave gamers not one city to explore but three, all of them set in the hip-hop demimonde of California in the early 1990s (though one of the cities is a Vegas clone). It also added dozens of diversions, the most needless of which was the ability of your controlled character, a young man named CJ, to get fat from eating health-restoring pizza and burgers – fat that could be burned off only by hauling CJ's porky ass down to the gym to ride a stationary bike and lift weights. This resulted in a lot of soul-scouring questions as to why a) it even mattered to me that CJ was fat and why b) CJ was getting more physical exercise than I was. Because I could not answer either question satisfactorily, I stopped playing.
And this on artistic taste in general:
Many children who want to believe their tastes are adult will bravely try coffee, find it to be undeniably awful, but recognise something that could one day, conceivably, be enjoyed. Once our tastes as adults are fully developed, it is easy to forget the effort that went into them. Adult taste can be demanding work – so hard, in fact, that some of us, when we become adults, selectively take up a few childish things, as though in defeated acknowledgment that adult taste, with its many bewilderments, is frequently more trouble than it is worth. Few games have more to tell us about this adult retreat into childishness than the Grand Theft Auto series.
I haven't played video games since college, when I got overly invested in the Sims for a while and felt somewhat disturbed by the pull, by my own investment.  Obviously I stopped far before Bissell did.  And uh, didn't end up intertwining video game and hard drugs habits.  But this is far and away the best piece I've ever read articulating the pull I felt and the uneasiness I felt about it, and about how art's interaction with our brains and our moral reasoning is a part of how we should judge its power and accomplishment.

Costume Drama

As is so often the case, Hero Complex has a great, nuanced take on the challenges Chris Evans will face in playing Captain America, and not just playing him, but portraying him in a period piece, which means something rather particular in comics:

I remember talking to Gabriel Macht, who portrayed the title role in "The Spirit," rooted in another 1940s-era creation, and he moaned about the vintage dialogue and retro sensibility of a square-jawed hero who was plucked from the era of serials and dropped into a CG age. "You say it as honest as you can," he said with a tight smile. Well, we all know how that turned out.
"Captain America" is being directed by Joe Johnston, and when I spoke to him a few weeks ago, he said one of the big challenges of the project was finding an actor who could present two physiques on screen -- the "98-pound weakling" look of Steve Rogers and then the ripped-muscle frame of his heroic alter ego after receiving a dose of the ultimate performance-enhancing drug. Evans will be tested by that body-shaping, but also by the need to win the hearts and minds of 21st century movie-goers with an FDR-era champion; that will be especially interesting to watch as the movie ventures overseas, where the name of the film might smack of jingoism.
I must say, The Spirit was really one of the most transcendently awful movies I've ever seen in my entirely life.  It was astonishingly bad.  There was too much of everything: too much of Samuel L. Jackson in high camp mode (something it's hard to imagine saying), too many women to keep straight (Jamie King's character was most intriguing and least used), too much harsh lighting contrast.  I suppose there's an extent to which it was an interesting experiment in making a visual graphic novel, but I don't think it was a success.  That aside, the extent to which it was really a period piece was exceedingly limited.  


Which doesn't mean superhero period pieces are a bad idea at all.  They don't need to be directly related to our history, though they can provide alternate metaphors for how we understand it, and the historical revisionism of Watchmen is wonderful, both in the comic itself and the details of the movie adaptation.  There could be a pretty badass movie in the combination of Mad Men's aesthetics and Wonder Woman's adaptation to mainstream society as an adventurer beyond her closed society of Amazons.  Joe Johnston's weird directing history would suggest he's not going to proceed along those lines.  He did do a nice period piece in October Sky, so if he can restrain some of the impulses he had in Jumanji, etc., he might have the right touch.

Please. Explain.

Guys, Drake is SO BORING.  Can someone please explain to me what is appealing about a guy who makes dishwater songs like this and louses up tracks with Eminem on them and makes really dopily sexist music videos?  I mean, really people:




Because I do not understand. I am at a loss.

Taking Up a Collection

I will lead up the fundraising campaign to make this a real thing.  I am not even kidding.




This would blow the intermittently-funny Walk Hard out of the water.  America deserves a truly uproarious parody rockstar biopic.  And salvation through Hawaiian shirts.  And Weird Al sure deserves the validation.

True Stories

So, in my rapture over 84 Charing Cross Road earlier in the week, I somehow missed entirely that it's a true story.  Helene Hanff and Frank Dole actually wrote all of those letters.  I'm stunned, and deeply gratified, again, by how rich human experience actually is.

I will never, never understand why memoirists fabricate experiences to pass off as their own, or publishers continue to send out fictionalized memoirs as if they're as good as the real thing.  The truth has such unmistakeable power to it.  Remember this opening scene from the first episode of The Wire (no spoilers, but very great enticement for anyone who hasn't seen it)?



Careful readers of Homicide, David Simon's reported book about the Baltimore Police Department, will note that this conversation is something that actually happened.  As fiction, it's testament to the power of a writer's imagination.  As fact it's an astonishing testament to the power of human experience to be literate, surprising, and clearly and cleverly illustrative beyond the power of anyone to make up.  I'd rather be constantly in shock to the beauty and pathos of the world as it is than seek constant substitutes for it.

I Cannot Begin to Comprehend This

What in the Lord's name is Frances McDormand going to be doing in Transformers 3?  I love Frances McDormand!  Is this all a sick plot by Michael Bay to lure nerds like me who swore never again back in? Because it will succeed, no matter how disgusted I am with myself over it.  Damn you, Frances!  You're capable of so much better!  Like this:

Man, Does Spoon Put On a Good Show

One of the people I ended up hanging out with at last night's concert remarked that he thought Spoon was, in a strange way, too good to be exciting.  I'm not sure I agree with that.  Certainly, Britt Daniel is one of the most locked-in rockstars I've ever seen on a stage (a note: for purposes of all comparisons, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band exist on a higher plane than mere mortals).  The show was just ridiculously technically proficient: mixed so the lyrics, which are so key to the band's music, were intensely clear, clearer in some cases than on the album cuts.  They did some fantastic arrangements of stuff that's a bit more subdued on the album.  In particular, they did this hellish, haunted version of "The Ghost of You Lingers" that reminds me of that epic, epic description of Nico's "The Marble Index" as a cathedral for a woman in hell in Lester Bangs' review.  I left the show feeling like I needed to revisit a bunch of music I was already deeply invested in, and that feels pretty exciting to me to have seen a band I care about a whole lot reinvent stuff that's definitely already a success.

But, best 'til last, they're performing an amazing cover of The Damned's "Love Song," which apparently Starbucks got them to record:



Watching Britt Daniel sing that while flogging himself with a tamborine like a penitent may be the artistic highlight of my year so far.  Sometimes, at shows, the vibration in my chest feels like love.  And some nights it really is.

The Politics of Desire

Image used under a Creative Commons license courtesy adobemac.

I think it says a great deal about how good Homicide is that I find Tim Bayliss almost irredeemably annoying, and yet I'm in love with the show as I finished up the second season.  It's not that I find Bayliss disagreeable: Munch is constantly disagreeable and he's probably my favorite character on the show.  Watching him get surprised out of the murk of his sourness by the fireworks that erupt towards the end of the Season 2 finale is one of the loveliest moments the show's produced to that point, and especially given how nervous Richard Belzer was about the role, it's a piece of acting that's self-assured in its portrayal of a man knocked off-kilter.

But in addition to that performance, one of the things I like so much about Homicide is something that I think would be impossible today: its frankness about the ecstasy and terror of sex.  Kay Howard waxing rapturous and weak-needed about the joys making love with Ed Danvers would be reduced to Samantha Jones-like shock talk today, and as much I love Samantha as a character, I think we can all agree that the world needs less of that, unless it's a Christina Aguilera parody, that as ripped off by other characters, it's a kind of display, rather than honesty.

(The discussion after the jump is mild, and yet probably not safe for a hypersensitive workplace.  Thar be one of those discussions of sex in pop culture that gets me banned from some of your offices.)



And I don't think any network show, and perhaps no cable one, could get away with portraying S&M the way Homicide does in that Season 2 finale.  Bayliss and Pembleton are investigating the death of a girl who worked a phone-sex line and was strangled by a belt from a leather jacket sold in a fetish shop.  In the course of investigating the murder, the two detectives visit an S&M club.  A suspect threatens to kiss Bayliss if they cuff him, and Bayliss loses it, not out of homophobia, but clearly because the guy's threat and explanation of the power dynamics have touched something deep within it.  At the end of the episode, one of the murdered girl's friends brings Bayliss a leather jacket as a thank-you.  He demurs, and she orders him to put it on, clearly shifting from a conversational tone to one that means--something else.  When he complies, it was the first moment when I really liked him.

One of the things that's been very interesting to me about Bones is that while the show has occasionally dealt with fetish communities in its constantly rotating cast of subcultures, the show usually debunks the idea that anything other than sex between people who love each other than be meaningful.  Brennan occasionally mentions some familiarity with power play, but Booth is generally freaked out, and the show usually suggest that he's right to be freaked out, that his world view about sex is correct.  If I were the show's writers, I'd actually think that might be a big obstacle for the pair as a couple.  But I think really it's reflective of a larger trend towards treating S&M and other sexual subcultures as precisely that. Something to be investigated, understood, and left safely behind.  They're not really considered legitimate vectors for character explorations any more.  And purely from a storytelling perspective, given the thinness of our pop cultural conversation about sex, about the relationships between men and women (to say nothing of men and men, and women and women), that seems like a shame.

Things I Love

That apparently, O Brother, Where Art Thou fits into ABC Family's programming guidelines.  I think family entertainment should be about more than simply portraying families, but about conveying the kinds of stories families are so good at teaching each other.  The myriad lessons of both the Odyssey and the Depression surely count.  As do the lessons in American music.  I particularly like this one:



The movie airs tonight at 7:30.  I'll be trying to tune in to show some support for the network's decision.

Personal History: Spoon Edition

There are a number of songs you should not put on a mix for a significant other unless you're absolutely sure about them.  One is obvious, taught to us by both High Fidelity and good sense:



But for me, the really salient song is Spoon's "Anything You Want," from the album Girls Can Tell:



I was given both songs by a guy who actually did meet me "when [I was] nineteen and still in school."  It made "Anything You Want" seem like a song we could play at a wedding, that we could smile over twenty years later.  Of course, we were dead wrong.  And the song really, I think, is about a couple that's broken up, and the guy who says that "I feel so in love and yet feel so alone" is trying to build a case that will compel the girl to come back to him.  He can't chase after her, whether because of pride, or hopelessness, so he's conjuring up memories, more to keep himself company than anything else.


But even though the sentiment was mistaken, I'll forever be grateful for the introduction to Spoon, one of my all-time favorite bands.  I've written about the sonic reasons for this before.  They're one of the few bands where I can listen to entire albums, just put them on and let go.  I'm a twitchy listener like that.  But Spoon's lyrics also just mean that I've turned over various songs like talismans, like worry beads.  High on that list of songs is "The Way We Get By" (in instrumental, the opening music for Stranger Than Fiction, the scene of which is linked to in the Spoon post I linked to above):



Like quite a few of Spoon's songs, it's a laconic setup with a very sharp idea at the heart.  As someone who favors major breaks and rapid and deliberate transformations, I've always loved the line "Let's make a new start / And that's the way to my heart."  There's something more precise, and yet less melodramatic about that line than something like "run away with me!"  I don't know that Spoon believes in the transformative power of love, and I find that refreshing, sometimes, even if I'm working out whether I agree with the band.

Then there's "Paper Tiger," which strikes me as an almost Puritan pop song.  It's sonically minimal even for Spoon:



I love the austerity of the line "I will no longer do the Devil's wishes" even if it's explained just one line later (I tend to interpret "The Fall" in "Chicago At Night" as Miltonian rather than as autumn).  The hesitancy of "I'm not dumb, I just want to hold your hand," as if even that simple, natural gesture needs to be explained.  Unlike in "Anything You Want," the limits of the promise are clear: "It will not protect you / But I will be there with you when you turn out the light."  It's not grandiose.  It's honest.

There's an extent to which Gimme Fiction and Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga bracketed the dissolution of the relationship that gave me that first song.  I don't particularly think that's why I am less enamored of the former album and swept away by the latter, although I do feel like Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga captured a feeling of coming alive again, of grappling with sadness but recognizing that it was past (particularly "The Ghost of You Lingers"), of coming alive and finding myself home that I felt very strongly in 2007.  "The Underdog," was, and remains my fight song, the verses I chant in my head when I'm angry or frustrated:



But more and more, I think of "Rhythm and Soul" as my current talisman, the clipped verses, the wonder and the whole wide world:



This band has touched me deeper than almost any other.  I'll still tell my kids about how much I loved Spoon, but in a very different way than I thought I would.  Tonight, I'll see them live for the first time.

Dealbreakers

Image of a minor Lord of Darkness used under a Creative Commons license courtesy of OtterFreak.

I laughed a lot reading Michael Jones' meditation on pop cultural dealbreakers in relationships.  Steely Dan is his:

And the world, in all of its once promising glory, crashes down around you.
How could you have ever ever ever in a million years spent time with this person? All those thousand moments of looking out over the ocean in seeming perfect unanimity of thought, two hearts as one and one heart was secretly singing: "Rikki Don't Lose That Number."
This while claiming "Sympathy for the Devil" was to be your wedding march?
This is serious stuff.
I tend to think that the existence of the iPod has made these kinds of pop culture shocks a lot less of a big deal.  We can all rock out to our own private soundtracks most of the time.  Except for road trips and weddings, accord doesn't actually matter that much.  As for me, I can definitely say I would draw the line at any Fred Durst-connected project.  But the bar is probably higher than that.  I'll have to give it some thought.


Sparks

Image used under a Creative Commons license courtesy of Tjflex2.

So much of what I've been reading these days has been either academics books for a class I'm taking for work, or Star Wars books (next big post coming soon, y'all!).  Individually, some of those books have been illuminating, or useful, or deep and cheesy fun (Kathy Tyers is better than anyone else writing in the Extended Universe at generating non-embarrassing sexual heat between her characters).  But collectively, they've left me ravenous for good prose.  And so it was with that lean and hungry feeling that I tore into Wolf Hall late last week, wrapping it up on the porch this weekend.

It's a marvelous, ingeniously constructed and deeply felt work and I highly recommend it.  But I don't want to talk about that, or about my Elizabeth I fixation, or about the fight over Thomas Cromwell's reputation (I would be extremely curious to see someone do a book like The Daughter of Time on all of this).  Instead, I want to talk about the prose, something that's going to necessitate a diversion.

I read Angels in America at an extraordinarily influential time in my life, about which I have long intended to write a post, but for now let me say it left me with a strong preference for sentences that are...baroque, ornate, those aren't quite the write words, but sprawling, urgent, stuffed because there is so much feeling and so many ideas behind them.  Joan Didon's clipped sentences with sprawling construction sometimes pulled me back into the possibility of constraint.  But my brain has moved to the rhythm of Tony Kushner's prose for many, many years now.  I have none of his brilliance, but often feel a great deal of urgency and impatience.

But God, Hilary Mantel's prose.  My God, people.  "He can draft a contract, train a falcon, draw a map, stop a street fight, furnish a house and fix a jury....He works all hours, first up and last to bed.  He makes money and he spends it.  he will take a bet on anything."  It's almost a platonic version of a list, one that should be taught alongside The Things They Carried, a marvelous guide to manhood.  "It's not the hand of God kills our children.  It's disease and hunger and war, rat bites and bad air and the miasma from the plague pits; it's bad harvests like the harvest this year and last year; it's careless nurses."  Brutal, plain and effective.  "Try always, Wolsey says, to find out what people wear under their clothes.  At an earlier stage in life this would have surprised him; he had thought that under their clothes people wore their skin."  Counterintuitive ideas, simple prose.  It's an unforgettable idea that rattles around in the brain, changes the way one's random gaze lands.  "From this marriage--Fifth Henry and the Glass Princess--sprung another Henry who ruled an England dark as winter, cold, barren, calamitous."  Perhaps it's just my susceptibility to myths, but it's a fairytale in a single sentence.  "He never saw the future again, not clearly as he had that year."  An burst of magic, and of fate, into the everyday occurrences where we can notice them.

And that's just a few of the passages, working through the list, that caught my eye.  It makes me want to dream in concise and perfect phrases, to value every one of them and not just the chains made by linking them together.

In a way, Wolf Hall is a good companion volume to Possession.  One is more about Melusina than another, the former about the state, the latter about private persons, but both dedicated wholly to matters of the heart.  And to England.  I wrote at one point when I was about halfway through that Wolf Hall was like reading fireworks.  It's like that, but it's a vast, intelligent construction, too: like Ellen Ash's journal in Possession, Wolf Hall is a delicious exercise in bafflement, in misdirection.  I'll have to read it again, and soon, to fully absorb Mantel's accomplishment.  And hope that she finishes her sequel soon, and with as great skill.

The World At Large

The New York Times has a feature up where they're letting readers ask questions of a location scout who works in New York.  The answers aren't up yet, but the questions are delightful.  For example:
I work on Water Street and John, across from what still is, but will no longer identify itself as the AIG building. Frequently assembled there are the various trucks you see at movie shoots, yet I can’t imagine what fascination this area would hold for anyone; and it only becomes more of a corporate wasteland as you proceed down Water, toward the Battery. What are they doing here?
Then there's local pride:
Hi Nick, don’t underestimate the cool spots in Hudson County, located right across the river in NJ. Don’t forget that On the Waterfront (an amazing movie) was filled in Hoboken!
And moral:
In these tough ecnonomic times, it would be nice if the cast/crews were given per diem to patronize local eating establishments–has this ever been considered? I saw a film crew on my area set up a catering tent in front of a deli that has been there 15 years. Disrespectful I think.
Envious:
Why are NYC apartments in movies so much larger than any apartment anyone I’ve ever met actually live in? Is it because the average NYC walk up is too tiny to fit a crew, lights, etc., or is it just that people in the rest of the world would not relate to a character who lived in a studio with a loft bed and no closet?
And ultimately fed up:
Can you please influence some of your clients to stop shooting in Greenpoint, Brooklyn? We’re sick of it. Thank you.
In my frequent tirades about the dullness of movies based in Los Angeles and New York, about the hunger those of us in other parts of this world to see the places that are beloved and familiar to us on film, I think I forget that it's possible to overlook vast swaths of those great metropolises.  It's been interesting to me to see the praise lavished on movies like (500) Day of Summer and Greenberg simply for being set in those comparatively quiet and lovely parts of Los Angeles like Silver Lake, Los Feliz and Echo Park.  There's so much to cities.  It's a pity films often seem determined to see so little.

Unfinished Business In London

Trafalgar square by cuellar.
Image used under a Creative Commons license courtesy of cuellar.

I was just exhausted and drained on Friday night, and in an effort to find something to do with myself so I wouldn't fall asleep at 8 in the evening, picked 84 Charing Cross Road out my Netflix queue.  I mistakenly remembered it as the movie You've Got Mail was a remake of (in fact, it's The Shop Around the Corner--my old movie cred is shot), and prepared myself for an evening of pleasantly fluffy romantic comedy with, what I expected would be much better writing.  I was right on the latter, of course, the writing is marvelous.  But the movie is a pleasure of a higher order, a magnificent meditation on trans-Atlantic styles, growing up and growing older, and the writing and reading life.  It may be one of the best movies on the latter subjects I've ever seen in my life.  (Spoilers ahoy!)



The basic setup is this: Anne Bancroft plays a youngish writer, Helene, living in New York who, unable to find some of the books she wants in the city, writes to a British bookstore advertising in a literary magazine, and strikes up a friendship with a youngish bookseller, Frank, played with marvelous restraint and tenderness by Anthony Hopkins.  After he sends her the first volumes she's ordered, she complains about his failure to translate the price into dollars, and with the blast of her voice off the page, declaring ""I don't add too well in plain American.  I haven't a prayer of mastering bilingual arithmetic," a connection is made, a correspondence is formed.

The movie is told almost entirely in the text of Helene and Frank's letters, and it's an amazing exercise in authorial voice.  Helene writes like she is: frank, Jewish-but-multicultural ("Are they kosher? I could rush a tongue over.  Advise, please!" she writes to Frank in one letter upon realizing she's sent Christmas ham to a firm with Cohen in its name.), intensely alive to the teasing and poking power of words, in love with their ability to elevate both her (she goes from broke aspirant, to successful television writer, to memoirist).  Frank is vastly more reserved("We watch it all from a safe distance, although I must admit I like the Beatles," he says of generational upheaval at one point.), frequently apologetic, deferential, he continues to treat Helene as a customer long after she begins treating him as a friend.  But when he signs a letter "love," the heft of the declaration is tremendous given his previous decorum.  We can tell Frank and Helene are soulmates not because of any particular declaration they make (When Helene writes, a bit boozily at one point, "You know, Frankie, you're the only soul alive who understands me," it's too much, for both of them, I think) but because of how uniquely alive their voices become when they write to each other.

That said, it's not a love story, something that took me by surprise.  Helene is supposed to go to England for Elizabeth II's coronation, a trip that's interrupted by that smallest and most pernicious of devils, expensive dental work.  She only gets to London after Frank dies, prematurely, of a burst appendix.  By that point, the bookstore that sustained her throughout her writing career is closed, and the staff she sent packages to in order to alleviate their years of rations have largely scattered.  The empty shop isn't a mid-movie disappointment like it is in You've Got Mail: it's the end of the movie.

But I think that's a brave decision.  It's refreshing to me that Helene never marries, that while she loves Frank, there's an extent to which she's married to the city.  84 Charing Cross Road is an intensely local movie in all of the right ways.  "If they lose this world series, I shall do myself in, and then where will you be?" Helene declares of the Dodgers, watching the World Series in a crowd outside a store selling televisions, only to have Frank extract a promise from her to root for his favorite, dreadful football team.  In a scene that could have been incredibly weird and awkward in another movie but works here, Helene is accidentally caught up in the protests at Columbia (I almost fell off my chair when the movie integrated a clip of Mark Rudd's speech there: The Weather Underground is my all-time favorite documentary) and arrested.  The movie can get away with it because it's so clearly established Helene as independent, abrasive, and charming to the people who strike her fancy.  She's a woman who reads a baby she's looking after for a friend with a book of sermons--sent to her, of course, by Frank.  The London side of the movie isn't quite as well-developed, but a sequence of the shop's employees all writing to thank her for sending them tinned ham and raisins from Norway is quiet and devastating as a portrait of postwar privation in Britain.  It's one of many good details.

And the performances are just great.  I know Bancroft will forever be Mrs. Robinson to most people, but I'm astonished by how good her work was as she got older.  She's vital and gorgeous in Keeping the Faith, one of her last movies, and as she ages in 84 Charing Cross Road, she gets decidedly sexier.  One of the movie's later scenes, writing to Frank to ask him to send her some Jane Austen, she's much more flirtatious and openly appealing than she was in the movie's younger scenes.  I feel like she was a trailblazer Meryl Streep and Helen Mirren ought to count themselves lucky to have.  I sometimes think Anthony Hopkins is in the flashy final stage of his career, but he's heartbreaking in his understatement here.  One scene, where an American woman comes into the shop, and Frank finds himself paralyzed by hope that it's Helene, but unable to approach her, should be taught in acting master classes: he never says a word to her, but goes from passionate anticipation to intense disappointment when it turns out not to be her, all in a few facial readjustments.  And of course there's Judi Dench as Frank's wife, a bit of casting that feels a bit jarring now--watching her watch the coronation, one wants to holler that it ought to be her up there, in one of her multitude of queen roles.  But she's completely excellent, the one person who perhaps most understands Frank's love for Helene and is able to admit the pain of it, even as she's made Helene a part of her own life too.

It's such a quiet movie.  But it recognizes, something that's all too rare, that the momentousness of human emotion is enough to carry us through, and to leave us weeping at the end.

Sandman On Screen

I agree with all of these reasons it'd be a devilishly hard television show to make.  But wouldn't it be a fascinating opportunity for HBO, Showtime or FX to really break out and do some astonishing long-form story-telling--in animation?  That's something that I think really is a frontier we've yet to reach, or even to approach, despite the phenomenal progress we've seen in television in the last decade.  We're living through what I thin is a real and important flourishing of animation as a medium of telling sophisticated and sometimes dark stories on film.  I defy anyone to say the first several minutes of Up weren't astonishing, and astonishing because of the depth and reality of human emotion they plumbed, including infertility and widowhood.  And Mirrormask and Coraline, both fairly dark works (though not as dark as many of the arcs in Sandman) by Neil Gaiman, have worked beautifully in animation or pastiches of live action and animation.  It'd be nigh-impossible to cast Sandman, so why not refuse to try? Capture the gorgeousness of the illustration, and make a brilliant cartoon serial for adults.

Everybody Wants to Know What's Really Going On / Are You and 3000 Still Making Songs?

Ta-Nehisi's coronation of OutKast on Friday had one line about Big Boi that crystallized something I've been thinking for a while: " it's really pleasing to see how he's grown as an artist in the almost 20 years (!!!) since Outkast premiered."  Perhaps it's inevitable and adolescent of me, but I always made the mistake of thinking him as the lesser of the duo.  My love for Andre 3000 seems almost adolescent to me.  That doesn't mean I feel it any less, or that the memory of that intense and heady passion is any less pleasurable today.  


I still think Andre 3000 is, when he is concentrating, wildly talented, among the absolute best in the game.  That said, he often isn't concentrating, for reasons unbeknownst to me.  And in that space where he's been off, writing music for an animated children's series, trying his hand at acting, and blues singing, and everything else, Big Boi's dedication, both to the project that is OutKast and his craft, seems to have paid off remarkably.  


The more that I think about it, the more I really believe Idlewild was a turning point for the duo.  Big Boi was just superior in both elements of that project.  Some of it had to do with how their parts were written, of course.  Percival was almost impossibly melancholy: Rooster really got all of the spark, and frankly, all the arc.  And while Three Stacks was off on a musical walkabout, Big Boi came up with "Call the Law," a track that has stayed fresh, and marvelous, and strange for me all these four years later.  I thought his work on "International Players Anthem" the next year was actually a step backwards: a jerky, syncopated delivery of some less-than-impressive gender politics.  Follow-ups like "Morris Brown," "Tightrope" and "Fo Yo Sorrows" showcase a rapper who's gotten better with age: faster, crisper, interested in creative collaborations in a way that's moving his work forward.  I never would have thought Big Boi would be the romance of my mid-twenties, and Andre 3000 a dream.  But so it seems to be.

Reflection and Recovery

I stayed up far later than I hoped or intended to watching the final votes on health care reform last night.  Which I suppose is as good enough occasion as any to encourage folks to read Joe Klein's The Running Mate.  Primary Colors is a superior work by a great deal, and if I were to make a list of my favorite novels, that would likely be on it.  But The Running Mate is unjustly forgotten, perhaps because the blood and treachery of the political campaign are interesting to more people than the vast and abiding strangeness of Washington, DC (it's also another one of Klein's wonderful love stories between actual grown-ups.  My one regret about the movie adaptation of Primary Colors is the extent to which that book's romance was excised.).  The Running Mate is chiefly concerned with that strangeness, though it's also powerfully about Vietnam, the Midwest, and Iowa as well.  But mostly it's a useful reminder of the stakes of politics, of the fact that it is not as...hopelessly corny as a lot of legislators make it sound to have this ambition, and also that we might all be better off if some folks knew when to walk away.  As one character says at an Inaugural dinner party for an administration he is to be shut out of, to a group of people he has been profoundly close to since they were together in Vietnam, and who are moving on without him:
"This is what we dreamed--and sometimes schemed--about for nearly thirty years.  And no, I'm not scared. Because I also rememember what we were like back then, even what you were like, Lanny.  I remember how clearly we saw what was happening to Vietnam, how hard we worked to change the result, how anguished we were by our inability to do so.  I know we carry those lessons with us--lessons, not scars, as some would have it.  Lessons that will inform the way we conduct diplomacy and, God forbid, military action.  I hope you act wisely, I know you will act honorably.  I salute you."
Terrible, right? Sort of embarrassing.  And yet true, and heartfelt.  A reminder that politics is not, as one character says to another in Primary Colors, "a fucking game." It's not.  It really never is.

(That, or you could listen to this, which uber-reporter Dave Weigel tweeted last night as reflective of Democratic mood in DC last night:

)

Getting Strapped

So, this may be the dorkiest comparison of all time.  Bear with me.  Does anyone feel like, after a lull in programming, HBO is making like Buffy leading up to the climactic fight with Adam in Season 4?  You know, get your friends together, be they Willow, Xander and Giles or Michael K. Williams, David Simon and Steve Buscemi, perform a spell and summon the spirt of the First Slayer or Tony Soprano, whoever your originary deity is, and then prepare to absolutely kick ass.  Because between Treme (about which I am almost paralyzingly excited) and now Boardwalk Empire (not to mention The Pacific), it looks like HBO has mounted up in a major, major way:




This strikes me as a great thing.  It would have been pretty tragic after The Sopranos and The Wire inspired the fantastic work taking place on Showtime and FX if HBO hadn't tried to up the game further.    I don't know if we're anywhere close to the potential limits to what it's possible to do with television.  But I hope folks keep stretching until we get there. (Plus, you know, Michael K. Williams 4 Evah! you guys.)

One Woman's Revelation...

So, I have not read the book but Eat, Pray, Love looks like a pretty dopey movie:



Maybe it's jealousy--I would love to be able to take a year off and travel, though I think I'd get bored, and I've never had a problem that required me to dump James Franco--but I don't know how this qualifies as an "incredible true story."  I think Elizabeth Gilbert did something that sounds like a lot of fun: take a trip funded by a book advance (I will be curious if the movie addresses that).  I think she probably learned lessons that are important and extractable for a lot of women who don't have that kind of luxury, though it makes me incredibly, incredibly sad that one of those lessons is, apparently, that it's okay to have an intense relationship with the food in Italy and that it is not a tragedy to go up a jeans size.  That such a thing counts as a revelation means we live in shrunken times indeed.

I don't mean to harsh on the profundity of Gilbert's experience, which was meaningful for her and a lot of other people.  I just am not that interested in this movie.  One great virtue of dumb action movies as opposed to the palest chick flicks is this: when they say something is momentous, one usually gets at least an explosion.

Men and Women Overboard

I thought last night's Community was lovely, and surprising in a lot of ways.  As I wrote in the recap:
Community draws much of its charm from the fact that its setting, unlike a traditional four-year college—be it Ivy tower or state school—brings together people at very different points in their lives. But as the study group at the show's core coalesced, the sitcom's spent less time addressing their anxieties about the fact that they're at Greendale Community College, whether as the result of a divorce, a pill addiction, or a misrepresentation of a Colombia degree as a Columbia degree. In last night's episode, as the characters struggled with classes they thought would be easy A's, that anxiousness came to the fore.
Plus there were boats!  And hilariously-shaped pots!  The crew's parking-lot rescue of Pierce may stand as a high point in all-time gentle sitcom surreality.

Credits for Credits

I think it makes a huge amount of sense to give out awards to movie opening sequences, as South by Southwest is doing this year.  They're absolutely a distinct art form, although an unusual one: when done poorly, nobody really notices.  When done brilliantly, nobody quite knows how to judge them, and their impact on the movie as a whole.  The opening credits sequence for Casino Royale, for example, doesn't explicate the movie, but it does an incredible job of setting up the aesthetics (I particularly like the target sites that spin into roulette wheels) of the movie, and it's a great piece of graphic design and animation.  And it's one of the few Bond songs I actually quite like: