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View Article  UNSPEAKABLY COOL: DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND


The fourth of the four coolest books published in the last few years, like two of the others, collects the work of Winsor McCay -- in this case the extraordinary strip Dream Of the Rarebit Fiend -- but unlike the other three wasn't put out by Sunday Press Books.  Privately published by Ulrich Merkl, it includes all of the strips from the series -- those not reproduced in the book itself are supplied on a DVD that comes packaged with the book.

The book is gigantic and presents the strips, published between 1904 and 1913, in their original size.  It also has a wealth of other illustrative material showing McCay's sources and documenting the enormous influence his images have had on America's visual culture, especially that of the movies.



The draftsmanship of the strips is stunning, the visual imagination exhilarating.  Its central gag involves the dreams of people given indigestion by eating Welsh Rarebit, making it a kind of run-up to McCay's masterpiece strip Little Nemo In Slumberland, which illustrates the dreams of a restless little boy.

Merkl's book, published in a limited edition, is available at his web site -- it's expensive but worth every penny.  It lovingly documents a brilliant and endlessly enchanting work of popular art.

Check out my reports on the other three coolest books of recent years:

Little Nemo

Little Sammy Sneeze

Walt and Skeezix
View Article  BACK TO THE FUTURE

                                                               [Image © 1998 R. Crumb]

With the circulation of the photo of Barack Obama looking silly (and oh so "other") in traditional Somali garb, it's clear that the Bill and Hill machine is back on message, delivering its urgent warning to all real Americans:

"The Negroes are coming!  The Negroes are coming!"

Bill and Hill have now officially used up all their passes for creepiness.  Voters of Texas, please -- make them go away.
View Article  HOLLYWOOD: ART VERSUS COMMERCE


One of the enduring myths of Hollywood is that the town is an eternal battleground between art and commerce -- between studio executives who only care about money and filmmakers who only care about art.

The truth is that movies have been, almost since the moment they were invented, a popular art form.  They attracted, for the most part, popular artists -- which is to say, artists who wanted to reach large audiences.  Long before there was an established studio system run by corporate functionaries, filmmakers courted a mass audience and reached it.  The financial returns that followed created the industry that corporations at once set about dominating and
controlling.



The art of cinema was created by the same people who created the mass market for films -- Griffith, Chaplin, Pickford, Keaton, Lloyd.  Because they were popular artists, commerce was an intimate aspect of their endeavor.  The corporate executives who took over the industry these artists created were by no means more interested in the box office than the artists had been -- they were interested in power and turning the art form into a more predictable revenue source . . . interests which often conflicted with maximum box-office potential.



When executives and filmmakers clashed over the content of films, it was not a battle between art and commerce -- it was a battle between popular artists who actually knew how to make popular films and bean-counters who thought they knew better.  Since the bean-counters quickly gained a virtual monopoly over the distribution of films, they had the last word, and also the ability to insure that this word could never be challenged, since the overruled filmmakers had no practical way of getting films before the public without the bean-counters' consent.



John Ford fought constantly with studio executives and, by his account, never won a single battle with them -- but does anyone seriously believe that Ford, one of the most consistently successful popular artists since Dickens, was fighting for some
private, noncommercial artistic vision?  Ford did make a few films, like The Fugitive, which he may have known in advance would not be wildly commercial, but for the most part he wanted to address a mass audience as effectively as possible.  For a genuine popular artist like Ford -- or Dickens, or Shakespeare, for that matter -- there is no conflict between art and commerce.

Ford was fighting against executives who could not have created a popular work of art if their lives depended on it, executives who only managed and bullied and second-guessed those who could create such works.  The real issue was not art or commerce -- it was power.  Without their corporate control of the means of film distribution, these executives would have remained in the realm of exhibition, from which most of them emerged and where they belonged.

Hollywood in truth has been a battleground between monopoly and a free market, between corporate standardization and homogenization and entrepreneurial innovation.  The conflict between art and commerce has been nothing more than a smokescreen.
View Article  PIERROT'S EMBRACE


Guillaume Seignac was a late Victorian painter (he died in 1924) who mostly turned out undistinguished but sometimes amusing imitations of Bouguereau.  His draftsmanship could be flabby and his images didn't have the über-photographic authority of his master.

The image above is different, though.  It has an odd suggestive power, almost perverse, that's rooted in theatrical gesture.  I find it haunting, for reasons I can't quite put my finger on.
View Article  CHEYENNE AUTUMN


This was the next to last feature film John Ford completed, in 1964, when he was 69 years-old.  It doesn't work as a drama, much less a melodrama, or as a character study or as an historical epic . . . but it's one of the most sublime visual poems in the history of movies and a very great work of art.

It tells the once little-known story of a band of Cheyenne who, in 1879, broke out of confinement on a reservation in Indian territory, present-day Oklahoma, and made a 1500-mile trek back to their homeland in Montana.  Pursued and harried by a succession of cavalry expeditions, starved and near death, the band made it to its old home where it was allowed to remain.

In his excellent commentary on the wonderful new DVD edition of the film, Ford biographer Joseph McBride says that Ford originally intended to make Cheyenne Autumn as a small, black-and-white film, an intimate study of the Cheyenne pilgrims, but that he was persuaded by the studio to expand it into a big wide-screen Technicolor extravaganza.  It was, says McBride, a "Faustian bargain" which led to a film that was neither fish nor fowl, since Ford lost sight of the Cheyenne characters yet failed to create a genuine epic.

This may indeed reflect the development of the project but I think it misses the essence of the film that Ford finally made.  All of the characters in the film, both Cheyenne and white, recede into the images, become secondary to the images.  Ford doesn't lose sight of them as dramatic personae because he has no real interest in them as dramatic personae.  They're just narrative markers that guide us through the landscape of the film.



Landscape was always a character
in Ford's Westerns, a kind of Greek chorus commenting on the relative smallness of human intention and desire.  It stood in, one might even say, for the regard of Eternity, in which human endeavor held an insignificant place.  It transformed the melodrama of his stories into tragic absurdity.

In Cheyenne Autumn, as in Shakespeare's late romances, the author lost interest in the mechanics of plot altogether, in the centrality of individual character, and became enchanted by the mystery of his medium -- the magical poetry of words, in Shakespeare's case, and of images in Ford's.  The progress of the Cheyenne through the magnificence of the landscape, the evolutions of mounted cavalry on the march or at the charge, fill Ford's imagination fully -- the characters dissolve into the beauty of movement itself.  They are elevated into a transcendent glory not by the specificity of self but by their possession of space.  They are dancers, sculptures in motion.



This is not an abstract vision, however, a celebration of technique.  In his old age, disillusioned with the legends of the West he did so much to reinforce, Ford lost his faith in man's essential goodness, or at least in that part of it related to his will.  Primal values, transcending individual human character, were all he could believe in -- the dumb urge to go home, to preserve community, to do one's duty.

At the center of the film Ford inserted, unaccountably to many critics, a 21-minute sequence set in Dodge City which mercilessly satirizes the myth of the Western hero, of the frontier town.  Jimmy Stewart appears as a corrupt and cynical Wyatt Earp leading the hysterical townspeople on an absurd pursuit of the phantom Cheyenne, who in truth are nowhere near Dodge.  The familiar narrative of the old West is deconstructed, revealed as a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

After this strange interlude, the film switches back to the story of the Cheyenne, doing what they have to do, and the horse soldiers, doing what they have to do.  When the Cheyenne are restored to their ancestral Eden, Ford shows us how much they have lost recovering it, just as he shows us how much honor the soldiers have lost in fulfilling a duty that's been applied to a meaningless and inhuman mission.

The triumph on both sides was only in the journey, the movement, the dream -- all of which vanish in the end, as the eternal landscape looks on impassively.

The film has a nominal "upbeat" resolution in its penultimate episode in which Secretary of the Interior Carl Schurz, wonderfully played by Edward G. Robinson, goes to visit the escaped Cheyenne in Montana and promises to help them stay there.  This scene, oddly, is shot against cheesy-looking back-projections -- such a radical violation of the look of the rest of the film that it almost seems deliberately surreal . . . as though Ford was asking us not to take this superficial "climax" too seriously.  Perhaps it can be compared to the improbable events that "resolve" the narrative of Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale, in which the playwright seems to be asking us to laugh with him at the conventions of the stage -- to remind us that the true heart of his work lies elsewhere.
View Article  FORGET


Jae Song has a cool new web log,
forget, mostly dedicated to poems, fragments of poems and quotes from various authors.

Check it out.


[Image © 2007 Jae Song]

View Article  DUDLEY NICHOLS AND JOHN FORD


With the notable exception of Stagecoach, I'm not a big fan of the movies John Ford made with screenwriter Dudley Nichols, even though these include some of Ford's most celebrated and entertaining films.

Nichols was an extremely skillful writer, with a sound sense of story structure and a good ear
(usually) for colorful dialogue.  But he also had a self-conscious, "literary" style -- he tended to see situations and characters in emblematic, metaphorical terms.  This aspect of Nichols' work encouraged Ford to indulge his gorgeous visual expressionism at the expense of what he did best -- create cinematic spaces and places of mesmerizing specificity.  The images of The Lost Patrol and The Informer are supremely beautiful but they grow claustrophobic after a while.  The desert and the fog-bound city are too obviously surrogates for existential states, symbolic and airless.



In his best work Ford found ways of imbuing interiors and landscapes with an uninsistent symbolic quality -- we read them as real spaces and feel their emotional resonances on a subliminal level.  We have a sense of discovering and exploring these spaces on our own, no matter how many times we come back to them.  The shadowy streets of Gypo Nolan's Dublin in The Informer, the merciless desert that swallows up The Lost Patrol, are places we visit with a guide, always reminding us what these environments "mean".



The streets of Tombstone in My Darling Clementine, the unfinished church on the edge of town, the maze of the O. K. Corral, are every bit as charged with meaning and significance, but Ford lets us tease them out for ourselves -- he lets us inhabit them at our ease, until the places seem to speak to us in their own voices.
View Article  POLITICAL POKER UPDATE


The flop on 5 February didn't favor either Democratic player -- Clinton was still ahead with her AK to Obama's AQ.  Obama spiked another queen in the Potomac primaries, however -- not because he won all three of them by big margins and not because it gave him the lead in pledged delegates . . . he paired his queens because for the first time he made big inroads into Clinton's base, older white women, Latinos and non-black lower-income voters.

If he can keep doing that in the primaries to come, his queens will hold up.



Clinton will pair her kings and take the lead if she wins big in Ohio, Texas and Pennsylvania, getting close enough to make a brokered convention acceptable to the party as a whole -- or at least not totally unacceptable.  Clinton would be likely to win a brokered convention.

However, if Obama leads significantly in vote totals, states won and pledged delegates after the primaries, I suspect that Clinton will take the card room manager aside and argue that AK high beats a pair.  If he rules in her favor, the card room will riot and the Democratic party will be finished for the foreseeable future -- which might not be a bad thing at all.

Obama represents the Democratic Party's last chance to reform itself from within and from the bottom up.  If he fails, a more radical solution will be required -- a new party altogether.
View Article  1950s ROMANCE


A Valentine's Day card from the 1950s.  Tasteful, witty, romantic . . .

[Thanks to Boing Boing for the link to an online collection of such cards.]
View Article  THE FIRST


I keep having to remind myself how exciting it is that this year America might elect its first female President, or its first African-American President.  It takes a certain amount of effort.  The truth is that such excitement doesn't have a lot of genuine substance.



I think back to JFK's election as America's first Catholic President.  It seemed like such a big deal at the time, but five minutes after JFK took the oath of office it was a non-issue.  Nobody cared anymore.  We forget how stupefyingly boring prejudice -- whether religious or sexual or racial -- really is . . . because it's not underpinned by anything real or relevant to the actual world we live in.  Its consequences can be horrific, but its core is empty, illusory, meaningless.  Like all ideas based on irrational concepts, it has no roots -- any strong wind can blow it away.



Five minutes after Hillary Clinton is sworn in as the first female President, if that happens, five minutes after Barack Obama is sworn in as the First African-American President, if that happens, the era in which such a development seemed extraordinary will instantly pass into ancient history.  Fifty years from today kids will have no imaginative grasp of that era, just as today they have no imaginative grasp of the era of legal apartheid in America.



For America, with its knuckle-headed orientation towards the future -- itself somewhat irrational -- the lunatic evils of the past have a tendency to enter the realm of science fiction.  In America, for example, women and blacks have always had the vote -- any time when they didn't have the vote unfolded in an alternate universe.  I grew up in such an alternate universe -- North Carolina in the 1950s.  I saw signs like the one above every day of my life.  Today they seem more like something I read about in a book than like memories of real things.

Perhaps it's an example of the narcosis of hope . . . and perhaps, in a strange way, that's part of the genius of America.  We started with these words -- "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal . . ." and it may be that on some level all the rest of our history has just been a process of finding our way home through a vale of treasonous delusions.
View Article  THE SIXTIES BEGIN


9 February 1964 -- I'm 13 years-old, an 8th-grader, in my first year at an all-boys New England boarding school.  No access to television -- required to be in study hall between dinner and lights out in our dorms.  The Beatles are appearing on the Ed Sullivan show for the first time.

What to do?

It's possible to sign out of study hall to work in the library.  Three friends and I do this.  Just before the Sullivan show goes on we sneak out of a bathroom window in the library, move from shadow to shadow across the campus to the math building, where there is a television which juniors are allowed to watch.  We enter the room with the television where about twelve juniors are gathered.  The moment of truth arrives.  If the older boys decide to bust us, we're in serious trouble with the school authorities, with so many demerits it will take us the rest of the term to work them off on campus maintenance details, with all privileges suspended.

For the first time it strikes me what a strange thing it is I'm doing.  I was a nerdy straight-arrow of a kid back then -- I don't think I'd ever knowingly broken a school rule in my entire life.  Somehow, though, the Beatles seem bigger than school rules.

The juniors smile and stare at us for a few moments, giving us time to sweat -- then wave us in.  We watch the Beatles on the show.



This is the same television, in the same room, where we were allowed to watch coverage of the JFK assassination not quite three months earlier.  Hard not to process the Beatles, purveyors of joy, as a kind of answer to Lee Harvey Oswald.



We sneak back across the campus, climb back in the library window . . . undetected.  The librarian, a plump, genial woman, looks at us wryly as we sign out -- I've always suspected that she noticed our absence over the course of the evening but decided not to bust us, either.

The decade of rock music and assassinations, desire and transgression had begun.  The Sixties were on.
View Article  A PUNCHINELLO FOR TODAY


Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo (1727-1804) was the son of the great painter and master of the fresco
Giovanni Battista Tiepolo.  Domenico painted and did frescos as well, but his most amazing work was series of drawings featuring the commedia dell'arte character Punchinello, done towards the end of his life.

The series comprised 104 pen and wash images which explored the character in unexpected ways.  Domenico showed him in childhood, in the kitchen cooking polenta, imprisoned, and finally dead and buried (see above.)  Indeed, Domenico treated Punchinello as an early version of Krusty the Clown, but with a depth of feeling that transformed him from a stock figure of the comic stage into an image of everyman, a clown of Shakespearean dimensions.

The drawings are free, almost casual, but incredibly beautiful.  The series was sold and dispersed in 1921 but in 1986 77 of them were collected and superbly reproduced in a book, which is out of print but still available, for a price, through online booksellers.  It's well worth tracking down.
View Article  FAITH ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL


I personally like to hear a little religion come up in the political discourse of this country.  Abraham Lincoln, like Martin Luther King after him, was very good at reminding us that our actions of the moment have to be seen in the light of transcendent values, and religion has powerful language in which to frame such ideas.

Here's Lincoln on the human cost of the Civil War (spoken at his Second Inaugural, above):

Fondly do we hope -- fervently do we pray -- that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn by the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, "The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether."

Word up, dude.



Barack Obama first got my attention in his speech at the 2004 Democratic Convention when he said, in the space of a few lines, "We've got some good gay friends in the red states . . . and we worship a righteous God in the blue states!"  It occurred to me that no other politician on the national scene could say both things with such fervor and conviction.  I'm sure that Hillary Clinton's faith and John McCain's faith are sincere, but neither could use the phrase "a righteous God" with such an unselfconscious sense of joy -- and neither would dare to speak with true affection for gays, afraid of alienating some constituency or other, regardless of their stated positions on gay rights.

I was really pissed off at the Mike Huckabee campaign ad in which a bookcase behind him was lit to present the image of a gleaming cross.  Huckabee later said it was inadvertent.  Right.  It was a Christmas message, in which Huckabee mentioned celebrating the birth of Christ -- why lie about the cross image?  Was he just too wimpy to put a crucifix behind him -- did he think it would be better to sneak it in?  Subliminal messages like this, especially when denied, are very creepy.  (Have a look at the ad yourself here and draw your own conclusions.)  I also am totally unmoved by mere statements of faith, or policies defended by scriptural doctrine.  I want the ideas behind those doctrines to take center stage in the discourse.



Michelle Obama, who is becoming a truly powerful speaker, said the other day in California that "our souls are broken"
in this country because we have lost some of our capacity for empathy with "the least of these".  She was using what is essentially a religious argument, and referencing scripture in the process -- these lines from Matthew:

Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.

That's one of the most radical statements in the history of human thought, and a keystone of Christian faith, but Mrs. Obama was using it in the context of an argument about ideas -- about the way a democracy ought to function.  She wasn't arguing about getting religion back into public life, with symbols and slogans, she was getting religion back into public life by speaking to (and from) its wisdom.

You don't have to be religious to appreciate the value of religious language for illuminating complex moral ideas -- Lincoln's own religious faith was a little murky even as he penned the words I've quoted above.  And even if you are religious, you can afford to be offended when politicians use the language of faith as a marketing tool.
View Article  CLASH BY NIGHT


There's a terrific short review of Fritz Lang's Clash By Night, maybe the greatest of all domestic noirs, recently posted on the web site films noir.  It has this sublime evocation of the film's themes -- "
Sexual abandon and existential entitlement are put on trial and found empty."

Double Indemnity and Sunset Boulevard are certainly the most entertaining domestic noirs, but Clash By Night offers far more complex insights into the ways post-WWII anxiety corroded relations between the sexes.

Check out the review here.
View Article  FLETCHER HANKS


Fletcher Hanks is sometimes called, with a kind of affectionate awe, the worst comic book artist of all time -- sort of the Ed Wood of the comic book.  Like Wood, he was bad in an earnest, reckless way that grips the imagination.

Fletcher's drawing style was crude, his stories simple and brutal.  They have a way of penetrating straight to the unconscious.



Not much is known about him, except that he was an abusive drunk who terrorized his family and then abandoned them in 1930, that he stopped drawing comic books in 1941 and that he froze to death on a park bench in New York City sometime in the 1970s.

But the work remains, saved by a few collectors of wildly obscure comics and now reprinted in a new book called I Shall Destroy All the Civilized Planets!  It is a cry from a twisted heart and in some weird, unfathomable way both brilliant and important.