Disappointed by the box-office performance of his latest film Sucker Punch, Warner Brothers executives have quietly moved to replace Zack Snyder as the director of the new remake of Superman, which will star Amy Adams as Lois Lane. Insiders at the the studio report that a deal is close to finalization which will bring Jean-Luc Godard aboard as director of the film. Superman would be the first major Hollywood assignment for the New Wave legend, who is reported to be thrilled by the prospect.
“I have worked outside the mainstream for too long,” Godard says. “Now I am ready to cash in. My whole career in cinema has been a prelude to this. I am very excited about meeting Amy Adams and using CGI to place her in thrilling situations on screen.”
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DRONES

The unmanned drones being used against targets in Pakistan today are controlled from Creech Air Force Base in Nevada (above), about fifty miles from Nellis Air Force Base — just north of Las Vegas, where I live. This is very surreal, but is it also immoral? Paul Zahl offers some thoughts on the subject:
IS ANYBODY OUT THERE?
a now almost canonized but then extremely unpopular speech in the House
of Lords, Bell challenged the Government on its bombing policy. In the play Soldiers Hochhuth imagines a personal meeting between Winston Churchill and Bishop Bell, in which they debate the morality of bombing from the air, especially when there is the possibility, even the probability, of civilian deaths.
Churchill believed that the bombing of civilian centers was essential to the Allies' winning the war. Bell believed it was a war crime.
Here are a few lines that the playwright puts in the mouth of Bishop Bell. They are mostly lifted from Bell's speeches and writings, or deduced from them:
Stage Direction:
“BELL, by his quiet strength, has released something akin to shame in CHURCHILL. This cannot be indicated logically, only portrayed illogically. The feeling does not last. The PRIME MINISTER is discomposed for a moment by the knowledge that someone is stronger than he is.”
Bell is a saint, in memory, of the Church of England. Then, he was a
pariah. Dresden was still bombed. The Atom Bomb was dropped, twice. [Below, the aftermath of Dresden:]
about combatants who cannot see, for a distance not of 30,000 feet,
but of 10,000 miles, the enemy, let alone the enemy's family, who are
burned in an instant to a cinder?
What would the hero of Hochhuth's Soldiers think about what we are doing today?
A MEAD SCHAEFFER FOR TODAY
“Forbidden Lover”, illustration from The Ladies Home Journal, 1932.
AN ARTHUR SARON SARNOFF FOR TODAY
A WALTER MARTIN BAUMHOFER FOR TODAY
Pawn Shop
AN ATGET FOR TODAY
A FREDERIC REMINGTON FOR TODAY
The Fight For the Water Hole — a narrative image that became a staple in Western movies. The painting dates from 1903, the year of the wildly popular short film The Great Train Robbery, a Western, which helped establish the story film as the dominant genre of cinema. This was the era when the mythic iconography of the Old West was becoming codified. Coincidentally or not, the coda of the Coen brothers' True Grit is set in 1903.
A NORMAN ROCKWELL FOR TODAY
And the Symbol Of Welcome Is Light — an early advertising illustration.
SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS
I'm working my way through the big DVD box set of Elia Kazan's films, and also through his autobiography. In both, I'm up to Splendor In the Grass. In his book, Kazan doesn't have a lot to say about the making of the film, beyond reporting the gossipy stuff, as he always does — he was cheating on his wife with the film's second lead Barbara Loden, Natalie Wood was cheating on her husband Robert Wagner with Warren Beatty. Yawn.
What he does say about William Inge's original screenplay, though, is fascinating. “His story had the one essential, an excellent flow of incident to a true conclusion.” He says that the film was easy to direct — “the scenes Bill wrote were the simplest I'd ever done. People came together, spoke to each other, a point was made, an issue decided, quietly and meaningfully. Then they parted and the story went on. That was Bill's talent.”
In a way, that was Kazan's talent, too — investing each scene with meaning, establishing a narrative momentum, keeping the thing moving, emotionally speaking. It's why Kazan's films are always entertaining, even when they aren't great. He developed a good eye for images, though he was rarely capable of creating passages of visual lyricism that lift the spirit. Even his great films rarely arrive at cathartic climaxes which knit the whole narrative together — one tends to remember moments between the characters rather than the whole sweep of the story.
Kazan seems to see Inge's talent as limited, that of a mere storyteller, yet he admits that the last reel of Splendor In the Grass, the climax, is his favorite of all his last reels. And he's right to feel that way. Splendor In the Grass, thanks to Inge's skill as a storyteller, and with some crucial help from Wordsworth, is the most profoundly satisfying of all Kazan's films, because of that ending.
Inge (above) did not have the reputation of Tennessee Williams, who could write dazzling, unforgettable endings that packed a punch, but often in a synthetic way, relying on a great exit line, for example, which seems to say more than it really does. The ending of Kazan's film of A Streetcar Named Desire doesn't break my heart — its poetic, tragic quality feels too neat. The ending of Splendor In the Grass does break my heart. It seems far truer, though certainly less grand and eloquent, than anything Williams ever wrote.
Williams was a better writer than Inge, but Inge was a better storyteller. We don't often think of making a distinction like this with the work of good dramatists, but it's one that sometimes can be made, and it's one well worth pondering.
[Click here for some extended thoughts on the film's plot and theme.]
A ROBERT G. HARRIS FOR TODAY
Summer Bachelor, magazine illustration from 1950.
SOHO
Remember the mornings I kissed you goodnight . . .
My friend J. B. White composed this song for a script I wrote in the early 1980s, about Soho, when that part of Manhattan was just coming into its own as a Bohemian enclave, and where I had so many magical adventures. Thirty years later, none of that Soho remains — it's a Yuppie shopping mall today — though the ghosts, the faces in the windows, are still there, I suppose, my own among them.
The places you
love that you can never return to are also places you can never
leave. They become part of your own small portion of eternity.
[Song © J. B. White]
MARY TAKES THE CHALLENGE
My friend Mary decided to “take the challenge” at a strawberry shortcake restaurant near her home in Florida. The deal is simple — eat twelve pounds of strawberry shortcake within five minutes and the dessert is free.
Mary managed the feat with only seconds to spare. “I don't even remember eating those last few pounds,” she said. “I was just on automatic pilot at that point.”
EARTHLY DELIGHTS
As a run-up to National Strawberry Shortcake Day next Tuesday, my friend Paul decided to go into training early.
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE
Next Tuesday, as everyone knows, is National Strawberry Shortcake Day. Stores all over the country are already running short of the berries and the fixings as folks scramble to stock up for the big celebration.
Restaurants which specialize in the magnificent treat, like the one in Florida whose sign is shown above, are gearing up for the biggest crowds of the year.
There's a reason that millions agree — National Strawberry Shortcake Day is the most delicious day of the year!