Monday, April 8, 2019

The Lynch Meditations -23

Inland Empire was the second-and, to date, last-David Lynch movie I saw in an actual theater, on a decent sized screen, albeit with digital projection, which wasn't exactly the greatest back in 2007. I think they just set up a consumer-grade digital projector-the kind that many aspiring filmmakers and film buffs buy to stage their screenings anywhere they please. (At the same venue, this was better than a screening of an actual film print of Argento's Suspiria, which was so fucked-up that much of the film looked like it had been invaded by obnoxious demon fireflies.) The movie was murky. You had to squint. You needed a full night's rest and an empty bladder to make it through its shadowy 179 minutes. This is pre-HD, we're talking, but maybe this murkiness was intended to add to the atmosphere of mystery. My circa 2007 DVD copy of the movie actually looks pretty good playing on a Blu-Ray player hooked up to a decent-sized modern LED TV. It's murky, but in all the right places. The lo-fi video look is actually quite slick. And some moments really jump out at you in contrast to the SD-nightmare shadows. So, I guess that's a plug for the DVD release. No, I'm not on the David Lynch payroll.

My theatrical experience was at the Plaza Theater in Atlanta, GA. They had a table set up with some fun feelies: Inland Empire bumper stickers, promotional cards for David Lynch's brand of all-organic coffee beans, and lobby cards with the title of the movie printed on them. The Plaza Theater is quite a nice space. At the time-I don't know what the Plaza looks like now-it had the look of an old-fashioned theater, with curtains and balconies-kinda like the movie theater you see late in the film itself when the Laura Dern character starts to become aware that she-or some part of her-is living inside a movie. 

Inland Empire was dense, impenetrable, and atmospheric. It had the heaviest mood of being absolutely lost in a confusing nightmare space of conflicting cinematic realities that have been fused and sutured together by sinister forces-using eldritch means-into a labyrinth of oppression. It seemed to be another extended meditation upon the corrupting, crazy-making experiences of trying to make movies in Hollywood in the vein of Mulholland Dr., but with an extra forty minutes on the running time, and fewer minutes overall devoted to clever dialogue exchanges and quirky moments of comic relief. Much time is spent stalking hallways and corridors and going up staircases and magically teleporting between the studios and sidewalks of Los Angeles, California and the snowy streets and well-appointed old-world interiors of  Lodz, Poland. 

Laura Dern seems to be playing a few different versions of herself: successful Hollywood actress Nikki Grace; the character she's playing in a movie called On High in Blue Tomorrows; and a kind of grim and gritty real life version of the character in the movie. Dern warps from one shard of fractured reality to another, guided only by the surreal nightmare logic of an allegedly cursed screenplay that seems to absorb and torment anyone who tries to produce it. Dern's Nikki Grace is also oppressed by a psycho jealous stalker of a husband who may or may not be possessed by a supernatural hypnotist known as the Phantom-who is sort of like a 1960s Marvel Comics villain-think the Miracle Man or the Ringmaster-imported into a Lynch movie. 

At some point during her wander of the nightmare labyrinth, Dern's Nikki morphs into a dystopian version of the melodramatic Southern Lady she plays in the movie, and she ascends a series of staircases inside a derelict building, only to find herself seated before an emotionally depressed, passive-aggressive man-hunched, bespectacled, and puffy-cheeked-in a shabby suit seated behind a desk who comes across as a cursed bureaucrat straight out of Kafka. This version of Nikki proceeds to give a deposition in which she expresses her rage at being poor and a lifelong victim of rape and sexual harassment by an endless succession of men in a miserable, polluted industrial town. This expression of rage is broken up into several sequences throughout the movie, and it seems to represent another part of the fractured reality that Nikki wanders through. The character is just this side of over-the-top. At first, the community theater American South accent draws attention to itself, and we seem to be back in the grotesque caricature of Wild at Heart; but as this nightmare deposition continues, the authentic emotions of rage and despair elevate the character and performance into an almost unbearably raw level of intensity. The Kafkaesque auditor, after listening to Dern for some time with almost no expression on his face-except a vague, oily contempt-asks her if she cheated on the husband who beat and raped her repeatedly, the implication being that she deserved the sadism inflicted upon her. This is a nightmare realm of misogynistic cruelty without compassion, mercy, or justice. 

Nikki is sometimes an active force in the narrative, as she stalks the mad maze, and at other times she becomes a bewildered observer of other people's personal hells. It reminded me of Martin Sheen's assassin-traveler in Apocalypse Now. Dern has an almost impossible task as an actor: endless variations of bewilderment, terror, confusion, and cataclysmic rage as she is confronted by a series of incomprehensibly weird dislocations and alienations from her identity, memory, and the space/time continuum itself. 

Oh, and it's a kinda/sorta musical. 

And there's a sitcom starring people in giant rabbit-head masks that a kidnapped girl imprisoned within a purgatorial hotel in Poland is forced to watch. This does not alleviate her suffering. 

Dern and her psycho-husband morph into alternate, working poor versions of themselves, which seems to embody some kind of rich white people's terror at the thought of losing their comfortable, privileged lives, and becoming consumed with the minutiae of daily budgeting for food and bills and toilet paper. 

There's a lot going on here. I'm not sure it all works. I'm not crazy about this Lynch trope of a brutal man being possessed by an evil spirit and, therefore, is not truly responsible for his actions. The Phantom is a variation on Killer Bob. Did we need all 179 of those minutes? Can this clusterfuck of space/time identity confusions and disruptions be so directly resolved by discharging a symbolic firearm into a comic book villain master manipulator? I mean . . . if it's all in a dream, right?

Maybe this is the inevitable outcome of playing with dream logic to the extent that David Lynch does in this movie. You do find yourself asking, What's the fucking point if it's all a dream or a hallucination or whatever? 

But aren't so many movies unlikely fantasies that pander to our desire for everything to be okay in the end? Comic book movies. Space operas. Rom-coms. Hyper-simplified biodramas. Pandering Oscar bait flicks. A lot of these kinds of movies strike me as more absurd and fucked-up than Lynch's idiosyncratic nightmares. At least, with a Lynch movie, there's a name on the front you can blame or praise. There's an author. I guess that goes far with me.

I haven't watched Inland Empire in awhile. 

Will I be able to make the epic sit? 

Diving in . . . 

Thursday, April 4, 2019

The Lynch Meditations 22: Mulholland Dr. (2001)

"You ever done this before?"

"I don't know."

We see swing dancers overlapping each other against a purple background.
A blonde beauty queen gets a crown.
Flashing lights.
Remember those corny swing-dancing GAP ads?
I'm thinking about 'em, now, for some reason.

Then we're in a first person camera POV,
diving into a pillow.
Is all that transpires after this but a dream?

Now we're following a limo through the curves of Mulholland Dr. a famous road associated with Los Angeles, with Hollywood, with the movies. It was the setting for a hilarious road rage episode in Lost Highway. Deepest night, and a beautiful raven-haired woman is riding in the limo, apparently against her will, as one of the goons in front points a silenced handgun at her. The woman is rescued when drunken teen joyriders collide with the limo, killing the goons, and tossing the woman clear, albeit with a serious head injury. She staggers off into the night.

The woman with the head injury eventually lays down to rest . . . are we entering a dream within a dream? Or is it all just one big dream? Who is dreaming who into existence?

Because the blonde beauty queen arrives in Los Angeles as an aspiring actress from Ontario. And soon enough she and the beautiful raven-haired woman meet, and the whole scenario feels like . . . a film scenario. Happenstance. A woman in trouble. A plucky young civilian investigator. The Canadian beauty queen makes like a wannabee Nancy Drew and offers to assist the amnesiac limo lady with her dilemma.

Oh, yeah: and there's a hitman who just barely manages to shoot his way out of a hairy situation, piling up two too many corpses. Three, if you count that poor damn vacuum cleaner.

Meanwhile, a filthy homeless man-who may be the secret evil god of this reality-hangs out behind a diner's dumpster, scaring to death anyone who looks directly upon his face.  Also: a sinister cowboy seems to dictate the fate of a young filmmaker. And then there's Mr. Rocque, the studio head who seems to want to exercise total control over the young filmmaker's dream project just because he can. Why have power if you cannot inflict it upon people, right?

Lotta sinister secret masters in this world-do I need to include the creepy-as-fuck elderly couple?
The mobster who is very particular about his espresso?
And Dan Hedaya-that guy always seems to have the weight of the world on his shoulders. Just like a secret master would . . . shit, he might even be playing the same character he played in Clueless. One moment he's fretting about his teenage daughter's provocative fashion sense, the next he has to go give the business to some upstart young director punk. When it rains.

Has anyone ever written fanfic about the Mulholland Dr./Clueless Extended Universe? Somebody oughtta get on that shit.

Initially, we are presented with idealistic, youthful people trying to make it in Hollywood: an aspiring actress/civilian detective and filmmaker making his first big studio film. The Canadian actress wants to become a star AND solve the mystery of her new friend's amnesia while sinister forces swirl all around her. The filmmaker is trying to resist the oppressive hand of the studio while also dealing with his unfaithful wife and worsening financial situation.

But then the narrative shifts: and an idealistic actress/detective becomes a vengeful jilted lover and the rebel filmmaker is revealed to be a self-serving cog in the studio machine; and the beautiful amnesiac woman is revealed to know exactly who she is and what she wants out of life no matter who gets hurt along the way. The idealistic protagonists struggling against fate are all unmasked as opportunists trying to hustle and con their way through life just like every other person in Los Angeles.

A weird nightclub host tells us, "IT IS ALL RECORDED," and, "IT'S ALL ON TAPE," and a song goes on even after a singer collapses . . .

A blue key opens a void that displaces one reality with another . . .

A woman sees a corpse that turns out to be her own-but only after a shift in space/time . . .

Are we seeing the fantasy Hollywood unmasked as a nightmare of free will cancelled by sinister Lovecraftian deities lurking in deepest mindshadows?

Or is it more of a loop or maybe a simultaneity?

When I first saw this movie, I perceived it as a slow revelation, an unmasking of a horrid reality, but, after absorbing Inland Empire and the third season of Twin Peaks, I can't help but see it not so much as a fantasy followed by the revelation of the dark reality powering it but more of an evocation of the instability of reality itself-of identtiy-of dream-of nightmare.

It's a whole lotta weird shit.

I have no explanations, no solutions, but I'm reminded of something the science fiction writer Samuel R. Delany said about how a writer should not attempt to employ popular tricks and commercial writing techniques to improve their fiction, but rather should be aware of the opposed tensions within the text. The writer can only control those tensions and how they are deployed. Everything else is out of the writer's control. I'm not sure I completely understand what Delany was getting at-he also brought up Wittgenstein, I think-but it resonates in my mind with what Lynch is doing in Mulholland Dr.: opposed visions of reality, of characters presented within the same film. What does this bizarre set of oppositions do to us, as filmgoers?

It confuses the shit out of us, but that confusion goads us to think about what we've seen, heard, felt, thought, experienced. We are no longer being passively entertained. We are engaged.

Or maybe we're yelling at the screen in frustration.

Maybe we're desperately wondering what the fuck is going on, what did I just watch?!

Maybe we're all just a dream in the mind of Alicia Silverstone's character in Clueless.

"As if."

"Silencio." 

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

The Lynch Meditations -22


Mulholland Dr. is the first David Lynch movie I saw in a theater and on a big screen.
After years of watching Blue Velvet on shitty pan-and-scan VHS,
I could see a Lynch film exactly the way it was intended. It did not disappoint.


Mulholland Dr. was that rare movie that ended up being everything I could’ve hoped for and then some.
Initially, I was concerned that it might be a bit of an overheated mess, like Lost Highway,
which was the most recent Lynch film I had seen at the time.
(I’m not sure I even knew about The Straight Story back then.)
But Mulholland Dr. delivered a nightmarish and hilarious mystery rooted in character and atmosphere
and driven by clever dialogue suffused throughout with a sense of the cruel and the absurd.


Some movies, when I’ve watched them, have confused the shit out of me.
I am full of questions and perplexities and conundrums.
I am left profoundly unsettled, uncertain of the ground upon which I stand.
I no longer know who I am, or I’m not as certain about myself as I was before.


What does this mean?
Why is all this weird shit happening?
Who is that guy? Where did this gal come from?
Why are the dead rising from the grave?
Who actually thinks nuclear war is a good idea?
What the fuck is going on?
Why was Kane so hung up on that snowsled?
Did the monolith make the primates smarter?
Why does the primate ancestor throw the bone up into the air?
Did the bone become an orbital missile platform just like that?
How did that happen?
Is the magic in the choice of edit?
Is the magic of the edit the power to fuck with space and time and space/time?
Why is there a giant fetus-in-a-bubble in orbit around the Earth?
Why did the astronaut-man get old and die?
Was the elderly astronaut-man reborn as the giant space fetus?
Why did the smart computer being murder the one astronaut?
What was HAL-9000’s major malfunction?
Did Tetsuo evolve into a universe at the end?
Why did the kid go and do that?
Where did he get all that extra mass?
Why do Kanaeda and Tetsuo shout each other’s names over and over?
Where does Optimus Prime’s trailer go when he transforms?
Why do all the crew members of Space Battleship Yamato have arrows on their uniforms
pointing down towards their crotches?
Is Space Battleship Yamato the one true Love Boat?
Did Batman actually die in a nuclear fucking explosion?
Did Alfred actually see Bruce and Selina at that cafe, or was that just his fantasy?
Did The Dark Knight Rises rip off Gundam 8th MS Team’s indecisive double ending?
Why would they do that?
Is it so hard to say goodbye to Shiro and Aina or the Batman?
Or to let a powerful ending work-just leave it the hell alone, people!

Sometimes it’s okay for your protagonist to die.
Especially if it counts for something big, y’know?
Why does Hollywood spend millions of dollars to make a new Halloween movie,
when they could spend a fraction of that cost just to re-release the original John Carpenter film?
That’s the one to see.
None of the sequels or remakes have lived up to the original.
Not even close.
If Hollywood is going to do exploitative remakes, they should try something kind of arty.
Like a remake of a respectable arthouse picture as done by YouTubers.
Think about it: if the Angry Video Game Nerd, the Nostalgia Critic, and Red Letter Media
spent the same amount of time trying to make actual movies that they’ve spent mocking pop culture,
they would be among the most prolific filmmakers in the business.
I want to see a remake of Blue is the Warmest Color
directed by Mike Stoklasa
and starring Jay Bauman and Rich Evans
in the roles originally played by Adele Exarchopoulos and Lea Seydoux, respectively.
Why can’t Hollywood do something like that?
What’s the holdup?
Mysteries . . .
Will I be forgiven for wishing they would've made the Mulholland Dr. tv series?
Was it Killer Bob or Leland Palmer who ended those young women’s lives?
Did Killer Bob take over all the spiritual command and control functions,

or did Leland let Killer Bob in?
Was it collaboration?
Or total takeover?
Or did collaboration lead to total takeover?
Why did Agent Cooper get fragmented into so many different Coops?
Is the Black Lodge a factory for cranking out doppelgangers or tulpas or whatever you want to call them?
I watch,
and I think,
and I always ask,
“Is this a metaphor or is it just a motherfucker?”


Mulholland Dr., when I first saw it, struck me as a surrealistic mystery which must be definitively solved.
Over the years,
I’ve come to think of it as an experience of unstable identities,
shifting realities,
very much like Lost Highway,
but with more relatable characters, and something closer to a coherent narrative
despite the all-encompassing Lynchian weirdness.

I feel as though I’ve come to understand Mulholland Dr.
in a way that I cannot grasp Lost Highway or Inland Empire-
two of Lynch’s more forbidding cinematic works.


And yet, one mystery still abides regarding Mulholland Dr.:
How in hell did Justin Theroux get top billing over Naomi Watts?
Must have a killer agent.


What will I think now?


Diving in . . .

Monday, April 1, 2019

The Lynch Meditations 21: Eraserhead Stories (2001)


Here be some yarns, all right.

The one that is most obvious to talk about is how Lynch got hold of a dead cat, and all the stuff he did to the feline corpse . . . was this deceased animal used to make the monster baby whatsit? Lynch doesn’t say that, exactly, but he says some other things about it. Yeah . . .

This is an entertaining watch, but it is also the “official story,” produced by and centered upon David Lynch, so keep that in mind while watching. I found it generally convincing, but it is on-brand with Lynch’s policy of not explaining the why of things, what the movie means, things of that nature. There is a lot of how here, though, and that’s as it should be. There’s quite a remarkable story behind Eraserhead, one of absolute devotion to the pursuit of an uncompromised artistic vision despite every kind of hardship. Lynch and his collaborators lived and breathed this movie for about six years or so. Kind of unbelievable. But it’s all true.

And, yes, this does seem to be the start of a kind of brand identity for Lynch as an independent filmmaker, which he would carry on with Inland Empire a few years later. Eraserhead Stories seems to be the start of Lynch taking a hand in how he is documented as an artist at work, and more of his process as a filmmaker would be documented as it happened in behind the scenes special features for Inland Empire and Twin Peaks Season 3. Lynch seems to have an interest in controlling how he is perceived as an artist, which is interesting considering how cagey he can be in interviews. I get the impression that he wants to shift the emphasis solidly from why questions to how questions in this regard.

Lynch speaks into a microphone. There are curtains in the background. It’s in black and white. Great stories. Goes deeper than the usual behind-the-scenes puff pieces. You get an actual sense of what went into the making of Eraserhead.

Not much more to say about it on my end. Watch it after you’ve watched Eraserhead, is the only thing I can think to tell you.

Onwards . . .

The Lynch Meditations -21


David Lynch produced a documentary about the years he spent in the 1970s making Eraserhead back in 2001. I’ve never seen it, ‘til now. My understanding is that it is sort of the precursor to the special features on the Inland Empire DVD, but who knows?

Going in . . .

Sunday, March 31, 2019

The Lynch Meditations 20: The Straight Story (1999)


We begin with stars, with cosmos.

We don’t see our hero, elderly World War II veteran Alvin Straight (Richard Farnsworth in the role of a lifetime), right away, but we see the exterior of his house. We hear a noise as he falls to the floor of his kitchen inside his house, but only because we are an audience for a movie, and the movie’s sound design is made for us to pick up on such cues. But the next door neighbor is oblivious.

Down at the neighborhood bar, people are waiting up for Alvin. Alvin is rarely if ever late, despite only being able to walk with the use of two canes, and so one of the gang decides to check in on Alvin, and it is revealed he has suffered a serious fall.

Life is quite precarious. It is possible, in this world, especially for those who are vulnerable, to fall through the cracks, to suffer in silence, unnoticed, and, in the event of death, maybe even die unmourned.

Alvin gets word that his estranged brother, Lyle, has suffered a stroke, and may not be around much longer. Alvin and Lyle have hated each other for years, the cause of this animosity long forgotten, and now Alvin feels the need to make amends, to patch things up before it’s too late, before everyone is dead and gone. Alvin is poor, he cannot legally drive, and he doesn’t even own an automobile to break the law if he was inclined to do so, and so he decides to drive from his home in Iowa to his brother’s home in Wisconsin-a journey of 260 miles-on his riding lawnmower.

Alvin is a stubborn man. He sees his doctor after his fall, and has little interest in taking advice, or getting anymore treatments or procedures. Alvin senses the presence of the reaper, and he no longer sees the point of submitting to the will of his healthcare provider. Alvin’s been to war, raised a family, lost a family to his own alcoholism, and now is only connected to his grown middle-aged daughter Rose (flawlessly played by Sissy Spacek) who was declared mentally incompetent in a court of law and lost custody of her kids after a tragic house fire for which she was held responsible. Both father and daughter tried to raise families, and ultimately lost them.

During an evening thunderstorm, Alvin sits in his living room, while the the shadows of rain pouring down the front window crawl across his anguished face, like amplified tears of the very soul, in a possible homage to the 1967 movie version of Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood,  in which a similar scene plays out involving a psychopathic murderer contemplating his impending execution. Alvin isn’t exactly a serial killer, but he does carry significant guilt from his World War II service, a guilt which he has held onto for decades without any kind of relief. We don’t know this until much later in the film, but I mention it here, because, well, the scene takes on a new significance once you know that . . . and if you’ve never seen this movie before . . . spolier?

Sorry, but I shouldn’t say too much more. I’m not sure how popular The Straight Story is among Lynch’s films, but it’s a journey you will be grateful for taking. The journey takes many sharp turns, and if your primary understanding of Lynch’s work comes from movies like Blue Velvet, Eraserhead, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, and Mulholland Dr. you are in for a shocker of a different kind. Yes, this is a G-rated film, so, yes, you could watch it with just about anyone, including children if you got some of those. But . . . dammnit, you really need to see this one. Although it is not my favorite Lynch work, it might be the one I would absolutely recommend above all others. It is firmly set in the real world-excepting maybe one scene of mechanical comedy-with not a trace of Lynch’s surreal supernatural weirdness. As much as I love wild fantasy, a movie set firmly in unforgiving, unadorned reality has increased value in this era of nonstop comic book spectacle, rampant online misinformation, and endless lies emanting from authoritarian governments around the world. The Straight Story does not exist to distract you, to anesthetize you,  or to whip you into a frenzy against a scapegoat. It exists to get you to pay close attention to a vulnerable human being making a profound series of existential choices as he nears the end of his life.

The DVD has no chapter skips. You can skip back to the very beginning. But you can’t skip ahead. (This was also done for the Mulholland Dr. DVD release-but we’ll get to that one later.) You’ve got to take this ride from the beginning, with no interruptions, no distractions-I mean, you can pause the DVD, if you want, if you need a piss break or something like that, but the film is intended to be watched in its entirety, and all in one sitting. If you can, do It.

One last spoiler: the film ends in stars, cosmos.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

The Lynch Meditations -20


Disney Presents
A David Lynch Film
The Straight Story
. . .
. . .
. . .
A David Lynch movie produced by Disney?
Does this mean that the characters in this film are owned by Disney?
Will these characters and their world appear in the next Kingdom Hearts?
Probably not 3, but surely there will be a Kingdom Hearts 4, right?
Got to be.
Got to be.
There needs to be a final boss fight between Richard Farnsworth on his riding lawn mower and Sephiroth.
Mr. Farnsworth’s Limit Break attack could be throwing his riding lawn mower at his enemy,
getting a bead on it with his shotgun,
blasting it with his shotgun,
causing the riding lawn mower to explode in spectacular fashion,
and inflicting 9999 damage upon the targeted foe.
Once you've leveled up, you upgrade to a tractor and a portable rail gun.


Although,
as I understand it,
Kingdom Hearts 3 de-emphasizes the Final Fantasy characters and world-building.
So Sephiroth probably won’t be there for a battle royale.
But he could be.
Disney could make this happen.
If they wanted to . . . and why wouldn’t they want this?
Twin Peaks is back in a big way . . . made a big cult splash . . .


. . .


. . .


. . . you ought to know where I’m going with this.


Disney buys Twin Peaks.
Lock. Stock. And the  goddamn barrel.
Kingdom Hearts 4 gets to have Sephiroth merged with Killer Bob.
Farnsworth gets his shotgun exploded riding lawn mower Limit Break gimmick.
Everything becomes as purest gold.


I don’t remember when I first watched The Straight Story, but it was on DVD, and I don’t think it had any chapter breaks, which was a creative choice by Lynch, who doesn’t want you to skip around while watching his movie. Lynch tried to enforce this regime on the Inland Empire DVD, but that movie is a super-tough sit, so it ended up with chapters you could skip to and from about like a standard DVD release.


The Straight Story is a magnificent movie. Just about perfect. Even though it is Rated G, it has that grittiness and even the grotesquerie one associates with Lynch’s work but in a more subdued fashion . . . but it is there. People smoke in this movie. They drink beer. They’re old, and pretty obviously heading towards their mortality around the seventy-to-seventy-five year mark. Death is a palpable presence in this film, is what I’m trying to say. This is a Disney-produced film in which every character is painfully mortal, finite, and struggling against the limits of their bodies, their finances, their modes of transportation-no superheroes, no cartoon characters, no Jedi, no faster than light travel-just damaged people trying to survive, who can’t pay their bills and medical expenses; who drive broken down vehicles or can’t afford to drive; and yet they struggle to do the right things for themselves and others before death claims them.


That’s how I remember it.
Will it hold up on a second viewing?
I’m thinking that it probably will.
We’ll see.

Going in . . .

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Every Day Is Halloween 7: Lost Bronson

From the Obliteration Frontier forums . . . posted under user name LostBronSon . . .

Against my better judgment,
I decided to marathon all of the Charles Bronson Death Wish movies,
all five of 'em,
over the course of one day.

I felt so filthy and corrupted by this experience
that I had to do it again,
day after day,
week after week,
for a year,
and,
of course,
I lost everything.

Job.
Friends . . . I only had three.
But they were cool dudes.
Not as cool as Charles Bronson.
But they were a'ight.

Girlfriend . . . which hurt a bit. But I would argue that ours was a mostly notional relationship anyways. Iris and I mostly connected through the realms of a MMORPG called Obliteration Frontier,
and to look at us in real life,
out-of-shape, bad haircuts, conversations which mostly focus on the minutiae of Obliteration Frontier lore,-

-Hey.
I get it.
The jokes write themselves.

But you must consider: some of us in this world don't feel wholly comfortable in our own bodies.
Yes, we should exercise daily.
Yes, we should eat better.
No, we do neither of those things, nor do we care to, nor are we over concerned about our own early mortality.
I could tell you in great detail about how there's no free will, and we are all in thrall to hardwired "central tendencies" and "forces of history,"
but you would find me tedious. And unconvincing.
Just as I find myself
tedious
and unconvincing.
Yet,
that magical Free Will
never manifests.
And I am locked into a spiral of increasing habit, self-loathing, and cosmically recursive guilt that drives me faster and harder in a circle 'round the drain.

I could go on and on.
But I have concluded I am just a survival meat-bot, executing program over and over,
ingesting food,
ingesting liquids,
showing up to job to earn money
to purchase food, liquids, escapism, clothes.

Until I began asking myself, "What if I just unplugged?"
But this was too scary.
I fantasized escape every day, night, in dreams, awake,
but I'm no survivalist.
I could never go off the grid.
I am the Grid . . . but that's a tale for another time.

Occasionally,
I'll watch a movie. Usually something weird and violent.
Iris hates movies,
she sees them as an outmoded medium,
and I largely agree.
But movies from long ago,
with physical special effects,
and actual stunt performers
give me a charge that high-end CG animated avatars cannot contain.
Wuxia. HK heroic bloodshed. Arnold. John Carpenter's The Thing. That grisly 1980's remake of The Blob.
Bronson.
I'd always meant to watch the Charles Bronson movies.
Especially the legendarily trashy and exploitative Death Wish franchise.
And so I set aside a single day to do it.
That was my habit.
Take a day out of the week to watch a bunch of old, sleazy movies.
Iris leaves me alone to do this. I just let her know a couple days ahead of time,
"Think I'm going to take a movie day."
I already had a hard drive full of Charles Bronson movies I'd been collecting through file sharing and torrents over the years.
Just had to go in, cue up the five Death Wish flicks,
ready to rock-and-sit.

Have you seen the Bronson vigilante movies?
I'm tempted to say if you've seen one you've seen them all . . . but this isn't strictly true.
But they are similar enough, that if you watched one you sort of get the gist.
You'll know if you want to watch more once you've seen one.
Many watch one
and feel totally repulsed by the copious amounts of sexual violence, rape, shootings, stabbings, and not so subtle overtones of racism and misogyny,
and if you are repulsed,
then good: you are free to turn away, and embrace life.
But if you are drawn to it,
as I am,
then you realize you are in search of something in the vortex of madness.
I found that something.

I should tell you at this point,
that I have innovated a superior method of watching movies and television and other passive forms of media (music videos, online video essays, etc.).
I see no point in consuming media according to official dictates.
I'll download, re-edit, re-score, re-arrange, and even re-voice the scenes as I see fit.
Sometimes my tinkering comes about as a result of dissatisfaction:
a movie is too long; actors' performances are poor; a film needs new scenes to be properly finished, and so I'll insert appropriate scenes from other media, or I'll compose crude animatics to fill the lack.
This is an engaged, serious-minded approach to media consumption.
Not riffs. Not parodies. Not swilling beers, and cracking jokes with the gang.
These are modifications made to satisfy certain, serious aesthetic desires,
and these recut versions do not circulate outside of my own secure, offline system.
My own private cinema.

But I do watch the movies in their original forms at least once, the first time through.
But even during the first watch,
I'm looking for that new vision, that new cut,
but it doesn't just come from my own imagination
or caprice;
rather,
the feeling is that there are other possible films lurking within a given film,
or series of films,
or maybe it's more like each shot
is a unit of communication within the totality of global cinema.
Each film is an imperfect,
often times confused
expression of this global cinema emanating from individual, seemingly isolated production,
and it is this global cinema
that I'm seeking to articulate.

But even I am an imperfect vehicle for this expression.
I tend towards my own tastes, fantasies, preferences.
I scorn CG animated movies, even if I largely relate to Iris and others through an online video game,
I strictly prefer my cinema to be as physical and celluloid as possible.
So,
I do not hold out hope of becoming the perfect vehicle, a kind of prophet.
Maybe I'll transcend my own limitations if I keep at it diligently.

From my first marathon watch of the Death Wish franchise,
I saw the untapped potentialities.
But they were all strictly in the realm of satire, making jokes, swilling beer with the gang.
No, on a private level, I'm not above such foolishness.
But I refuse to allow my public persona to be that of the comedian.
And so, the following weekend,
I took another movie day to watch the five Death Wish movies again.
I noticed the use of squibs-small triggered explosions of fake blood to simulate bullet hits-in the first movie and compared them to how they were used in the subsequent four movies.
The squib work is low key, and somewhat grisly at times,
yet I sensed that there could've been a higher outrageousness to the bloodshed,
particularly in the third installment which lapses into meta-cinematic self-parody
as an enraged citizenry follow the example of their vigilante Christ
and take to the streets to gleefully fire off their guns and kill, kill, kill.
I began to see this mode of madness
as the secret heart of the Bronson Death Wish cycle.

In Death Wish 3, the filmmakers decided to flaunt the fascist power fantasy of vigilantism, and confront the audience with its own twisted desires to see an emotionless, near-silent Charles Bronson kill scores of people in the name of law and order no matter the ethics, the collateral damage, or even logic of such actions. "Here it is, gorehounds, eat your fucking fill!"

And so I set to work pulling apart the scenes,
re-suturing them in a highly disjunctive style,
mixing and matching past/present/future,
having middle-aged Bronson/old Bronson/elderly Bronson shoot at himself,
I even manipulated the audio to make it seem like the squibs were the firing guns,
and the discharging guns the wounds.

I looked deep into Bronson's sad, wrinkle entombed eyes,
and I knew I had to free him,
and all the other actors,
from the fascist idiocy,
from my own idiocy,
and so I created . . . a kind of sixth Death Wish film . . . in which the actors do not fire off their guns . . . they wander a vast empty city . . . a cheap backlot set . . . and when they encounter one another . . . they do not draw their pistols . . . their bodies writhe and burst and spray each other with bright red, viscous syrups and chunks of raw hamburger meat . . . and they do a little dance like they're playing a typically exaggerated shooting death scene in a violent action flick . . . everybody's just squibbing all over each other . . . this was the secret film I unlocked within the official franchise . . . the Lost Bronson Classic . . . this new movie accesses random selections of scenes based on complex algorithms within the code . . . yes, I had to draw new scenes completely from scratch . . . most of it, as of this post, has yet to be properly finished . . . it's all in my all-too-sad head . . . because this movie doesn't need to exist outside of my mind . . . it's too good for this world. People would see it, and would have no choice but to start squibbing all over themselves and each other uncontrollably, until the world drowned in fake blood and chunks of raw hamburger meat.

The secret of the Lost Bronson Classic will die with the final deactivation of my idiotic brain functions.

. . .
. . .
. . .
. . .
. . .

. . .

But I got weak.
I just had to share the secret of the Lost Bronson Classic.

I'm living with my cousin, Mike, typing these words over WiFi I cannot afford. I sacrificed my old life to realize this vision. I'm not sure it was worth it. I'm not sure I can forgive myself for ditching Iris like I did . . . but that is a story for another time-one that will never come around, a story I'll never be able to tell . . . or, you know, I want it to be like that. I want the dramatic end of self-destruction.

But I lack the free will to execute such drama.
I'm a survival meat-bot, faithfully operating according to program,
day-in, day-out.
Neither wholly convincing nor wholly fanciful,
not quite a full-on filmmaker, not quite a sarcastic piss-taker,
I work in retail,
and am grateful that my cousin Mike took me in despite my madness, my malfunction,
my momentary eruption of free will.

-December 2018

Copyright 2018 by William D. Tucker. All rights reserved.