Monday, November 09, 2015

Operational Cinema: Inglourious Basterds and You



Inglourious Basterds (sic)[1] is a World War II movie written and directed by Quentin Tarantino[2].  The film raises questions of historical accuracy, the validity of revenge, the costs of racism, and the acceptable usage of violence as told in five chapters. The film is long on plot and suffused with themes, so for the purpose of this review only the first chapter, “Once upon a time in … Nazi-occupied France,” will be summarized.
The film opens in the idyllic French cow country during the Nazi occupation of the country. A farmer (Perrier LaPadite) chops wood as a delegation of German military drive up the lane. The delegation is led by Colonel Hans Landa, who has been placed in command of the search for Jews in country. In fact Landa is so good at it he’s been dubbed “The Jew Hunter” by the people of France. Landa says he wants to visit LaPadite’s farm as a simple formality in order to officially close the file on the LaPidite family. What Landa and LaPidite both know, and what the audience gradually learns as LaPidite slowly realizes what already Landa knows, is that there is a Jewish family that has been hiding underneath the kitchen floorboards for the past year[3]. The last Germans who searched the farm didn’t suspect a thing, because they would never hide there themselves. The colonel interrogates the farmer and humbly brags about how he is proud of the nickname the French people have given him, “precisely because I’ve earned it.”[4]  Landa offers terms to LaPidite, who accepting, points out where the Dreyfusses are hiding. The Germans soldiers machine gun the floor, massacring the whole family, except for one teenage girl, who escapes the slaughter and runs out into a field, with Landa trailing her with his pistol, waiting for a sure shot, and right when it appears he has it, he shouts, “Au Revoir, Shosanna!” and drops his pistol to his side as she runs over a hill out of sight. Does he let her go because he can’t make the shot, or to let the infamy of the Jew Hunter circulate even wider? After all, anyone Shosanna would tell the truth of her tale to would obviously be sympathetic to the Jews, and hence would be even more afraid to continue giving aid to them if the Jew Hunter was on the case, just like LaPidite was when he found out who had come to call on him.
Tarantino sets up all of the themes of the film in this first nearly 20 minute scene. All the characters are playing a part throughout, save for the terrified Shosanna as she runs from the massacre of her family.  A theme that is central to nearly every moment, every image, every line of dialog, is that of performance -- of existence as a form of acting, and human identity as both projection and perception.”[5]
The second chapter, called “Inglourious Basterds” deals with a group of Jewish commandos, led by a descendant of Jim Bridger named Aldo Raine, who are dropped behind enemy lines undercover to terrorize the German forces.They are a propaganda unit to counter Goebbels' -- a movie at loose in the world. Forget Dresden, the Basterds are carpet-bombing the Germans with the most powerful weapon of all: fear.[6]” The Basterds, as the Germans call them are guerrilla fighters who kill German squads, but let one survivor go after marking him with a swastika carved into his forehead. The principle reason they give for doing this is that “We like our Nazis in uniform. That way, you can spot ‘em just like that. But you take off that uniform, ain’t nobody gonna know you was a Nazi. And that don’t sit well with us.”[7] This may seem like a simple case of a gruesome revenge fantasy, but many Nazis attempted to flee Germany after the war to avoid being prosecuted for their crimes, and many succeeded with the help of relief organizations as well as churches in escaping from justice and setting themselves up with nice new lives in places like Argentina..[8]
Tarantino never states whether the commandos are religious Jews, or just culturally and ethnically Jewish, but either way the fact that they mark their victims has religious and cultural significance to the Jewish faith. In Leviticus 19: 28 it states, “Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh… nor print any marks upon you.” The fact that Jews were tattooed in concentration camps was disrespectful to their religion, to say nothing of their human rights. The act of the Basterds in marking Nazis is evidence of the belief of the soldiers that, in the words of Lt. Raine, “Nazi[s] ain’t got no humanity.”[9] The Basterds’ belief in this idea is shown by the fact that they mark their enemies in a way that is considered an abomination when it is perpetrated against their own people. The question is raised by the scenes of the Basterds killing Nazis simply because they wear a certain uniform, if killing people because of their political persuasions is moral, or not. And that’s a good question. But that’s exactly what wars are all about.
The issue in this film is that we are actually shown the faces of the Nazis.  We see how good they are at their jobs, we hear of their bravery in battle, we see the pride  and love they have for their children, and are even shown one Nazi’s tears of joy when commended by the Fuhrer. Shorn of context, these characterizations make us admire and sympathize with these characters. Interestingly, we are never shown anything of the concentration camps, and they are never even brought up! But we know they were there. We know what happened there. We know that they killed millions of undesirables purely for the sake of furthering their power.
Subtextual criticism is brought up in the film itself by film critic-turned-secret agent Archie Hicox, so it is safe to say this is a movie that openly invites audiences to bring subtext into the theatre with them. Does bravery in battle matter when one’s moral bravery has been abandoned? Does it matter that young Sgt. Wilhelm is a proud and loving new father, eager to share his favorite movies with his new baby boy? Does he deserve to live in a time of war when he has signed up with the Nazis? If one makes quality films but does it for the glory of racist fascists, should one take pride in the work?  So the question remains, is what the Basterds do up close and personal worse then what regular soldiers do in battle from the safe distance of a foxhole?
In the next chapter we see the decadence of the lifestyle of the Nazi high command when the escaped Shosanna has lunch with a German war hero (Fredrick Zoller), Joseph Goebbels, his mistress, and some SS officers who interview her in order to determine if the cinema she owns would be a proper place to host Goebbels latest masterpiece starring Zoller. The pampered poodles of Goebbels’ mistress sit at the table with the Nazi entourage. Tarantino lingers on lavish close-ups of delicious looking strudel and crème. Why? To show that these people have the will to power to have the best of everything, but instead of obtaining it and sharing the surplus with the people of the world, they waste it all in conquering, subjugating, and destroying their fellow man. Landa even describes the strudel as, “Not so terrible.”![10]
The last two chapters deal with a plot hatched by the American OSS and the British SOE, to assassinate the German high command (Hitler, Goebbels, Hermann Goring, and Martin Bormann) at Shosanna’s cinema during a gala premiere using the Basterds as the operatives. Shosanna has also decided to blow up her theatre to create her own oven to roast the Nazis. The two overlapping plots to kill Hitler[11] dovetail and intertwine in the last chapter as plot complications force the Basterds to improvise, to disastrous results, which leads Landa to detect their plot. Landa is a self serving piece of human trash, with no real loyalty to the Nazi party he has sworn to serve, so he makes a deal to let the bombs blow as long as history is rewritten to state he was a double agent for the allies the entire time. The deal is struck, so the Basterds’ bombs go off, as well as Shosanna’s undiscovered plot to set the theatre ablaze, but not before Shosanna is murdered by the previously thought of as nice Nazi Zoller., and the Basterds left at the cinema by Landa wreck vengeance on Hitler by machine-gunning him to death.
With the death of Hitler in the film, we see we’ve not been in our reality, but watching an alternate history. We should have know this the whole time. Movies are not reality. Tarantino never lets us forget we’re watching a movie, a hallmark of French New Wave cinema[12]as he uses chapter headings,  repurposed film score from classic films, voice-overs, constant references to characters watching movies, split screen, and ‘80’s rock songs as score. Tarantino’s intention is unclear here, but that is a hallmark of art films, where the director gives just so much, and leaves the rest up to the audience. The trailers for Inglourious Basterds promised a thrilling revenge commando movie, but what Tarantino made is a European art house movie about the actions taken on all sides during World War II. The film poses many questions, some extremely uncomfortable, about our moral logic, our duty to our beliefs, and the toll of war on societies[13]. The film is a masterpiece, and will stand the test of time. It is also fun. As Tarantino said,
Holocaust movies always have Jews as victims. We’ve seen that story before. I want to see something different. Let’s see Germans that are scared of Jews. Let’s not have everything build up to a big misery, let’s actually take the fun of action-movie cinema and apply it to this situation.[14]


[1] The title is purposefully misspelled. The only clue the film offers for this is a shot where Lt. Raine sets his rifle against a rock and we catch a fleeting glimpse of the words “inglourious basterds” carved into the rifle stock.
[2] Film is the most collaborative medium of all the arts, but for the sake of space as well as style, I will leave out mention in the body of the review of the contributions of the cinematographer Robert Richardson, editor Sally Menke (1953-2010), and other essential personnel.
[3] Doris L. Bergen, War & Genocide (Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield, 2003), 185. Most of the Jews that were hidden in Europe were children, because it was easier to hide and explain them than adults. Boys were riskier to hide than girls as few European Christians circumcised their boys, and the Jew hunters of the time would routinely ask men and boys to pull down their pants to determine if they were Jews.
[4] Quentin Tarantino, Inglourious Basterds (New York: Weinstein Books, 2009), 11.
[5] Jim Emerson. Inglourious Basterds: Real or Ficticious, it Doesn’t Matter. Scanners With Jim Emerson. September 1, 2009. http://www.rogerebert.com/scanners/inglourious-basterds-real-or-fictitious-it-doesnt-matter.
[6] Jim Emerson. Some Ways to Watch Inglourious Basterds (Sic). Scanners With Jim Emerson. August 25, 2009. http://www.rogerebert.com/scanners/some-ways-to-watch-inglourious-basterds-sic.
[7] Tarantino, Inglourious Basterds, 37.
[8] Gerald Steinacher, Nazis On The Run (New York: Oxford University Press Inc, 2011), 286-289. Shockingly, two large organizations that helped former Nazis flee justice were the Catholic Church, and the International Committee of the Red Cross.
[9] Tarantino, Inglourious Basterds, 19.
[10] Tarantino, Inglourious Basterds, 66.
[11] Roger Morehouse, Killing Hitler (New York: Bantam Books, 2006), 322. There were many, many plots in real life to kill Hitler, a majority of which were plotted by members of the German military, but something always seemed to go wrong at the last second and Hitler walked away from them all. But not in this film.
[12] Aaron Koehler,” C’est Si Bon! French New Wave Cinema & Its Impact on Contemporary Film” (ENG 122-316, Community College of Aurora, 2013). Rough draft in my possession.
[13] The author has seen the film a total of four times.  On August 22, 2009, September 18, 2009 (both in movie theaters), December 25, 2009, and May 8, 2013 (on home video), and these and other themes, far too many to address in this essay constantly well up and present themselves with the smallest bit of intellectual effort on the part of the author.
[14] Jeffrey Goldberg, “Hollywood’s Jewish Avenger,” The Atlantic, September 1, 2009. http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2009/09/hollywoods-jewish-avenger/307619/?single_page=true

Saturday, November 07, 2015

Django Unchained


            Django Unchained starts off at the lowest point in the slave Django’s life.  We don’t know it yet, but he’s just been sold away and separated from his wife, Broomhilda, for attempting to escape to freedom together.  He’s being marched through Texas, barefoot, chained to other slaves, with just an old pair of ratty pants, and an old blanket to try and keep warm.  In this first scene, the promise of the title begins to unfold.  Django is literally unchained with the help of Dr. King Schultz, a German dentist turned bounty hunter. Schultz needs Django to help him with a bounty he’s after, and only Django can help him with it, because he knows what the bounty looks like.  Schultz and Django have an interesting relationship because it starts off very one-sided, but develops into a true partnership and friendship.  Schultz despises the institution of slavery, but doesn’t really care about individuals who are slaves, because he doesn’t have any personal experience with them. Throughout the film, Schultz gains that experience, and at the end of the film, it causes him to act against what we’ve understood to be his character up to that point, so much so that he apologizes to Django after the fact. Django truly becomes unchained after being freed.  He becomes the fastest gun in the south, he becomes an expert bounty hunter, and he becomes a hero as he saves his wife from a living hell. Django always had this in him, and the film shows us the clues, for example, we see him run away with Broomhilda, we see him do everything he can to save her from the lashing of the Brittle Brothers, even the fact that he and Broomhilda are married at a time when slaves weren’t allowed to be married, shows that he has a rebel heart against evil and tyranny, it’s just waiting to have a chance to come out and expand. King Schultz may initially give him that opportunity, but Django takes it whole-souled and wholeheartedly.  And at the end of the story, with the corruption of Candieland destroyed, his wife saved, and their freedom papers in his pockets, it is his victory.

Thursday, November 05, 2015

Beasts of the Southern Wild




This film is like a fable written by Terry Gilliam, and filmed by Terrence Malick.  It’s impressionistic, hazy, up for debate, sad, strange, and beautiful. It’s a movie that makes you want to make movies.  If it was better, you might not be as inspired by it.  The film is about a rundown community of jolly fools who live on the edge of survival and civilization, in a place called the Bathtub. The world has passed these people by, and they are just fine with that, besides, there’s “No crying in the Bathtub.” This is a place to experience and celebrate the mysteries of life, and to realize your connection to, and your purpose in, the universe. Nobody in the Bathtub exemplifies this more than Hushpuppy, a six year old spitfire of love, passion, and joy who just wants her mommy back and her daddy, Wink, to take care of her.  Wink wants to make her strong enough to take care of herself, because he’s slowly dying, so he’s downright frightening and seems like a danger to Hushpuppy in some scenes.  He says his job is to “keep you from dying.” Gradually, as the film unfolds, we begin to see why Wink is this way.  His wife ran off after Hushpuppy was born. True love crushed him, and all he knows now is that living is good, so he’s too tough on Hushpuppy. He gives Hushpuppy her own double wide on their property. Until she burns it down, gets rescued by Wink, and a giant storm hits the Bathtub, flooding everything.  The polar icecaps start melting, and the Aurochs, giant wooly mammoth-boars get unfrozen from the ice, and head toward the Bathtub.  Society finally notices the Bathtub, but only makes things worse, and Hushpuppy leads a gang of pre-pubescent girl orphans on a quest to find mothers.  Hushpuppy is a kid character for the ages. She saves the Bathtub from the Aurochs by being herself, and taking the time to explain her situation to bloodthirsty animals, something only a kid would think to do. She knows what’s right, and doesn’t question it.

Wednesday, November 04, 2015

Moonrise Kingdom


Moonrise Kingdom is a story of first love, set in 1965.  The lovers are two 12 year olds, Sam, an orphan, and Suzy, who lives on New Penzance Island. Sam meets her on a Khaki Scout field trip to the island. They become pen pals and concoct a plot to run away together while Sam is on the island for a Khaki Scout camp. The difference between the adult characters like Suzy’s parents, Captain Sharp, and Scoutmaster Ward, is that Sam and Suzy have an openness to the world, even as they rebel against the constraints placed on them by that adult world by running away to create their own.  As their adventure goes on, they learn more about each other’s world views, and the limits of each other’s experience, as well as one another’s faults and flaws, but this doesn’t cause tension and conflict in their relationship. They accept the reality of the other. They take each other as they are, for what they are, and try to help each other be better. Sam and Suzy’s openness and acceptance of each other is contrasted by the attitudes of the other Khaki Scouts in Sam’s troop.  The other Scouts are children who play at adult roles, like Redford, who can’t stand any deviance from social norms, and takes on the role of an enforcer of society’s rules, the way a policeman, or a principal would. After the runaways are apprehended, one of the Scouts, Skotak, has a change of heart about their involvement in the capture and their unthinking rejection of Sam.  Skotak gives a speech convincing the others to help rescue Sam and Suzy. It doesn’t matter that of course, two 12 year olds can’t run off together and live a happy life, what matters is the changing of our hearts to love and accept other humans, and seek their happiness. Eventually the adults are won over to this purpose as well, but with their additional wisdom and years of experience, are able to cut to the heart of the matter, and give Sam and Suzy what they really needed all along, a family to belong to.

Tuesday, November 03, 2015

Wong Kar-Wai's In The Mood For Love: A Hong Kong Tragedy



Note: This was written for my Contemporary Global Cinema class last spring.
Wong Kar-wai “the Jimi Hendrix of cinema”s most well loved film is 2000’s In The Mood For Love. (Jones 2000) The only film released in this century to be voted into the top 25 of the Sight & Sound critic’s poll of the best movies ever made. (Sight & Sound 2012) This along with the fact that it’s his most well regarded movie is the reason why I chose to analyze this film out of the ten total features he’s credited with directing. The Criterion Collection stamp of approval didn’t hurt either: “This film has been a major stylistic influence on the past decade of cinema, and is a milestone in Wong’s redoubtable career.” (Criterion 2012)
I’m not sure this is a movie you can understand. Analyze endlessly, yes. Understand? No. It’s a movie you feel. This may be because, “for Wong, emotion, and not necessarily story, is the content; style exists to evoke it.” (The Playlist 2013) It will make you question not if you are with the right person, but if you are the right person, and if you’re not, what should you do to ensure you become that person?
     The film is set in 1960s Hong Kong and concerns two next-door neighbors, Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan, whose spouses begin an affair. After a while our heroes figure out they’re being cheated on, and begin meeting to commiserate together. They develop feelings for each other, but struggle with the choice of whether to act on them or not. They eventually choose not to pursue a relationship, which breaks their hearts, but keeps them morally superior to their unfaithful spouses. However, once their platonic relationship develops into love and becomes an open secret between them, Chow does ask her to leave Hong Kong with him. She doesn’t accept his extra ticket, and Chow moves away to Singapore alone. They never see each other again.
     This is really a film about questions. The original title was Secrets but was changed at the urging of the Cannes Film Festival because it was such a generic title. (Kaufman 2001) The title Secrets brings to my mind the act of interrogation, either of self, or others, which the narrative encourages us to think about, as our protagonists role play Mrs. Chan confronting Mr. Chan about his affair. We wonder if Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan shared secrets with their respective spouses. Mrs. Chan, for instance, arranges clandestine meetings for her boss, Mr. Ho with his mistress, even on his wife’s birthday! She tells Mrs. Ho that he’s working late at the office. The one exception being on Mr. Ho’s birthday, where Mrs. Chan explains to the mistress that he will be having dinner with his wife. Does Mrs. Chan go home and tell her husband these things? I think not. The great irony is that the same types of lies Mrs. Chan is involved with are what her husband tells her in order to cheat on her.
Some of the questions the film raises include, should we stay faithful to unfaithful people? What constitutes an affair? Why would people cheat? Why not leave first? How much, if any, of the blame do those who are cheated on share? Is getting emotionally attached to someone of the opposite sex being unfaithful? Is getting cheated on a sufficient reason to cheat also?
     The whole film can perhaps be summed up in a line from Mr. Chow. Speaking with Mrs. Chan about his former dream of being a martial arts serial writer (I presume this means Wuxia stories), he says, “I couldn’t get started, so I gave up.” This encapsulates their entire future relationship. The sad part is that even though they never officially began a romantic relation, they did have the foundation in place for a great relationship. That’s why I’m tempted to believe that what they were doing in essence constituted an “affair” as well, even if it never became anything physical.
     Another important line is uttered by Mr. Ho to Mrs. Chan. He tells as he prepares to leave the office to see his mistress that there’s “No need to stay if everything’s done.” We as the audience want Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan to get together, because we know that their marriages are already over and done with. But they can’t seem to go through with it. As Joshua Kline writes, “The two potential lovers cling near one another like satellites, but they seem to understand that they may never be able to share the same orbit.” (Kline 20013)
But if “everything’s done,” why stay? Divorce was less common in the 60s, surely, but these are very cosmopolitan characters, who it seems aren’t against divorce. Why can’t they be together and stay together? The film leaves it up to us to answer. I want to remake this as a teen romance with the couple’s parents standing in for the cheating spouses to explore these questions.
     Wong Kar-wai is known for his incredible visual aesthetic and he further explores this in In The Mood For Love. According to Tony Rayns, Wong Kar-wai actually acted as his own director of photography on this film, despite what the credits say. This was Wong’s first film where he knew exactly what he wanted and how to get it. This film was actually shot two times over a period of fifteen months because Wong found better location for the many apartment scenes after they had “finished” shooting principal photography the first time, (Rayns 2012) which accounts for why Christopher Doyle and Mark Li Ping-bin are credited as the film’s cinematographers, since they did shoot the movie even if their actual work isn’t on the screen or in the finished product.
This film is rife with beautiful shots ready to be swiped and repurposed for other films. The cinematography tells the story. All these beautiful shots serve a purpose. The lush photography shows us an aesthetically beautiful world even while our heroes’ lives are falling apart around them. We see they’re in this beautiful world, but they can’t seem to escape their misery to enjoy it. This is where the power of photography comes to intertwine with the subject and subtext of the film. The film takes place in a Shanghaiese community that no longer exists; a world vanished. Wong Kar-wai grew up in such a community, and he and his art director, William Chang do their best to recapture it here.
But we all know the past can’t be recaptured, no matter how hard we try. The film seems to tell us through its cinematography that we are already in paradise and what we must do is awake to that fact, and make our lives match the gorgeous worlds we already inhabit. That’s one of the ironies of nostalgia; things once taken for granted are now infused with magic and mystery and yes, even love. To quote the American director Noah Baumbach on the popular music of his youth, “When I was a kid, I would resist Top 40 music, because I was that kind of kid. But now I hear whatever was on the radio when I was a kid and it makes me want to cry, it’s beautiful.” (Arbeiter 2015) And to finally drive the nail in, an intertitle taken from Liu Yi-chang’s short story Intersection that appears towards the end of the film reads, “That era has passed. Nothing that belonged to it exists anymore.”
We see this in every frame of the film. Restaurants, taxis, wallpaper, hairstyles, fashion, they’ve all gone the way of all the earth. This leads us to ask the question, why is nostalgia such a powerful force? What is it we want back? And is there a way to get it back? This is a heavy movie!
I think that what Wong Kar-wai is getting at through showing us these images is that we can’t be sure that we’re not living in a golden age right now---and that even applies to our relationships. Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan love each other, but they don’t take the next step to establish a relationship. Mr. Chow does make a weak attempt to persuade Mrs. Chan to go with him to Singapore, but she doesn’t leave with him.
Later, there is a scene where Chow can’t find something in his room, and he asks the apartment manager who’s been in his room. The manager denies anyone has been there, but we then see shots of Mrs. Chan in his room looking at his things. She was there, but without him. Later, Mr. Chow goes back to Hong Kong and stops by his old building to visit his landlord, and give him a present. He learns that his landlord moved sometime ago. He leaves the present with the new occupant. He almost knocks on the door next door to say hello to Mrs. Chan’s old landlord, but he hesitates, and then leaves. What he doesn’t know is that Mrs. Chan has since bought her landlord’s apartment and lives there. If he had knocked, he would have seen her again! He barely misses her!
This film is so, so sad. But it speaks a truth about the past and the future and the present that is unmistakably important to everyone who sees it: we can’t let our lives (with their attendant golden ages) pass us by through indecision. Mrs. Chan loves Mr. Chow but won’t leave her husband even though he’s already left her in his heart. This parallels what a clerk at Chow’s wife’s work tells Chow when he comes to pick her up after her shift: “She’s already gone.”
The film’s final scene follows Chow in Cambodia at the Angkor Wat temple complex as he follows the ancient custom of letting go of secrets by whispering them in to a hole and then filling the hole in with mud. He uses grass and dirt, but we get the idea. But does he get rid of the secrets, or just sacralize them?
This emotion of losing time right in front of your eyes is expressed in some of the bizarre shots selected. There are shots when our heroes are in a restaurant talking and suddenly we cut to a shot where the camera starts on an empty booth and quickly dollies screen left to catch Mrs. Chan and Mr. Chow sitting in a booth together. It’s disorienting because it looks almost amateurish. But since we know these aren’t amateurs, we have to consider what they are drawing our attention to, and that is the subject of time itself. As Kent Jones writes, “His films are made up of moments that seem to have been grabbed out of time, as though he's almost always just missed it.” (Jones 2000)
Another technique the filmmakers use is jittery slow motion. It makes us feel like we’re being led inexorably toward something, like the gallows for execution. That’s exactly what happens as the potential relationship of our protagonists is killed by their indecision. We’re repeatedly shown this in the objects the camera lingers on. Clocks, doorways, hotel room numbers, empty hallways, walls that separate characters who want to be together, and ringing telephones all testify to the fact that the characters are halting between two opinions. (1 Kings 18:21)
Mrs. Chan wears a different close-fitting high neck cheongsam dress in each scene. Twenty-one different dresses appear in the final cut of the film. (Foam of Days 2013) Mrs. Chan’s high fashion looks reveal her beauty and seemingly flirty and fun loving ways while cleverly hiding and distracting from her heartbreak. We’d never see her on the street and think that her husband would cheat on her. The change of dress further imprints the passage of time on the audience.
The final intertitle reads “The past was something he could see but not touch. And everything he sees is blurred and indistinct.” Much like a Greek tragedy, Wong Kar-wai’s masterpiece acts as a cathartic experience for the audience. The characters suffer so that we can learn from their mistakes. We’re privileged to witness the sad fate of Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan so that we don’t become people who hold on to the beautiful past, when we thought our future was brighter and possibilities seemed to abound, but instead make the hard choices that will allow our happiness to bloom in our hearts, just like the flowers on Mrs. Chan’s amazing dresses. In The Mood For Love is a heartbreaking, instructive, tragic masterpiece that deserves every bit of its lofty reputation.

                                                     Bibliography

Interview: Noah Baumbach Talks 'While We're Young,' Working With James Murphy, Ad-Rock, Wes Anderson & More by Michael Arbeiter. Retrieved at http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/interview-noah-baumbach-talks-while-were-young-working-with-james-murphy-ad-rock-wes-anderson-more-20150325
Online Entry for In The Mood For Love (2000) – The Criterion Collection #147 http://www.criterion.com/films/198-in-the-mood-for-love
In The Mood For Love: 21 Dresses by “Foam of Days” retrieved at: https://foamofdays.wordpress.com/2013/06/02/in-the-mood-for-love-21-dresses/
Of Love And The City: Wong Kar-wai’s In The Mood For Love by Kent Jones. Retrieved at: http://www.filmcomment.com/article/of-love-and-the-city-wong-kar-wais-in-the-mood-for-love
Decade: Wong Kar-wai on "In The Mood For Love" by Anthony Kaufman. Retrieved at http://www.indiewire.com/article/decade_wong_kar-wai_on_in_the_mood_for_love
1,001 Movies You Must See Before You Die, In The Mood For Love entry by Joshua Klein. General Editor Steven Jay Schneider, Updated By Ian Haydn Smith
Retrospective: The Films of Wong Kar-wai by The Playlist Staff retrieved at http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/retrospective-the-films-of-wong-kar-wai-20130819
On In The Mood For Love. Interview with Tony Rayns on Special Feature found on the 2012 Criterion Collection Blu-ray reissue of Wong Kar-wai’s In The Mood For Love.
The 50 Greatest Films of All Time By Sight & Sound Contributors and Ian Christie. retrieved at: http://www.bfi.org.uk/news/50-greatest-films-all-time


Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Hey, what's YOUR name?

                              (From Madman Atomic Comics # 17 by Mike and Laura Allred)
                                                                 
IMAGINARY BAND NAMES part II

Novels I Wanna Write
Teleport
The Likes
Jakob Dylan's Dad
Buzz, Your Girlfriend, Woof!
The Exceptions
Lazy Ambassador
Teenagers From The Future
Shaman Ballers
Infinite Crisis
Summerbaby
Obsolete Vernacular
Lovecon Four
The Right Things
Hot Republicans
Accelerationist
Braverman
Loveography
The Complete Unknowns
Checkreign
The Bumper Stickers
The Future
Plus Plus
Colorado Llamas
The Gazebos


Thursday, July 07, 2011

WORST BLOGGER EVER





I've had this blog for four years and seven months. I've posted a total of 30 times, most of which were simply a picture and a caption. I know I am the best worst blogger ever. I've won only shame and disgrace for this. And I want to be better. But how do I make amends? Let me know in the comments.


Love, Wes




Saturday, July 11, 2009

Heart Songs Pt. 1: Are You Listening?



In 1995 I started listening to the radio. The events that preceded this occurrence are slightly obscured in my own mind. Suffice it to say, I did not discover KKDS 1060 Radio AAHS on my own. Radio AAHS was a children's (kids) station on AM (radio). I could now go into what I did while the radio played, the significance of it to my 11 year old life, what the radio looked like, and the time I called the station to answer the daily moral question asked by my favorite daytime DJ (whose name is lost to history), and how my recorded conversation with said woman was broadcast throughout these united states. But the minutia of biography is sometimes overbearing (at least to one's self), so let's skip it. I got an old radio and started listening. All of this is to say my first favorite song was "As I Lay Me Down," by Sophie B. Hawkins. All of my early favorite songs were sung by women. All of my life I have loved women. I know now and can see now the preparation that was occurring in my heart for the future.


This is the first in a series about the songs I love. Not songs that rock, not songs that are good, great, or greatest, but songs I love. Songs that have an emotional connection to my life, whether in time, space, or event.


Songs are music and words together. Lyrics alone can never give the same effect as actually hearing a song, but for your enjoyment: "As I Lay Me Down," Sophie B. Hawkins


It felt like springtime on this February morning
In the courtyard birds were singing your praise
I'm still recalling things you said to make me feel alright
I carried them with me today, Now


(chorus)As I lay me down to sleep
This I pray
That you will hold me dear
Though I'm far away
I'll whisper your name into the sky
And I will wake up happy


I wonder why I feel so high
Though I am not above the sorrow
Heavy hearted
Till you call my name

And it sounds like church bells
Or the whistle of a train
On a summer evening
I'll run to meet you
Barefoot barely breathing


It's not too near for me
Like a flower I need the rain
Though it's not clear to me
Every season has its change
And I will see you
When the sun comes out again


For an incomplete picture of Radio AAHS see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_AAHS