collisionwork: (kwizatz hadarach)
And a joyous MLK Day to you all.

It's being pretty well covered in the blogosphere in any case, but rather than quote or embed any part of the "I Have a Dream" speech (time, familiarity, and the beauty of MLK's voice and cadences have worn off its prickly edges more than they should), I instead recommend reading the transcript of his "Beyond Vietnam" speech, from April 4, 1967, Riverside Church, NYC -- reprinted in full by Jason Grote at his blog - thanks, Jason, I've never read this in full before, only excerpts.

I also dug this photo from If Charlie Parker Were a Gunslinger . . ., in their continuing "When Legends Gather" series.

I've been saving a few links of interest; time to unload them, I think:

World's Greatest Guitar Amp Name - if I had $5,000 to drop on a guitar amp . . . I probably still wouldn't get this because I just couldn't fathom spending that kind of money on a guitar amp, but I'd be glad to know it exists out there . . . and it's probably pretty damned good, actually, given the company's rep and so forth.

Over at VetVoice, RockRichard, an NCO currently serving in Afghanistan, writes "An Open Letter to Bill O'Reilly" regarding Mr. O'Reilly's statement that there are no homeless vets (and his corollary that if there are, they're all addicts and it's their own damned fault).

A nice bit of irony, courtesy of Neatorama. Also, from the same site, a steampunk laptop!

And finally . . . since it turns out I missed this yesterday . . .

Blue Velvet finale

Happy 62nd birthday, David Lynch!

Eraserhead finale

collisionwork: (eraserhead)
3. Surprise


In looking over the Oscar nominations when they came out, and realizing that I had not seen even one movie nominated in ANY of the categories, it occurred to me that the only movies I had seen in a movie theatre in the past year were Drawing Restraint 9 and INLAND EMPIRE. That's it. Period. Whoa.

Between ticket prices, Netflix, lack of interest in what comes out these days, and theatrical work to take care of, I guess that seeing movies in the theatre (and I've ALWAYS been one for the promotion of actually seeing films on a BIG screen rather than video) has become a hell of a lot less important in my life than it once was. This would sadden me if I didn't have better things to think about.

Which reminds me, more Lynch writing soon -- I have the essay file open in the background constantly while working on other things, so I can drop ideas here and there if they come up. But Hamlet, sorry, Ian W. Hill's Hamlet (gotta get used to that) has needed to take over here for the time being.


collisionwork: (eraserhead)
Okay, this has been frustrating.


My intention WAS to tie into the "Lynch Mob" bloglink-a-thon going on over at Vinyl Is Heavy by rewatching ALL of David Lynch's film/video work in chronological order, and jotting down a few notes for six posts this week, one-a-day, Monday through Saturday. Just some notes, what I see, what I feel, what I think, what connections I've made over the years of looking at these things.

Two things got in the way. First, other writing I had to do, as well as personal life silliness. Second, the notes got out of control, as I added synopses and biographical stuff about Lynch that I "needed" to explain the notes, until I wound up with something closer to essays than notes. Also, there were serious problems getting the damned photos in the post and at the right size (please let me know if they come out all farblondjet on your browser -- I'm importing them from a new photo server - my flickr account is full - and they just kept going all haywire).

Whatever, at least I got the first one done before the Blog-a-thon was over -- the rest will show up as soon as I can get them together (probably faster, as less bio and synopsis will be needed in future, I think). Enjoy.



DREAMING OF DAVID LYNCH #1a (of 6): Philadelphia


1. Six Men Getting Sick (1967, aka Six Figures Getting Sick)


All of Lynch’s early (pre-Eraserhead) films are included on the Short Films by David Lynch DVD originally available only from davidlynch.com, now available commercially elsewhere. The original edition came in an 8”-square box with inserts that was an art object in itself (but held the disc in a tight cardboard sleeve just perfect for damaging it), and the films are presented in as good video versions as you could imagine (and probably, with Lynch’s painstaking restoration work, better than any of the film prints out there).

Lynch was a student at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts when the chance incident of wind moving a painting he was working on in his space at the Academy (a black painting with some very dark green grass) and the sound of some distant music from another student’s studio gave him the desire to see his paintings move.

With the help of his childhood friend Jack Fisk, he created a 6’-square plaster “screen,” featuring three distorted heads, rented a 16mm camera (with single-frame capacity but without reflex viewing), and began animating.

The result is a fifty-second long film that was shown on a loop at a year-end “experimental painting and sculpture” competition at the Academy. For ten minutes of each hour, in the gallery where the student work was being shown, they would turn out the lights and turn on Lynch’s film for several minutes, accompanying it with the sound of a siren on tape. Lynch and Fisk constructed a mechanism out of pieces of three erector sets to take the film loop from the projector up to the ceiling and back down to refeed in.


Six Men Getting Sick 1

We see six heads. The three on the left are three-dimensional – plaster casts of Lynch’s head, two of them looking pained, one – all the way on the left – looks peaceful, asleep, leaning his cheek on a hand. Perhaps this head is dreaming the rest of the work. Or maybe it has a toothache. Three more animated ones are added to the right, abstracted, distorted (one looks like “the Bufferin man”). Frames are drawn around some of the heads. All six heads grow esophagi and stomachs (one grows an actual chest x-ray). Words flash: LOOK. SICK. There is fire. Everything goes red for a moment. The stomachs fill with bile. The figures grow arms that jump around jerkily. Then all the heads vomit.


Six Men Getting Sick 2

Six Men Getting Sick is probably the lightest film in overall visual tone of all Lynch’s work, as it has to be in order to work as a projection on a sculptured surface – so, for a good deal of it, a lot of white space. The animation is fluid (except for the deliberately jerky arms) and precise. As with all of Lynch’s animation in his next few films, it appears he actually animates every single frame – most animation is shot with changes every 2 to 6 frames, for the sake of time, materials, and sanity.

The speed with which things move, change (and sometimes flash for a frame or two) somehow expands the strictly defined world of the frame, the sculpture, into a larger mental space. Some things flash and are barely seen, other things are held and can be looked at clearly, and the timing of which is which seems perfectly right.

The animation stops twice for brief live action shots, one of fire passing under the lens and one in which paint drips down the animation surface, which was obviously tilted or vertical – for years, I’ve been convinced the animation was actually done at a vertical on the sculptured screen itself, as it would be very difficult to make some of the precise lineups between animation and sculpture happen otherwise, but in looking for images for this essay I found stills of the animation without the sculptured elements (and discovered it can also be seen that way in the documentary Pretty as a Picture), so Lynch is, of course, just being amazingly organized and precise as usual.

The video version is, naturally, not really the work. The animation is superimposed on the screen, but also blocks it out at times in ways it wouldn’t as an actual projection. Lynch repeats the film loop six times on the video, with siren noise (the siren sounds like an old recording, so if it isn’t the original one that Lynch used in ‘67, he’s done what he could to simulate it), basically creating it as a new video work, Six Men Getting Sick (Six Times) as it’s now called onscreen. It’s an interesting bridge between Lynch’s paintings and film, as it resembles both, but is not quite either. Though he became interested in film as a means to make his paintings move, he knows that film cannot just be moving paintings, and adjusts his style accordingly. But he still has a ways to go.

Lynch won the competition, but the piece cost $200 to make. This was too much money to spend on one work, as far as he was concerned. He went back to painting.



2. The Alphabet (1968)


The Alphabet 1


Another student at PFA, H. Barton Wasserman, seeing Six Men, and having some money, commissioned Lynch to make a sculpture-film for him – something where the sculpture could hang on the wall and be interesting on its own, but with a flick of a switch, the lights would dim and a film loop would project on the sculpture-screen. He gave Lynch $1,000 to make it. Lynch spent almost half that on buying a used 16mm Bolex camera ($478.28 to be exact - he includes a still of the receipt, which he still has, on the DVD). He intended to make a split-screen film, with two-thirds of it animated, and one-third live action. He shot the film.

The camera was defective. What he got back from the lab was 100’ of smeared colors, with no frame lines. For some reason, he says, he wasn’t depressed about it (how, I don’t know, as I assume he spent an insane amount of focused time and effort on the animation), and Wasserman told Lynch to use the rest of the money to make whatever he wanted as long as he got a print.

Lynch’s wife Peggy had told him of seeing her six-year-old niece thrash about in a nightmare, repeating the alphabet over and over in an agitated manner. This struck a chord with Lynch, who was still in what his then-wife calls his “pre-verbal” phase, using sounds and gestures as much as words in everyday conversation.

From Lynch on Lynch: “Painters don’t have to talk. Every idea was in another language, down, deep inside. I never had to bring it to the surface. So things were pure and, you know, better that way. I didn’t have to justify anything. I could just let it come out. And that’s why talking about things isn’t a totally satisfactory thing . . . It just struck me that learning, instead of being something that’s a happy process, is turned around to being almost like a nightmarish process, so it gives people dreams – bad dreams. So The Alphabet is a little nightmare about the fear connected with learning.”

So he had ideas. Lynch painted the inside of his house (2429 Aspen Street) black to shoot the live action sections, then animated the rest, even tighter and more obsessively than in his previous film.


The Alphabet 2

Children chant “A B C” ominously as the film begins. A male voice sings a song about the alphabet as abstract animation fills the screen gradually with color, the letters of the alphabet emerging in order as part of the composition. There are flashes of a woman’s mouth, once with strange groaning, once saying, “Please remember, you’re dealing with the human form” (almost certainly a quote from one of Lynch’s teachers at PFA). Abstract shapes coming from uppercase letters give birth to lowercase letters, with blood and distorted cries (Lynch’s newborn daughter Jennifer, recorded on a broken reel-to-reel tape deck). Letters jump into the head of a distorted, hermaphoditic figure, which gasps and bleeds from the eyes. A woman’s voice recites “The Alphabet Song” in a childlike voice as Peggy Lynch pixilates around on a bed, reaching for the letters, then vomits blood across the sheets.


The Alphabet is incredibly tight and well-made, and that it was made as a first film by someone teaching himself the technical aspects of filmmaking is incredible, especiaslly when, say, compared to the early contemporaneous films of say, David Cronenberg – whose Transfer (1966) and From the Drain (1967) I was lucky (if that’s the word) enough to see some years ago, and which are amazing in their near-incompetence.

Every beat of Lynch’s film falls naturally into the next, and the rhythms are naturally cinematic in a way it usually takes years to learn. I know at least one person who thinks this is still the high point of all Lynch’s work, and there’s almost a case to be made – it’s pure, effective, without a wasted moment. At the same time, it’s missing one of the most important elements of Lynch’s work since, a dense overlay of sonic elements – the sound is interesting, he’s already thinking about it, but not quite yet where it needs to be, and the film does not quite cohere the same way as his later work, where sound works as the mortar holding the bricks of his images together.

Still, The Alphabet gave Lynch, as he says, “the bug” for filmmaking, and he began writing a script for his next film.


The Alphabet 3


3. The Grandmother (1970)


A friend told Lynch about the American Film Institute in Washington D.C., and their grants for independent filmmakers. All you needed to submit was previous work and a script, and Lynch had both, so he sent them in. Soon after, the first group of grant-winners was announced by AFI, and Lynch was unhappy to discover that they were almost all people far more established in the world of experimental film than he, such as Stan Brakhage and Bruce Connor.

Unknown to him, after The Alphabet was screened at AFI, there was some confusion about what pile to put it in – screened films were put in piles by “category.” When they were done, The Alphabet was in a pile all by itself, so the powers at AFI decided that no matter what they may think about his film, Lynch had to get a grant.

With the money, he made The Grandmother, a complex mix of two-dimensional animation, pixilation of actors, and live action. He painted the inside of his house black again (to make the actors and set pieces the only important things in frame), adding chalk lines here and there to delineate doors and corners, found a cast of friends, neighbors, and co-workers from LaPelle’s Printing (where he worked), and got to work.


The Grandmother 1

In an animated prologue, a brutish, grunting, whining couple produces, through their rubbing, an elegant boy in a suit, who is tormented at their hands. In their home, he repeatedly wets the bed, and is punished for it by his father (though the puddles are bright yellow, it is emotionally and thematically treated more like wet dreams). He finds a bag of seeds in the attic, pours dirt on a bed up there, plants the seed, waters it, and watches as a tree grows from the bed. The tree gives birth, noisily, sloppily, to the Grandmother, a comforting, whistling presence. The boy spends as much time away from his barking parents and with his grandmother as he can, growing closer to her, eventually having (animated) dreams in which he murders his parents and lives with the grandmother in a paradise with pools of yellow liquid. His mind has (as Lynch says) “got putrefied through some bad thinking.” The relationship sours, and the grandmother whistles herself to death. The boy tries to save her, and then to dream her up again as he wants her, but is unable to.


The Grandmother 2


The Grandmother is an advance for Lynch over his previous film in some ways, but a big step back in others. His camerawork, precise and controlled in Alphabet, is too often handheld and rambling here – very “early student film” in a way that The Alphabet is not – it’s interesting to compare Lynch’s early handheld work here to his recent work in INLAND EMPIRE to see just how differently “controlled” apparently uncontrolled camerawork can be. If The Grandmother’s handheld work suggests a voice saying, “Uh, wait, here you go, look, uh, over here – wait a minute, let me set this up for you, just a sec . . . there you go,” then INLAND EMPIRE’s camera says, “Look here . . . now look here . . . watch this while I move . . . over . . . here . . . isn’t that interesting?”

The Grandmother is also frequently boring, a charge often leveled at other films of Lynch’s, perhaps understandably. But while I have been occasionally bored at parts of Lynch’s other films on rewatching them (occasionally), this film is the one that always bores me in a couple of spots – I just want to yell “get ON with it” far more during this 34 minute long film than I ever do during the nearly three-hour INLAND EMPIRE. It is often, as opposed to the perfectly dark levels of The Alphabet and much of his later work, just too damned dark – the final shot of the film, a live-action/animation combo, is almost impossible to read. Things are missed in the murk that should be seen.

But it is here, working for the first time with soundman Alan Splet, who would be his close collaborator for the next 16 years, that Lynch uses a dense soundscape as an integral part of his mise-en-scene, creating the feel that comes to mind when something “Lynchian” is thought of. It’s not as constantly inventive as most of the later work – one particular tone, something like an organ (which also shows up in Eraserhead) is used many times here, almost as a default tone.

The occasional music score by Tractor, a local band, is pleasant, but oddly dated (I don’t know why, can’t put my finger on it, but something in the ambient tone screams “late-60s”). But the voices of the four characters – none of whom speak but make distinctive noises – are beautifully constructed, from the father’s brutal grunts, to the mother’s keening, to the boy’s wounded-bird cries, to the grandmother’s ethereal whistling. It’s not Eraserhead yet, but it’s getting there.

Lynch had applied for a $7,200 grant from AFI to make the film, and had received a $5,000 one. He ran out of money before finishing and asked AFI for the last $2,200 (his budget had been accurate almost to the dollar). One of the heads of AFI came to Philly from Washington D.C. to see what Lynch had done so far, was impressed, approved the extra money, and suggested to Lynch that he should come study at AFI’s new school in L.A.

So in the Summer of 1970, Lynch packed up his car and drove to Los Angeles.


To be continued as soon as I can get it together . . .


collisionwork: (Tulse Luper)
Yesterday (Monday), I got my copy of the new DVD of Performance, the film by Nicolas Roeg (photographer/director) and Donald Cammell (writer/director), in the mail - a day before release date; thanks USPS! I've been waiting for this film, a favorite, to come out on DVD for years (hell, to have ANY kind of good-quality video release), and . . . well, I'd like to say I was not disappointed, but that's not altogether true.


Good things: The transfer is beautiful. Roeg's images have never looked so sweet and strong. For years I've seen this in faded and/or grainy and/or scratchy prints. The film now lives up to the standard of Roeg's work on other films from Fahrenheit 451 to Masque of the Red Death to Petulia to A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.

The film is the full cut, not the slightly-edited original USA cut. The voices of Johnny Shannon (as Harry Flowers) and Laraine Wickens (as Lorraine), which were dubbed over with more "intelligible" voices for USA prints, have been restored -- I'd never heard their actual voices before; Shannon is perfectly intelligible to anyone who's watched enough BBC TV, Wickens is, yes, rather more difficult, but far better than the horrible screechy adult-woman-masquerading-as-a-child voice that replaced hers.

The sound remains - correctly - in mono, but has been spiffed up to be more clear, punchy, and wide in frequency than ever before, which brings me to--


One Bad Thing: The attraction to many of this film lies much in its brilliant soundtrack (mostly by Jack Nitzsche), so having the songs be so clear and rumbling (even in mono) is a good thing.

However. Someone must have decided that the classic sequence featuring Mick Jagger performing his song "Memo from Turner" needed even MORE audio goosing, and apparently decided to mix together the original mono track from the film with a mono version of the song as it appears on the original soundtrack album of the film - the same recording, yes, but in a different mix. So when the song begins, the bass suddenly becomes THUNDEROUS and the song really LEAPS OUT at you. This is not in itself bad, though it's noticeable that an extra echo effect is missing from Jagger's voice in a couple of spots. Then, during an extended instrumental break midway through the song, several sound effects and one line of dialogue from Jagger ("Here's to Old England!") are now COMPLETELY GONE from the scene.

Okay. In the great scheme of things, this is a very small matter. Still, this is, despite the film's relative scarcity for many years, an important film, influential on and revered by many filmmakers for years (Paul Schrader once remarked that whenever he was stuck for an idea, he'd watch Performance again, as it's full of ideas, and will always have something good and appropriate for him to steal). This DVD is probably going to now be the "definitive" version of the film, the only one that anyone who gets to know the film now will know, and it's NOT QUITE right. Dammit.

The only other "bad thing," really just a mild annoyance, is that in the (so-so) new "making-of" documentary on the disk, the "swinging London" atmosphere of the film is represented by title graphics with subpar Height-Ashbury-style, "groovy" typefaces and graphics that have nothing to do with the film. Ick. Yeah, yeah, I know: "Sixties" = "Bill Graham Winterland Posters." {sigh}


Restoration is a tricky business all right. They screwed up another little-but-really-not-so-little thing in the new restoration of Eraserhead they just did at MoMA, which I'll be discussing sometime else soon in the next few days when I'll be . . .


DREAMING OF DAVID LYNCH (IN SIX PARTS)


David Lynch’s work is never far from my mind. Obviously, I’m not alone. Recently, when Isaac Butler at Parabasis put it to his fellow theatre bloggers (primarily playwrights) to list their influences, Lynch’s name was generally among the ones listed (James Comtois noted this in his list and comments).

The group of posters over at Vinyl Is Heavy have announced “The Lynch Mob,” a series of postings this week (Feb. 12-16) focusing on Lynch. While not a “Blog-a-thon” per se, it seemed like a good excuse to spend this past week watching the entirety of Lynch’s output as director of film/video works (his work in other media either less interesting or interesting enough to be dealt with on its own, you make the call), in chronological order, and put down a few thoughts about his 25-or-so films/videos.

I don’t want or intend to go into any great analytical detail about all the pieces – that would require at least one book, possibly more, and would be reductive as regards the work in any case. A good book already exists containing as much of that as you need, Lynch on Lynch, edited by Chris Rodley.

This is a personal look at Lynch’s works; a few thoughts about what interests me here and there, connections I’ve made, things of note to point out, and variants/problems with the video versions. A breezy overview.

So after making up a list of his works, and pulling out the tapes and DVDs, I went to it from the start. I've made it through everything from 1967 to 1995 thus far, and my first entry (covering Six Figures Getting Sick through Eraserhead) will be up ASAP.


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