Saturday, June 22, 2013

Yeezus


“Got the kids and the wife life/but can’t wake up from the night life”-Kanye West, “I’m In It”

Kanye West’s Yeezus is ugly, sparse, pornographic, abrupt, alienating and scary. To hear it is to take it’s beating. “The monster about to come alive again,” he says in the first cut, and its a strategically placed warning, like the bashing of a television set as overture for David Lynch’s un-Twin Peaks Twin Peaks movie. “Monster” was the name of the angriest bile-spewing track on West’s last album, and signifies that that guttural style with hold the most sway in this new collection.

There’s no joy here. Boasts of sexual conquests aren’t boasts at all under the mangled scrim of West’s hoarsely pained vocal delivery and handheld, lost-in-the-club production (a much chided line about being with Asian women thus “all I need is sweet and sour sauce” is layered with a demonically dubbed second voice, rendering the sentiment ominous and tension-fraught). It’s sprinting production and recent completion only weeks ago gives Yeezus the emotional moistness of a recently recovered suicide note. The 70s soul samples that brought so much communal hearth to his beats in the days of producing for The Blueprint and solo albums like Graduation are gummed and distorted beyond repair. Having just begun a family seems to have augmented, rather than staunched, his demons.

If anything, the persistence of the demons has brought him to an unprecedented musical despair. Tracks like “New Slaves” and “Hold My Liquor” rise and fall in choppy pixilated waves of rough acceleration and heartrending free-fall. He’s not happy, not with his continued subtle subjugation by the mainstream media (remember his Good Morning America interview where Matt Lauer spoke to him like he was 5 years old?), not with the vacant materialism of his fellow black success stories, and especially not with the decadence and endless pampering available to him as a God. Mostly, though, he’s unhappy about the fact that he’ll never be happy. His gross ego is justified only in his talents, so how would you feel if you were one of the great modern popular artists and were only known for having a “make a sad girl cry reputation”? On Yeezus he isn’t asking for our sympathy but, like Trent Reznor (the musician this album most shockingly recalls) he’s invited the listener into a nightmarish, chaotic headspace.

Screaming and apocalyptic sirens plague Yeezus. Techno bass and house acid rain isn’t employed for groove, but rather as the horror movie soundtrack for catastrophically failed relationships and emotional terrorism. “Blood On The Leaves” is the album’s most lacerating passage. Layering high notes of Nina Simone’s voice from the track “Strange Fruit.” (The callbacks to nature juxtaposed with the machine music of the record’s whole give the listener a Brechtian image of an artificial tree on an empty stage, perhaps circled by Dogville chalk.) Kanye spills out an oblique, traumatic narrative of---we can only presume---a failed relationship with a groupie who, in the year’s most unnerving lyric, couldn’t handle her liquor so it “came out of your body.” Unlike many other hip-hop kiss off tracks, “Leaves”’ violence and misogyny are underlined by a sensation of total waste, the immolation of talent, connection, intimate potential. Everyone is guilty, the star fuckers and the stars who have come to see others as little more than shown-off Instagram photos. In a reference to the glorious “Runaway”, of which this song is an obvious parallel, Kanye is reduced to mumbling inaudible noises, static tears, into the Auto-Tune ether.

Yeezus is, like his last two albums, and despite its intentional aura of tossed-off dirtiness, an architectural scourge. Lyrics and sonic portents wind and click and compliment each other on different cuts. The overrated Justin Vernon is vocally isolated in a lonely lament of pain before the underrated Kid Cudi is similarly displayed singing “If you loved me so much then why’d you let me go?”, his anguished solo pouring down like hard rain on the album’s minimalist tarp. Beats and voices are blasted into strobe echoes, most disturbingly at the instance of a female orgasm. No joy anywhere. Kanye chants “God” at the close of the bleakly exhilarating “Black Skinhead” which leads into the next track, “I Am A God.” He sees blood on the leaves before “Blood On The Leaves.” Ragga and Dancehall artists like Beenie Man are sampled throughout, partly as a classic West means of enlightening the listener about the history of black music while simultaneously seasoning the composition, but also as a hint to this album’s ultimate aesthetical signpost, which reads “This Way To The Club.”

Simon Reynolds called electronic dance music and rave culture a “journey into sound,” and while Kanye’s overwhelming auteurist presence (not to mention Rick Rubin’s) negates Yeezus as proper house, he’s chipped enough thematic concrete from that music to make his career-long concerns pulse with the blood of rave abandon. Yeezus is a journey into dark sound, and as Pitchfork commented it resembles in the West(ern) canon 808s And Heartbreak most of all. There’s a personal pain merged to the inherently impersonal genre of electronica, but the dancefloor can be a breeding ground for a thousand little tragedies. West can talk about fucking and stacking paper all he wants, but he knows, and the music knows, that it can contradict the speaker and tell the real story. The pumping beat lends both gravity and bodily thrill to the album-wide expression of dissatisfaction, resentment, loss and exhaustion.

Exhaustion is a key component to understanding Yeezus, and the creepy lethargy is articulated in the final song. “Bound 2” samples an old soul tune but unlike a similar brushstroke on, say, Late Registration, the song is grainy, lost in fuzz, as if we’re listening to a 3rd generation bootleg or a radio station that’s going out with the tide the farther we drive from the tower. Kanye’s ferocious flow diminishes to a halting stop-start speech, where he airs grievances in regards to a certain relationship (with a certain culturally noxious figure that all but makes a great work of art disposable gossip fodder for philistine rags.) It’s good dog day hemp music, until. Until. Amid Kanye’s lightly lobbed orders about this being “don’t tell your mom shit,” everything-the degraded sample, his impotent rambling-is stopped dead by an emphatic vocalist who breaks through the numb to bravely intone “I know you’re tired of loving, of loving, with nobody to love.” Then we’re returned to the stoned quotidian, a Nothing To See Here reversal, like the actors in The Truman Show quickly repairing a collapse in the immaculate show set. This breakthrough epiphany comes back in full longing and force, only to be suppressed one more time before the song pathetically deflates. “Bound 2” is difficult stuff and not easy to like, especially if you compare it to “Lost In The World.” Don’t, that’ll get you nowhere. Instead, focus on the sound story “Bound 2” is dramatizing. Think of how much like life the shifts mirror, your daily mired routine in waxy perception and circuitous bitching-until, until that one geyser of passion bursts through your brain, telling you you’re tired, that you can strive for something better, that you can leave with someone else, a metaphorical person or a warm passionate body. And yet, since even the dream is too wretched to consider because you’ve wasted enough time, and striving and failing would be worse than doing nothing (you tell yourself), that outpour is bottled again and stopped.

Uh-huh honey. I’m tired, you’re tired, Yeezus wept. Thank god.


Saturday, June 8, 2013

Reviews of Frances Ha, etc.




In Whit Stillman’s incandescent, Lubitsch-worthy Damsels In Distress, Greta Gerwig’s idiosyncratic screen presence was mined for all its potential riches; In Stillman’s hands she could be linguistically complex, stubborn, even sinister. Now dating Noah Baumbach, Gerwig is the front-and-center Muse and co-creator of his Frances Ha, a brief, B&W character study of a 27-year-old dancer whose life in Manhattan is just as uncoordinated as her steps. It’s likeable and well photographed, but in his fawning Baumbach has peeled off layers from both Gerwig and himself. Frances Ha is self-consciously slight, a snapshot that fails to develop.

I haven’t followed the “Mumblecore” movement since 2010, seeing Andrew Bujalski’s mature Beeswax and Aaron Katz’s stylish Portland mystery Cold Weather as symbolic kiss-offs to this very insular, very mid-aughts DIY phenomenon. Clearly Baumbach was taken with it, no doubt first noticing Gerwig in her ex-comrade Joe Swanberg’s seminal Hannah Takes The Stairs and casting her to poignant effect in Greenberg. Baumbach dabbled in Mumblecore, having produced Swanberg’s haunting 2008 film Alexander The Last before stepping in and escorting Gerwig across the ballroom. At this point though, Swanberg has blossomed into one of the most talented young filmmakers in American cinema, and his recent features Silver Bullets (the best horror movie in five years) and the wrenching Art History have probed intersecting themes of lust, art making, psychosis and betrayal in taut, innovative ways that don’t fall under the “Mumblecore” tag or any tag at all. Frances Ha is a late entry in the Mumblecore cycle and its effects---stumbly “improvised” dialogue, threadbare running time, examination of an aimless (also white, upper class, Artistic) Lost Generation—feel dated, even archaic, especially after the advancements made by Swanberg. This wouldn’t be a problem if Baumbach had simply updated the sensibility of his debut feature Kicking And Screaming, which certainly influenced Mumblecore, but his lax compositions and Hipster’s Digest scenes are redolent of a desire to imitate the work of Bujalski and Swanberg. If this is Baumbach “re-inventing” himself, may I suggest retroactive appraisal.

A director with as vast a knowledge of film history as Baumbach should realize that in his ardor of Gerwig he’s fallen into the “Auteur/IngĂ©nue” syndrome that claimed Peter Bogdanovich, whose affection for Cybill Shepherd led him to grossly misuse and overestimate her talents in the likes of Daisy Miller and At Long Last Love. The sad fact is that Gerwig isn’t much for physical comedy, and instead of calling back to the awkward grace of Marion Davies she futzes around on the dance studio floor and a woebegone waitressing (or “pouring”) job in the vice of her director’s constricting monochrome halo. The eeriness and complexity of her “Let’s do the Sambola” call to arms in Damsels is narrowed here to pissing off a subway platform and making the most out of bite-sized vignettes like Frances’s visits to her parents in Sacramento or an impromptu, melancholy Parisian jet. She’s also upstaged by the tic-free, genuinely unpredictable Adam Driver, as a womanizing roommate she crashes with after being ditched by her BFF (Mickey Sumner). It should be noted that Frances briefly resides with Driver’s Lev and another young turk in a unisex living situation vastly inferior to the wit and gender dynamism displayed weekly by Zooey Deschanel, Max Greenfield and Jake Johnson on the excellent show New Girl. But of course Frances Ha is better than that fluff. It could tell you itself.

In his derivation of outmoded indie style, and distracted by the delight of showing off his new lady, Baumbach largely eschews the pointed, astute storytelling that made past films like The Squid And The Whale so powerful. In Squid, the foreshadowed, symphonic use of Pink Floyd’s “Hey You” to augment domestic misery smacked one right in the gut. There’s nothing as tricky or effective here. Frances Ha’s passages are largely cut to ribbons, as she breaks up, flirts, hangs out, contemplates, travels and lives in a perpetual gimcrack zap without dramatic anchor. Thus most of the film feels oddly tossed-off and enervating at the same time. Her magical dance down a city street to David Bowie’s “Modern Love” is deflated by jump cuts that should have stepped aside for an extended, graceful track. Also unnerving are the staccato bursts of Baumbach’s trademark pornographic dialogue exchanges. Amidst the preciousness we’re suddenly hit with talk about how a boyfriend loves to “cum in my face” or how a sexual conquest can only climax in the 69 position. Far from objecting on moral grounds, I’m only struck with how distracting these bon mots are. Appropriate for the poison pen Hamptons drama Margot At The Wedding, but for this love letter to the French New Wave, Woody Allen, and Ms. Gerwig?

The film finds agreeable footing in its third act, where Frances hits her nadir in a university regression and tries salvaging her relationship with her friend and the future. Still, the concluding charms inevitably cast a pall over what came before. What if the majority of the film were allowed to breath? What if it were more disciplined and focused on one or two aspects of Frances’s life, her dancing or relationships? Would they yield the same concentrated pleasures as Robert Altman’s The Company or Eric Rohmer’s A Good Marriage? Or was the modest enterprise cursed from the moment Baumbach and Gerwig decided to have their damsel trip and fall while running down a sidewalk, garishly disappearing from view?


The Internship

Despite the occasional guff routine and motes of unfortunate ethnic humor, this Own Wilson and Vince Vaughn reteam is considerably more winning than Frances Ha, being the first PG-13 Vaugn vehicle that isn’t atrocious and even sneaking in some wise observations about getting older and counting your losses amidst enjoyable Revenge Of The Nerdsian set pieces. Two hour commercial for Google? Of course. But who cares, there are worse companies. Seeing these veteran pros I’ve basically been watching my entire life team up with an engaging bunch of ragtags in a techie decathlon is increasingly pleasurable. It has a good-natured glow.


The Hangover III

Rotten Tomatoes, the consensus worshipping cultural tragedy of a movie site, delivers a stone, final judgment on this last entry in the comedy franchise. The Hangover III is poor because it’s an “angrily dark action movie.” And that’s a bad thing? By making the third entry so gustily gonzo, Philips seems energized in a way he hasn’t been since chronicling the fringe ramblings of Al Goldstein and G.G. Allin. The inspired elements of the first Hangover were hampered by a scrim of “Bro” misogyny, which was thankfully corrected in the superior sequel and this crowning entry. (It’s as if the first film was helmed by Bradley Cooper’s douchebag Phil and the others by Galifianakis’ spacey manchild Alan.) Hangover III is a kinetic, bruising crime story with incidental humor, which makes it even funnier. Philips’ rejuvenated energy allows for some unexpectedly gorgeous widescreen cinematography, and it has a creepy, frenzied mirth that Guy Richie and Martin McDonagh have tried and failed to pull off. Like the later Saw movies it’s a reminder that good results can spring from the Studio demand for extended narrative, and its invention leaves a noted indie feeling increasingly rote. 

Monday, December 31, 2012

The Last Of Erin




1.
His shrine was incomplete without it. An online handle on the message board who claimed to be a girl sent him a private E-mail telling him that she had the Nasty, but it was too valuable to be sent in the mail so would he want to drive to the town where she lived and retrieve it from her there? This had the chance of ending very badly, but he needed the tape, had sought and desired and bled for it nearly all of his life. It would never be uploaded to streaming video. Once the last copy vanished the content on the tape inside would stop circling the great cultural drain and just fall into a time before creation. Obtaining it would mean a seven-hour drive, to a designated meeting place at night. He quickly accepted “her” offer, even though he demanded to Skype with her and she refused, asked for her phone number and was refused. She wrote how she was “too far gone” to be seen. She was beyond the point of talking on the phone with anyone, perhaps ever again. All he got her to share was the dubious information that she had traveled hill and dale to go to a liberal arts school, and since graduation had decided to stay in the small college town. She came across the tape with “great difficulty,” and, out of her entire collection, both hard copy and torrent, she wanted to be free of it. She was charging him a song for it, too. So he booked a motel and since it was The Holidays anyway he didn’t have to put in for a day off at work. He began the trip early, blue fuzz above the mountains, and checked into his overripe hotel room that evening. They were scheduled to meet at the town Gazebo the very next midnight (“ask around, or you’ll probably just see it as soon as you arrive”).  He fell asleep in this new foreign America, dreaming of the tape and Sabine and the trap he may have just willfully entered.

2.
The tape was called several things, colloquial brands from the UK underground. Sabine was the Dutch blonde featured across its 45-minute length. She died of an apparent suicide in the late eighties, the time he was born. He only knew her through crude video captures, Sabine with the horses and dogs, Sabine with the fat old men, and worst of all because of its temporary solace, Sabine roaming fields in a stained orange dress, allowing daffodils to proliferate in her hands during the ethereal glide. He first read about it in 6th grade, inspired to look up “Video Nasties” on Altavista after seeing the word in the Psychotronic Film Guide. It was listed on a survey of other Nasties, The video’s title struck him because it wasn’t “nasty” like Bad Taste or I Spit On Your Grave. As he read the details he knew he was too young to be reading them but he didn’t stop. His mother was working a second job as a Community Center lifeguard and wouldn’t be home for another two hours. Somehow it had already grown dark. The site had a picture of Sabine from the tape, a cropped image of her lying on the ground, head to the side, eyes closed as thick knives of hay knelt abrasions across the skin of her face and bare shoulders.

There were only a half-dozen copies in rumored existence. He knew that once he saw the Nasty (if she even had it in her possession, if “she” was even that) it would be a grainy blip compared to the vast, writhing possible videos he played in his mind over and over again throughout the long years. Sometimes the unseen was better. He’d been burned in the Tape Trading days by the likes of Gestapo’s Last Orgy and Cynthia’s Revenge, pupa with the reputations of fully-grown monsters. This was different. It didn’t tell a fictional story. Sabine played herself, more or less: a farm girl who took solace in her animals when human beings hurt and betrayed her. The gang rape was supposedly first, trailed then by thirty minutes of enthusiastic zoophilia. Some versions had credits-all bullshit names, “Petulia Kelly,” “Michael Goodheart”-but the commonly circulated Nasty cut just ended, no, just closed. Now he had to see it just to see it, because he’d seen everything else, and this was the tape that inspired him to see everything else, in the early days thinking Well, I’ll never see that.

Who the hell was she? The name on her E-mail was just Fucked. You have 1 new message from Fucked.

3.
He woke in the afternoon before the meet and decided that if he stayed in the motel he would fall asleep and miss it, and he didn’t trust this cheap establishment with a wake-up call. He drove around. A pleasant town, appropriately festive despite the strange absence of snow. Blocks of homes were auto-erotically choked with Christmas lights. The sky was pitiful and grey. This was why he activated primarily during the night. No, there was a little snow, under an inflatable rubber snowman welcoming all-comers to a house on some hill.

He got a burger at an overly set-designed, “hippie-themed” restaurant in the center of the town. Young people sat around him, bottling themselves within psychedelically-dyed tablecloths and benches soaked with drizzle outside. He realized when he gave his order that those were the first words he had spoken to anybody in months.

Ignorant as to his being illegally parked or not made his walking tour of Main Street hurried and brief. The locale was a tourist fly-trap, stores of weavery and caffeinated beverage enclaves everywhere. The women were almost all beautiful. How could people live here? But, he realized, he could live there himself if his room was uprooted and shipped over. There was more traffic than the town seemed poised to handle. It was gonna be ok though. Night was what the place was secretly built for. Night was what the “girl” was built for. She had the Nasty because she didn’t live in this bunker of daylight. Did she look pretty when she slept? If her mouth languished open, was there a thimble of drool tiptoeing to the pillow? Who was lying next to her to catch it?

He wondered what the breath of the girl who owned the Video Nasty smelled like. He wondered if she tried to be graceful and ladylike or if, in shunning the sun, she had let her hair grow down to the floor. He went back to the motel and slept. He felt unclean in the light.

4.
There was no snow. Brief exhalations of cold windchill were the only giveaways of winter. An unknown source played a maudlin instrumental of “Silent Night” that moved him despite himself.

He saw nobody at the gazebo until he saw her, leaning against the southern darkness, and when he got a little closer she stepped into the illuminating amber slicked across the wooden, danced-on floor. Moles of acne pocked a face curtained by hangman 70s songwriter dirty blonde hair, a face unmasked by slaughtered bangs. They had already run together from point to point: the physical meeting felt anti-climactic in a way. He was relieved the text was accurate, unless he was about to be knocked unconscious by a stealthy co-conspirator. He braced himself for some hideous impact.

He saw her bag at her boots. She did speak. “I would have suggested we meet at a video store but the last one closed about a month ago.”

“Mom and pop?”

“Yea. It’s being renovated into something to do with Mackintosh Computers.” Her voice was stout, husky; it verged on downloading the entire woman full. “They began selling off their VHS inventory and I made out with as many as I could even though I don’t have a VCR. Or at least I didn’t, back then.”

A red pickup truck drove slowly through the immediately adjacent street. He imagined the driver was out late to buy dog food, a late dinner for his basement victim.

He gave her a check and assured her it wouldn’t bounce. He would even go with her to the bank in the morning. “You don’t have to do that,” she said. “I believe you.”

She lit a cigarette. He tried to decipher indentations of the videotape inside her bag.

“Can I assume your real name isn’t ‘Fucked?’”

“You can assume that. I’m not going to tell you what it really is.”

“Fine. It would ruin the name I picked for you, on the drive over. There was just clouds over mountain. No stars. I picked a name for you then.”

She smacked her tongue and tapped slight embers to the floor of icy dust. “What name did you give me?”

“Erin.”

She mouthed “O” and took a drag. “Not even close.”

After a few quiet minutes, a blast of wind rerouted smoke from her mouth to the ether park beyond. He asked, “Can I see it?”

“Didn’t you ever hear about not seeming too eager around girls?”

“I’m not trying to have sex with you.”

“No, you want this.”

She stepped it out, her stocking’d thighs shivering as she crouched, felt through the bag and pulled out the unmarked Nasty, boxed in the Marco’s Video Store package, gritty black plastic laced with a banner of animated movie icons (Laurel and Hardy, Chaplin, Marilyn, you know).

“I already wrote to you about this, but you’re wasting your time coming down here. The version that exists in your head is a thousand times more transgressive and horrible and positively turgid than the real thing, which is just…which is just fucking mush. It’s padded with endless cutaways of the Danish countryside. The actual, you know, ‘content’ is only sixteen minutes, and you can barely see it with all the 16mm blear.”

“I’ve seen the vidcaps. I know it’s a waste. But there’s an aura to this thing that accelerates the older and more exhaustive I become. I can watch it and move on.”

“The one dog doesn’t look happy to be there, but a hairy hand keeps pushing him back in. It’s like that part of Last House On Dead End Street.

“You know that one? You’re a Roger Watkins fan?”

“I have two eyes and a heart, don’t I?” After this transaction, he would never see her again.

Was her life fated from the start to obtain the Video Nasty? He needed to know something. But he needed to know a few other things first.

“Are you on Filmpocalpyse? [best-kept secret obscure movie torrent site.]”

“I am. One of my uploads was that classic roughie, The Taking Of Anna.”

“I remember that. It was posted by ‘Fuckthead.’”

“That’s my name.”

“I left a long comment for you. I was TBater.”

Her shaking finger pointed his way. “You. You. That rant about George Payne was you! I loved that, dude. ‘Payne was the American God of hurt and hate. He got no pleasure from any of it.’ And here we are.”

They stood together, blank frames of web words developing in the stop bath of the actual.

"Why do you watch roughies? Why do you watch things like The Nasty?"

"Same reason as you, Kindred Spirit."

“How did you get Sabine?”

“When I was in the city, visiting my family at Christmas, I came across a 'Pocalypse thread about unavailable tapes…in retrospect it was probably started by you.”

“No, actually. I had probably already been kicked off at that point. I was a selfish Seeder”

“ I happened to be on very late and I saw something about a ‘Midnight Garage Sale.” Only 45 minutes from the city. ‘You never know what you’ll find.’ So I took my father’s car and drove to a perfectly normal-looking house in the suburbs, playing Swans the whole way down. Guy wasn’t kidding. The lights in the houses were off but the garage door was wide open, and there were about two dozen people milling around. Yes, the users of Filmpocalypse had skin and brains, I think I was the only woman. They were nearly all middle aged or young and withdrawn-seeming. SOme held hands. Two giant tables were set up in the garage. I couldn’t see his car anywhere outside. On the tables the guy had set up six crates, three on each table. Everyone was quiet as we browsed. The Master Of Ceremonies, if that’s what you could call him, was installed in the hallway by the garage, holding a clipboard that kept track of purchases and the value of purchases. Prices were negotiable based on rareness of the item. He was playing early Rod Stewart low on a 90s stereo. You know, that song they covered on The Office? ‘The handbags and the gladrags that your granddad had to sweat so you could buy.

“When a browser picked something they wanted-most tapes were labeled but others were big fat mysteries-they consulted the M.O.C. and he let them into a little laundry room with a TV/VCR setup so they could see what exactly was on the unmarked tapes or so they could gauge the quality of whatever find they’d just found. I happened to reach into a crate and pulled out a naked tape. Something was queer about it. There was a paltry amount of tape in the cartridge. Whatever this was it wasn’t a feature. What, then? I started feeling the pulse of discovery.”

“I know how that feels,” he said, cancelling tears through every modulated blink.

“I snuck the tape into the back viewing room, making sure the M.O.C. was busy consulting with someone else. I popped it in and there she was, Sabine, carrying two barrels of milk across a field that tried to look bucolic but failed miserably. I made a sound you can only describe as a ‘gyelp.’ I quickly ejected it and, breaking protocol, slipped it in my bag. What would happen to me if they found out I stole? I bought two tapes, episodes of the Japanese ‘Rape Man’ serial, and quickly drove home. I had it. What else was happening in America at that time that was as important as this? I bogarted Sabine!”



5.
From The Basement Tape, a work-in-progress memoir by the girl he called “Erin” (this section details an all-nighter watching Filmpocolypse movies with an ex named Doug):

Break Free My Chains! was released in 1978 by producer Harry Novac-his company logo, a kaleidoscope of multicolored letters spiraling and swirling to form his name, was the variant of image I previously thought was only accountable in dreams-and we chose it to be, in Doug’s words, the night’s “spooning a companion” film. That is, the movie you can watch without fearing sleep, because if the movie was a person you would share the lateness, kiss in the dark, skin pressing skin, having already made love in the wet hours before.
 Racesploitation. There were many of those, offshoots of Exploitation, deeper roots into what Doug called “The basement of American Cinema.” Nunsploitation, Lezsploitation, Blacksploitation, Sexploitation. There were others, un-official categories invented by the collectors of torrent sperm. 42ndsploitation, vampsploitation, beastsploitation, rapesploitation. I could go on and on and on and on.
 This one exploited race tension in a blood struggle between an African-American college professor traveling through Washington State with his family, and a bigoted millionaire named Harley Shaw who kidnaps Professor Carver’s family and uses them to resurrect slavery at his secluded Antebellum-style mansion. The daughter becomes his sex captive. Shaw verbally assaults Carver throughout, violates his daughter in front of him, uses him as a human ottoman, throws the family in cages guarded by his buck-toothed sons, whips him repeatedly while the Professor is chained up. Carver goes over the edge when he finds out that his daughter has been impregnated by Shaw, who plans to kills the child because he doesn’t want his family lineage to be “Stained.” Carver convinces his bruised, beaten, overworked family, plus two prostitutes Shaw kidnapped to start his “experiment,” to rise up against their oppressor, to break free of the mental and physical chains that bind them. Armed with working tools, cutlery, a wheelbarrow, the neo-slaves take out Shaw’s sons, while Carver faces Shaw, rifle versus scythe, white versus black.
 “Give me your best shot, nigger boy!” Shaw takes aim.
 “I might be your boy, but I’ll never be your nigger,” Carver says before throwing his weapon into Shaw’s neck. Arterial spray. We zoom out of the family as they embrace. The child incubates still. The End.

6.
They traded up. He offered her a ride. She shrugged. As they drove he thought about what would happen if he let himself fall in love with her. He couldn’t succumb to that. She, “Erin,” “Fucked,” whoever, would be nauseated by the mere word. He wondered why he wasn’t, considering all he watched and was drawn to, but no, the word “love” didn’t sicken him, nor the idea of being involved, holding the warm body of someone you had fallen in love with.

He had it. He finally possessed Sabine. The shrine was finally a Shrine.

“I’m leaving here soon,” she said. “Going home. Good thing we caught each other when we did.”

He pictured the long, angry E-mail she would send, accusing him of gushing and making her uncomfortable. He could imagine the depth of his eventual fixation, the character flaw he resented the most, the thing that made him retreat from human relationships two years before. He shouldn’t have come here. All of his dread predictions would become events. He’d probably E-mail her the instant he got home, or try to kiss her after he parked outside of whatever home was hers.

7:
From The Basement Tape

There was a movie from the depths. I’ll never forget it, it looked pulled from the ocean, it looked pulled from the ocean and angry to be alive. Women suffered. The movie stayed with their suffering until it went beyond drama, beyond the pale, until it became sad, the woman was in mourning for herself, her eyes died before she did and it was so sad. The face of the woman in the old horror film was Beethoven. They performed an operation on her. They cut into her. They knew what they were doing. They were stealing her blood. I had not slept for twenty-four hours. I knew how she felt. I felt a kinship with this victim. Hands manacled to a steel table. A soundtrack of library choral music. Hyena laughter from the overlord and his minions.

--

Watched:
 Dark Riding, Ozsploitation from the 1970s. A bickering, well-off brother and sister travel to their freshly deceased uncle’s mansion in the outback to secure their enormous inheritance. It opens with the murder of their other sibling in a car accident orchestrated by our anti-heroes. The two are incestuous. They have sex in the bed of the departed. Then doors start slamming. Things don’t go according to plan.

 Rape Cartel. The screams of the victims of sadistic Mexican drug lord Fernando Rodriguez scorched the morning. Robert Forster is a DEA agent hell bent on stopping him after Fernando gets a hold of his wayward daughter. Gunfight in blazing streaks. It’s difficult to stay awake through the filler that includes Forster’s unfortunate, mincing Gay-stereotype lawyer.

 Manson Family Secrets is of the rankest sub-genre, that of Tatesploitation, or Skeltersploitation, alleged home movies from The Ranch, doe-eyed, stoned, very poor actors playing Charlie, Tex, Sadie, etc. 16mm “Found” footage. This tries to capitalize on the urban legend that The Family made snuff films before the Tate-Labianca killings. This was exacerbated by Ed Sanders’ book The Family, which I have around here somewhere. Charlie sits in a circle with the other fakes. He drones on about Helter Skelter and the “Negro Uprising.” Sound pops.

 And there was a short subject, Knowing Your Fellow Nudists. And a cartoon, “Dancin’ Demons.” We began an import post-apocalyptic revenge thriller, Bronx Kill Squad 2023, directed by “Eric Martin,”-really Enzo Santini, who made hundreds of film, none by his actual name-but it was too early, the pace too plodding to sustain us aloft. We decided not to give in. At Doug’s basement sink we splashed our faces with water. We high-fived and thrust our foreheads together. We’d make it through. If one fell the other would become their designated rescuer.

8.
“Do you want to come back to my hotel room and watch this with me? Might be better if you don’t watch it alone, you never know.”

The polite wince on her face was the sign, the clear betrayal, that she knew he’d let himself become a yearning, messy, heartsick human being like those common others below the hill where she made a home. She unbuckled her seatbelt and opened the door. She patted the Nasty, by itself in the backseat.

“Enjoy,” she told him.

Hey. “Hey!” She stopped while walking across the front lawn to her apartment house, half of which was covered in tarp and parasitic scaffolds for the sake of renovation.

She told him without having to speak: “No. Don’t. Let me go.”

He said, “Goodnight, Erin.”

She waved and disappeared between the folds and knotty contours of the haunted house. He didn’t drive away. One dim little light came on in the top left corner. Tree branches sloped across the window, Oz talons protecting her. Before he took off for the street that would eventually connect to a highway, her light blinked off, replaced by the slightest blue glow of a computer screen.

So what becomes of you my love? 

9.
Sabine hung herself, either in 1986 or ’85. The Nasty was the only thing she left behind, and even that is more myth than object. In my worst moments, those late-night depths of self-loathing and other Fun Shit, I wonder if I could ever be as brave as her, brave enough to debase myself doing something that gave me a cent of pleasure in one otherwise horrid life, brave enough to end that life when I felt it was time to do so. Unlike Sabine, I plan to carry on, but I can’t watch her anymore. I can’t be burdened with perpetuating her legacy in my lonely apartment anymore. I’m going to sell the tape. Not to the highest bidder, but to someone even more wretched than myself. Someone who needs her more than I do.
 There’s a minute that I’ve watched countless times I’m surprised I haven’t wrecked the tape. It’s towards the end. She’s just finished blowing the dog, a Great Dane, and she masturbates it until the animal ejaculates on her tits. Sabine lets out a relieved, exhausted sigh (at least I think she does, the tape is silent) and lies back on the bed of hay. The dog shakes and runs off, probably to eat a long-promised post-coital treat. The camera should cut then. It stays rolling. It zooms into Sabine’s face. Her eyes are lodged deep inside a previous year. Her face is affectless, until she smiles wide, broadly happy, eyes stapled to the ceiling of the barn. Is she happy for now, for what just transpired? Or did she manage to successfully uproot a memory that was good and fine? A day of solitary rock climbing as a girl? A first kiss from a sturdy hitchhiking boy? I don’t know. The Nasty ends there. Once I froze the image at the exact moment her zombie smile pierces everything, pierces the zoophile loop that always holds her, pierces the room where a lost girl who hates herself is watching thirty years on. The bottom of the screen shook with a distorted strip of static tracking. I lay on the bed, pulling up the blanket and hugging my pillow. We didn’t take our eyes off each other. I watched Sabine’s ambivalent mirth until I passed out myself.



Thursday, November 8, 2012

Eight Poems


Beautiful Things

1
Jazz and Poetry are
Too good for me
I don’t deserve their
Unlockable fragrances

Monk and Crane
Told me a story
That I couldn’t hear
And could only
Vertiginously experience
Through some pipe dream
Of Eno’s Faraway Beach

I felt nothing until
The day,
Or night rather
When they stoked the fires
Of my burdened consciousness
And brought me to
A version of life
Where a Blazing-Through reigned
Piano keys and Words
Relieved of their old emasculation
Chafing ears and air
I forgot to seal my gorging

2
You, undefined, are too good for me
You, a multitude of quarrels buried under wet skin
Don’t change don’t come
Any closer

I saw you dancing to the jazz in my head
Was it dancing?
Or did you sleep
And not experience me
Rosalie moving blank
Her blushing ass mapping
The failed territory
Of all who sought surrender
You relieved him like sleep once did
You, his ticket to the Dunes
I gore through innocent pages the wound of your false interior

3
Your lip curls
When you’re aroused
And it also curls
When you know it’s bullshit
I’m in love with your choices
Even if they never led you
To my room
Your birthmark, Nellie
Rubbed off on the sheets
Of a bed rejecting treatment
Insisting only that your feet be clean For his mouth

The Popular Fiction Writer

The Popular Fiction Writer
Handled his narrative like taffy
On quadruple-spaced pages
To make sure his legions
Were thrilled
Even if that meant
The sliver of a person
He created
Had to go left
When she kept
Pressing at his brain
To permit her an alternative choice

He played golf
And briefly forgot
About the Mausoleum Of Thrills
He’d erected in every
Major bookstore
Across the century

I wish I could
Take comfort in
His bloated body of works
I wish his series’
And his standalones
And his thrillers and romances
And calculations to a market
Were a constant in my life
And not translucent evidence
Of a problem
That divides me
From my fellow shoppers

They are smart
They don’t suffer
Because they know
He will always deliver
Like the load-bearing driver
Of a usable take

The Popular Fiction Writer
Doesn’t see what all the fuss is about
He was never going to write Ulysses
In the first place
And his books
Make people happy
So if you don’t like him
Read something else

Psychle

I didn’t have the option
of picking a mate
like you did
from the stacks of waiting mates
you had whinnying, biting, caulked
at the fringe point of every little toe

Stacks and stacks
You fanciful alone
Yet all you had to do
was announce those magic words across Liberty smog
and the militia of the jaded goateed  
would invade your sadness
which remains, still, even as
the victor hotly bites through your cheek

I have caskets
You have stacks
Dead connections trained
like dogs to perfect the limits
of my Dungeon
You ran from billions of winged Predators
Tried hiding in the grooves of promises faint
as dropped calls
and you also tried hiding
in the tower of simulated hate
with flickers stitched
In the ether
of women battered
to pillows of yarn
by men who killed their old names
if not themselves entirely
You reached into the stacks
and the first folder your hands caught
became the pillar where you lay
as “The Bad Thing” lost sleep
trying to find you again

I might have a shot away 
at immortality
but he will die with you
And both will be
rotting forgotten
together

No Man’s

I’m afraid of myself
Because I am a city
Where rule is lobbed to the introverts
And they transform a metropolis into a writing room

In my city
All prey naked
And each of my friends
Get overtaxed as punishment
For the crime of being thought Free

Every citizen
In the Northern Quadrant
Is a pixieish teenage girl
Chewing on her own pink hair
Staring at a computer screen
In a female nest otherwise Ketchum dark
Playing new music
A genre known as
MenstralCore
Locus’d with bobbleheaded bass
Her panties dissolving like the LSD
On Madeline’s tongue
Passed to her
On the tidal crest
Of Judy’s tongue

At the outskirts
A prostitute called Zel
Addresses the robed Daemon:
“These conditions are unlivable,”
she laments
“Uptown the faggots don’t want love
and are left with nothing but
Joycean ejaculate
lubricating their bug stomachs.”

The Daemon,
Stoking the fire with two decades’ baggage
Answers with the feline sound
Of Zel’s first orgasm
Self-inflicted, when she was twelve
And still answered to Rose

Losing patience, Zel says
“The black population is only accessible through their music
and the Jews through their books. And even you, Daemon,
who bleed cheap food and nonsensical follies
know that Left and Right factions have been dissolved
because they give unacceptably sterile Brain.
The price of living here
is to forfeit any desire for sunlight
because it has been usurped
by context. And the value
of human relationships is nullified
by a gerbil’s resentment
and the holy singing of maids
leaking from our adjacent republic.

“And it isn’t a kiss away like Mick said
but of a much extended roping distance
from me to you, which, as we know,
is a gulf subsumed into a cloud
of dense impossibility.

“Nothing is stable or sacred.
I’ve prophesized it
to the most minutely detailed arc.
Books can’t save us.
Money won’t save us, even if we could get it.
Time is a worm.
We’re worms.
And I’ve never been happier in my life.”

I’m afraid of myself
Because my city is flammable
And I’ve lost me only match

Them

My parents are engaged
In a conspiracy
To kill me
With implants of different
Complexes
For many of life’s unfortunate handouts

They are trying to kill me
By turning off my dwelling’s heat
And by telling me I’m
Too bloated and then
Too sucked-in
By telling me
To pursue someone
And that paradoxically
That or that someone isn’t worth pursuing

They are trying to kill me
By giving me what I want
And not telling me
That it has to stop

They are trying to kill me
But don’t realize it
And would feel guilty if they did
And that’s why
I love them

Nova Scotia

She doesn’t know he’s awake
Until he feels her nude hip
As she props herself up
On the side of the bed
Nearest the window
Gazing at a wall of
Sweaty glass

Hours ago
They slept together for the first time
After an era of minor friendship
She, broken by a single man
Who isn’t this one, now stroking skin
So cold
Each goosebump
A minute in time
That lock-stepped enough
To make their evening possible

They’ll fuck prolifically
Over the constant passage
Of the Sun
Rolling across the sky
Like a tire down a hill of Highway Blank
Never intending coupledom to leak
From her bed
And into their lives

They go places
Neither would have
Gone alone
With Adult Pink sabers
And tools that change
The countenance
Of your adored and lonely face

And when
They walk down the street
She hangs back
And then decides to lead
And is allowed to advance
As he trails close behind her

A strobelight is
Nothing but a wrench

a.m.

At College
I knew rapists
And abusers of women
Who fucked people
I wanted to fuck
And beat women
I wouldn’t have beaten
And murdered the spirits
Of decent people
And were sometimes defended
By great people
Who should have known better

Every night before I sleep

Goodnight Carol,
I wish I knew you now
The only thing we have in common
In 2012
Is forest and fire
And the music of an era
You left behind 

Goodnight Carol,
You seemed a member
Of the party
Who decided to leave
Without telling anyone else
Backing slowly out of the room
As the others fought on
Not realizing there was
One of them subtracted

Goodnight Carol,
I didn’t think about you
For several years
Until The Bad Thing
Started growing weeds in my brain
And I realized how
The unthinkable contingency
Could in fact
Be

Goodnight Carol,
You were not the first
To cement
A family legacy
The family in question
Would rather not welcome
But everyone hopes
You’ll be the last
Each of us
In the lower generation
Has a private vision of you
Mine is of a woman who
Tragically became photographs
Until the end of time

Goodnight Carol,
I hear you linger
In the secret crying
of every guardian I've loved
And I’m left with
Ambivalent empathy
And eternal fascination
And Roth’s perpetual fear
Of a future where may exist
A pinprick
Of a day
Day when maybe