Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Stan Lee RIP

The death of Stan Lee on Monday has no doubt inspired much reflection from those who grew up on his many tales to astonish. The Marvel Age of Comics created, before a string of billion-dollar grossing movies, many volumes of half-baked analysis. I have no wish to add to that. What follows are a few lines of tribute to Stan the Man's contributions to storytelling. 

It is something of a mystery as to why, after more than 10 years of trying, almost every corner of the Marvel Universe has made the trip to the big screen successfully, except the one title that started the whole thing – The Fantastic Four. The quartet gave birth to two mostly unsatisfying outings (giving us the first appearance of Chris Evans in colorful tights) and another attempt that largely arrived stillborn (despite the presence of Michael B. Jordan). Evidently, playing the Human Torch is a kind of training wheels for bigger things. 

But the Fantastic Four provided the Big Bang for the Marvel Age. Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, for more than 100 issues, created the architecture for much of what we see in the movies of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and beyond. The coming Captain Marvel film will feature the Skrulls, the alien race who bedeviled the FF in its first year of existence. The four made the first trip to Wakanda to meet Black Panther. It was Johnny Storm who rediscovered Captain America (though this was later a hoax, it was an effective trial balloon that led to the character’s resurrection with the Avengers.) Doctor Doom, a disfigured figure of nobility and intellect wrapped in armor and robes, can be seen as the prototype for Darth Vader.

The FF met the Inhumans, traveled to the Negative Zone, and hobnobbed with all the various characters of Marvel’s other magazines. Month after month, through the sixties, the Fantastic Four was the laboratory for Marvel's demolition and recreation of how comic books were conceived, produced and celebrated in popular culture. 

But long before Thanos – there was Galactus.

Perhaps the ultimate FF adventure – and an example of Stan Lee’s abilities as a storyteller – is the 1966 three-issue arc of Fantastic Four 48-50: The Galactus Trilogy.

This story has been told elsewhere. Lee and Kirby created their stories through a routine: a consultation/brainstorming about the plotline of a particular issue, Kirby drawing the pages and Lee later filling in the dialogue. For the 50th issue of Fantastic Four, the two wanted something besides the usual rogue of the month. The idea was to create a demigod who would be beyond the calculus of good and evil, something different than a costumed goon bent on world domination. Kirby later said he drew his inspiration from the Bible. What came was Galactus, a giant being who roamed the cosmos in search of planets from which he could consume the energy needed to sustain his life. His quest is neverending, and he leaves husks of planets behind in his wake. The fate of every life on earth hangs in the balance.(I've often wondered where in the Bible that inspiration came from. Daniel's vision of "The Ancient of Days?" The Angel of Death? One look at Galactus' world destruction machines and you might be reminded of Ezekiel's vision of the wheels.)

To accentuate the adventure, Kirby created a nearly naked shining figure on a surfboard, whom Lee dubbed the Silver Surfer. The Surfer, Kirby explained, because he was the herald of Galactus, was himself a being of immense cosmic power who sought out the planets his master would destroy.

Reading the three issues more than 50 years later, we are reminded of how much the medium has shifted since. Lee and Kirby had been part of comic books since virtually the beginning of the industry, and had seen it morph from a subversive child entertainment into the childish material of the 1950s. The panic that comics contributed to social ills - which inspired the Comics Code Authority - mandated neutered stories and spawned banal plotlines. Heroes fought villains in convoluted storylines where little was at stake, lives were only obliquely threatened, and those threats were easily dispatched. War comics. Romance comics. Monster comics. Western comics. The plots were interchangeable, sometimes engaging, but mostly forgettable. The medium would have died if Lois Lane never strayed from her monthly mission to prove Clark Kent's secret identity, or Xom, the space creature, succeeded in devouring the Earth. "We knew we were writing for kids," Lee remembered. "Or so we thought." To achieve an end run around this, the Marvel storylines focused, not on the external conflicts, but the internal ones that power brings to our heroes.

Most early Marvel superheroes owe their abilities to radiation in one form or another, given that the Marvel Universe came into being during the Cold War. Atomic power served the same kind of storytelling function that magic had for centuries. Space, because of Yuri Gagarin and Alan Shepard, was a fertile playground for the imagination. We assumed it was where we were going to spend the future. 

On the page, Lee abided by the rules of the comic book genre. No one ever speaks in the comics. They shout! They declaim! The exclamation points give the prose its power, as does Lee’s penchant for alliteration. Our superheroes may speak in pedestrian rhythms, but the cosmic figures talk with Shakespearean intonations.

The dynamics of the Fantastic Four began with the first issue. Reed Richards, Mr. Fantastic, is the elastic leader, a brilliant scientist in love with Sue Storm, the Invisible Girl, who merely wants to be by his side. Her brother, Johnny Storm, is the Human Torch, a young man as fiery as his superpowers. But the heart and soul of the FF is Ben Grimm, the Thing, a rock-like bruiser and tortured soul, the outsider who gave the series both comic relief and pathos.

For the coming of Galactus, the action begins deep in space and gradually grows closer to the earth. Our heroes are alerted to the planet destroyer’s approach by The Watcher, himself a giant bald, grandiloquent figure pledged to not interfere in the affairs of the human race. But this time, he breaks his vow, knowing that Galactus will destroy the earth if allowed to.

The Watcher: Heed my words, pillager of the planets! This tiny speck of matter upon which we stand contains intelligent life! You must not destroy it!
Galactus: Of what import are brief, nameless lives...to Galactus?..It is not my intention to injure any living being! But...I must replenish my energy! If petty creatures are wiped out when I drain a planet, it is regrettable...but unavoidable!

The story is full of the kind of action, suspense and invention that one came to expect from Lee and Kirby. The Surfer arrives and summons Galactus, but the Thing “clobbers” the Surfer, rocketing him across New York until the being lands unconscious at the apartment of Alicia Masters, Ben Grimm’s blind girlfriend. It is from her that the Surfer realizes the human race is worth saving.

Though Galactus drives most of the story's action, it is the Surfer who imbues it with its gravitas. The Surfer is, as Alicia puts it, a figure of nobility who immediately bewitches her, and us. He combines the mystic pull of space with the spiritual mythology of surfing - riding a wave in search of some zenlike moment of absolute peace, a connection with energy, fate and nature. The fact that he can be made into a defender of the human race gives the final act of the story its punch. For when the Surfer decides to oppose Galactus, he holds off the devourer until Johnny Storm can return from the other side of the universe with the Ultimate Nullifier, a device which can destroy not only Galactus, but vast stretches of the universe. And so, Galactus decides to spare the earth, for now. But in doing so, he exiles the Surfer to the earth, denying him the ability to return to his home, leaving him a permanent outsider on a planet he will never understand, even though he has saved it.

One legacy of the Lee-Kirby is the endless speculation as to who is responsible for what idea, which characters, what storylines. It is the comic book version of the Paul vs. John calculus that infects Beatle scholarship. Kirby, for all of his invention and the power of his images, was never quite as successful without Stan Lee, while Lee created Spiderman, Dr. Strange, Thor and others apart from Kirby. Controversy followed him in those collaborations as well. To celebrate his work is not to rob Steve Ditko, Larry Leiber or even Kirby of their essential roles in the creations.

But Stan Lee largely outlived those controversies, and lived long enough to see those comic stories transition to worldwide celebration in the movies. He made no bones about the somewhat pedestrian origins of his ideas, as did Kirby. Sure, great literature gave some inspiration, but so did old radio shows, the movies, and even other comic books. By the time the Marvel Age rolled around, the two of them had already been at it for almost 20 years and could sometimes no longer remember which schtick came from which quarter.  

But it’s possible now, as a tribute, to look in awe at the ambition of those stories, the wit they used to tell them, and the style that they created. Comic books began as kid entertainments, and now they largely survive as sometimes pretentious, sometimes inspired ways of telling stories. The Marvel stories, no matter how far they ventured out into the unknown, were always about having fun, and Lee never forgot that.

He created the narrative voice that piloted those adventures, giving the reader a fearless, funny, and unforgettable guide. The stories were not one-offs but a continuous narrative, building on itself, much like the television shows we binge-watch today. Panels sometimes contained wisecracking footnotes referencing earlier adventures. The voice veered between knowing and cajoling, a guide who nudged the action along without stopping it, the voice in the mind's theater who only wanted you to enjoy the spectacle as much as possible. And if necessary, to deliver a lesson. When the first appearance of Spiderman closes, Peter Parker walks away in guilt, knowing the robber he could have caught earlier is the same one who murdered his Uncle Ben. It is Lee's narrator who delivers the verdict:

"And a lean, silent figure slowly fades into the gathering darkness, aware at last that in this world, with great power there must also come -- great responsibility!"

It is Lee, as narrator in Fantastic Four 48, who tells us during a transition that shifts us from one distant galaxy to Planet Earth in one panel, that we are able to make the sudden leap “through the magic of our limitless imaginations.” 

It’s a magic he was happy to share. 

Set Your Fields on Fire

The award-winning novel by William Thornton
Available now

Some of the coverage of "Set Your Fields on Fire"

 You can order "Set Your Fields on Fire"for $14.99 through Amazon here.
It's also available on Kindle at $3.99 through Amazon here.
Read an interview I did with AL.com on the book here.   
Here's my appearance on the Charisma Network's CPOP Podcast. 
Here's an interview I did with The Anniston Star on the book. 
Shattered Magazine wrote a story about the book here. 
Here's a review of the novel by Robbie Pink.
This piece appeared in the Marietta (Ga.) Daily Journal.
Here's the write-up from The Birmingham Times.
Read a story for Village Living here.
This story appeared in The Trussville Tribune and this video.
Here's my appearance on East Alabama Today.  
Story and video from WBRC Fox6 here. 
Here's the write-up in The Gadsden Times on the book.
Read a piece I wrote for WestBow Press about writing the book here.
A piece about some inspiring works for me.
This is another interview with the fleegan book blog here.

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Why do we keep going back to Jurassic Park?


There is a heartbreaking image halfway through “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” that surprised me, and I think it speaks to the larger reasons why the Jurassic movies keep being made for willing audiences despite the fact that they are getting less and less original.

A volcano is erupting on Isla Nubar, the Pacific island where the dinosaurs of Jurassic World remain after decades, threatening the lives of the creatures. A team is dispatched to save the dinosaurs, presumably to move them to a new sanctuary. In a thrilling action set-piece, the volcano eruption causes a dinosaur stampede with our heroes in the middle of it, as stampedes are likely to happen in these movies. In the nick of time, the heroes and their rescue animals scurry onto a waiting ship. But the camera lingers on a lone Brachiosaurus, swallowed up by a cloud of ash, looking plaintively at the camera, beyond rescue.

It’s an image that calls to mind the central mystery behind the existence of dinosaurs since humans began discovering their remains over the last two centuries – just as surely as they once walked the planet, they no longer do. The idea that we didn’t know about them for so long seems to frustrate something inside us, as well as fascinate. It’s an idea stated in Stephen L. Brusatte’s recent, excellent book, “The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs: A New History of a Lost World”

“We humans now wear the crown that once belonged to the dinosaurs. We are confident of our place in nature, even as our actions are rapidly changing the planet around us….If it could happen to the dinosaurs, could it also happen to us?”

“Jurassic World” is the fifth film in a series spawned more than 30 years ago by Michael Crichton’s “Jurassic Park.” I recently went back to the book, its sequel, and watched all of the films, not sure what I was looking for. 


Crichton’s original novel is well-known, but perhaps not as much as the Spielberg film based on it. The novel fits squarely into Crichton’s oeuvre of techno-thrillers with hints of science fiction, where mankind experiments with elemental forces and learns, to his dismay, how little he knows.

“Park” begins, not with the idea of an amusement park for the superrich stocked with dinosaurs, but with a short prologue about the dangers of then-emerging biotechnology. Crichton introduces what, at that time, would have been a revolutionary idea – biotechnology, dealing with the science of life itself, has the potential to do more for humanity than atomic power and computers, he says. But as so many times with Crichton, he gives this as a warning. Biotechnology may have been unlocked through the cold, rational, patient work of scientists, but it has commercial implications far removed from those of science or even basic ethics, he is saying. “There are no detached observers,” he writes. “Everybody has a stake.”

He puts most of these concerns in the mouth of Dr. Ian Malcolm, a scientific voice arguing that nature is even larger than we can imagine, not one system by itself but part of several among even larger systems. That is why he responds to the park with horror, understanding that there is something, in a scientific sense, unholy about what John Hammond has attempted. Crichton makes the decision to have Malcolm die of his injuries in the novel, making us wonder if the author fears a death of sanity among the scientific community. (He resurrects Malcolm in the following book, probably because of Spielberg’s decision to leave him alive in the film.) In an extended dialogue, Malcolm compares scientific discovery, and the race to be the first, as a kind of rape. Instead of observation, there is always the temptation to act. When Ellie Sattler asks if he means the destruction of the planet, Malcolm says that’s “the last thing I would worry about.”

When it came time to make the film “Jurassic Park,” Steven Spielberg had the perfect property with which to show everything he had learned in his first 25 years of movie making. In a sense, the creation of the movie “Jurassic Park” is about moving pictures. The aim is to depict dinosaurs and humans interacting, something that never happened in history. It’s an idea that he sums up in an image later in the movie – words projected on the face of a raptor. More importantly, we must have the dinosaurs chase and threaten our human characters. To accomplish this, Spielberg and the visual effects team employed computer generated image technology in a way that hadn’t been seen before. The first hour of the movie sets this up. 


We enter knowing the concept. We expect to see dinosaurs. Twenty years before, Spielberg directed “Jaws,” forced by a malfunctioning mechanical shark to withhold sight of the animal from the audience for long periods of time. He can now show dinosaurs in detail, and yet he still uses the same technique as before to draw in the audience. Our first sight is waving tree branches, like something out of the original “King Kong.” He has begun a strategy of conceal and reveal. Consider that in 1993, there was still some suspense as to whether he could pull it off.

The next scenes introduce our characters – Grant, Sadler, Hammond, Malcolm with the lawyer. We are introduced to a relationship between Grant and Sadler – they never kiss – and, by the unexplained presence of a child at an archeological dig, the idea that they may be planning the next step. (There was no relationship in the novel.)

Richard Attenborough is cast as Hammond, which is an interesting decision. The genial businessman who we first meet in the novel later morphs into an embittered man blaming everyone else when the park’s obvious problems destroy his dreams. By casting the smiling character actor/director in the film, Hammond becomes a grandfatherly, Walt Disney-esque figure, and thus, more ominous. We may feel some sympathy for this man at the same time we see how he has perverted science in the name of commerce.

The great reveal comes not as an attack however, but on a hill with a herd of Brachiosaurs, straining to eat from trees. It looks – it feels – lifelike. And non-threatening.  The stately music of John Williams gives us the appropriate awe before nature.

Then we are reintroduced to the concept, how the park was created,  and Malcolm is there to remind us of the problems, as he was in the novel, though in a more limited basis. Next comes the egg hatching for another moment of awe, and the idea that “life finds a way.”

Muldoon, the great white hunter, is there to illustrate how dangerous the creatures are. There is a storm coming, and then the last, expected magic ingredient – kids. Hammond’s grandchildren are there because…well, children love dinosaurs.

Even still, Spielberg does a curious thing. He frustrates us, making us like the child carried to the zoo who can’t see the lion lounging out in the sun. There are no dinosaurs that we can see. But that will change, at the moment when everything converges to make the last half of the movie an almost continuous chase. He knows the thing we want to see is the Tyrannosaurus Rex, so even here, he hesitates, giving us the impact tremors, the bobbing water in the cup holder of the SUV. The electrified fence is there to create its own kind of suspense.

Without meaning to, Spielberg and Crichton created several archtypes that keep reappearing throughout the “Jurassic” series: The noble male scientist. The resourceful female. The underhanded technician. The hunter. The exploiter. The well-meaning but doomed capitalist. Spielberg also created several scenes and situations the series has returned to again and again. A contemplative pause before nature’s awesome power and grandeur. The humans running in the middle of a dinosaur stampede. Our heroes threatened by one menace which is in turn neutralized by a larger, heretofore unseen threat.

The end of “Jurassic Park” leaves us with a problem, as it did its markers. The dinosaurs are still alive on the island. Don’t we want to go back? But how do we keep from telling virtually the same story, over and over? It’s a problem they haven’t yet overcome.

To satisfy his fans, Crichton gave us “The Lost World,” and reading it, you sense that he wrote it trying to tailor the story to what he expected Spielberg would want. He brings back Malcolm, again contrives to have children on the island, and invents a rival biotech company interested in the technology that created the dinosaurs. There is an indication, at the book’s close, that the dinosaurs days are numbered.

Again, there are the ominous warnings:

“Scientists pretended that history didn’t matter, because the errors of the past were now corrected by modern discoveries. But of course their forebears had believed exactly the same thing in the past, too. They had been wrong then. And they were wrong now.”

Spielberg, though, was satisfied to take only a few elements of Crichton’s book in order to satisfy the audience’s supposed second wish for a Jurassic movie – having a dinosaur chase people not on Isla Nubar, but in urban and suburban America. 

 The first hour of “The Lost World: Jurassic Park” played better than I remembered. That’s largely due to the good cast and Spielberg concentrating on the human interactions. We see Pete Posteltwaite in the role of the hunter, this time, only slightly sinister and able to walk out alive in the end. Arliss Howard is the obligatory evil capitalist exploiter of the dinosaurs. From the moment Jeff Goldblum’s daughter shows up, you know she’ll wind up on the island somehow.

A formula is already taking shape, even though it has been somewhat tweaked. Information is withheld to get the hero back on the island, because no sane person would want to go back. Those who are going for the first time are ignorant of the danger or arrogantly assume they can handle it. Still, must we always encounter the T-Rex in a rainstorm?

I remember thinking when the movie came out that the entire reason to have “The Lost World” was to have the shot of the T-Rex drinking from a swimming pool. That’s perhaps why the last third of the movie seems to come off the rails, as though all the story has led up to this, and there isn’t much here besides a procession of visual jokes reminiscent of Spielberg’s “1941”– Japanese people running from a dinosaur, meant to remind us of Godzilla. The dinosaur dashing past the customs sign prohibiting animals past this point. A child waking up parents because of a monster. Spielberg also dispenses with Crichton’s ending – the dinosaurs will survive, so we can again return.

A few words here about "Jurassic Park III:" In its stripped down story, it reminded me of the way sequels used to play out – with less money, fewer stars, a smaller story, a smaller set. The cast is again excellent, with Sam Neill brought back for most of the action, joined by William H. Macy and Tea Leoni. But the action is again all too familiar. Its main selling point seems to be – Pteranadons! The timely rescue of the U.S. military replaces the by-now expected resolution with one as old as the movies themselves. 


“Jurassic World,” released 14 years later, understood that even though we don’t think a park with dinosaurs can succeed, we want it to. We want to see it, just as much as want it to fail catastrophically.

We are reintroduced to a few familiar faces, like B.D. Wong. We are impressed with Bryce Dallas Howard’s moxie and beauty, and charmed by Chris Pratt’s goofy raptor trainer. The Great White Hunter is also an exploiter in Vincent D’Onofrio’s Hoskins, who wants to find a military application for the dinosaurs. When our child protagonists stumble onto the old Jurassic Park visitor center from the first movie, we are supposed to feel the appropriate nostalgia before the awe of previous box office glories.

Of course, we haven’t left well enough alone. In a nod to Crichton’s original inspiration, the park’s creators have engineered their own ultimate predator, Indominus Rex, in an attempt to one-up nature and create even more thrills. But because Indominus is man-made, it is ultimately defeated by a tagteam of the T Rex and the Mosasaurus – again one threat neutralized by a larger one. “Fallen Kingdom” has gotten better at rendering dinosaurs, and gives us a roomful of capitalists bidding on them. Marx would have loved the sight of primeval animals slaughtering a room of high-rollers, mixing ideology and evolution.

Despite its scientific trappings, the Jurassic series has always been about sheer entertainment. Its concept was meant to thrill, though I wonder how many times it can thrill given the safe ground its makers continue to inhabit.

I’m reminded of the sight of John Hammond in the first movie, hovering over melting ice cream, fearful for the lives of his grandchildren. He has spared no expense to bring his dreams alive, and they have hatched a nightmare:

“You know the first attraction that I ever built when I came down from Scotland was a flea circus – Petticoat Lane. Really quite wonderful. We had a wee trapeze, and a merry-go…carousel. And a see-saw. They all moved- motorized of course. But people would say they could see the fleas… But this place…I wanted to show them something that wasn’t an illusion, something that was real, something they could see and touch…an aim not devoid of merit.”

The dinosaurs, like our doomed Brachiosaur swallowed in ash, offer an echo from a past we never had a chance to forget. They didn’t leave books or buildings, just their bones.

They remind us of deep time – oceans of centuries where we did not walk the earth and would not for longer than we can comprehend. They remind us of our mortality – in that they are no longer here. They remind us of our stature – you are small, little man, and weak, and you too will die. And will there be anything left of you when it is all over? We power your cars and your cities. What power will anyone find in what ultimately remains of you?

The end of “Fallen Kingdom” promises yet another adventure, now that dinosaurs have been loosed upon the world. Yet, I have the suspicion that future Jurassic Worlds will till the same ground, resurrecting the same fossils, like pumping tired oil wells. 


But not all fossils are best left underground. 2017 saw the publication of an unearthed Crichton novel, “Dragon Teeth,” which gives us dinosaurs (of a sort) in a western. The novel, which the late author wrote in the 70s, tells the story of a young Yale man caught between the real-life fossil hunters Othniel Charles Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope. The two are looking for bones in the west in 1876, which gives Crichton a chance to construct a lovely, fun, rollicking adventure. Crichton again gives us vain scientists, racing to make the discovery, but our hero, William Johnson, merely went West to win a bet. He cares nothing about the unseen giant beasts of the dim past, even though he is present at a moment of their rediscovery.

“You and I are the first men in recorded history to glimpse these teeth. They will change everything we think we know about these animals, and much as I hesitate to say such a thing, man becomes smaller when we realize what remarkable beasts went before us.”

There is something wonderful about the scene, late in the book, when Johnson finds himself the guardian of these million-year-old bones, even though he cares little for them and barely understands their importance. One feels the stubborn insistence of man, that he matters because he exists – now. 

Whatever may happen to the species in the future, his existence is of paramount importance. The dinosaurs had their shot, as Malcolm would say later. 

Why not make the most of today? 

Set Your Fields on Fire

The award-winning novel by William Thornton
Available now

Some of the coverage of "Set Your Fields on Fire"

 You can order "Set Your Fields on Fire"for $14.99 through Amazon here.
It's also available on Kindle at $3.99 through Amazon here.
Read an interview I did with AL.com on the book here.   
Here's my appearance on the Charisma Network's CPOP Podcast. 
Here's an interview I did with The Anniston Star on the book. 
Shattered Magazine wrote a story about the book here. 
Here's a review of the novel by Robbie Pink.
This piece appeared in the Marietta (Ga.) Daily Journal.
Here's the write-up from The Birmingham Times.
Read a story for Village Living here.
This story appeared in The Trussville Tribune and this video.
Here's my appearance on East Alabama Today.  
Story and video from WBRC Fox6 here. 
Here's the write-up in The Gadsden Times on the book.
Read a piece I wrote for WestBow Press about writing the book here.
A piece about some inspiring works for me.
This is another interview with the fleegan book blog here.


Wednesday, November 7, 2018

The Resurrection of Orson Welles


Orson Welles lives. 

The consuming film project of his final years, “The Other Side of the Wind,” is finally getting an airing on Netflix, more than 40 years after he shot it – freed at last from a tangle of lawsuits, international complications, money problems, and even the grave. How does it stack up with the other films of Welles’ career? How close is this finished product to whatever his artistic vision would have been? In some sense we can never know, but as one character in this newest film says, “Half a man is better than none.”

Orson Welles, of course, dwells now on the other side of the wind himself, dead since 1985. Yet somehow, it seems appropriate that the final act of his directorial career should play out in this way. He managed to yet again create a movie out of time that plays to any particular moment, despite the fact that it captures a Hollywood which supposedly disappeared four decades ago. I say supposedly because the story is larger than Hollywood, larger even than Welles.

The story of “The Other Side of the Wind” – how it was made, why it has taken so long to be seen – is told very well in “They’ll Love Me When I’m Dead,” a Netflix documentary released as a companion piece. It places “Wind” within the context of Welles’ life and explains how he shot it haphazardly, over many years, as he got the money. When you know that story, it makes the story you end up seeing that much richer and, weirdly prophetic. 

But the actual plot of the film follows the final day in the life of Hannaford (John Huston), which turns out to be his 70th birthday. It is the seventies, and we are in the “New Hollywood,” when the old studios temporarily gave way to the crop of young auteur directors influenced by the freedom of European cinema. Hannaford’s birthday party is a meeting of these directors – Dennis Hopper, Paul Mazursky – and a gathering of film critics and documentarians who have come to chronicle the occasion. Mingled in the background are hosts of full-size dummies. The evening also offers a special screening of Hannaford’s latest movie, also titled “The Other Side of the Wind,” which resembles a highly-stylized European-influenced film. Cuts of the film play within the action of the larger movie, as Hannaford’s story unwinds.

“What happens here?” asks someone watching Hannaford’s movie. “I’m not really sure…” says another. We get the impression from the cuts, and the “missing film” titles that occasionally interrupt the action of Hannaford’s film, that his work is incomplete. It should be said that, like some of other late-period Welles, “The Other Side of the Wind” shows the hallmarks of its construction. Some scenes play out occasionally like a cross between 70s era porn and a home movie with stars, one character giving barely coherent readings of dialogue in grainy-washed out film.

But you can argue this is intended. What Welles is doing, as the movie advances, is something like what Oliver Stone did in his “JFK” era films; simulating real life through documentary forms with various film stocks, black and white photography mixed with color, giving the audience the illusion that they are seeing the authentic last hours of Hannaford’s life. (Oja Kodar, Welles' collaborator, later accused Stone of stealing the look after he saw an early print.) Because, like “Citizen Kane,” “The Other Side of the Wind” begins with death – Hannaford’s death in a suicidal car crash. So our first question is why such a man would kill himself.

Like “Kane,” Hannaford’s character seems based on fact. One can draw the obvious parallel with Welles, with a little bit of Ernest Hemingway thrown in. (The car crash reminded me of Camus.) Hannaford is a mythic, mystic figure in the eyes of the cineastes that follow him around, asking for his every utterance. One of those is his young protégé, Brooksie Otterlake (Peter Bogdanovich) a hot young director who is Hannaford’s friend, confidant, some would say imitator, and whipping boy. Hannaford is also surrounded by his long-time cronies – Billy (Norm Foster), his fixer; The Baron (Tonio Selwart), his financier, and his lover Zarah Veleska (Lilli Palmer).

But Hannaford is not Welles, because he’s still working. He hasn’t had to beg for money. He is presumably not, as Welles was, forced to go hat in hand to these young would-be artists for money, but is still creating. However Huston is obviously not happy. This is the sinister John Huston of “Chinatown” – boozy, bored, brooding, growling at anyone within earshot, always performing for cameras and expectations. Why isn’t he happy? For one thing, he’s broke. Perhaps he will have to go begging, but there’s something deeper. We suspect that his film doesn’t work, and he knows it. What’s more, the male star of his film, John Dale (Robert Random), ran off the set.

No, there’s something deeper devouring Hannaford. More than the money, more than the movie. In “Citizen Kane,” it is the moment of Kane’s party to celebrate the Inquirer becoming New York’s most widely read paper that we begin to sense that something is wrong with his life, through the observations of Jed Leland. In “Wind,” with its ghastly “Day of the Locust” vibe, Welles’ gives us a kind of sour grapes observation. His life is not Hannaford’s, and thank God! Because Hannaford’s success is really just mind-numbing failure, soul extinguishing and absolute – Pharoah in the palace, fingering dim rubies over the corpse of his first born. Welles gives us a lovely image – the lights of Hannaford’s birthday cake, reflected in the lenses of Otterlake’s glasses, his face wrapped in an adoring, worshipping smile. But all these disciples, his audience, are just a bunch of mannequins, or dummies, and all these colored lights and pretty pictures are meaningless.

“The wind blows where it will, and you hear the sound of it, but you can’t tell where it comes from or where it is going,” Jesus is quoted as saying in the third chapter of John’s Gospel. “So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.” In the film, Hannaford says, “the Truth shall set us free,” another paraphrase from John. During the party, Brooksie has an extended comic dialogue about how the Apostle Paul created Christianity from Christ’s teachings. There is a sense that beyond the cameras and mics, the action in the picture is taking place “in the sight of God.” Hannaford tells Brooksie, “Always remember that your heart is God’s little garden.” Later he says, “We’re all ruled by the wind.”

The idea of God as the ultimate director gets an airing. Hannaford’s power as the director to shape a story and a vision seem godlike. But he’s a twisted deity, and we sense from the movie-within-the-movie that Hannaford may have had an unhealthy interest in his male star. (There is something eerie in the way that the film references pedophilia in light of recent teacher and priest abuse scandals). Despite the way Hannaford’s film is dominated by the frequently nude figure of Oja Kodar, as our unnamed actress, Hannaford’s directorial attention is focused on John Dale, the frequent object of his criticisms and even his self-lacerations. Hannaford talks of “creating” him, but his creation has betrayed him by not conforming to the vision. And what was Hannaford’s vision? Something that seems obliquely emasculating.

A word here about the film within: We are treated to a series of lovely, powerful, beautifully filmed sequences involving Kodar and Random. Occasionally, they meet, as in a car for a highly charged coupling, the rhythm provided by windshield wipers in a torrential rainstorm. The film’s wordless action occasionally feels like a chase, only we are unsure of the identities of the pursuer and the pursued. Random’s face is expressionless, while Kodar frequently seems a devouring sphinx, her conquering step unchanged whether the action shifts from a desert to a deserted movie set. The overt Freudian tones, and the phallic imagery of the closing scenes, seem ridiculous enough that we suspect Welles is letting us in on a secret – Hannaford, rough-and-ready man’s man, is really just fooling himself, but he isn’t fooling us. The fact that Kodar’s character is often referred to as “the Indian” also gives us the impression that this is another Western, and Kodar is, like the Natives of the Plains, being exploited.

But Hannaford’s movie is stubborn, and refuses to be seen in one venue. The screening keeps breaking down (the power is cut) and the scene keeps moving, until the final sequences are relocated to a local drive-in. The desert vistas around the screen mix with the picture within the screen. But everyone leaves before the movie ends, even its director and stars, and all we hear is the beleaguered voice of the director in voiceover. “Who knows, maybe you can stare too hard at something, drain out the virtue, suck out the living juice. We shoot the great places, the pretty people, all those girls and boys,” Hannaford says, before adding, in a sepulchral voice, “Shoot ‘em dead.”

The last of his films released in Welles’ lifetime,” F For Fake,” explored the question of authenticity and expertise. How much is something worth, based on the name attached to it? What is the value of an artistic vision? And is artistic identity a kind of con?

Welles is commenting on his own life, and his profession, we sense. Welles himself emerges, in his own biography, like a figure out of legend. A boy genius, a grand huckster, peddling Shakespeare for the masses on Broadway and a fake Martian invasion before being whisked away to Hollywood. His life, up to “Citizen Kane,” was a series of rapid movements conquering different disciplines, seemingly on his way to some other far horizon. There was illusion in this, something Welles admitted himself. He was talented, but he also carried the illusion of effortless brilliance. He sometimes was able to carry off the impression of an erudition he had probably not yet earned, and his legion of critics suspected this. No one’s that good, you can sense the masses of Tinseltown musing when he steps off a plane from New York with a contract in the late 30s.

Hollywood stopped him dead in his tracks. He continually made the mistake of inflaming the money men, and paid the price of it for the rest of his life. No amount of artistic vision can ultimately save the artist from himself. But he never went on to the next thing once he tasted cinema. It devoured him, and gave him the curious position of being both inside and outside it, a participant and a spectator.

So we can perhaps see “The Other Side of the Wind” as his comment not just on the movie business, but on the medium itself. Directors can, through their own personal visions, assume unto themselves enormous power. But to what end? The assembling of that kind of power has the effect of both drawing people to Hannaford, and isolating him. The director exploits his actors, rendering them practically mute. The director wants to tell a story, but what good is the story, other than pretty pictures, if no one can comprehend it? And what if the vision itself is just a replay of another, earlier triumph, this time in self-parody. The worst offense, Hannaford says, is borrowing from oneself.

One senses, even from the grave, an amused smile on Welles’ face as the film plays out, almost a lifetime after his lifetime, an entertainment about entertainment, a stink bomb at a party, a lacerating valentine to his life’s work, an indictment with a smile, delivered from one huckster to a multitude of them, played out before an audience of dummies.


Set Your Fields on Fire

The award-winning novel by William Thornton
Available now

Some of the coverage of "Set Your Fields on Fire"

 You can order "Set Your Fields on Fire"for $14.99 through Amazon here.
It's also available on Kindle at $3.99 through Amazon here.
Read an interview I did with AL.com on the book here.   
Here's my appearance on the Charisma Network's CPOP Podcast. 
Here's an interview I did with The Anniston Star on the book. 
Shattered Magazine wrote a story about the book here. 
Here's a review of the novel by Robbie Pink.
This piece appeared in the Marietta (Ga.) Daily Journal.
Here's the write-up from The Birmingham Times.
Read a story for Village Living here.
This story appeared in The Trussville Tribune and this video.
Here's my appearance on East Alabama Today.  
Story and video from WBRC Fox6 here. 
Here's the write-up in The Gadsden Times on the book.
Read a piece I wrote for WestBow Press about writing the book here.
A piece about some inspiring works for me.
This is another interview with the fleegan book blog here.