Showing posts with label scenes I love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scenes I love. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Scenes I love: WWBD

"In a way his pictures are like a transcendent juggling act in which it seems that the whole universe is in exquisite flying motion and the one point of repose is the juggler's effortless, uninterested face." — James Agee, "Comedy's Greatest Era"


Everything I need to know about life I learned from Buster Keaton.

Okay, that's not completely true, but I like the sound of it. And it's a Starbucks-cup bromide that has rolled around my brain more than once recently.

As 2010 projects its final frames and we smash-cut to 2011, I'm getting all reflective and thoughtful, looking back at the past twelve months, taking stock of the significant narrative arcs of the year. 

What brings me to Keaton is a renewed appreciation of how we face adversity, those bumps and turns and unforeseen punji traps that make good plot points in movies but are hell to live through in real life.

You see, too many of my friends are going through too much of that hell lately. Relationships fracturing, critical health issues, the economy sinking them down like cement overshoes in a cheap gangster flick — life's slings and arrows, sound and fury, the whole unasked-for shitstorm, with no discernible fairness or reason or purpose in sight.

Indeed, 2010 saw my own full recovery from a medical cataclysm worthy of an episode of House, a long episode I've only alluded to slantwise in this blog. So, yeah, not only do I understand that Wile-E.-Coyote-falling-off-the-cliff feeling, I have fostered a new appreciation of the coping mechanisms we devise for ourselves to help soften the dusty whump! of impact.


Among my coping mechanisms, one I've recently recommended to others: favorite movies, comedies particularly. You know, "...best medicine," all that jazz.


Take The General, for instance. I've owned more video editions of this film than any other title, culminating this year with Kino's outstanding Blu-ray disc. In ten years, when it's available via a downloadable app to my Cerebrum Communicator, I'll no doubt get that one too.

Like Chaplin's The Gold Rush, Keaton's practically perfect 1927 Civil War masterpiece is a comedy of epic scale and ambition, and pinnacles lists of the top films of the silent era. Moreover — this point is often overlooked — it departs from Keaton's earlier shorts by delivering not a gag-a-minute string of slapstick setpieces, but instead an action-adventure-historical-war-espionage thriller deftly spiced with comic bits.

Set at the outbreak of the Civil War (or, as parts of the South still call it, the Unresolved Argument We'll Keep Bringing Up), one of the film's famous sequences involves a chase between two steam locomotives. One of them is the General, the engine beloved by its engineer, would-be Confederate soldier Johnnie Gray (Keaton). Union Army spies have commandeered the General to use it as a moving sabotage platform against Confederate forces.

Worse, they've kidnapped Johnnie's second great love, the girl Annabelle Lee. Earlier she rebuffed him after a misunderstanding branded him a coward unwilling to join the Confederate Army like all honorable Southern men. Now Johnnie is giving chase in another locomotive, the Texas, determined to defeat the saboteurs, take back his engine, and (possibly in this order) rescue the girl whose tintype he displays in the General's cab.


In hot pursuit, Johnnie clambers over the General's fuel tender onto the flatcar holding a cannon he acquired en route. He measures a handful of gunpowder in pinches, then tamps it down, loads the cannonball, lights the fuse, and returns to the engine's control cab. The cannon fires, yet the cannonball arcs (rather delicately) to his feet in the cab. Giving it that famous deadpan Keaton look, he rolls the cannonball off the speeding train shortly before it explodes.



He tries again. This time cool-headed desperation prompts him to forgo handfuls and pinches to shove the entire powder keg down the barrel. He loads another cannonball, lights the fuse. His retreat to the cab is interrupted when the flatcar's hitch snags his foot. Shaking the foot free, Johnnie also shakes the cannon barrel down to aim not overhead toward the Union saboteurs ahead of him, but straight at himself and the engine.

He retreats to safety by climbing the exterior of the engine to the cowcatcher up front — train track blurring mere inches beneath him, Union soldiers not far ahead, and mammoth artillery primed and pointed at the tonnage of locomotive against his back.

At the critical instant, the track curves just so, the cannon fires, and the blasting cannonball arcs not into the Texas but into the rear boxcar of the stolen General. The explosion leads the frightened Yankee raiders to believe that an outnumbering Confederate militia is hot on their tail.



In response, they block the track first with the damaged boxcar (Johnnie cleverly switches the rails to avoid a collision) and then by dropping large wooden railroad ties onto the track. Johnnie slows the Texas and runs ahead to lift the first log off the track. When the Texas's cowcatcher catches him like a spatula, he straddles it with the heavy railroad tie still in his arms.

But a second tie blocks the track ahead! Well — here's the beauty part — when the Texas approaches it he lifts the first tie and, with Olympian style and precision, heaves it onto the end of the second tie, catapulting it smoothly up and out of his trajectory with neither log clobbering him in the head. The chase can continue.



In that scene lies a metaphor, I'm sure of it.

It's classic Keaton, displaying the qualities that make the crisply expressive "stone-faced" Keaton character forever memorable: his steady resolve in the face of obstacles, his willingness to accept surprises and sudden changes of plan with dry aplomb, pausing only to perhaps slightly arch his eyebrows or momentarily stare the conundrum full in the face. It's as if tattooed on Keaton's chest is a motto taken from Kipling's Barrack Room Ballads: "When first under fire an' you're wishful to duck ... Be thankful you're livin', and trust to your luck / And march to your front like a soldier."


On the great railroad track of life, if only we could address our obstacles with such stoic resourcefulness focused on what we need to do rather than on the mugging-for-the-camera, hammed-up Oh, shit! of it all.

Adding to this chicken soup for the movie-lover's soul, remember that we're watching Joseph Frank Keaton, actor and director, performing dangerous and outrageous stunts with no camera trickery or stunt double because that's what it took to do the job. We can wish for a New Year's blip in the zeitgeist that manifests as people all across society — from the most brutally slinged-and-arrowed among us to simply humble writers who love movies — finding their bliss and reducing their blood pressure with one four-letter mantra: WWBD. What Would Buster Do?




Or how about Steamboat Bill, Jr.? This Mark Twain-like tale from 1928 is Keaton's last great feature. In it, Buster is a ukulele-strumming Harvard milquetoast who returns to Mississippi to find his father, a tough and crusty sidewheeler steamboat captain.


In the film's famous climax, a cyclone blows the local port town to smithereens. In terms of sheer physical damage, it's an amazing scene. It supersizes stunts and gags Keaton successfully rehearsed in earlier shorts such as "Back Stage" (made during his fruitful years with Fatty Arbuckle) and "One Week". It's the sort of destruction that nowadays would be consigned to CGI. Buildings peel apart and tumble down to splinters at Junior's feet. Houses lift off their foundations. Junior rides a wheeled hospital bed and flies through the air clinging to a tree uprooted and set flying as if to Oz. A dozen impressive large-scale visual feats come, bam-bam-bam, in this scene alone. And through it all his expression, as ever, registers only controlled alarm and a certain thoughtful interest in the forces buffeting him hither and thither.

Again St. Buster teaches us that, in a world of windswept and sometimes violent unpredictability, we can either teeter face-first into the gale and risk sliding through the mud on our ass, or allow life's vicissitudes to carry us where we must go to (in Junior's case) save the day, embrace reconciliation with our loved ones, and get the girl. 

"What Keaton did physically is actually quite startling when you discover that he did all of his own stunts," said Kevin Spacey in a 1999 American Film Institute special. In the cyclone scene, the stunt everybody remembers is the house. When the two-story, two-ton facade of a house descends to squash Keaton below, it smacks the ground and shatters, with Keaton saved by standing in the precise space of its small open window. Spacey again: "The famous one is when the house falls. He had to stand on a mark. I'm told it was a nail ... if he moved an inch to one side he would have been crushed to death."



In other words, when the walls are falling down, WWBD tells us: try to stand where the window is.


Never mind that The General is based on a true story and shows off Keaton's fanatical devotion to historical authenticity. He filmed it in Oregon for the scenery and because only there could he find the narrow-gauge track required for the genuine period locomotives he acquired. The beautiful Mathew Brady-inspired photography includes luscious moving long shots of vast forested mountainscapes, steaming locomotives (the coolest comedy props ever used), and warring Northern and Southern armies played by hundreds of Oregon National Guardsmen.


Never mind that its most famous moment, in which a real, full-sized train plummets off a burning high-span trestle bridge, is the most expensive shot from the silent era — $42,000, and some years ago I read that that equates into the millions today. Walter Kerr, in his indispensable The Silent Clowns, called it "surely the most stunning visual event ever arranged for a film comedy." It goes without saying that there were no second takes.

Never mind the comedic, dramatic, technical, and filmcraft sophistication on view throughout Keaton's silent-era, independent work.

No, the fulcrum point of both The General and Steamboat Bill, Jr. is Keaton's signature image — a man alone, making the most of whatever the hell's going on around him.



Watching Keaton today, we realize that he's the most modern of all silent screen masters. His ongoing travails at the whims of The Machine — meaning his beloved mechanical contrivances as well as Nature or "the Establishment" — make him our contemporary. By virtue of their subtlety and number, his confrontational pas de deux with modernity outgrace even Chaplin's marvelous Man-vs.-Machine allegories in Modern Times.



Also, today Chaplin often strikes us as oversentimental, maudlin even. That's not to downplay his genius or his comedy at all, though there's something about Keaton's restrained, underplayed determination as he faces each new obstacle that feels refreshingly timely. The Little Tramp was Chaplin's "Everyman," self-consciously created to embody all people from all times. The character's longevity is a testimony to that universality. But it's Keaton's innocent yet unflappable achiever we more identify with. As Keaton himself put it, "Charlie's tramp was a bum with a bum's philosophy. Lovable as he was, he would steal if he got the chance. My little fellow was a workingman, and honest." We feel for the Tramp, but we want to be like Keaton.


It's telling that the two most inventive actor-writer-directors Hollywood has ever produced, Keaton and Chaplin, in their heyday worked side by side but never together. One difference between these equal-yet-separate geniuses is that Chaplin was a stubbornly 19th-century Victorian making movies in, but unable to fully acclimate to, a whole new 20th century. Keaton, on the other hand, was a Machine Age modernist who grasped the world of Model T's and hand-cranked movie cameras as his toybox.


It's my suspicion that Chaplin, if delivered to New Year's Day 2011 via time machine, would be entirely at sea, and disgruntled to boot, within today's moviemaking world. Keaton, on the other hand, would leap into it with every downloadable app at his fingertips, meanwhile putting Steven Spielberg and James Cameron on hold until he chooses to take a video conference.


Keaton and Chaplin are both enjoying a boom of popular rediscovery in recent years. I can't help but suspect that — while both awe us and make us laugh — Chaplin speaks to our sense of nostalgia the way Dickens does, and Keaton connects with us as a fellow modernite. Who among us can't identify with his small, straight-backed figure standing atop his speeding engine, leaning forward as if his shoes are nailed to the roof, shading his eyes and gazing into the onrushing distance, wondering what the hell's coming next?







Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Scenes I love: Charlie Chaplin's science fiction movie (from "Modern Times")

Although you won't find it referenced in the Overlook Film Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, the first segment of Charlie Chaplin's 1936 feature Modern Times gives us a tidy little science fiction allegory, one worthy of Kurt Vonnegut, that's a self-contained short film all by itself.

You could always recognize "a Chaplin film," but the man rarely allowed his work to succumb to cookie-cutter sameness. Here we can see a difference right from the get-go, with the introductory card that reads: "'Modern Times'. A story of industry, of individual enterprise ~ humanity crusading in the pursuit of happiness." What we have is not just a story about a funny little man, but a morality fable, or cautionary tale, about people on the chuckholed road to the American Dream.

Created almost a full decade after the beginning of movie sound technology yet exhibiting its director's belief that movies didn't need dialogue to communicate effectively, Modern Times was Chaplin's final film to star the Little Tramp, and the difference between this Tramp and his formative years in the earlier classic shorts and features (1914-31) is worth noting.

Back then he was a little fellow alone in a nascent society of other immigrants and vagabonds and petty miscreants. Now in Modern Times he is billed as "a factory worker," and he doesn't exchange his work overalls for the familiar Tramp outfit until almost twenty minutes have passed. In earlier films the Tramp was an underdog up against the authorities or a unibrowed bully or the Alaskan frontier. Now he's a more emblematic Everyman, and his antagonist is society itself. The enemy is named in the movie's title.


The factory setting is a metal-enclosed world where men are nameless collective components in an immense machine. We never know what it is that "Electro Steel Corp." produces. All we need to know is that the Tramp is an assembly line drone in "Section 5," and his job is to tighten bolt after bolt on identical metal widgets whizzing by before him on a high-speed conveyor belt.

And wow — what a stylized look at the Machine Age this is! Our modern times are memorably represented in gargantuan dynamos that could have blazed from the cover of Amazing Stories magazine. The factory's boss — when he's not playing with puzzles or reading comic strips — observes the workers via giant two-way video screens. (The sparking Jacob's Ladder alongside his screen is a nice Frankenstein touch.) The Tramp can't even take a break for a smoke in the washroom without his sour-faced boss' wall-sized Big Brother mug (pre-Orwell, mind you) appearing and barking orders to get back to work. When the boss picks up a newspaper, we can imagine him reading about that nasty business involving the scientist Rotwang across the sea in the German super-city of Metropolis.

Al Ernest Garcia, uncredited, played the President of Electro Steel Corp. His film career dated back to 1911. In 1928 Chaplin gave him a credited role as the Ring Master in The Circus. He also appeared in City Lights, The Gold Rush, and a few of Chaplin's earlier shorts. This was one of his last films.
It isn't long before the Tramp has tightened so many bolts that when he walks away from the assembly line his body keeps up the herky-jerky robotic movements it has become conditioned to. The machine has infected the man, and we laugh while we get the message rising from the humor.

Or take the "Billows Feeding Machine" sequence. Thanks to a mechanical salesman that speaks via a phonograph record (with one significant exception near the end of the film, all human voices in Modern Times speak only through machines), the boss tests a new contraption designed to increase efficiency by eliminating a worker's lunch hour. The feeding machine is a chrome monstrosity, all jointed metal arms and servos, like something that would come crashing through the walls of a robot dentist's office. The recording exhorts us to admire "its beautiful, aerodynamic, streamlined body, its smoothness of action, made silent by our electro-porous metal ball bearing," and so on with all the language-abusing manipulations of modern product marketing copy.

The Tramp is conscripted to test the device, and one of Chaplin's most inspired scenes arrives when the gizmo goes haywire with the Tramp trapped like a torture victim by mechanical arms shoveling food into his mouth or onto his face, while the automatic "sterilized mouth wiper" keeps dutifully patting his mouth until, berserk, it whacks bang-bang-bang his besmeared face. What's the boss' opinion after he's witnessed his employee abused in such an undignified fashion? "It isn't practical."

Soon we come one of Chaplin's indelible images. It's the crazed Tramp being drawn into The Machine, where he's threaded through giant cogwheels, stopping only to blithely tighten another pair of bolts.


Right there Chaplin's genius hands us an ageless visual metaphor, one that any 21st Century employee who has clipped a Dilbert cartoon will greet with a knowing smile. Chaplin almost certainly planted a personal message of his own in those gears that grab and digest the Tramp: They look suspiciously like the threading path of a motion picture camera. The Tramp, a creation of pantomime in a medium that by '36 was all about sound, is overtaken by mechanization. After Modern Times he is never seen again.


Driven to the brink by it all, our bedeviled factory worker goes stark raving nuts. Like a man hypnotized, he wields his wrenches like weapons, tightening everything, such as the buttons on the back of a secretary's dress, before chasing after a bosomy matron with her own pair of ill-placed fashionable "bolts."


Fortunately, with insanity comes freedom. Released from his machine-like life, the Tramp dances and twirls in giddy drunken glee. Instead of robot-like repetition, his movements are now balletic, spontaneous, human. Wearing an enraptured — enlightened? — smile, he traipses about sabotaging the machinery and his fellow drones until he's captured and sent to a hospital to be "cured."


This is Chaplin's rage against the machine. In lesser hands, such industrial strength social commentary would be a blunt-object diatribe like H.G. Wells' Things to Come, released the same year. But this is Chaplin, so even pointing a lens at the soul-eating inhumanity of the workplace gives us a comic parable. Unlike Wells' technofetish polemic, Modern Times remains fresh for the 21st Century by living up to its title.

The YouTube clip below deletes the Billows Feeding Machine segment (replacing it with an intertitle card at the 4:38 mark), but otherwise the factory sequence is intact:



In this YouTube clip, the Billows Feeding Machine sequence starts just after the 3:00 mark. Unfortunately the clip ends before the sequence's wham-bam climax, and (at the time I write this) the follow-up clip has been deleted from YouTube:




There's plenty more to Modern Times, of course. After the factory worker is sent to the hospital, Chaplin abandons the "science fiction" scenario to follow the Tramp, now back in his famous too-tight jacket and baggy pants, into the outside "real" world. It's a world of hunger, political inequality, and good people getting by as best they can against powerful oppressive forces. The episodic structure uses comedy to pin down like beetles other contemporary topics much on Chaplin's mind. His takes on unemployment, poverty, drugs, strikes, strike-busting, and riots still pack a wallop of modern currency.

But it's the factory sequence that Modern Times is most remembered for, and you don't have to be a hardcore Chaplin fan to recognize "the one with the guy in the gears."


By employing science-fiction-like motifs (not that he'd use that term) to point an observant finger at the rumbling age of mechanized industrialization, Chaplin wasn't inventing allegorical musings out of whole cloth. Instead he was elevating and popularizing themes that had already been bubbling up in films and literature during the anxiety-making cultural and technological changes of the 1920s and 1930s.

As early as 1909, E.M. Forster's story "The Machine Stops" depicted a future of mechanized isolation that presages our current Internet age. Fritz Lang's slaves-to-the-machines fable Metropolis was nine years old by '36.

Assembly-line humanity features starkly in Aldous Huxley's novel Brave New World (1931), which opens in the "year of our Ford 632." 1931 also saw the issue of Modern Mechanics that asked "Is Man Doomed by the Machine Age?" ("Yet the present era of industrial depression, with millions of men thrown out of work—as some maintain, because machines have taken their places, working swifter and cheaper—has seen a renewal of the outcry against machinery.")

From Modern Mechanics and Inventions, March 1931
From the San Antonio Light, April 2, 1939

A German film from '34, Master of the World, features malevolent industrial robots and war machines threatening human labor and lives. H.G. Wells' own screenplay to 1936's Things to Come, which I've already mentioned, presents a civilization destroyed by machines of war and then revived by machines of creation and prosperity.


Later movies, such as the 1951 English serio-comedy The Man in the White Suit, use science fictional elements as a means for social or topical commentary in ways that Chaplin would, I think, applaud.

Probably reflecting the mood of our (modern) times, dire dystopian science fiction is on the rise again, both in the movies and on the book shelves. Yet as far as I can see, there's not a modern Chaplin out there saying that if this really is a Brave New World, we might as well go ahead and laugh at it. On second thought, there's Jon Stewart. That's good enough for me.


(From here on I'm simply giving myself an excuse to post pictures of Paulette Goddard from the film, as if I really need a reason beyond the obvious.)

There's a lot I love about Modern Times. Its lack of a strong narrative spine isn't one of them. Long-form story structure was not one of Chaplin's gifts, and Modern Times is almost cripplingly modular, not a single full-bodied story as much as a linked string of self-contained one- or two-reel shorts.

But running through the heart of it all is a love story between the Tramp and the "gamin," a "child of the waterfront, who refuses to go hungry." We meet her stealing bananas from a shipyard loading dock, tossing the food up to a gaggle of hungry street urchins. She is spirited and vivacious, almost feral. Alternately wild and coquettish, she sports the haughty swagger of a Robin Hood outlaw, then sweetly looks after her father ("one of the unemployed") and her two young sisters.

She's played by Paulette Goddard, one of the great classic Hollywood beauties (and eventually the best ex-Mrs. Chaplin).




Goddard was Chaplin's third wife, and is handily the loveliest and liveliest of his leading ladies. Today, after the better part of a century, her gamin is among the sexiest of ingenues — how many of the Tramp's other love interests first appear onscreen in a short rag dress and with a knife in their teeth?

After the gamin's father is gunned down in a labor riot, she's an orphan who prefers life on the lam to imprisonment in the hands of social workers who, like the police, are depicted as thuggish Authority types. The Tramp is also having his dustups with The Law. It feels inevitable when at last he introduces himself to the lovely, bedraggled young woman by offering her his seat in their shared police wagon.

Unlike previous women the Tramp has fallen for, the gamin is given equal status carrying the movie. The Tramp loves a girl who loves him back. Finally he has a partner. Chaplin called the duo "the only two live spirits in a world of automatons." They're jailbreakers who have busted out of the Establishment and are on the run for their own freedom.

For the rest of the movie they are companions, even sharing a tumbledown shanty together. Chaste? Yes, but Modern Times differs from its predecessors by giving the Tramp someone to share his story with. Neither character is subordinate to the other. Chaplin's message was good enough for Casablanca six years later: In this crazy, mixed up world sometimes all we've got is each other.

Near the end of the film, the Tramp and the gamin have finally found their place, and the former factory worker's humanity, in an environment that couldn't be more distinct from the mechanized hive where he began — performing before an appreciative audience. Although the scene is set in a restaurant where the Tramp and the gamin are employed, there's little need to wonder how much autobiography Chaplin was letting slip through here.

Happiness doesn't last, however, and before long the two vagabonds are forced back onto the open road for one of cinema's most wistful exits. Despairing alongside a country road, the gamin sobs, "What's the use of trying?" The Tramp — once again the scruffy no-surrender optimist the world had watched for an entire generation — urges her to "Buck up. Never say die. We'll get along!" Then he reminds her how to put a smile on her face. She agrees, and the spark returns to her eyes.


In Chaplin's best-remembered fade-out, the two tramps set off hand in hand down the dusty road toward a mountainous horizon, silhouetted against a welcoming sunrise. Two survivors, resolute and no longer alone, with the totality of their worldly possessions tied up in kerchief bundles, walk away toward an unknown, but also unprescribed and unmechanized, future.

If you don't think that last shot is a lump-in-the-throater, there's no hope for you.



Music: Muddy Waters, "The Blues Had a Baby and They Named it Rock and Roll"
Near at hand: Framed photo of "Shakespeare and Co." bookshop.