Rays of
Debatable Intention
by David Zakss
Vidor's characters are in fake costumes like a concert
by the rock band Kiss. The only way I am able to watch this fashion show
is that I once enjoyed a Kiss concert when I was growing up. This was at
the University of Toronto's Varsity Stadium, then I went on to study
film at U of T. And now the past concert is the clue which allows me to
endure this classic picture. Now I can read every medallion and pattern,
though I know the metallic parts are probably wood painted with metallic
paint. David Cronenberg once revealed that many of his devices look
realistic when they're secretly made of wood.
Zombies eat human flesh. Helicopters fly over the
zombies. I think I like the helicopters the best, because I was once
impressed by one on a trip to the States when I was a kid. Helicopters
playing blasting soundtracks were big in Viet Nam, according to Coppola.
In film school, we were told the difference between music that's just
meant to be in the soundtrack, and noise which exists in the actual
world of the characters. Helicopters blasting their own theme music
attack would cross the border into imaginary sound, just like passing
over into Cambodia.
At the Toronto International Film Festival, Atom
Egoyan is in front of the screen, introducing "EXOTICA". He
picks me out of the crowd and focuses on me. I feel like people on stage
are always staring at me. Is this the penalty for me looking at his
creation, he gets to look at me? Do I have something in my bag I can
shoot at him? I feel like he's watching me to defend himself. He's more
successful than me, though, so it must be me having my soul sucked to
feed the powers of his inroads into Hollywood. Why did my girlfriend
ever start buying me passes to the film festival? My birthday happens to
be around now. I don't like crowded theatres, though.
I have enjoyed some reactions I've overheard in
screenings. When I went to see "ALIEN", I liked somebody
cheering the black guy who took up a flamethrower to track down the
creature. I didn't even think it must be a black spectator. It just made
the character look like a hero. At one film there was something burning,
and a friend made a hissing sound of derision. Coincidentally, his
hissing sounded just like something on a frying pan. Before that, I
didn't know audience sounds could be just like part of the story action.
At a nasty Stephen King film, a fistfight broke out in the last row,
loud not with shouting but with struggling limbs. Somebody got ejected
and the other person was told to just relax and enjoy the film now. It
made me, too, feel relaxed to hear the stranger's voice, soothing my
guilt over seeing an antisocial horror picture.
Meanwhile, films go by, sequences of images
intermingle across the days. The French New Wave turns into a No Wave,
with bloodless films which offer very little. They must have used up all
their ingenuity in their first burst. The internet offers something else
to look at, threatening film distribution not only indirectly, but
offering espionage reports on upcoming projects. These make it
impossible for new films to come out without being pre-empted by
second-rate quickies plundering the new ideas. Yet the image stream will
continue one way or another. Narrative suggested these in the first
place, like ghosts offering pictures which rise out of the primitive
campfire. They keep rising, a manifestation which takes centuries and
children of children to watch unfold, but the primitive fires are still
at their stem, even if they look like UFOs firing rays of debatable
intention.
David Zakss writes: "David took
film at U of T because he didn't want to do a real subject. He enjoys
investigating the designs of narrative in many media, starting with the
millennial ritual of written language. David was once a denizen of the
Danforth, for a number of vital years in his puny human lifespan." |