2012 (Roland Emmerich, 2010)

Posted in Film on April 12, 2010 by culturecrammer

It’s the end of John Cusak’s career as we know it in this apocalyptic yawnathon

2012, as predicted by the Mayans, is the year the world will end. Solar flares have boiled the Earth’s core, unleashing a cataclysm of earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and tsunamis that threaten to ravage the planet’s landmass like so much pie crust.  Down on ground zero is Jackson Curtis (John Cusack), a divorced LA writer whose camping weekend with the kids turns into an epic battle to get his family to safety.

At the helm of this juggernaut is Hollywood’s  master of disaster Roland Emmerich, the man behind box office leviathans like Independence Day, Godzilla, The Day After Tomorrow and 10,000 BC.

Sadly, the most spectacular thing about 2012 is quite how, armed with a blank-cheque budget, Emmerich has managed to mould his earth-shattering subject matter into something so prosaic and uninvolving.

The wheels start to come off early on, as the Curtis clan make their escape by car and plane from a crumbling LA.  In the hands of a Spielberg this would be heart-in-mouth stuff, as all around the fleeing family roads rupture, skyscrapers buckle and chasms gape.  But this is conveyor-belt calamity: as the world gives way beneath them, a hair’s-breadth from death, all Cusak and co can muster is a series of goofy “woooah!” reaction shots. There’s no real sense of danger or consequence. Even the CGI seems phoned-in.

Like its predecessors, 2012 invites us to take a perverse pleasure in witnessing the flimsy constructs of our civilisation topple, symbols of a global system as vulnerable to the avarice of bankers as it is to terrorist attack. Like the resurgence of the horror genre, the return of the disaster movie signals a new age of anxiety for modern audiences. It’s as if we feel ourselves to be living in a world of perpetual imminent collapse, captive to the opaque whims of government and insecure in the knowledge that the rich will always sell us out.

Sure enough, in 2012 the world’s elite buy themselves tickets to safety, leaving the rest of humanity to face unthinkable carnage. To offset this disconsolate message, the film feeds us a miniature morality play – apocalypse is the occasion for Cusak’s failed American father to gain redemption by saving his family from dysfunction and the rival claims of an interloper (his wife’s plastic surgeon boyfriend, played by Thomas McCarthy).

Along the way, Emmerich throws in some spurious emoting, as characters we barely know or care about say tremulous long-distance goodbyes to family members, mere moments before being swept to their deaths by gargantuan walls of water.

John Cusak looks decidedly sheepish throughout and decides to keep his head down as much as one can when one is the protagonist of a blockbuster. Meanwhile Woody Harrelson hams it to high heaven as a crazed conspiracy theorist, and Danny Glover as the President seems content to offer his services as a poor man’s Morgan Freeman.

Insulting in its emotional cheapness and bogus morality, 2012 is the end of the world as a sanctified Disney ride. Worse still, it’s a barely competent exercise that fails to deliver the goods even on its own terms.

Still, the sea looks cool.

Daniel Barenboim conducts the Berlin Staatskapelle @ Royal Festival Hall, 01/02/10

Posted in Classical, Music on February 3, 2010 by culturecrammer

In this series of concerts pairing Beethoven’s piano concertos with orchestral works by Arnold Schoenberg, Daniel Barenboim has found an inspired way of linking two musical revolutionaries who, though separated by centuries, are nevertheless kindred spirits.

The implication of this shared billing is that what Schoenberg did for the music of Brahms and Wagner, Beethoven did for the music of Haydn and Mozart – he made it ‘breathe the air of other planets’.  As if to underline these affinities, tonight in the Five Orchestral Pieces, Barenboim points up the underlying romanticism of Schoenberg’s string writing, which even as it leaves traditional harmonic language behind, is full of echoes of the 19th century.

This series of orchestral miniatures dates from before Schoenberg began to reign in his free-floating chromaticism by introducing the twelve-tone system that would lead to the formal constraints of Serialism.  Loosed from the moorings of tonality, these pieces are shimmering and exotic, with none of the dryness of later works.  In the elegiac solo cello and viola of the second piece, for example, there is surely beauty enough to appease the most conservative of ears.

Yet, judging by the tenor of several conversations during the intermission, these century-old compositions can still provoke perplexity in modern audiences. Though essentially introspective, along the way they manage to be by turns witty, bawdy, barbed and viscerally terrifying.  As juddering stabs of dissonant brass jolt us in our seats, it’s clear Schoenberg still has the power to shock and unsettle.

Barenboim and the superb Berlin Staatskapelle seem utterly at home in this music, and able to flit between the sound-worlds of the respective progenitors of Romanticism and Modernism with ease.  The pleasure Barenboim, conducting from the piano with some wonderfully flamboyant gestures, takes in the verve and wit of Beethoven’s second concerto is palpable. This music is in his blood. He conducts without a score and plays with the spontaneous air of a man observed through his living room window on a Sunday afternoon.

For the fourth concerto, arguably Beethoven’s greatest, we are in for an altogether different order of music-making.  As Barenboim launches into the darkly mysterious opening, we are instantly reminded of just how daring this music was, and of how modern much of it still sounds. With its epic scale, its filigree light and shade, and its superabundance of harmonic invention, the Fourth is like many concertos within one – a dazzling tumult of ideas perfectly realised.

While Barenboim relishes the virtuoso passagework, his approach is the antitheses of the steely precision of a Pollini – his Beethoven is all about flow.  The ear may detect the occasional fluffed note, but Barenboim’s playing has an unerring and irresistible sense of pulse. He gets better and better, dashing off a scintillating take on the first movement cadenza and showing rapt concentration and poise in the magnificent slow movement. Come the third movement Vivace, Barenboim is on fire. By the time he hits the last note he’s won himself a lengthy and unanimous standing ovation.

Star as he is, at the peak of his artistry tonight, one stopped thinking of Barenboim altogether and thought only of Beethoven, as if the composer himself were at the piano. And that is the most we can ask of any musician.

The Alexandria Quartet by Lawrence Durrell (Faber & Faber, 1957-60)

Posted in Books, Fiction on December 3, 2009 by culturecrammer

by Bolokovsky, guest contributor

When Lawrence Durrell published his teratology of novels The Alexandria Quartet (1957-60), he could hardly have been more out of step with the emerging new wave of British fiction.

For although Durrell was born a decade earlier than his near-contemporaries John Osborne, John Braine, Alan Sillitoe and Kinglsey Amis, the publication of the Quartet roughly coincided with Osborne’s Look Back in Anger (1956), Braine’s Room at the Top (1957), Sillitoe’s Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1958), and Amis’ Take a Girl Like You (1960).

For Durrell, this new generation of British writers – the so called ‘Angry Young Men’ whose kitchen sink realism eschewed any form of glamour or exotica – epitomized everything that he characterized as ‘The English Death’. As he explained: ‘English life is really like an autopsy.  It is so, so dreary.”

By contrast, it’s impossible to understand Durrell without seeing him as he saw himself: a European. Durrell’s heroes were DH Lawrence, Richard Aldington, Robert Graves, Norman Douglas and T.S.Eliot – all writers who considered themselves Europeans first, and British citizens second.

Despite its unfashionable aestheticism, The Alexandria Quartet – comprised of Justine (1957), Balthazar (1958), Mountolive (1958) and Clea (1960) – was a critical and commercial success. Set in Alexandria, Egypt, before and during World War II and taking modern love as their central subject, the four novels describe the same sequence of events from several points of view, allowing individual perspectives to change over time.

Durrell’s high art aesthetic makes no concessions to the reader, but the demands it makes are rewarded with writing which is superbly evocative of its ‘spirit of place’, Alexandria.  The city, a favourite haunt of the Greek modernist poet Cavafy whose unnamed presence pervades these novels, is conjured up in all its extravagant sensuality.

By comparison with the collection of dowdy sparrows that inhabit the work of his peers, Durrell’s characters are fabulous birds of paradise, brilliantly placed in this exotic setting. Alongside the central character/narrator Darley (who seems to represent Durrell), at least three other important figures in the Quartet are writers.

Of these, the most problematic is the novelist Pursewarden, the high priest of aestheticism, scattering aphorisms and philosophical and artistic pronouncements whenever he appears. His portrayal borders on caricature, and at times it is difficult to accept that his pretensions are meant to be taken seriously; nonetheless he, alongside the cross-dressing rogue Scobie, and the alluring Jewess Justine, remain wonderfully memorable characters.

Durrell’s prose, as he describes sexual couplings and political intrigues among the streets and cafe’s of Alexandria, and evokes the atmosphere of the surrounding countryside,  sea, and islands, is startling visual, ornate and intricately worked. Particularly in the first novel Justine, Durrell allows his poetic sensibilities to flow unrestrained, saturating the text with beautiful imagery and an almost febrile intensity.

Durrell himself was critical of his ornate style. In an interview with The Paris Review in 1959, he said of his prose: ‘It’s too juicy…I always feel I am overwriting. I am conscious of the fact that it is one of my major difficulties.”

These self-acknowledged weaknesses aside, at his best Durrell can be compared to such supreme modern prose stylists as Vladimir Nabokov, John Updike and John Banville.  Like them, Durrell may be criticised as favouring style over substance, or accused of being overly elitist and esoteric.

But to the appreciative reader, The Alexandria Quartet is the work of an artist using the full palette of his genius to create an intoxicating mixture of sensual imagery and unforgettable characters.

Susan Boyle – I Dreamed A Dream (Sony) 23/11/ 09

Posted in Music, Pop/Rock on December 1, 2009 by culturecrammer

Here is a voice that has had to swim the vast ringing spaces of Simon Cowell’s cynicism in order to reach us.

Perhaps this explains why for much of I Dreamed A Dream Susan Boyle sounds like she is singing in a wind tunnel. This is not helped by the fact that her much-vaunted vocal assets have been heavily treated – pumped up with the studio equivalent of Botox.  It adds to the artificiality of her already mannered vocal technique, which (perhaps at the insistence of her voice coach) consists largely of piling on layer after layer of wobbling vibrato.

Which isn’t to say there isn’t a voice here, of sorts.  On rare moments when Boyle relaxes into her natural midrange, you can hear it – a kind of long-breathed warble, with enough power to worry the edges off the custard creams in the church halls of West Lothian.

Contrived it may be, but Boyle’s Elaine-Paige-on-steroids singing style is at least preferable to the nasal histrionic whinnying that now seems compulsory for new pop acts.  The fact that she offers an antidote to the generic urban/RnB template surely goes a long way to explaining Boyle’s staggering popularity.

And there’s another saving grace: Cowell has been merciful – there is no opera here.  Instead the repertory ranges from predictable anthems like the title track, through contemporary stadium-pop and the odd nod to her church roots with the likes of Amazing Grace and Silent Night.

Boyle’s take on Wild Horses, the Jagger/Richards paen to the heaven-and-hell pull of heroin, is downright eerie. There’s even a stilted, bloodless rendition of The Monkee’s Daydream Believer that hooks the song up to an iron lung and drains every last dreg of Pop life out of it.  At times the track order is bizarrely incongruous – one minute Boyle’s going all breathy and Bette Midler on us for Cry Me A River, and the next, she’s wading into a pious rendition of Great Thou Art.

There’s a sort of implied biographical narrative underpinning these song choices, which seem to soundtrack Boyle’s years of thwarted ambition and strangulated passion as she stayed at home to care for her ailing mother.

It’s ironic, then, that Boyle, despite striving for effect to an almost fatiguing degree, seems incapable of investing any of these songs with a scintilla of authentic feeling. This is un-music, manicured with pitiless efficiency by Cowell’s production team, with any vestiges of what might have made Boyle’s singing distinctive carefully airbrushed out of the aural picture.

What I Dreamed A Dream exhibits most powerfully is an overwhelming self-consciousness, a morbid awareness of itself as product.  Even as it insinuates itself into our lives, soundtracking our weddings and work-do’s, this record is harbouring a sneaky secret: it’s not really on our, or the music’s, side at all.

Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca (Domino) 9/8/09

Posted in Music, Pop/Rock on November 30, 2009 by culturecrammer

Some landmark records document a giant transformational leap in a band’s development, marking that moment when good artists become great ones.

Bitte Orca is such a record. That it’s also a strange and wayward affair is no surprise coming from a band whose last album, 2007′s Rise Above, was an attempt by frontman Dave Longstreth to remember and reinterpret the entire Black Flag album Damaged after not hearing it for 15 years.  But what makes Bitte Orca special is the way it manages to combine disorientating, mind-flanging weirdness with a joyous, entirely instinctive pop sensibility.

Instantly, listening to opener ‘Cannibal Resource’, it’s as if Dirty Projectors have rearranged rock’s DNA and installed a new songwriting logic. At once strange and familiar, the song offsets its swaggering rock bass and hand-clap percussion with odd time signatures, tangential guitar riffs and vertiginous modulations in pitch. Like the rest of this record, it pulsates with a supreme sense of freedom and confidence.

Things get better still with the gorgeous ‘Temecula Sunrise’, which soars along on the dovetailing Eastern-flavoured harmonies of singers Amber Coffman and Angel Deradoorian, providing the perfect foil to Longstreth’s caustic warble.  Their girl-group vocals see-saw away in the background as dissonant 12-string finger picking meets flurries of fuzzy, amped-up guitar.  This is pop freed of – or rather reconstructing – cliché, throwing us curve balls while simultaneously riffing off classic motifs from rock’s institutional memory.

In fact, tracing the influences in Bitte Orca is like writing tasting notes for a complex wine; every time you delve into it you’ll pick up a hint of something else. ‘The Bride’ has a lilting, water-borne quality that recalls Starsailor-era Tim Buckley. Elsewhere Longstreth, a music composition graduate, drops in jazz, classical, Middle Eastern and African influences, even a touch of 50’s doo-wop.  There are shades of Devendra Banhart, bluesy Led Zep/White Stripes power riffs, the circular grooves of Steely Dan and the voodoo boogie of vintage Captain Beefheart.  But above all this album rings with the influence of Talking Heads, whose David Byrne is a recent Projectors collaborator.

Then, as if to underline their ability to defy categorisation, the Projectors launch into the avant-R’n’B of ‘Stillness Is The Move’, a procession of booty-jiggling pop hooks filtered through something thrillingly alien. With a lyric paraphrasing Peter Handke’s poem from the Wim Wenders film Wings of Desire, Coffman and Deradoorian’s helium-high vocals ride a Middlle Eastern guitar loop over a glitchy staccato rythmn.  Yearning strings enter the mix as the track builds to a plateau of blissed-out, mystic euphoria. It’s the coolest record Destiny’s Child never made.

This is an album about the longing for transcendence, the state of grace music promises but only delivers in rare glimpses. It’s indie music let off the leash, in which bookish white college kids attain heights of rapture of a kind normally reserved for black soul artists.

More ecstatic word painting follows in ‘Two Doves’, which plays on poetic imagery from the Old Testament text Song of Solomon. Its picked guitar and breathy violin stabs pay loving tribute to Nico’s cover of Jackson Browne’s ‘These Days’ from her album Chelsea Girl, even going so far as to lift a line (“Don’t confront me with my failures…”).  Deradoorian’s vibrato-laden vocal is vulnerable and deeply moving, all the more so for being placed in music that seems to have been mysteriously deconstructed and reassembled.

But it’s on the wildly segueing medley ‘Useful Chamber’ that the Projectors’ sheer reckless verve is at its most jaw-dropping.  A backdrop of morphing synths and chiming, spun-glass guitar is sprayed with sporadic blues riffs; this switches abruptly into a spoken passage, then bursts into a romping chorus plastered in blistering fretwork, before leaping into unearthly vocal modulations that sound like something from another culture, if not another planet. It’s like Ligeti crossed with the Beach Boys.

Old punks might dismiss all this as so much suspect prog-rockery.  But this record is on a relentless quest to transcend its own self-conciousness. The formal experimentation never distracts the music from its main purpose – to communicate urgent, spontaneous joy.

Bitte Orca gloriously reaffirms your faith in pop music’s protean and inexhaustible abilty to reinvent itself, be reborn and live again – even if it has to turn itself inside out to do it.

The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen (Fourth Estate, 2001)

Posted in Books, Fiction on November 18, 2009 by culturecrammer

To read Jonathan Franzen is to know – like a Star Trek crew member facing off against some alien mind-entity – that you have encountered an intelligence indubitably greater than your own. In The Corrections there are times when Franzen’s voracious, omniscient imagination seems to have inventoried and articulated the multiplicity of the world in full.

In this he resembles other super-eclectic brainboxes of postwar American fiction – his obvious forbears Don DeLillo and Thomas Pynchon, as well as contemporaries such as the late David Foster Wallace. But what marks Franzen out and gives this book its deep richness is his commitment to storytelling on a very human scale. Franzen uses his gifts to excavate human truths not only with unflinching clarity, but also with a touching and tender pathos. Time and again, his insights feel thrillingly, deliciously right.

The book tracks the trials and disappointments of the Lamberts, a middle class, midwestern family whose home town of St Jude is named after the patron saint of lost causes.  Alfred is the family’s crumbling patriarch – an austere, emotionally frozen disciplinarian from a backwards prairie town, who dedicates a life of service to the railroad only to see it gobbled up and asset-stripped by a firm of aggressive venture capitalists. In retirement, his dignity and self-reliance are similarly devoured by Parkinson’s, and his obsolescence underlined against the backdrop of a hi-tech, consumptive America that no longer has a use for his kind.

His youngest son Chip is a Foucaultian cultural studies lecturer who (in an episode reminiscent of Philip Roth’s The Human Stain) loses his job after an affair with a precocious student.  He finds his antithesis in his elder brother Gary, a senior portfolio manager in affluent midlife, depressed, paranoid and alienated from his wife and children. Meanwhile, middle chjld Denise is a bisexual workaholic control freak whose wild side erupts in a string of kamikaze love affairs.

Over these wayward children frets their hen-like mother, Enid – neurotic, status-anxious and self-deluding in her emotional need to believe in her family as a paradigm of success and respectability. As it becomes apparent that Alfred’s condition is deteriorating, she begs her children to return home for ‘one last Christmas’ in St Jude, thus providing the dénouement toward which the book’s multiple narrative threads inexorably move.

Franzen exposes the follies, vanities and neuroses of each Lambert with such insight and compassion you get the feeling that, rather as Dostoyevsky did in The Brothers Karamazov, the author has split himself into three to bring this trio of siblings to life. Each of the Lambert children’s lives are shaped, consciously or subconsciously, by a series of reactions to their overbearing parents. Franzen brilliantly captures the sticky toxicity of family relationships, of how vainly we struggle, like flies in a web, to free ourselves from the threads that tie us to our past.

But perhaps the book’s greatest achievement is its heart-rendingly powerful and lucidly observed study of Alfred and the corrosive onset of Parkinson’s. Franzen drills into the deepest recesses of this proud, complex and initially unsympathetic figure, peeling away layer after layer until we see the vast, aching sadness at his centre.

Out of such pain Franzen fashions some of the blackest and most brilliantly sustained comic writing in contemporary literature.  The early chapters in particular vibrate with savage farce, and show that Franzen is at his most laugh-out-loud funny when he writes about men and masculinity.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the picaresque exploits of the hapless Chip Lambert. As the novel opens, we find the recently sacked academic in manic-depressive freefall, writing an ill-conceived attempt at a commercial Hollywood screenplay which opens with a six-page lecture on the anxieties of the phallus in Tudor drama. Worse, having dispatched the manuscript to his agent Eden Procuro, he realizes that he has subconsciously littered the text with scores of repetitious and highly inappropriate references to his female protagonist’s breasts. In the first of many allusions to the book’s title, Chip is seized by the conviction that he can salvage both his career and his relationship with his girlfriend if only he can chase the document down and make the necessary corrections before Procuro reads it.

The novel’s title serves as an inexhaustible metaphor that weaves through the fabric of the story: it is referenced in the miracle Parkinsons drug Correcktall, to which the Lamberts are fighting to get Alfred access; it is a stockbroking term for the catastrophic plunge in the value of Gary’s shares in said drug; it is the political correctness that costs Chip his job, as well as the correctional facility being built on his college campus – and so on. But above all it alludes to a generalised sense of the desperate need to put things right – whether morally, spiritually, clinically or pharmaceutically – in a society obsessed with unattainable normalcy and terrified by the prospect of failure or dysfunction.

This is beautifully realized in the character of Gary, who having attained all the trappings of suburban comfort, begins to experience his home as a kind of panopticon, in which the concerned gazes of his family members become surveillance cameras. In a fit of paranoia he resorts to elaborate shows of positivity in order to disprove his wife Caroline’s accusation that he is clinically depressed, culminating in a blackly hilarious episode involving a deadly combination of vodka and hedge clippers.

Sadly, Franzen cannot sustain this level of inspiration. After producing prose of seemingly effortless fluency and verve for 300 of its 650 pages, The Corrections goes soft in the middle.  Part of the problem is that Franzen can’t resist expanding his canvas to take in the widescreen vistas of ‘meta-novelists’ like Robert Coover and William Gaddis. With varying degrees of success, he riffs off themes from the late 90s zeitgeist, including the economic and cultural appropriation of failing Eastern European states, the ascendancy of cultural theory in academe, the long boom of US economic growth and the accompanying banalities of postmodern mass consumption.

But having spent the first half of the novel constructing a compelling family saga, Franzen’s story ranges into places it does not need to visit. Arid plains of narrative open up as Franzen throws in sub-plots and back-stories involving inconsequential characters we never meet. In a series of sprawling information dumps, his prose style shifts from rich first-person detail to broad-brush exposition. A cartoon-like quality creeps in, as the author falls prey to the bad habits of some of his contemporaries, including a touch of satirical excess and some overly knowing hipster symbolism.

Happily, in due course Franzen finds his way back to the story he has so expertly made us care about, and the pay-off – the long anticipated Christmas reunion – is more than worth the readers’ perseverance.

Its flabby midsection notwithstanding, at its note-perfect best The Corrections beautifully balances its satirical elements with movingly observed human drama, evoking an utterly three-dimensional world.  An extraordinary feat of empathy and compassion, The Corrections can be ranked among the finest American novels of the past 30 years.

The Comedians by Trevor Griffiths @ The Lyric Theatre, London

Posted in Theatre on November 12, 2009 by culturecrammer

David-Dawson as Gethin Price

It was a bold move for the Lyric to resurrect this old warhorse which, though electrifying in its day, now risks being dismissed as a period piece.  When Trevor Griffiths wrote The Comedians in 1975, the ideological battle lines were clearly drawn: while notorious bigots like Jim Davidson and Bernard Manning prowled prime time TV, British theatre was the stomping ground of the left-wing firebrand – the likes of Edward Bond, Howard Brenton, Howard Barker, and of course Griffiths himself.  This was a Britain arriving at the fag-end of the postwar consensus, on the cusp of Thatcherism and punk. Yet while society may have changed unrecognizably, the climate in which the play was written – recession, strikes, far-right groups on the rise – feels chillingly familiar some 30 years on.

The action unfolds on one long, rain-sodden evening in a Manchester night school, where six amateur comics are gathering for a chance at the big time.  Burt Challoner, an influential London talent spotter, is coming north, and the wannabe stand-ups, desperate to escape from dead-end menial jobs, hope to impress him.

Keith Allen as Burt Challoner

Their teacher Eddie Waters (Matthew Kelly), himself a once-great music-hall turn, clings to an idealistic notion of the comedian as truth-teller –  “A real comedian dares to see what his listeners shy away from, “ he tells his protoges.  But when Challoner (Keith Allen) makes it clear his tastes are strictly lowbrow, most of the group begin wheeling out every racist, misogynist stereotype in the book. We witness their routines in the play’s second act, when the school room is transformed into the stage of a working men’s club and we, the audience, become the punters whose worst instincts are being pandered to.

Then Waters’ favorite pupil, shaven-headed proto-punk Gethin Price (David Dawson), sabotages the show with a disturbing act pitched somewhere between agit prop protest and Dadaist art terrorism.  As well as seething with class hatred and social and cultural alienation, this savage parody points up the cruelty of the routines that have gone before.

David Dawson as Price fizzes with a barely-contained nervous intensity. It’s an impressive, sometimes brilliant, performance of immense commitment, but it would benefit from a touch more subtlety. He has a tendency to over-act, and his wired realization of the character too often exhibits itself as a collection of tics and mannerisms. Dawson heavily signposts Price’s otherness from the other standups, which detracts from the shock value of his explosive second act routine. Dawsons’ portrayal is one-dimensional compared to Jonathan Pryce’s unforced but compelling performance in the 1979 BBC Play for Today production that made that actor’s name (see video below).

Director Sean Holmes keeps the ensemble powering along nicely, the expertly drilled cast totally at home with the fast-paced dynamics of Griffith’s knockabout script.  Billy Carter and Michael Dylan are excellent as the two Irish comics, while Reece Shearsmith, Mark Benton and Keith Allen are all good value, and in most respects Matthew Kelly is perfect as the world-weary Waters.

Matthew Kelly as Eddie Wells

But in Act 3 the cast were stretched by both the strengths and the weaknesses of Griffiths’ script. By the time we arrive at the confrontation between Price and his teacher, the play is no longer simply about comedy but the role and relevance of art in society.  It’s in these more didactic moments, when Griffiths’ own voice occasionally speaks through his characters as if they were ventriloquists’ dummies, that The Comedians begins to show its age. Yet these scenes also include some of the play’s most powerful writing, not least Waters’ haunting confession of his response to a visit to a Nazi concentration camp (“Something in me loved it”).  This is heavyweight stuff, requiring actors who can carry it with absolute conviction. Though they tackle it bravely, Kelly and Davis don’t quite have the range and authority to realize the full power of the scene.

Ultimately, The Comedians eschews soapbox dogma. Like the play’s patient teacher Eddie Waters, Griffiths may not approve of his characters actions, but he does not condemn them. His script is full of dialectical cut and thrust, and a sympathy that acknowledges the gulf between principles and material necessity. Griffiths seems to accept that the function of art is to ask difficult question and to be honest when it cannot answer them.  Underneath the rhetoric, it is The Comedians’ probing, questing spirit that has kept it young.

Colourmusic – ‘Yes!’ (Memphis Industries)

Posted in Music, Pop/Rock on November 8, 2009 by culturecrammer

The new single by Yorkshire/Oaklahoma cult collective Colourmusic is glorious – as is the genius video, which features random acts of triumphant, therapeutic air-punching  in the recession-scarred Bible belt. All together now: Love the machine!



Warpaint – ‘Stars’

Posted in Music on October 24, 2009 by culturecrammer

This music video, shot by Adam Harding in the ashes of the Angeles National Forest, is a thing of beauty. The fact that it combines girls kissing with ethereal light-painting and reverse slow-motion fireworks does it no harm at all.

Said girls, LA trio Warpaint, have a distinct ‘shoegazer’ vibe,  flavoured with a hint of the sexy menace and mania of Throwing Muses and the tribal aesthetic of UK post-punk group The Slits.

Possession (Andrzej Zulawski, 1981)

Posted in Film on October 23, 2009 by culturecrammer

possession_locThere are films that are bad. There are films that are so bad they’re good. And then there is Possession.

Maverick Polish director Andrzej Zulawski’s 1981 arthouse horror flick is like no other experience in cinema.  This celluloid cataclysm is amateurish, demented, incoherent, ludicrous, and jaw-droppingly self-important – yet somehow you cannot take your eyes off it for a moment of its two hour running time.

Mark (Sam Neill) returns from a lengthy business trip to find that his wife, Anna (Isabelle Adjani), has been having an affair and wants a divorce.  Scenes of increasingly hysterical marital meltdown follow as the couple wage a war of emotional attrition over the head of their young son in a claustrophobic Berlin flat.  It’s like Kramer vs Kramer on mind-twisting psychotropics.

Yet both Mark and his wife’s lover must contend with a third, secret love interest: gradually they discover that Anna has spawned and nurtured a diabolical creature in a derelict flat on the other side of the city. Worse still, it’s much better in bed than either of them, and she is prepared to kill in order to protect it. possessionsa1ng0

Possession offers a unique cocktail of elements in collision. To his general directorial ineptitude, Zulawski adds poker-faced pretentiousness, one of the most incomprehensible scripts ever written, and risible dialogue riddled with quasi-philosophical balderdash.  The acting, with the exception of the astonishing Isabelle Adjani, is execrable and unintentionally hilarious.  The young Sam Neill – never the most towering of talents – is here criminally mis-directed, pushed so far beyond his limits he virtually exits the stratosphere.

And Possession is funny. Gut-creasingly funny. Witness the scene where Mark tracks down and confronts his wife’s lover, Heinrich, an outrageously camp Steven Berkoff type played with delirious pansexual loucheness by German actor Heinz Bennent. The following is typical of their exchanges as they careen around one another like a pair of loons:

Heinrich: There is nothing to fear except God, whatever that means to you.
Mark: For me God is a disease.
Heinrich: That’s why through a disease we can reach God.

Its deeply suspect gender politics notwithstanding, at the heart of Possession is a great concept – a film about sexual possessiveness and marital trauma set against a backdrop of demoniacal madness and body horror.   Alas, Zulawski seems to have made it while absorbed entirely in a private world of opaque meaning.  The film seems to be a cathartic outpouring of his feelings about his own divorce  coupled with a comment on his ill-treatment at the hands of the Polish authorities, washed down with half-baked Cold War metaphors and lashings of sixth-form existentialism.

But what single-handedly entitles Possession to its status as a lost classic is an extended scene in the Berlin subway, when the evil that has taken seed in Anna finally erupts (see YouTube clip below).  What follow are three of the most intense and harrowing minutes in all of cinema.  The physical and emotional commitment shown by Adjani is remarkable.

possession

Almost as unforgettable is a scene in which we finally witness the creature, brilliantly designed by E.T. creator Carlo Rambaldi. The disturbing sight of Adjani locked in coitus with her demon lover is one of the great horror movie images.

These scenes, as well as the sheer unrelenting pitch of hysteria that permeates the film, invite comparison with the likes of The Exorcist, the Polanski of Repulsion and Rosemary’s Baby, early Cronenberg, and even Lars von Trier’s recent Antichrist.

Combining moments of unhinged genius with some of the most woefully misconceived and self-indulgent film making ever, Possession is mandatory viewing. Just don’t forget to look out for the man in the pink socks.