David Lynch: Eraserhead.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013



Released 1977 Directed by David Lynch Starring John Nance Fantasy/Horror Genre Synopsis found here

Meshell
Where does one start with Lynch?
Eraserhead is nothing short of sinister. Set in a Chernobyl-esque, gritty industrial scene, Henry (John Nance) is to me an ominous parallel of Charlie Chapman. His distinctively high, fluffy hair (full of secrets?) and pen protector are to him what Charlie's bowler hat and cane. In his movement, Nance delivers a rigid, slapstick performance. He ambles over the industrial wasteland, shoulders curved, feet finding their way into muddy puddles and the like. 

The interaction between characters is perplexing at best. Long, awkward silences are punctuated with bizarre discourse and inappropriate reactions; my favourite being when Mary's mother is questioning Henry on whether or not he had sexual intercourse with her daughter. Henry, pathetically withdraws himself into the corner as Mary's mother nuzzles at his neck.

The true question is, is Eraserhead a heartbreaking work of genius or pure fuckery?


The sound of silence & perfect mismatching
Sound is an extremely important element to the film. It makes the mundane of the film surreal and sheds light on the old hock, 'silence is deafening'. The slow pace, the silence, the jarring drone that seamlessly transitions from insect-like (locusts, scuttling cockroaches) to the hissing radiator, ticking clock, the scrape and scratch of metal on metal, and so on. All the noise represents the lack of noise.

The houses in which Lynch's odd characters share the mundane meets surreal in the sense they are what I imagined Motel rooms decorated in the 50's looked like in the 70's. Practical, functional meets outdated, mismatching and worn to a thread. However, Lynch injects the right measure of 'Lynchian' with particular addition, such as a milky puddle in the centre of a bed for the unfaithful Henry and his neighbour. 

After all, who else could put a mud-pie atop a doily on a night stand, and for it to be the least questionable item in the film? Hats off to the kookiest director in a starched shirt, buttoned to the throat.

The good, the bad and the grotesque
I adore the Lady in the Radiator (I grew up listening to the Pixies' version of 'In Heaven, Everything is Fine').


I found the tiny chicken hilarious.


Same as Mary's mother's reaction. And Mary's coiffed fringe.


But just couldn't move past the grotesqueness of the 'baby'.


No one really knows how Lynch achieved this thing. I understand Lynch's desire to retain an air of mystery, but seriously. I would keep tight-lipped about a fucking mechanically animated horse-foetus-like thing. Precautionary tale of the dangers of premarital sex? Mehbeh.

Myskool
The Aural Industrial
You know you've made it as a filmmaker when you get your own adjective. Lynchian, that is, something that calls to mind or emulates the work of David Lynch, is not used as much as something like Burton-esque but that's probably simply because no one attempts to make anything as batshit insane as Eraserhead.

Eraserhead has been endearing to me since long before I ever saw it. I recall seeing the poster (featuring the image at the top of this post wherein Henry is spotlighted in a cloud of his own... I want to say 'head dust') in a magazine, probably when I was around 12. That was also the age where I first watched Clockwork Orange and Rocky Horror so I don't think my head would have exploded if I saw it. Although, I do believe it would have been right up my alley.

David Lynch starts here with this phenomenal first film. For me the windy pipes, cemented buildings, crumbled ruins, smokestacks and indistinct machinery are the perfect backdrop to this story. The focus on old industry, the fifties-esque conservatism and costume design and the jazz-influenced musique concrete soundtrack make the film timeless in the truest sense of the word. Though 'when is this happening?' is probably the last question on most people's minds. 

[....] another might be "WTF?"
People and machines live harmoniously
I feel connected to this movie, and not just because Meshell reminded me that I looked like Henry every five minutes, the portrayals of the characters, though stylised, feel very real. The overzealousness of Bill, Mary's father, turning to brimstone about the lack of appreciation for plumbers. The naivete of Mary and her change from innocent girl to sullen, embittered mother. The confusion on Henry's face as he stares at a litter of dogs sucking at their mothers teats. 

Nothing can be relied upon in this world. Henry, supposedly fresh from buying groceries, steps in a puddle of mud unsuspectingly. Henry seems surprised at the lack of mail. The elevator takes an uncharacteristically long time to close. There is a message from Mary who he has not spoken to in some time. On and on and on, until Henry is taking scissors to the giblets of his progeny. It's a wild and unexpected ride, but a feast for the senses. Meshell has pretty heavily covered the soundscape but I really want to mention how alive the world feels for such an empty wasteland; everything is smoking, bubbling, splintering or shining. The static shots don't even feel still, there is always noise informing you of other goings on. Even the music feels like effects, there is a great moment when Henry leaves his house and is walking to Mary's. What sounds like car honking begins in the background but gradually becomes part of the chord organ score. 

I recommend Eraserhead to anyone who enjoys:
  • Beautiful black and white cinematography.
  • Creative use of sound and music.
  • People who have little men controlling their nervous system with pulleys that force their mouths to open and spit out visual representations of spermatozoon.

Roman Polanski: Rosemary's Baby.

Monday, March 18, 2013



Released 1968 Directed by Roman Polanski Starring Mia Farrow Horror/Drama Genre Synopsis found here.


Myskool
Myskool's time at university can be divided into three disparate and distinct timeframes:

Timeframe 1: Wherein he smoked cigars immediately after watching free movies.

Timeframe 2: Wherein he realised he didn't have to actually attend classes to pass.
Timeframe 3: Wherein he proclaimed "all of them witches" loudly and with vitriol at any who vexed him.

But now, apparently firmly rooted in Timeframe 4 (wherein he speaks of himself in the third person), Myskool watches Rosemary's Baby for what feels to be the twentieth time. Eyes affixed to the screen as if it was his first.
That's right, I proclaim (abandoning my third person shenanigans), I am a fan of this film already. Rarely have I viewed a film so compelling and hypnotic that simultaneously makes me want to continue watching as much as it makes me want to suspiciously peek into my neighbour's lounge-rooms for traces of both Satanism and chalky 'mouse'.


The Unexpected

I can't take my mind off of the notion of being some 60's pensioner looking for an exciting trip into the romantic lives of a lovely, young New York City couple. Hearing Rosemary's Baby and seeing the lovely Mia Farrow plastered everywhere is whetting this adorable senior's appetite for a delightful experience. She finds a seat somewhere near the middle, but not the exact middle and is further excited by the opening credit sequence. 

Everything, from the exciting landscape, to the typeface and the pink, would do little to quell her expectations. Alright, there is some ominous music, but not overtly so. Maybe this is just an assumption but I can't help but think that people wouldn't have known what they were in for at the time. This happens even today, I remember going to see Sweeny Todd when it came out and watched about 16 teenaged boys walk out when they realised it was a musical. Wow, what a tangent.


The Music, Repetitious, Slightly Annoying and Utterly Effective 


Just when something new and surprising occurs (and you're expected a change in theme to mark the moment) suddenly as if it never went away Für Elise plays. It's as if the budget allowed for the one track and between this and the opening song it all feels a bit otherworldly. This arrangement of Für Elise is different though, creepy and spindly, it reverberates long after each note ends but concurrently feels sharp and staccato... I know, I know, I'm the oxymoron king. But it is, ultimately, extremely effective in its indeterminate emotions. Für Elise could quite easily be anyone's theme, Rosemary's, Minnie's, Guy's or Hutch's. It could and does score, lots of the most important moments.


Because you are exposed so frequently to Für Elise whenever you get anything different it really stands out. The most dramatic sting occurs with the reveal of the Anagram from the 'All of them Witches' book and when this occurs it feels simply spine-tingling because the score earned that moment through restraint and pacing.



The Absurd
As a warning to those haven't seen this, let it be known, there are next to no sympathetic characters. I count three; Rosemary, Hutch and Terry (the lady who is living with the Castavets when Rosemary moves in). That's it, though I am open to corrections.


That being said I think this film deals with its lack of heavenly creatures with great aplomb, granting us with some magnificent humour. Though the laughs come more rarely than often and more Samuel Beckett than Jerry Lewis. Some people might be hard-pressed to find it but its there and look no further than the final scene for out and out wildness that actually works and is hilarious and terrifying at the same time.

I find this movie damn entertaining. Damned entertaining? Maybe, but I have never heard of much of a Christian backlash. Though I would definitely not be shocked.


It is a measured and methodical study of a truly terrifying thriller that can be taken in two ways; if you don't like the supernatural elements, you can choose to view the movie as if everything Rosemary encounters is meticulously controlled by a group of wrinkly chanters, you can write off other moments and coincidences. It is never overwhelmingly one-sided in how you interpret it. You only have to look at Donner's The Omen (some would argue, the little brother of this film) made some 10 years later to see how perfectly Polanski managed this tale. Don't get me wrong though I love The Omen but, for me, it isn't all for you, Damien. Actually, there is only one thing to say...



"Hail Satan"
Meshell
Feminism
Rosemary's Baby awoke within me the feminism I'd quashed down to my pinkie toe post-uni. Here's why:

a.) Rosemary is drugged and raped by her husband, BUT IT'S OKAY. 

b.) Rosemary - a grown woman - is repeatedly treated and chided like a child, BUT IT'S OKAY.
c.) Rosemary's body is used as the vehicle to bring Satan's sprog into this dimension, completely against her will - heck, even without her knowledge - all in the name of her husband's career, BUT IT'S OKAY.


I found Rosemary's Baby to be quite risqué for its era, and honestly can't blame Old Blue Eyes for demanding his bride, Mia Farrow, quit the set. After all, if nothing else, this film did demonstrate the extent of just how powerless objects young women were.


The European, the coincidences and the creep-factor
As one of the first mainstream films directed by a European, audiences used to the formula of big production companies would have been intoxicated by the strangeness of subject and technique, and abhorred by the altogether disturbing themes of the film. There are scenes so quintessentially 'European' film, I'm certain would have knocked Grandma's horn-rimmed glasses right off their perch in the late 60's. I mean, all that Catholocism and Paganism symbolism, rape, naked wrinklies.

Watching Rosemary's Baby for the first time as a modern audience, the events following the release of the film certainly increase the chill-factor; Polanski's near-premonition of a cult irreparably damaging a pregnant woman. Unlike Rosemary who had to live with the knowledge that she had produced Satan's child at the hand of a cult, Mrs. Polanski (Sharon Tate) and her healthy child in utero were murdered at the hand of a cult. Gulp.

Furthering the creepiness is the producer William Castle's proclamations of the film being 'cursed'. Shortly after release, Castle became gravely ill. And although it's a stretch - the apartment building used in exterior shots of Rosemary's Baby, The Dakota being the building John Lennon was murdered in front of certainly gives me the willies, particularly considering Lennon's connection with Farrow's sister, Prudence:


Is this a good place to mention Manson - the man behind the cult responsible for murdering Polanski's wife and unborn child - believed the song Helter Skelter from the Beatles' White Album to be his call to arms? (I promise I'm not a Beatles conspiracy theorist, I firmly believe McCartney wasn't replaced by a Welsh look-alike.)

What else would one expect of a film centred around Satan's baby being born in the sixth month of the 66th year? (6/66)


The set & costume design
I will admit to being a bit of a set and costume design geek. It is here in both its well chosen subtleties for forwardness character traits or events are truly clinched nicely. For example, Rosemary is seen in yellows and mustards when she is healthy and upbeat, red when major plot events take place, blue and maroon when she is unwell physically and (seemingly to others) mentally.

Then there's the hair. Oh, that Vidal Sassoon hair. Pre-pregnancy innocence chopped to a beautiful pixie. Perfect.

And finally, to end on a high-note: DAT SET. Have mercy.




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