Lost in the Movies: January 2020

Lady Bird


The story opens in New York - a city of new beginnings. It is the fall of 2003, and the disorienting shocks of the early decade have already settled into the uneasy pangs of the mid-decade. Against this backdrop our heroine (Saoirse Ronan) arrives for her first semester of college, dragging her suitcases out of the subway and staring up in awe at the skyscrapers. She came from somewhere else, but where she came from hardly matters - at a loud dorm room party she tells a boy she's from Sacramento but when he shouts "Where?" she changes her answer to "San Francisco." And she hesitates before giving her name, Christine; somehow, it seems like she's offering an introduction not just to the boy or to the audience but to herself. "Christine" - innocuous, ordinary, allowing her to blend in with the flock of eager, nervous new students, a blank slate from which to start anew. We've probably seen this film before, if not as a film than as a TV show or a memoir or a more formless cultural narrative riding the circuit in millennial media. The cast of this journey consists of other hip young people, the milieu is urban, and the trajectory is upwards despite bumps along the road.

Only after falling violently ill (she pukes as soon as she kisses the other partygoer), spending the night in a hospital, and seeking out the comfort of a Catholic church the next morning, does Christine's facade crumble and a sturdier foundation emerge. Christine may be her given name, but Lady Bird is the name she gave herself (as she once declared at a casting call for her Catholic school play); even if she's abandoning the quirky moniker, its legacy lingers. She lied about being from San Francisco, of course: the first answer was her real hometown and she's only now realizing how much Sacramento contributed to her identity. Most importantly, Christine/Lady Bird isn't the only one to tell a fib - I've lied too. This isn't actually how Lady Bird begins. This is how it ends.

Mad Men - "Souvenir" (season 3, episode 8)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode of season three. Later seasons will be covered at another time. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on October 4, 2009/written by Lisa Albert, Matthew Weiner; directed by Phil Abraham): Now that a contract binds Don to his Manhattan office, he's hardly spending any time there. Connie is sending him across the country to visit what Pete dismisses as "every armpit [Hilton] has." The next destination is a bit ritzier, however; after initially declining, Betty accepts Don's invitation to accompany him to Rome. There they enjoy their spectacular view of the city and especially the romantic allure of their bed. Betty arrives early for their meeting with Connie in a glamorous beehive, black dress, and flashy jewelry, ogled by two eager young men (Federico Dordei and Giuseppe Rausch) who dismiss Don, once he arrives, as a "millionaire American," old and ugly. Treating Don as a stranger but accepting his overtures, Betty invites him to her table and feigns surprise that his hotel room is "so close to mine," causing the locals to leave their outdoor table in despair. The two grin and continue to play this game; there's something sexy about their flirtation for both of them, especially the pretense that it's a purely physical and perhaps even illicit attraction. "I'm in town for two nights," Don chuckles, "I won't get my heart broken."

Back in New York, Pete pursues a more genuine infidelity, kindly offering to help a bashful German au pair (Nina Rausch) by taking care of a dress she's stained. He keeps his promise, discovering to his surprise that Joan has taken a job at the department store where he exchanges the outfit. Only then does the girl discover that his overtures are not so friendly - or perhaps too friendly. Initially accepting her polite demurral (she has a boyfriend, she says), he returns to her apartment and cajoles his way in, pressing himself on her and accepting her weary submission as confirmation she wants him, or simply as a free pass for someone who doesn't really care either way. His later guilt is provoked less by Gudrun's tears than by her employer's (Ned Vaughn's) self-assured tone as he advises Pete to look elsewhere when scratching his seven-year itch, as if he's initiating the younger man into the club of perpetually philandering husbands. When Trudy returns from the Jersey shore, realizing vaguely that something has gone wrong, Pete asks her never to leave him behind again.

For the moment at least, the discontent that settles over the Draper home mostly belongs to Betty. Don offers her a coliseum-shaped trinket soon after their return, but she is not satisfied. "I hate this place," she insists. "I hate our friends. I hate this town." She's not simply missing the worldly glamor of Rome. Betty kissed Henry a day before flying out, when he assisted her community group at a town meeting. No one was around, and he closed the door to her car immediately after leaning in for the kiss, but their spark of connection is now overt. Later, counseling her daughter (who fought with Bobby after he caught her kissing a neighborhood boy), Betty observes, "You're going to have a lot of first kisses. You're going to want it to be special, so you remember. It's where you go from being a stranger to knowing someone, and every kiss with him after that is a shadow of that first kiss." Don's small souvenir is not her only reminder of a strong attraction.

My Response:

Guardians of the Galaxy (The Unseen 2014)


"The Unseen" is a series in which I watch popular films for the first time. The list, which moves backwards in time, is based on the highest-ranked film I've never seen each year on Letterboxd (as of April 2018). Guardians of the Galaxy was #2 for 2014.

The Story: Fleeing his mother's (Laura Haddock's) deathbed in 1988, Peter Quill (Wyat Oleff) is abducted by aliens; we will later piece together that the space pirate behind this kidnapping, Yondu Udonta (Michael Rooker), adopted and exploited the human boy until he rebelled in adulthood. When we catch up with Quill (now Chris Pratt), he still listens to his mother's mixtape for inspiration but has otherwise moved far away from her beneficent vision of his character. Then Quill gets caught up in the intrigue surrounding a potentially universe-annihilating "infinity stone" desired by the godlike Thanos (Josh Brolin) but eventually intercepted by Ronan the Accuser (Lee Pace), a puritanical radical who wants to destroy most other races in a genocidal quest to live up to his twisted religious ideals. The reluctant hero gains, loses, recovers, loses again, and eventually seeks to intercept this small superweapon before Ronan can use it to destroy the peaceful Nova Empire, led by Irani Rael (Glenn Close) and dutifully protected by Rhomann Dey (John C. Reilly). In the process, Quill discovers a conscience and, just as importantly, comrades. The criminal lowlife, alternately known as "Star-Lord," is soon joined by the misfit all-stars of green-skinned assassin Gamora (Zoe Saldana), literal-minded and (literally) thickheaded refugee Drax the Destroyer (Dave Bautista), and two bounty hunters - the caustic, chip-on-his-shoulder mutant raccoon Rocket, and the kindly tree creature Groot (Vin Deisel, hired solely to repeat "I am Groot" as the only three words the creature can speak). Together, they break out of prison, race between various planets and starships, and slowly discover a purpose for their lives: guarding the galaxy from an imminent apocalypse while hopefully having a bit of fun in the process.

The Context:

Mad Men - "Seven Twenty Three" (season 3, episode 7)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode of season three. Later seasons will be covered at another time. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on September 27, 2009/written by Andre & Maria Jacquemetton, Matthew Weiner; directed by Daisy von Scherler Mayer): In dramatic fashion, "Seven Twenty Three" introduces us to three separate scenarios, presented in single shots, isolated without context and separated by a black screen. Betty drapes herself across a fainting couch, tenderly massaging herself in sensual fashion. Whose house is she at, and is someone else just offscreen, encouraging her? Peggy awakens on a bed, a bit stunned as she remembers where she is and who she's with (a man's body, turned over so we can only see its back, lays next to her). Is this the boy she fooled around with the other night, or Pete, or a stranger? Don pushes himself up from a wooden floor surrounded by empty bottles and the detritus of a wild night, staring at his very bloody reflection in the mirror. Who hit him, and was he drinking and possibly sleeping with the schoolteacher - did their expected affair actually turn into a violent and short-lived bacchanal? This was my speculation in each case and, thankfully, the episode managed to subvert each one of my expectations, surprising me with some developments that emerged from the ether and others that had long been building, either above or below the surface.

Betty is, in fact, in her own home - she has destroyed her carefully redesigned living room, to the horror of decorator Cynthia (Susan Krebbs) - by purchasing an old Victorian fainting couch at the casual behest of Henry Francis, the governor's advisor whom she met at Roger's country club party. She was meeting with Henry during an eclipse the day before (at a restaurant where the waitresses unmistakably wear the Double R uniforms from Twin Peaks), hoping he could help with a local civic matter although both know there's more to their chemistry than that. So far nothing's come of it, but they're clearly inching closer to an affair, as are Don and Miss Farrell at a children's eclipse celebration at the exact same moment. Peggy's fling is - obviously - consummated, but it came as more of a shock even if it shouldn't have. After wooing her in a business sense, Duck accepts her refusal to leave Sterling Cooper and then propositions her in a much more vulgar fashion. To her own surprise as much as anyone else's, she accepts. Is she attracted to Duck? I'm not sure he seems her type (if she has one). But she certainly welcomes his flattery given Don's absolutely brutal dismissal of her just an hour earlier: "Every time I turn around you've got your hand in my pocket. You have an office and a job that a lot of full grown men would kill for. Stop asking for things!"

Indeed, Don bears some responsibility for the places all three characters end up in that opening montage, because Betty's purchase is also clearly a response to his outburst the night before. In her case, at least she gives back as good as she gets before he storms out the door. When pressed why he won't sign a contract at work, Don snaps, "Let me explain something about business since as usual, you're making this all about yourself. No contract means I have all the power. They want me but they can't have me." Betty has the perfect retort. "You're right," she deadpans, picking up the larger significance. "Why would I think that has anything to do with me?" Don storms out drink in hand, picks up a couple hitchhikers (Trever O'Brien and Erin Sanders) off to get married (and hopefully dodge the draft), and gets drugged. He converses with a spectral Archie Whitman, cradling moonshine and rocking in a chair while telling dirty jokes, before the young man punches Don in the back of his head, knocking him out so they can empty his wallet and flee into the night. If Don's professional relationship to Peggy and marital relationship to Betty remain surprisingly intact at episode's end, his relationship to someone else is entirely severed.

Throughout "Seven Twenty Three," Bert, Lane, and Roger have been pressuring him to finally sign a three-year contract; he's just officially landed Connie Hilton as a client and they want to make sure this relationship applies not only to Don but to Sterling Cooper. Lane's concern is of course entirely cordial and impersonal. Bert pushes hard, harder than he probably even needs to, when he presents Don with a contract the morning after his bloody bacchanal: "Would you say I know something about you, Don?" he calmly threatens. And as if to present the flip side of this warning, he shrugs, "After all, when it comes down to it, who's really signing this contract anyway?" - a reassurance that simultaneously digs the knife in even deeper. But it's the third partner in pressure who receives the coldest, deepest share of Don's wrath. Roger supposedly buried the hatchet in the previous episode, but he's been getting under Don's skin for a long time and when he calls the Draper household and asks Betty to push Don, that's the final straw. While finally signing his near-future away, Don says matter-of-factly, "I don't want any more contact with Roger Sterling."

My Response:

Thirteen


Thirteen occupies a fascinating in-between space not just in its subject matter - a girl catapulted from anchored childhood "innocence" to unmoored adolescent "corruption" in a matter of months - but in its milieu and even, at least from today's standpoint, its time period: the character is caught in a place neither destitute nor privileged, and the film exists in an era that is far from the immediate present but also not quite the distant past. Tracy Freeland (Evan Rachel Wood) certainly doesn't have much access to the wealth and luxury she witnesses all around her in L.A. Her divorced mother Melanie (Holly Hunter) is a recovering alcoholic hairdresser operating out of her own home, working constantly to make ends meet and frequently failing when her own generosity gets in the way. Because that's the thing: as tough as it is for the Freeland family, it's even rougher for those who pass through their home (and sometimes stick around). Melanie is constantly allowing customers to eat her food, skip out on a payment, and even move in with them as they work out their own living situation. Overflowing with compassion, she can't help herself despite her awareness of how chaotic the situation is for her own children, especially when compounded by an especially unwanted houseguest: her boyfriend Brady (Jeremy Sisto), just out of rehab. Yet even this circus seems comforting when contrasted to the situation of Evie Zamora (Nikki Reed), Tracy's traumatized friend who is as needy as she is reckless, as vulnerable as she is ruthlessly manipulative.

Mad Men - "Guy Walks Into an Advertising Agency" (season 3, episode 6)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode of season three. Later seasons will be covered at another time. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on September 20, 2009/written by Robin Veith, Matthew Weiner; directed by Lesli Linka Glatter): Everything is about to change. The characters know this, they've been expecting it for a while, but even so the changes are happening in a way they don't like and didn't expect. And then, without warning, everything changes again in an instant, leaving them to wonder what other shocks the future may hold. That's the story at Sterling Cooper anyway. In the Draper household, change is more ingrained, gradual, and perpetually unclear - baby Gene has unsettled the household, particularly Sally who is terrified of her new brother. She's convinced that he is the reincarnation of his ancestor, sharing not just Grandpa Eugene's name and living quarters but (according to her at least) his looks. Betty tries to playfully assuage her daughter's concern with a present on the infant's behalf (a Barbie doll wrapped inside a comic strip) but this only creeps Sally out more, investing the unspeaking child with uncanny powers that are cemented when she wakes up to find the Barbie sitting on her dresser after she chucked it out the window. Don has his own reason for discomfort with little Gene's resemblances... "He hated me and I hated him," he snaps at his wife. "That's the memory." As if to console himself and not just Sally, while cradling the baby he tells her that they don't know who this Gene will be yet, and that's a good thing.

Indeed, the episode is filled with such reminders about the dangerous fragility of certainty. When Joan cries at her farewell party in the office, these aren't tears of joy. Greg is devastated to discover that not only has he been passed up as Chief Resident but he'll never be a successful surgeon ("You have no brains in your fingers," a mentor informs him) - they're going to need Joan's job, or a new one, after all. Suddenly her ten years at Sterling Cooper seem not just like a fond, bittersweet memory but a desperate economic, and probably emotional, necessity (I also love the subtle hints that she and Don once had a romance; I can't remember if this was ever explicit, was whispered in previous episodes, or is simply something I'm reading into the situation). Her party unfolds against a much broader backdrop, a British business invasion preceding the broader musical one seven months later. The agency's new owners Saint John Powell (Charles Shaughnessy) and Harold Ford (Neil Dickson) arrive on July 3, pointedly putting their American employees in their place on the eve of Independence Day. Don has reason to suspect that he's going to be promoted and transferred to London, a transatlantic deliverance that makes him giddy with anticipation. Instead, wunderkind Guy Mackendrick (James Thomas King) lands cheerfully arm-in-arm with Powell and Ford, spreading disappointment in his wake.

A crestfallen Lane, already struggling with the New York relocation, is exiled to India. Bert is relegated to "chairman emeritus," Roger is left off the new organizational chart altogether (ostensibly by accident), and Don remains head of creative but firmly underneath the leadership of young Cambridge-educated Guy. Only Harry receives any sort of promotion, but the situation starts to turn at the office with two incredible, unexpected events. First Don receives a phone call from Conrad Hilton; he ditches the festivities for an impromptu meeting and finds out that "Connie" was the man in the white tuxedo at the country club bar, with whom he shared his humble background. Playing hard-to-get but also modest in his ambitions, Don reluctantly advises Connie on a new campaign featuring a cartoon mouse ("no one wants to see a mouse in a hotel") and, having been burned by the London disappointment, he asks only for Connie's business account. When pressed, Don relates the story of a snake that hasn't eaten for months and then chokes to death when it gorges itself. Meanwhile, back at the office, the celebratory Guy's foot is chopped off by a panicked secretary riding a John Deere tractor between the desks, unleashing a gruesome torrent of bloodshed.

My Response:

Zama


For more than an hour of screentime, Don Diego de Zama (Daniel Giménez Cacho) languishes as a provincial magistrate in the hot, claustrophobic, and contentious outskirts of eighteenth-century Spain's South American colonies. His desire to be transferred elsewhere perpetually butts up against the baroque mechanations of the regional bureaucracy, whose dependence upon all-too-human whims and material exploitation is laid bare in an era without any technocratic veneer. And the horny Zama's sexual appetite is even less satisfied: he's caught peeping and called a voyeur by native women on a beach, tantalized but kept at a distance by young women who sneak other lovers behind their sanctimonious father's back, and strung along for (non-sexual) favors by the elegant Luciana (Lola Dueñas) whose mature flirtation turns out to be a bow without an arrow. We eventually learn that he has a half-Indian son with whom he has only fleeting contact: whatever might actually root Zama to his surrounding environment is rejected in favor of maddening whispers, teases that can barely be called dreams let alone promises. Eventually, he will escape from this oppressive if placid cage, long past the point where it might actually be a liberation and with results that suggest it never could be anyway.

Mad Men - "The Fog" (season 3, episode 5)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode of season three. Later seasons will be covered at another time. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on September 20, 2009/written by Kater Gordon; directed by Phil Abraham): Medgar Evers has been shot - the first of several thirtysomething martyrs to the sixties struggle for black freedom - and his name, image, and/or legacy pop up several times in episode 5. Evers' name first comes up in the opening scene, as Don and the very pregnant Betty inform Sally's teacher, Miss Farrell, why their daughter has been asking so many questions about Evers' recent death. Discovering that the little girl just lost her grandfather, Miss Farrell is upset and embarrassed; she called the meeting due to Sally's recent behavior - getting into a fight - as well as those many questions. She later calls Don, after she's had a few drinks, to let him know that she lost her father as a child; he's already hinted to her that he personally understands this form of grief too (keep in mind Evers had three very young children at the time of his murder). Meanwhile, although I don't think Evers is mentioned directly as part of this particular storyline, Pete's push for Admiral Television to target "the Negro market" is buttressed by a growing awareness of the civil rights movement. Pete has a tense, aggressive exchange about the black community's TV preferences with a clearly annoyed (and unsettled) Hollis (La Monde Byrd), the elevator operator; the affronted Admiral reps ask "is that legal?" when confronted with Pete's proposal; and Lane follows Roger's blistering admonishment with a careful suggestion that Pete's idea isn't necessarily bad because "there's definitely something going on." Elsewhere in the episode, Pete is blindsided by an invitation to lunch from Duck, in which Peggy is also a guest of honor. Pete storms out, but Peggy is intrigued by Duck's flattery especially after she goes to Don for a raise and is dismissed because of Lane's recent penny-pinching. "What if it's my time?" she offers with deep-seated melancholy, echoing Duck's own seductive pitch to her. This plot is, near as I can tell, the only one in the episode untouched by the Evers assassination.

The third Evers reference appears in Betty's dream as she floats in an opiate-induced ether while entering labor. After gliding down a sidewalk in what appears to be a gorgeously back-projected sequence (strong, strong Hitchock and/or fifties melodrama vibes here - the lighting and actress' make-up are all deeply evocative), Betty finds herself inside her own home. "Am I dying?" she asks her father, who, clothed as a janitor, mops blood off the floor. Evers sits quietly at the table, Betty's mother applying a salve to his recent, bloody wound and warning Betty, with reference to the slain NAACP leader, "You see what happens to people who speak up?" In the real world, she's being shushed by a brusque nurse who is supervising the birth in lieu of Betty's doctor, loading up the morphine whenever the third-time mother expresses anxiety. Don, meanwhile, sits in the waiting room with a friendly but subtly surly prison guard anticipating his first. He promises Don - as if the man in the shirt and tie is a kind of god - that he'll become a better person as a father. Tension grows through all these elements and we recall the dark conditions of the season's opening scene (and the reminder that the Kennedys are about to lose a baby in the fall)...and then after all these creeping portents, Betty gives birth to a healthy baby boy. Having skirted a cataclysm, in the final moments of the episode Betty wanders into the hallway, following the child's cries into the room where her late father was just staying (indeed, the infant has been named after the old man). The difficulties ahead stretch far beyond any potentially apocalyptic horizon; these complicated intergenerational tangles will only become more tangled with time, developing into either a trap or a chrysalis.

My Response:

December 2019 Patreon podcasts: LOST IN TWIN PEAKS #11 - Season 2 Episode 3 and LOST IN THE MOVIES #62 - Twin Peaks Cinema: River's Edge (+ history of baby boomers/sixties, Twin Peaks Reflections: Invitation to Love, Sarah, Andy, One Stop Gas/Lydecker Veterinarian's Clinic, Prison, Albert vs. Twin Peaks/Part 9 & more)


As the steady march towards a complete focus on Journey Through Twin Peaks continues, I've been focusing on my Lost in Twin Peaks rewatch podcast, and am now almost done with all the episodes that will come out this winter before Journey. Unfortunately this means I had to postpone many of the features I planned to include in my main Patreon podcast, so expect a mega-episode in January covering multiple films by Twin Peaks episode directors, capsules on most of the movies I watched last year, podcast recommendations, listener feedback, and more. For now I pared "Twin Peaks Cinema" down to a single episode director: Tim Hunter, whose film River's Edge preceded his work on the series by three years, sharing striking similarities with the later show. Most obviously, it features a dead girl found near a body of water, whose murder destabilizes the community (or exposes already existing fissures), particularly effecting a group of teenagers in disparate ways. Elsewhere in this episode, I continue my studies of Peaks characters, locations, and storylines, while kicking off a new "Opening the Archive" reading series on baby boomers, the sixties, and (eventually) The Big Chill and Return of the Secaucus Seven, anticipating my video essay on the subject in a few months.

Here's my latest Lost in Twin Peaks entry (for $5/month patrons) on the first non-Lynch episode of season two...



And I close off the year with my sixth "Twin Peaks Cinema" study on the $1/month Lost in the Movies podcast...



Finally, my rewatch of one of the most underrated episodes of season one is now available to all patrons...



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