Lost in the Movies: March 2021

Mad Men - "Christmas Comes But Once a Year" (season 4, episode 2)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode of seasons four, five, and six. The last season will be covered in the summer of 2022. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on August 1, 2010/written by Tracy McMillan and Matthew Weiner; directed by Michael Uppendahl): Add another holiday to the Mad Men canon (when my viewing diary closes, I'll have to compose a visual tribute encompassing all of them). Although the last season finale came close on the calendar, I don't believe we've run all the way into Christmas before; season one ended with Thanksgiving, season two with the Cuban Missile Crisis in October. And speaking of major sixties events, we get our first Beatles references when Don suggests his secretary Allison pick up some of the band's 45s for his daughter; she for her part is touched by the poignancy of Sally's "Santa" letter to her dad which ends with a wish he could join them Christmas morning though she knows he can't. There's a hint of personal tenderness here that crystallizes before long. Allison has been around since very early in season one, eighteen episodes in all so far, but she's only come up in one of my reviews: when Ken ripped her clothes off in front of a guffawing crowd at the old office's 1960 election party. Now she's in for a different, more subtle form of humiliation: when Don forgets his keys at the Christmas party and she shows up to escort him into his apartment, he quickly seduces her. She's glowing when invited into his office the next morning...only to discover he will only allude to the event in the vaguest terms and has no plans to adjust their professional relationship. Worse, he almost makes it seem as if what happened was simply a byproduct of that workplace hierarchy.

Allison is not the only one deflated by the events of that night...Roger is sadistically brought down several pegs by Lucky Strike owner Lee Garner, Jr. (the man whose harassment of Sal got poor Sal fired). Considering he currently represents virtually all of SCDP's business - despite good old Freddy Rumson returning with an Alcoholic Anonymous-arranged Pond's Cold Cream account under his arm - Lee is able to command a lavish party on whim and force the desperate-to-please admen and women to dance on a string for him, including Roger in a baggy red suit, white beard, and hearty-as-he-can-manage "ho ho ho." Don chooses this moment to sneak out; he'll get plastered (enough so to sleep with his secretary) at another location, discreet, alone, as he often does these days - indeed a few nights beforehand, his nurse neighbor Phoebe (Nora Zehetner) came to his rescue when he collapsed outside his door (she, unlike Allison, escaped his eager embrace). Not that he needs any more excuses to be driven to drink, but Dr. Faye Miller's (Cara Buono's) parting shot certainly doesn't help. Offended by his hasty exit from a meeting in which she asks the staff to tell their life stories, the visiting consumer research psychologist brusquely tells Don he'll "be married again within a year," and then sarcastically apologizes for reminding him that he's a familiar type rather than a unique individual. Regardless, he agrees with her assessment of life's primary challenge: trying to reconcile what you want with what's expected of you.

My Response:

Sorry to Bother You (LEFT OF THE MOVIES podcast #3/LOST IN THE MOVIES podcast #18)



(embedded podcast player fixed at 8:30am - now features the correct episode)

Three years ago, Sorry to Bother You married a radical viewpoint with broad comedy and surrealist fantasy, causing a stir among left-wing viewers in particular who'd been hungering for this kind of pop cultural encapsulation of their own shift in consciousness. I saw the film then and offered my thoughts, and now I'm reviving that discussion at an opportune time. In Bessemer, Alabama next week, Amazon warehouse workers are voting on whether or not to unionize, so Sorry to Bother You's story of a strike at a telemarketing company, against the backdrop of a tech billionaire's diabolical scheme to turn workers into virtual slaves and literal workhorses, seems more relevant than ever. (Meanwhile, the tech billionaire is played by Armie Hammer, whose recent scandals and alleged crime lend an even darker underpinning to the decadent villain he plays onscreen). Boots Riley's film was released at a time when the young left felt as eager and optimistic as it did frustrated and alienated from the status quo. While the bulk of this recording dates from that time, it's worth asking what Sorry to Bother You tells us now in a post-Bernie, post-Trump, and (not quite) post-Covid world. If you have any thoughts, please share them and I'll respond on future episodes.

By the way, this episode has an unusual number of links including many other podcasts covering this film - see below.


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LINKS FOR EPISODE 18


...including PODCASTS on Sorry to Bother You (available on iTunes as well):








MY RECENT WORK

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Mad Men - "Public Relations" (season 4, episode 1)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode of seasons four, five, and six. The last season will be covered in the summer of 2022 (now updated to winter 2021-22). I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on July 25, 2010/written by Matthew Weiner; directed by Phil Abraham): If the season two premiere showed Don subtly slipping from the dominant perch established in Mad Men's pilot, by November 1964 he has reached his nadir. A lonely bachelor in the city who spends Thanksgiving with a prostitute (Erin Cummings), Don visits his children at his ex-wife's convenience while Betty refuses to move out of the house that he still owns (and where she makes love to her new husband in the garage). As he prepares for a slightly embarrassing date with Bethany (Ann Camp), a friend of Jane Sterling, Don catches his own bleak visage in the mirror and appears to be little more than a shell of a human being. And yet Don should be triumphant. Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce, while uneasy in its less-than-impressive new quarters, rides entirely on his reputation which has only grown since the bold stunt he pulled last fall - hijacking his former agency's star talent before the British buyout took hold. Don is still relatively young, another couple years until forty by my count, and Bethany's reaction to their Chicken Kiev dinner suggests he's still catnip for women of any age. The housing situation may be frustrating but he holds the cards there given the mortgage (cards he attempts to pull when finally demanding Betty and Henry vacate, buy, or pay rent); as Don remarks to his accountant, on paper he's a wealthy man...even if it doesn't feel like it.

What Don lacks is not status or power but that most fragile commodity, the one that has haunted him for three seasons: identity. In fact this psychological black hole eventually threatens his social and material capital. A disastrous interview with Advertising Age, intended to humanize the industry legend and polish the firm's sheen, backfires because Don refuses to give the clearly frustrated writer anything to work with. Because the article fails to mention him, the agency loses that flaky heir whose athletic campaign Pete backed last season - right after Harry bought a television special to promote it. Roger, Bert, and Lane fear further fallout and pressure Don to schedule a rebound sit-down with a friendly Wall Street Journal reporter but Don resists. What else could he do differently? His reticence represents the old-fashioned masculine ideal - achievement speaks for itself and bearing one's soul to earn a little extra coin is considered gauche (Don obviously has his own reasons for this reserve, between his Dick Whitman past and recent divorce). But with New Journalism just a few years away, and edgy mid-sixties pop culture sneering at stodgy stoicism, it's time for a change of pace. After dramatically expelling a couple prudish would-be clients, Don agrees to the Journal interview and presents an entirely new persona: brash and boastful as he takes full credit for the company's creation and success, tactically deploying a fuck-you smirk that's entirely new to his ever-evolving defensive arsenal.

My Response:

Start of Spring update


Exactly nine months ago today, on the cusp of summer, I issued a status update to organize a new schedule for the site and lay out my plans for pursuing unfinished work, primarily two Twin Peaks videos that I'd originally hoped to publish in May. I presumed I'd be caught up with that work within a few weeks, start sharing several posts a week instead of just one, and finish my Journey Through Twin Peaks project in late summer. Instead, those two videos (and life in general) proved so time-consuming that I didn't finish the second until February and only now, at the tail end of winter, am I almost caught up with belated patron obligations (I wrapped my main podcast episode and a half-dozen bonus spin-offs yesterday). For the past forty weeks, I've published just one post every single week - sometimes a simple update to touch base, sometimes a round-up bursting at the seams - to keep the site active. That will change next week when I begin reviewing Mad Men's fourth season, share my latest public podcast, and possibly upload a YouTube video update too; going forward, my online activity will be a little busier with at least one post, but often more, per week.

As announced in that update back in June, each day of the week is reserved for a different type of post - Monday for TV viewing diary, Tuesday for video essay update, Wednesday for written film review, Thursday for podcast cross-post, and/or Friday for random - so whatever I have to share in a week will be released on its respective day. First up, I will finish the "catch-up" phase of my "path through Journey Through Twin Peaks" schedule (with a couple Lost in Twin Peaks episodes kicking off the late season stretch and both public and patron podcasts on Blue Velvet). Then, behind the scenes, I will build up a backlog to take me through September of this year (including a Citizen Kane video for the eightieth anniversary in May and another season of Mad Men episodes, which I've already begun watching and writing about). By June at the latest I hope to be completely focused on Journey Through Twin Peaks again, immersing myself in season three - the material itself, as well as what others have had to say about it - and creating the videos ahead of time before I start sharing them, so that I'm not tripping all over myself as I was with Part 5.

That's the plan, anyway. As the bookends for this period show, plans can change - but I hope you and I enjoy the journey along the way regardless. See you Monday.

Images from a return to Twin Peaks (2 of 2): Mark Frost, Other Collaborators, and The Return


The first collection features many other screenshots from Part 5
(corresponding to chapters 29-33 on YouTube)

This concludes my screenshot collection of all juxtapositions, superimpositions, explanatory titles, collage-like mosaics or other visual manipulations from my video essay series Journey Through Twin Peaks Part 5 - "Over the Mountain Pass". This process has escalated with each part - for Parts 1 and 2, a few screenshots were included alongside the videos; Part 3 featured many more, and by Part 4 there were so many screenshots I needed a whole separate post for them. By Part 5, I had to split this screenshot collection in two, and this round-up right here is over twice as long as the previous one. The Mark Frost section in particular is cluttered with original compositions, which is what happens when you need to visualize the work of someone whose output was frequently literary. As a result, that standalone video on YouTube (chapter 35) took months to create, far longer than any other individual entry in Journey (you can also watch chapter 34, about the original series collaborators, and chapter 36, a chronological journey through the third season, on YouTube). Hopefully this offers an enjoyable opportunity to pause and explore the various comparisons and illustrations on their own, separate from the whole.

The Lobster (LOST IN THE MOVIES podcast #17)



I decided to jump ahead the next episode a week early for reasons explained in the podcast. It will be three weeks till Episode 18, and in the meantime I'll be catching up with Patreon rewards from February and closing off a long period that began last summer as I publish the last pieces (a YouTube announcement and a second round-up of screenshots) related to Journey Through Twin Peaks Part 5. On this episode, I discuss The Lobster, Yorgos Lanthimos' surreal, whimsical, and sometimes quite violent 2015 romance in which single people spend a month at a resort trying to find a mate who matches strict criteria...or else they will be turned into animals. The only alternative is racing off to form a resistance band in the woods where they're now punished if they do fall in love. Colin Farrell and Rachel Weisz are both earnest and amusing as a couple who find themselves in the latter situation, and the film provides a springboard to consider how society molds us in often bewildering and contradictory ways, on the job as well as in relationships. If you have any reflections on this fascinating, eccentric work, let me know, and I'll share your comments when we're back on the normal schedule a few weeks from now.

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LINKS FOR EPISODE 17
(MY RECENT WORK)


Previously on this podcast



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