Lost in the Movies: April 2021

April 2021 Patreon podcasts: LOST IN TWIN PEAKS #27 - Season 2 Episode 19 and LOST IN THE MOVIES #78 - The Straight Story in Twin Peaks Cinema, Opening the Archive & Twin Peaks Reflections (w/ Ben's Civil War breakdown + Jean, Dick, the Briggs throne, orphanage & more)


Following the last update's all-Blue Velvet line-up, this month I tackle another David Lynch project as part of Twin Peaks Cinema, Opening the Archive reading/sampling, and Twin Peaks Reflections storyline tie-in. In this case, the rustic journey of The Straight Story makes a nice companion piece for the Americana of Twin Peaks (including the drama of the Civil War as filtered through Ben Horne's breakdown). This G-rated Disney film, about a determined old man riding a lawnmower through the Midwest, provides at once a marked contrast with Peaks' supernatural surrealism and also a thematic complement. Meanwhile Lost in Twin Peaks is drawing closer and closer to the finale, this time with an episode co-written by Mark Frost which dives headfirst into the growing mythology. Even that podcast is related to The Straight Story, since I dwell on a contemporaneous Time Magazine cover story about the post-eighties "simple life." Behind the scenes I've been catching up with work on all fronts and there will be some announcements about that soon, but for now I'm just happy these arrived on time. Thanks to all of you for your patience. After running behind for a couple months, I'm finally caught up with patron rewards again (although some of the bonus content planned for this month - feedback and capsule podcasts - will have to wait until May). Maybe Alvin's method really does work best: stay slow and steady, and you'll end up back on track.

Mad Men - "Waldorf Stories" (season 4, episode 6)


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 August 29, 2010/written by Brett Johnson and Matthew Weiner; directed by Scott Hornbacher): Don has been nominated for a Clio award for his "Billy the Kid" campaign (in which a little boy in a cowboy costume closes himself into a homemade prison), and when he attends the ceremony he's buttressed by reminders of how close his success lies to buffoonish catastrophe. In particular, good old Duck makes an ass of himself by drunkenly heckling the MC, while the petty Ted hires an actor to impersonate an impressive military personality to flank him in public appearances. Don wins the award but his moment of glory is rather compromised by a lost weekend in which he goes to bed with another award-winner and wakes up two days later with a waitress whom he doesn't even remember meeting (and whom he told his real name). Don is further embarrassed when Peggy turns up at his apartment on a Sunday to inform him that his successful pitch to Life Cereal was based on the goofy interview with Roger's wife's cousin Danny Siegel (Danny Strong), whose absurd "cure for the common _____" fixation Don randomly adopted to save an account. As a result, he is forced to hire the comically short young hack (not that young, though - Peggy scoffs, "There's no way he's twenty-four; I'm twenty-five."). Pete, meanwhile, is humiliated to discover that Lane has coaxed Ken over to SCDP; he saves face by requesting a meeting with the new hire in which he flexes his muscle and reminds his former co-equal that he's the big boss now. Peggy finds her own way to assert herself with the obnoxious if charismatic Stan Rizzo (Jay Ferguson), an arrogant, hedonistic art director. When she's forced to share a hotel room with him for the weekend in order to brainstorm, she calls his bluff and makes him strip down - mocking his erection, she eventually achieves a kind of dominance in the relationship. Interspersed with this material is a 1950s flashback (ostensibly 1953, although Roger looks quite a bit older than thirty-seven) in which Don is a fur salesman pressing hard to get his material into Roger's hands. After being rebuffed numerous times he gets the big man to spend the morning in a bar with him and then insists he's been hired at the firm although Roger can't remember. A dozen years later, Roger tells Don he left his award at the bar and hands it over in return for acknowledgement that "you couldn't have done it without me." Perhaps, but not in a way that's particularly flattering to anyone involved.

My Response:

Mark Twain (LOST IN THE MOVIES podcast #20)



Ken Burns recently released a new documentary series on Ernest Hemingway so although I'd been planning this episode here - on another Burns film about an American author - for months, the schedule was once again serendipitous. Several years ago, I kept catching bits and pieces of Mark Twain on TV and I found it so unexpectedly fascinating that I eventually had to watch the whole thing straight through. I'd known less about Twain's life than I thought I did, and both his persona and Burns' approach reeled me in. On the podcast I discuss those subjects, including the filmmaker's wider oeuvre and why I think he tends to be stronger in certain areas (and certain styles). However, there was also something more broad in the film that stirred me. In the last few minutes of the episode I muse on why the mid-nineteenth century milieu of Twain's childhood resonates across time and space; the movie offers a remarkable window into both the haunting and pleasing aspects of the writer's quintessentially American idyll.

Incidentally, if you missed my Patreon follow-up to the public Blue Velvet episode a couple weeks ago, it's (or rather, they're) linked below. Before the end of April, there will also be a fainter Patreon echo of this episode too. When my upcoming Patreon episode discusses the old-fashioned rustic charm of The Straight Story as well as the very Ken Burns-influenced "Ben re-enacts the Civil War" storyline, I'll be touching on the subject of Burns' masterpiece, The Civil War (which is already central to the Lost in Twin Peaks episode I opened up to all patrons this month).


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You can also listen on Pinecast and Spotify
(and most places podcasts are found)


LINKS FOR EPISODE 20
(MY RECENT WORK)

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($5/month)




Mad Men - "The Chrysanthemum and the Sword" (season 4, episode 5)


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 August 22, 2010/written by Erin Levy; directed by Lesli Linka Glatter): "The Chrysanthemum and the Sword" points both backward and forward while anchoring itself very firmly in the moment. The Japanese motorcycle company Honda becomes a potential goldmine client for SCDP, triggering a furious Roger's war-fueled resentments from the forties while hinting at the Pacific nation's eventual dominance of the auto industry in the eighties. (The notion of Japanese cars seems so absurd to the admen that, when they learn they have a shot at marketing the company's brand new models, they wonder if they really want to.) After Roger ambushes a business meeting with ratatatat insults involving barely-veiled references to Pearl Harbor and the atomic bomb, a furious Pete accuses him of having ulterior motives: is this really about promises made to dead sailor pals or is Roger worried that if Pete starts bringing in big hitters, Roger's own Lucky Strike account will carry less weight? Don nearly salvages the account when he cooks up a plan almost as conniving as the legendary creation of SCDP in '63 - he pretends to shoot an expensive spec commercial, in direct violation of the Japanese business' scrupulously written rules, in order to provoke his obnoxious rival at the CGC agency, Ted Chaough (Kevin Rahm), into filming his own ad. Then Don self-righteously removes himself from the competition by telling the Honda reps that it would be dishonorable to compete against someone who flouted their conventions so brazenly. Don, reading the postwar anthropological study from which the episode takes its name, believes he's got a solid read on their cultural conventions; we'll see whether or not this stunt pays off in the long run, but early signs are promising. At any rate Ted faceplants, which is good enough.

While Don continues to thrive professionally, he's flailing in his personal life. A visit with his kids in the city heads south when he leaves them with a babysitter (neighbor Phoebe, whose unflappable demeanor in previous episodes collapses to the point where she is humiliatingly fired by Don). Sally decides to cut her hair, leading to an outburst from Betty who is particularly pissed that Don pranced off with a date rather than watch the kids himself during his one night a week. She's also alarmed by indications that the little girl is growing up all too fast. Encouraged by Henry to go easy on the kid, Betty lets Sally attend a sleepover which backfires disastrously. As her unsuspecting friend slumbers on the couch, Sally becomes ever more fascinated with the handsome men on TV and - tactfully, under the notable guidance of a female writer and director - we quickly find out how few inhibitions Sally harbors...as does her friend's mother (Amy Sloan). Deposited back at the Draper home as punishment for "playing with herself," the humiliated Sally is more confused and morose than ever and so Betty agrees, with Harry's prodding, to send her to a child psychiatrist, Dr. Edna Keener (Patricia Bethune). As quickly becomes apparent in their first meeting, it's Betty who needs a therapeutic outlet as much as anyone; we're right back in Betty's first season childishness as she sits in the playfully decorated office and starts inadvertently spilling her own guts to the intrigued shrink, who carefully sets up monthly meetings with mother as well as daughter - ostensibly just to check up on the child's progress. Don, kept abreast of his daughter's crisis from a distance, finds his own solace over sake with Faye in the company kitchen, finally sharing the familial troubles he withheld for so long. She, in turn, confesses that she wears a fake wedding ring as a prop to keep men away, although Don is quick to note that he must, implicitly, not be one of the ones she wants to keep away. Faye is able to exit this encounter without going any further, but we strongly suspect this won't be their last temptation to further let down their guard.

My Response:

belated March 2021 Patreon podcasts: LOST IN TWIN PEAKS #26 - Season 2 Episode 18 and LOST IN THE MOVIES #77 - Blue Velvet in Twin Peaks Cinema, Opening the Archive & Twin Peaks Reflections (w/ Jean framing Cooper) + Film in Focus: Blue Velvet Revisited documentary (+ more Twin Peaks Reflections: Denise, Betty & the Briggs home, Dead Dog Farm & more)


I never realized how much I'd discussed Blue Velvet before - and how much I still had to say about it - until composing this multipart podcast (and assembling the public episode on Blue Velvet as a standalone film, which is a tie-in to this). David Lynch's eighties breakthrough was the movie which took him from being an avant-garde cult-figure (beginning to turn semi-mainstream director-for-hire) to a full-blown auteur whose name could be used as a commonly understood adjective. The story of a curious young man discovering dark sexual and criminal secrets in an all-American small town (or small city?), the 1986 feature also directly paved the way for his 1990 TV series which was both enabled by Blue Velvet's success and dependent upon borrowing and expanding narrative and stylistic aspects of the previous work. Those ties are the focus of my longest "Twin Peaks Cinema" discussion ever - challenged only by my episode on Mulholland Drive - but the subject spills out into other parts of the episode as well. In my "Twin Peaks Reflections" section, I relate a routine second season subplot to the ostensibly less genre-focused Velvet. And when I opened my archive to revisit my previous coverage of the film, I had so much material that in addition to reading three full essays in the main episode I had to spin off three decent-sized bonus episodes too.

When I watched the Criterion Collection blu-ray, I was surprised to discover that I'd never actually seen the bonus avant-garde documentary Blue Velvet Revisited, even though I'd wanted to for years. In fact I was so taken with this particular work - a gorgeous Super 8 restoration of footage shot on the North Carolina location in the mid-eighties alongside black-and-white photos, recordings of cast and crew talking off the cuff, and latter-day moody music and editing flourishes - that I devoted an entire "Film in Focus" section to it. Not only the peek behind the scenes of this unique production but the aching exploration of another era and its zeitgeist completely captivated me, sparking personal as well as cinematic musings. Inspired simply by the realization that my scheduled March "Reflections" subject, just a few minutes of material for the podcast, would include Blue Velvet, I ended up assembling a sprawling analysis of/meditation on a Lynch project that has both fascinated and frustrated me for years. It took a couple weeks for me to catch up and my "Lost in Twin Peaks" podcast also got delayed in the mix, although this allowed it to go up on the episode's thirtieth anniversary. Hopefully you find all of this worth the wait and have some of your own thoughts to share.

Mad Men - "The Rejected" (season 4, episode 4)


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 August 15, 2010/written by Keith Huff and Matthew Weiner; directed by John Slattery): Connections forged, broken, and wistfully recalled define our first full venture in 1965. Allison, suffering in silence for weeks, breaks down during a Pond's Cream meeting supervised by Faye. Ostensibly gathered to discuss their make-up regimens, the focus group of secretaries quickly turn toward man problems and Allison runs from the room. Don, already discomfited by her broken gazes toward the two-way mirror (through which she knows he is watching her), tries to apologize and smooth things over but instead she asks him to write a recommendation letter. Offering to sign anything she composes, Don's generous intent is read (perhaps correctly) as casual indifference and Allison hurls a desk ornament across the room in rage before a second, and final, dramatic exit. The whole office now knows, more or less, what happened between these two. On a more pleasant note, Peggy befriends Joyce Ramsay (Zosia Mamet), a LIFE Magazine photo editor who works below her in the same building. After struggling for years to find her place in New York's social universe, Peggy clicks with Joyce's hipster bohemian circle, sharing pot at avant-garde loft parties and making out in a closet with Abe Drexler (Charlie Hofheimer), an independent reporter, during a police raid. Joyce's undisguised more-than-friendly interest in Peggy, whom she tries to kiss, may complicate the camaraderie but for now everything is falling into place.

The same is true for Pete following years of marital struggle with infertility, infidelity, and in-law tension over adoption. Pete discovers he's going to be a father after all, right as he's supposed to break bad business news to his own father-in-law (and client, whose Clearasil account is about to be dropped). Later he will flip that bad news on its head, at least for himself, strong-arming Tom into bringing his entire conglomerate - Vicks Chemical - over to SCDP. Called a "son of a bitch" by the soon-to-be-grandfather, Pete just shrugs; his youthful petulance has, with time, matured into a more worldly ruthlessness. But not too worldly: when a gut-punched Peggy congratulates him on impending fatherhood, hints of shame, regret, and confusion flicker across his face - a look that returns as he and Peggy stand apart at the end of the work day. She gathers with her lively, colorful friends near the elevator, he stands on the other side of the glass partition with gray-suited admen in whose ranks he is quickly rising. Both have done well for themselves, though his path to the top is clearer, and both appear to be hitting their stride after many awkward false starts and detours. But they are headed in very different directions, one toward the greatest generation fifties ideal of the nuclear family, the other toward the baby boomer seventies ideal of swinging singledom. The divided screen provides a perfect microcosm of the silent generation, split right down its middle.

My Response:

Blue Velvet (LOST IN THE MOVIES podcast #19)



The patron follow-up Twin Peaks/Blue Velvet comparison is now available.

Today is the thirty-first anniversary of the Twin Peaks pilot, when David Lynch changed television forever in the form of a surreal mystery set in a small town. Four years before that, however, he'd told a similar story in cinematic form with Blue Velvet. I will be comparing those two works on a Patreon podcast which should be available in the next day or two - but first, for this public podcast I wanted to share a discussion I recorded three years ago; consider these "part one" and "part two," especially as this episode ends with a few thoughts on how Velvet relates to the The Return via the presence of Kyle MacLachlan and Laura Dern. I also cover the film's stylistic and tonal relationship to other Lynch films, some of the deleted scenes, the influence of Lynch's upbringing in different types of areas, the suburban vs. urban feel of the setting, the effect of perspective on an amoral (not just immoral) milieu, the legacy of the sixties onscreen and offscreen, and more outlandish theories - mine and others' - about what's "really" going on. Links to my previous work on the film are included below, and I'll be reading (or sampling) from them on the patron podcast too, as part of my archive section - in addition to a special section of my "Twin Peaks Reflections" in which I specifically relate the "Jean Renault's drug scheme" storyline from season two to Blue Velvet. If you're interested in becoming a patron but haven't taken the jump yet, this month is the perfect time, not only for the extension of this podcast but because I will be releasing a Straight Story patron episode in April as well.


Subscribe, rate, and review on Apple Podcasts
You can also listen on Pinecast and Spotify
(and most places podcasts are found)

The follow-up to this podcast - patron coverage of Blue Velvet as "Twin Peaks Cinema" - is now available HERE.


LINKS FOR EPISODE 19

MY PREVIOUS WORK ON THIS FILM


Take This Baby and Deliver it to Death (non-narrated video essay focused on how Lynch's early films - including Blue Velvet - depict violence and assign the roles of abuser, victim, and rescuer)



Journey Through Twin Peaks chapter 27: Opening the Door (video essay exploring how Twin Peaks represents a shift in Lynch's work and how it affected his later films, includes one clip from Blue Velvet) - see still images here

Blue Velvet & The Duchess of Langeais (reviewing a double feature from the David Lynch/Jacques Rivette retrospective at Lincoln Center)


MY RECENT WORK

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New on Patreon
($1/ month)


($5/month)





Mad Men - "The Good News" (season 4, episode 3)


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 August 8, 2010/written by Jonathan Abrahams and Matthew Weiner; directed by Jennifer Getzinger): A year ago, Don Draper found himself in the midst of a contentious divorce and radical workplace shakeup - he did not have the mental space to do much other than act and react. Now, as 1964 gives way to 1965, he has all too much space and time: While employees like Joan plead vainly with Lane for a longer vacation (her husband is headed to Vietnam in a couple months and this may be their last chance to get away), Don wanders off to Mexico with a sense of obligation and resignation, of "I guess this is just what bachelors do," rather than excitement. However, he never makes it to Acapulco. A short stopover in L.A. to visit Anna initially yields minor bittersweet bemusement; her water-stained wall needs painting, and he quickly decides her bohemian college student niece Stephanie (Caity Lotz) needs something else (is it just my faulty memory or did the always-horny Don once show a modicum of restraint?). Happy to be in a place where he can just be known as old family friend Dick sleeping on the couch, this particular trek to the Pacific is not intended to resolve or temper an existential crisis, but simply to find momentary comfort in the midst of general spiritual exhaustion. Instead, he's confronted with the dying of even this flickering, modest little light: when he attempts to bed Stephanie, she gently tells him that Aunt Anna is dying of cancer but doesn't know it. The next morning her mother Patty, who doesn't disguise her contempt for Don, dismisses him as "a guy in a room somewhere writing checks" and demands that he not ruin Anna's final months. Despite immense reservations, he complies - maybe as much out of a low opinion of his own significance as respect for the woman who helped him the most and asked the least.

Back in New York, Joan - staging an indoor tropical dinner straight out of the sham honeymoon in It's a Wonderful Life - is touched by Greg's usefulness as he stitches her up. In this moment at least, she can feel she is part of a caring, reciprocal relationship while the more powerful Lane is not. (Ironically, this revelation is achieved when Greg adopts his professional, rather than domestic, persona.) There is a hint that Lane's pennypinching refusal to allow the Harrises their getaway arises from his own resentful jealousy. When Joan receives roses from Lane with a card reading "Darling, I've been an ass. Kisses, Lane," it quickly comes out that his secretary confused two gifts: the more formal apology intended for her and this personal attempt at reconciliation intended for his wife, soon to be ex-wife, in London. Don finds a lonely Lane in the office by himself on New Year's Eve; without the heart to go to Acapulco, instead he gets stinking drunk with his partner, heading out to a comedy club where they're ridiculed as a gay couple until their call girl dates show up. They entertain themselves throughout the night, a different version of the relax-and-just-enjoy-the-moment energy Don experienced with Anna and Stephanie, but when morning comes he's left with the same facts he confronted in December: a job with little joy, non-working hours to fill with drinking, screwing, and other distractions, another year passing by, like all the others have and will, until the day when it's as if none of them ever happened at all.

My Response:

belated February 2021 Patreon podcasts: LOST IN TWIN PEAKS #25 - Season 2 Episode 17 and LOST IN THE MOVIES #76 - Twin Peaks Cinema: Kings Row / Political Reflections: Pandemic, Protest, Election, Insurrection & The Future (+ Us, Brideshead Revisited, documentaries on the Roosevelts, Reagan, and Lee Atwater, podcast recommendations, listener feedback, Twin Peaks Reflections: Nicky, Dougie, Hide-Out Wallie's, Timber Falls Motel, Milford family/The Secret History & more)


I promised this one - or rather, these ones - a long time ago, but kept postponing. The bonus sections, featuring film capsules, podcast recommendations, political reflections, and listener feedback, were originally planned for the summer but work on Journey Through Twin Peaks videos pushed them back to February (same with my "Twin Peaks Cinema" coverage of the dark small town melodrama Kings Row, starring Ronald Reagan, which I wanted to discuss in conjunction with a documentary on the fortieth president). Then, for complicated reasons, I found myself working on several projects simultaneously while also traveling for the first time since the pandemic began (as well as getting sucked into the drama surrounding the stimulus vote in Congress) - so the "February" podcasts ended up getting published in March.

Hopefully, the material was worth the wait. Kings Row was a particularly fascinating work to dig into between its social drama, psychological motifs, and dark family dynamics; it makes an interesting comparison point not just to Peaks but to other films discussed as "Twin Peaks Cinema" like Peyton Place and Our Town. Only after recording was I reminded that the same director, Sam Wood, helmed both Our Town and Kings Row - so perhaps I'll have more to say on those films from that angle in the future. At one point, I also hoped to offer full "film in focus" reviews on the 2019 horror film Us, Jordan Peele's clever, twisty follow-up to Get Out (which I reviewed a couple years ago), and Brideshead Revisited, the definitive arthouse-TV literary adaptation. Although I ended up shaving them down to extended capsules, I will definitely be revisiting both titles in other mediums.

Elsewhere, listener feedback ranged across numerous aspects of Twin Peaks (from the zeitgeist of its different eras to the collaboration between Lynch and Frost to its impact on multiple video games). Podcast recommendations on historical, cinematic, and political subjects were divided into four mini-episodes with all the accompanying links in the show notes. And my political reflections ended up standing on their own as a ninety-minute episode...unsurprisingly, given that 2020 was arguably the most historically significant year in America since 1968 even if just for the pandemic (which takes up less than ten minutes, although it hovers in the background of everything else).

That's just a small sample of what's in these podcasts; I even had to excise and save more than half the film capsules and the Journey Through Twin Peaks feedback for upcoming episodes. I did get up my belated Lost in Twin Peaks coverage of the comeback (?) episode where the late second season really begins, which was also meant to publish in February. My "March" rewards will be a little late too, but only by days in this case. So stay tuned. Meanwhile, here are links to all the podcasts, followed by a detailed rundown of the content for each one....













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