When It Absolutely
Did Not Mean A Thing If You Couldn’t Swing That Thing- With Swing Kids In Mind
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank
Jackman
Swing Kids, starring
Christian Bales, Robert Sean Leonard, 1993
Sam Lowell was shocked when he thought
about it later, shocked that any government, any society would go murderously
crazy over some dance craze, although that may have been the least of it. He
mentioned to his good friend Bart Webber in an e-mail urging him to either get
the DVD Swing Kids from Netflix or
see if it was in his local library in Carver which was well stocked in such
DVDs that one could hardly imagine that when they were young that as much as
parents, churchmen, politicians hated to see young people going crazy over rock
and roll that displaying such interest might wind you up in jail, or a work
camp. He reflected that as much as the later hip-hop nation and techno-pop were
the current young’s way of breaking out that was equally true. Hell even the
1930s swing movement in this country, you know Benny Goodman, Count Basie and
the like which is at the center of this drama was left in peace to do their
faded thing. However in 1939 Germany as Hitler and his minions were readying to
set the world on fire any such social diversity was verboten, yeah, forbidden.
Later after Bart had ordered and seen
the film though Netflix (it was not at the Carver Library although another film
with Robert Sean Leonard in it who played Peter in Swing Kids, Dead Poets Society, was in stock and he took that out)
he and Sam met at the Sunnyville Grille in Boston to have a couple of drinks as
they occasionally did since both were now semi-retired and talked a bit about
the impact of the film on them. About how maybe their own rock and roll beginning
might have looked to the authorities under different circumstances and whether
they would have had the stuff to buck society, buck the jailers like Peter did.
About in the red scare Cold War night when things every day looked touch and go,
looked scary every time they did the atomic bomb coming air raid drill which meant
they had to duck under their seats and hold their heads, how they too needed to
express themselves in a world they didn’t make. Express themselves with their own
be-bop language, their endless listening to the latest rock and roll records on
the transistor radios that were their life-blood, at Doc’s Drugstore jukebox,
at the school dances and on American Bandstand.
Express themselves in their dress and manners (long sideburns a la Elvis, snarls,
and open neck shirts)
So at the level of youthful rebellion both
Sam and Bart could sympathize, could do more so under the wretched Nazi
circumstances that Peter and his buddies, including main buddy Thomas (played
by Christian Bales) who went weird before the whole thing was over, faced to be
the Swing Kids, to breathe their own air. But the times in Germany did not
permit such freedom and this film graphically depicts why in the end those who
wanted to be free spirits, just wanted to be-bop-bop and swing, swing, swing
wound up in work camps or impressed into the army.
The film follows the traumas and different
ways that two young high school kids tried to express themselves, tried due to their
own hubris to be swing kids by night and Hitler Youth by day. Thomas bought into
the Nazi ideology in the end ready to do murder and mayhem to those who shortly
before he was be-bopping with. Another buddy, Arvid, saw the writing on the wall,
saw there was no air for him and his guitar in 1939 Nazi Germany and committed
suicide. Others like Peter’s mother made every compromise to stay alive (with
some reason since her husband had run afoul of the Nazis early on while protesting
the expulsion of the Jews from the universities and had been broken), like Thomas’
father who just talked about how evil Hitler was (which wound him up in the
Gestapo headquarters when Thomas ratted him out), and like many others just went
along to get along.
Peter genetically made of sterner stuff
defied the bastards. Said what every kid from every generation since kids
became a separate social category would like to say-“yes, it don’t mean a thing
if you can’t swing that thing.” Sam and Bart both wondered if they would say under
those same circumstances “Roll over Beethoven and tell Tchaikovsky the news.”
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