This space is dedicated to the proposition that we need to know the history of the struggles on the left and of earlier progressive movements here and world-wide. If we can learn from the mistakes made in the past (as well as what went right) we can move forward in the future to create a more just and equitable society. We will be reviewing books, CDs, and movies we believe everyone needs to read, hear and look at as well as making commentary from time to time. Greg Green, site manager
Everybody Loves A Con
Man (Or Woman)-With Richard Gere’s “The Hoax” (2006) In Mind
DVD Review
By Book Critic Zack
James
The Hoax, starring
Richard Gere, 2006
Everybody loves a con man
(or at the headline states con woman as well although there tend to be fewer of
them in the deep rich history of this art form). Everybody that is except the guy
(or gal) being conned. That egg on the face person most definitely does not love
a con although he or she gets what they deserve in my book. I have seen some
beautiful work in my time. The time when Eddie Murray took some hungry greedy stockbroker
for a cool million when a million was something on non-existent stock, nada. Or
that time when Conrad Vedt a seemingly mild mannered non-entity took the local
syndicate for five mil and got away with it (although he did spent some serious
time looking over his shoulder before the coast was clear). The big one though
at least the one I was close to, knew some of the players, was when Jack Kiley
took down a couple of high-end Las Vegas gamblers for something like ten million
all by himself. The stuff of legends. And that brings us to the film under review
the rough film adaptation of writer Clifford Irving’s book about his big time
literary scam of the so-called billionaire when a billion was serious money Howard
Hughes “autobiography” The Hoax. (Although
the thought occurs to me why would you believe what a con artist has written
about himself-oh well.)
Clifford Irving, played
by Richard Gere, understood the first rule of the con-go big or don’t go at
all. It is not worth the time or energy to do the con for chicken feed although
I have known back in the old Acre section of my growing up town North Adamsville
guys to do cons for chicken feed. A serious con like the one Irving tried to
pull for a million bucks and maybe more if things had worked out on a
well-known if reclusive public figure working the literary scam which meant
bucking a high-end publishing company also meant possible jail time if the
thing went south on him. Which in the end as everybody now knows it did
dragging his wife and his closest collaborator down with him in the gutter-into
jail time.
Still you have to like the
brass of the guy taking a shot at immortality in the con artist pantheon-a
place not for the faint-hearted. First he had to get a big enough target for
his appetites which seemed to narrow down to Howard Hughes for no better reason
than he saw his name on a magazine cover and figured he could use that notorious
reclusiveness of Hughes’ to work his magic. Of course the second rule of the
con is to talk fast on your feet and be plausible which Irving did with relish
starting with his agent and working up the food chain to the big-time publishing
company executives. The dicey part or one of the dicey parts was that the potential
publishers advised by their platoon of lawyers were going to be looking for some
proof and a lot of the film dealt with working around that problem. But see the
third rule of the con or maybe it really is the first rule once you get a bead
on human nature as it has evolved over the last few millennia is to understand
how to play to a little greed or some
vanity advantage over your competitors. Bingo here.
The other dicey part which
in the end did Irving and his compadres in was the blow-back from the super
security conscious Hughes empire. Irving
almost had it made but just couldn’t work out that last kink about how to grab the
dough-the fatal check-which needed to be cashed with Hughes’ name on it. Tough
break. Yeah, everybody loves a con. Conrad Vedt, Jack Riley and Eddie Murray would
have been proud.
Once Again On The - 75th Anniversary (2017) Of Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman’s “Casablanca” -
By Bart Webber
I have spent much ink this year starting almost at the beginning of the year writing about the classic black and white film Casablanca a staple at every retro-film locale including the Brattle Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts where I first saw it with a “hot date” back in the late 1960s. A date who did not mind going on a cheap date (hell the admission was about a dollar maybe two) when I told her what we would be seeing. (Somehow she had asked her mother about the film and so was intrigued about this hot on-screen romance during wartime between Rick and Ilsa.) That movie coupled with a quick after film stop at equally cheap Harvard Square Hayes Bickford for coffee (always an iffy proposition depending on when the stuff was brewed also iffy) and some kind of pastry that had been sitting on the stainless steel dessert shelves for who knows how long got me away without having to call “dutch treat.” Got me as well another six months of very nice dates so my memories of that gorgeous film with the six million quotable and unforgettable lines from “play it again, Sam” (Ingrid Bergman as Ilsa request to Humphrey Bogart Rick’s main entertainment provider Dooley Wilson to play the sentimental As Time Goes By) to “We will always have Paris” (when Rick responds to Ilsa’s bewilderment that he is letting her take that last plane to Lisbon with those wicked letters of transit provided him to her husband Czech liberation leader Victor Laszlo so he can continue to do his work against the night-takers running the world in those days) are still pristine.
I am not the only one who is crazy for this movie since I am enclosing a link to an interview done by Terry Gross on her Fresh Air show on NPR with film historian Noah Isenberg on the making of the classic Hollywood film in his new book, We'll Always Have Casablanca. " Needless to say when I get my greedy little hands on that item I will be reviewing it in this space. This guy has me beaten six ways to Sunday with what he knows about that film. Kudos.
Spanish Is The Loving
Tongue-Those Sparkling Eyes Of Hers-From The World War II Rationing Vaults-
Armida’s “The Girl From Monterrey” (1943)-A Film Review
By Lance Lawrence
The Girl From Monterrey,
starring Armida, 1943
WTF. (This is a
family-friendly publication for what it is worth although we have learned from
recent experience that the demographic the new site manager Greg Green, more on
him ina minute as the source of “WTF,” was
trying to reach with his silly experiment of, for example, having grown women
and men review cinematic portrayals of Marvel/DC comic characters like Captain
America to draw the young in a cohort that doesn’t give a, ah, fig for on-line
blogger-induced publications. Try Instagram brother, try Instagram as my eight-year
old granddaughter could have told Greg and avoided a near civil war among the
writers, young and old, and a revolt by the real readership base-the remnants,
the best part of the Generation of ’68 past its flower. So WTF it is although
that same eight-year old granddaughter was hip to that expression about two
years ago and so we are not protecting virgin ears.) I recently reviewed a boxing
film from the 1930s starring a triad of classic stars from that period like
Bette Davis, Edward G. Robinson and Humphrey Bogart who went through their
paces in Kid Galahad (not to be confused
with the later Elvis 1960s production under the same title) with Edward G. trying
finally get a champ but who if he lived would have gotten a brother-in-law plus
champ despite his being overly protective of his younger sister who was crazy
for the big guy.
I made a big point there of
detailing my own street-fighting episodes cut short by the realization that if
anything I was more a lover than a fighter but in any case not a fighter, not
even a street fighter much less getting in the ring with anybody. I made the
even bigger point that despite that youthful folly I never was much of a fan of
boxing, of the art of the fist, of pugilism. Yet our own illustrious site
manager (the same one who made me go on and on with the “dirty language”
disclaimer so you know what I was up against) forced me to do the honors.
That was then but on the basis
of that review, the perverse basis if you ask me of that light-headed
experience he decided that I was to be at least temporarily the in-house “boxing
expert” and review the film of the headline-The
Girl From Monterrey. The “how” of that particular choice bears some
explanation. Apparently Greg was going through the archives or had remembered
from his days as editor at American Film
Gazette that during World War II Hollywood, then the sole world capital for
film production spewed out as much patriotic war material as was possible
without destroying every film produced in that period. Somehow he latched onto
this short war-induce film which featured a couple of boxers who would before
the end of the film wind up in uniform and so there you have it, why I am
reviewing this essentially propaganda piece.
But hold on there is a back
story to that as well. This year, 2018, commemorates on November 11th
the 100th anniversary of Armistice Day, the day when the bloody
slaughter, the bloody destruction of the flower of the European youth ended
(the supposed “war to end all wars” was the tag to get guys to fight the
freaking thing-another WTF). A couple of stringers here, a couple of Vietnam
veterans, Sam Eaton and Ralph Morris have been spear-heading the efforts, via
their memberships in the anti-war Veterans for Peace group to publicize the
commemoration of that event in this space. Greg’s “find” dove-tails with that
commemoration since this production was a “talkie” and because few World War I
film productions still exist I am the messenger.
Well I have stalled enough
I might as well get to this short sad tale of a film which at least had the
mercy of being short probably due to the rationing of chemicals for the war
effort. This one started out south of the border, started in Mexico when that
was not a dirty word and immigrants were welcome- to harvest the fields. Started
with a spitfire, sparking eyes, Spanish is the loving tongue dancer-singer in
an up-scale cantina named Lita, played by never heard of before but well-known
then Armida. This feisty and short, unbelievably short so that say Alan Ladd
would feel tall next to her had made it clear to management that she was not
available to sit with the customers after doing her stage chores- and got
bounced, or quit depending on whose story you believe, once the manager made
one too many demands on her in that department. What is a girl to do though
when she is bounced.Enter younger
brother Baby, a good=looking middleweight, who had quit college to enter the
ring, to become a pugilist and who was raring to go in that ill-sought
profession. Lita decided against all good judgment to “manage” him after a few
gringo boxing promoters sitting in that cantina watching Lita go through her
paces saw Baby flatten the Mexican contender who made one too many advances on
Lita.
Shift scenes to New York
(presumably with all papers in order and not having creeped in via a borderless
wall) where Baby got some early cream puff fights working his way up the food
chain. But Lita is a singer and dancer, remember that spitfire and sparkling eyes
in that profession and so she found work in a nightclub where she and Baby and
those nefarious promoters went go for entertainment. Lita did a number and got
hired. Baby got all hung up on a gringa torch singer who probably was too big
for him-too cutthroat, too wise for this sap despite his pugilistic prowess. Lita
in her turn gravitated toward another good-looking middleweight, the champ, a
guy named Jerry does it really matter his last name since he was nothing but a “bicycle-rider
anyway, a dancer in the ring tiring out his opponent before the knock-down on canvas.
Baby was making time with this
Flossie the floosy and Lita with the chump champ while Baby worked his way up.
As you can guess two good-looking middleweights are bound to crash into each other
and so it goes when an American promoter gives the high sign to Flossie to get
Baby to sign the contact to fight Jerry. Lita is torn but things work out well
since Baby knocked Jerry on his ass for the championship and then both men show
up in the uniforms of their respective countries. Ho hum. What was not ho hum
was Lita’s stage presence where she sang some songs I had never heard were in
the American Songbook. Check these out on YouTube the jumping Jive, Brother, Jive, Last Night’s All Over and the title The Girl From Monterey. Yeah check those
sparkling eyes as Armida goes through her paces.
The Golden Age Of The
B-Film Noir- Lloyd Bridges’ “The Big Deadly Game” (1954)
DVD Review
By Film Editor Emeritus
Sam Lowell
The Big Deadly Game, starring
Lloyd Bridges (Jeff’s father okay when he needed dough I guess and hit the
bricks in London and Spain), Simone Silva, Hammer Productions, 1954
Recently in a review of
the British film Terror Street
(distributed in Britain as 36 Hours) and
subsequently another British entry The
Black Glove (distributed in Britain as Face
The Music probably a better title since it involved a well-known trumpet
player turning from searching for that high white note everybody in his
profession is looking for to amateur private detective once a lady friend is
murdered and he looked for all the world like the natural fall guy) I noted
that long time readers of this space know, or should be presumed to know, of my
long-standing love affair with film noir.
Since any attentive reader will note this is my third such review of B-film
noirs in the last period I still have the bug.
I went on to mention some
of the details to my introduction to the classic age of film noir in this country in the age of black
and white film in the 1940s and 1950s when I would sneak over to the now long
gone and replaced by condos Strand Theater in growing up town North Adamsville
and spent a long double feature Saturday afternoon watching complete with a
stretched out bag of popcorn (or I think it is safe to say it now since the
statute of limitation on the “crime” must surely have passed snuck in candy
bars bought at Harold’s Variety Store on the way to the theater) some then current
production from Hollywood or some throwback from the 1940s which Mister Cadger,
the affable owner who readily saw that I was an aficionado who would pepper him
with questions about when such and such a noir
was to be featured would let me sneak in for kid’s ticket prices long after I
reached the adult price stage at twelve I think it was, would show in
retrospective to cut down on expenses in tough times by avoiding having to pay
for first –run movies all the time. (And once told me to my embarrassment that
he made more money on the re-runs than first runs and even more money on the
captive audience buying popcorn and candy bars-I wonder if he knew my scam.
I mentioned in passing
as well that on infrequent occasions I would attend a nighttime showing (paying
full price after age twelve since parents were presumed to have the money to
spring for full prices) with my parents
if my strict Irish Catholic mother (strict on the mortal sin punishment for
what turned out to have been minor or venial sins after letting my older
brothers, four count them, four get away with murder and assorted acts of
mayhem) thought the film passed the Legion of Decency standard that we had to
stand up and take a yearly vow to uphold and I could under the plotline without
fainting (or getting “aroused” by the fetching femmes).
What I did not mention
although long time readers should be aware of this as well was that when I
found some run of films that had a similar background I would “run the table” on
the efforts. Say a run of Raymond Chandler film adaptations of his Phillip
Marlowe crime novels or Dashiell Hammett’s seemingly endless The Thin Man series. That “run the
table” idea is the case with a recently obtained cache of British-centered
1950s film noirs put out by the
Hammer Production Company as they tried to cash in on the popularity of the
genre for the British market (and the relatively cheap price of production in
England). That Terror Street mentioned
at the beginning had been the first review in this series (each DVD by the way
contains two films the second film Danger
On The Wings in that DVD not worthy of review) and now the film under
review under review the overblown if ominously titled The Big Deadly Game (distributed in England, Britain, Great
Britain, United Kingdom or whatever that isle calls itself these Brexit days as
the innocuous Third Party Risk is the
third such effort. On the basis of these four viewings (remember one didn’t
make the film noir aficionado cut so
that tells you something right away) I will have to admit they are clearly
B-productions none of them would make anything but a second or third tier
rating.
After all as mentioned
before in that first review look what they were up against. For example who
could forget up on that big screen for all the candid world to see a sadder but
wiser seen it all, heard it all Humphrey Bogart at the end of TheMaltese
Falcon telling all who would listen that he, he Sam Spade, no stranger to
the seamy side and cutting corners, had had to send femme fatale Mary Astor his snow white flame over, sent her to the
big step-off once she spilled too much blood, left a trail of corpses, for the
stuff of dreams over some damn bird. Or cleft-chinned barrel-chested Robert
Mitchum keeping himself out of trouble in some dink town as a respectable
citizen including snagging a girl next door sweetie but knowing he was doomed, out
of luck, and had cashed his check for his seedy past taking a few odd bullets
from his former femme fatale trigger-happy
girlfriend Jane Greer once she knew he had double-crossed her to the coppers in
Out Of The Past. Ditto watching the
horror on smart guy gangster Eddie Mars face after being outsmarted because he
had sent a small time grafter to his doom when prime private detective Phillip
Marlowe, spending the whole film trying to do the right thing for an old man
with a couple of wild daughters, ordered him out the door to face the
rooty-toot-toot of his own gunsels who expected Marlowe to be coming out in The Big Sleep. How about song and dance
man Dick Powell turning Raymond Chandler private eye helping big galoot Moose
Malone trying to find his Velma and getting nothing but grief and a few stray
conks on the head chasing Claire Trevor down when she didn’t want to be found
having moved uptown with the swells in Murder,
My Sweet. Those were some of the beautiful and still beautiful classics
whose lines you can almost hear anytime you mention the words film noir.
In the old days before I
retired I always liked to sketch out a film’s plotline to give the reader the
“skinny” on what the action was so that he or she could see where I was leading
them. I will continue that old tradition here (as I did with Terror Street and The Black Glove and will do in future Hammer Production vehicles to
be reviewed over the coming period) to make my point about the lesser
production values of the Hammer products. Lloyd Bridges is a music guy (not a trumpeter
which might have given him some juices but some kind of second-string composer)
who is in Spain on holiday as they say in England, Britain, the United Kingdom,
or whatever when he runs into an old war buddy who seems to be in trouble. And
he is since he winds up dead, very dead, for some unknown transgression. Seems
that this war buddy had run afoul of an international smuggling ring centered
in Spain and run by some mal hombres from the look of them and had to pay the
price for his treason. Naturally clean-cut good guy Lloyd figures out what was
what and the bad guys fell down, fell down hard once he put the hammer to them.
Vaya con dios mal hombres.
That is the gist of the
main crime story but what this one really was about if you looked at time spent
on the subject was his romance with this Spanish senorita, played by Simone Silva, who was running a
dance school, a folkloric dance school teaching the ninas how to do the old
time dances and doing a pretty good job of it. So between bouts of fighting
crime Lloyd was keeping company with his coy mistress.
Better that Terror Street but not as good as The Black Glove although it can’t get
pass that Blue Gardenia second tier
in the film noir pantheon. Sorry
Hammer.
Out In The Riverdale
Drive-In Night-With 007 Jame Bond’s “Doctor No” (1962) In Mind-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Special Guest Film
Critic Bart Webber
Doctor No, starring Sean
Connery, Ursala Andress, 1962
Hey, me, Bart Webber, I
was the guy with the car my father’s passed down 1956 Chevy (two-toned with the
classic fins that people today are ready to die if they have enough dough to
grab one at some high-priced automobile auction). Usually that would mean
nothing except that recently Sam Lowell, the now retired film critic in this
space, called me up one night after watching, or rather re-watching after a
fifty-five year hiatus, the film adaptation of Ian Fleming’s 007 James Bond
thriller, Doctor No (1962) the first
of what would appear to be an endless number of sequels and asked me to do a
review (after he sent over the DVD for me to watch). See Sam, the Scribe, Jack,
Frankie, Alex and I watched that film the first time in my car, in that 1956
Chevy two-toned, cherry red and white, at the now long gone and converted to an
open air park along the river Riverdale Drive-In. (For those who don’t know
what a drive-in is or are too lazy to look it up on Wikipedia that was an open air place where you went in a car to see
movies on a big screen and heard through a speaker places athwart the driver’s
side care window, usually a double feature and cartoon with intermissions in
between to stock up on food and drink from the refreshment stand at night, the
first feature starting at dusk so sometimes hard to see). A cheap way for a
family or more importantly in the time frame I am speaking of cheap date with
lots of promise at least starting out of foggy car windows before the night was
over (and an inability to tell mother what the plot of the movie had been
about.
But the night I am
talking about was not such a cheap date night although as usual with the gang
who hung around Tonio’s Pizza Parlor some dreams of girls and foggy car windows
entered into it. But mainly we were there that night to see this Doctor No film because the Scribe (the
late Peter Paul Markin who was the guy who had more zany ideas than anybody
else) had, as usual read the Ian Fleming
book and had heard that this guy Sean Connery who was playing the lead
character 007 James Bond was very cool. Who am I kidding we went because we
also heard through that same Scribe that this cool chick Ursala Andress was
going to be running around half-naked in
some scenes. Hey we were sixteen, maybe seventeen years old, without dough, and
most of the time dateless because of the no dough so what did you expect. If we
ran into some real live girls at the refreshment stand so much the better.
So that was where the
car deal came in (and sometimes I think I got to be in the Tonio crowd because
I was the only one with a car and I am sure that was the Scribe’s motivation
but he is no longer around to confirm the truth of that statement. Here is how
the thing played out that night and many other drive-in nights. This little con
courtesy of the Scribe who was a combination saint, brain and con artist all
wrapped into one explosive package. He figured out, or maybe I had better say
he had heard about this scam to get into the drive-in cheap. Since those of us
who lived in the Acre section of North Adamsville where Tonio’s was located
were always hard pressed for dough we would listen to any scheme that would get
us what we wanted. In those days before I think the drive-in theater owners got
wise and started charging by the carload there used to be individual
admissions. To get around this problem the Scribe suggested that a few of us,
maybe three of the six who went that night hide on the floor of the back seat
and in the trunk of car. That way we would only have to pay for three
admissions and would have money enough for some stuff at the refreshment stand
(and give us reason to go there to check out the girls. This idea always worked
and I have often wondered why until one day I figured out that the ticket-taker
could have given a fuck about who was in the car all he or she cared about was
moving the line of cars forward.
See though the Acre
girls would do the same thing although maybe they wouldn’t throw somebody in
the trunk. Beautiful right and that is where the boy-girl mingle would get
started and wind up at the refreshment stand. Needless to say single daters
didn’t do this, at least I never did on cheap date night. Needless to say as
well that we Acre kids, boys and girls alike, had our own meeting section far
away from the parents with their young kids (conversely what young parents
would subject their sweet charges to the bombast of high school mad monks and
sisters).
Frankly I don’t remember
what happened on the boy-girl front that night because I was enthralled by the
film. I had always liked action adventure films so this was like catnip to me.
Funny after a fifty-five hiatus this one unlike a couple of other later Sean
Connery-starring Bond vehicles that I have watched, re-watched, does not seem
dated. Certainly the theme of good guys battling evil genius bad guys who want
to take over the world is as fresh as today’s headlines.
Here’s the play as Sam
Lowell always likes to say when he is giving his take on the plotline. A
British intelligence agent in Jamaica is missing and presumed dead and
government paid killer agent James Bond, Sean Connery’s role is sent to find
out why and why as well why there is some interference with the booming
American rocket program then in its early stages. Once landed Bond is on the
case and finds out that some serious skullduggery is happening in an off-shore
island by the nefarious evil genius bad guy Doctor No and his minions. So Bond
has to see what is what on that island. As it turned out this No was some kind of
nuclear physics freak who had associated himself with a criminal syndicate
first in Tong China and later the nefarious SPECTRE international crime organization.
While discovery all this information about what was being produced on the island
up pops this Honey, really a honey, nothing but a fox as we used to say played
by Ursala Andress who looked just fine in skimpy bathing suits. While this pair
were are playing footsies they were captured by Doctor No’s security apparatus.
Bond and Honey took a beating for a while but in time-honored good guy tradition
the bad guys must take a fall-and they do. No is no more. At the end Bond and
Honey make their getaway on a small craft and that was that.
So you can see why I was
involved in the film to the exclusion of checking out the girls at the refreshment
stand that night. When we left we only had four guys since Jack and Frankie had
hit pay-dirt with a couple of girls who said they were bored by the movie and
had only come because their girlfriends needed to fill up their car for that
cheapjack caper at the admission booth. Nice, right.
How World War II Was
Won-With Cary Grant’s “Kiss Them For Me” (1957) In Mind
DVD Review
By Sandy Salmon
Kiss Them For Me, starring
Cary Grant, Jayne Mansfield, Suzy Parker. 1957
In wartime all emotions,
plans, ideas are kind of pushed together and what would ordinarily be a
slow-moving train turns into a supersonic airplane ride. That was certainly the
case in the matter of love and marriage as the film under review of Cary Grant’s Kiss Them For Me film adaptation of the 1945 play brings to the fore. And
World War II the time frame of this cinematic effort, the time of the Generation
of ‘68’s, my parents, the parents of today’s baby boomer generation was no exception.
That wartime was filled with all kinds of hasty marriages some which lasted forever
as in my own parents’ case and some didn’t (and some lasted forever shouldn’t
have either). (That “kiss them for me’ by
the way as a symbol of the time no mere happenstance for there is a very famous
photograph taken in Time Square, New York City of a sailor in a deep embrace
all out kiss with some dame whom he may or may not have known, probably not,
once V-E Day was declared to end the war in the European Theater).
Of course even in a
romantic comedy as here there is a need to be solemn about the dedication of
those who rolled back the night-takers in the European and Pacific wars not all
of them who made it and laid down their heads in some watery or mud splattered
grave. Here Cary Grant and companions are gadabout Navy fliers out in the Pacific
War, the part fought against the Japanese, who by daring-do get ride from
Honolulu circa 1944 to San Francisco for some well-deserved shore leave. All of
this done in a normal smooth as silk Cary Grant style who is a guy with a fast
glib comic tongue ad who butter would not melt in his mouth. One they get into
Frisco town it is party time as long as they can hold out. Of course along the
way they have to deal with the fact that they are under orders to report to a
medical facility over in Oakland which would and will crab their style. And
along the way Cary and pals are figuring out ways to avoid that situation like the
plague.
Here’s where the love and
romance if you can get it comes in. Cary is smitten by this Gwentyth, played by
fetching ex-model Suzy Parker, a good-looking take her anywhere proudly
red-head who probably was the dream of any service guy who wanted to settle
down to a nice nest after the war. Well she is already “spoken for” by a well-heeled
(and heel) war contractor who is nothing but trouble for Cary and the boys. But
all Cary has to do is put on that smooth as silk charm and bingo he and she, they
are an “item” all in a couple of days. Yeah, the times were like that. But in
the normal patriotic twist that hot affair will have to be put on hold for the
duration since the boys rejecting a soft stateside assignment head back to the danger
to finish what they had started. Not the
best Cary Grant vehicle but adequate.
[Somewhat incongruously
this film also stars blonde, very blonde, 1950s busty bombshell Jayne Mansfield
who was, along with Marilyn Monroe except Jayne was a step or two down in the
talent category, the epitome of World War II generation guys, my father’s generation
guys, idea of a highly sexual desirable woman. Unlike the iconic Marilyn who could
really though Jayne played to type the “dumb bimbo” which in this film seemed
out of place. Maybe she knew somebody high up in the studio but her performance
detracted from the main play-that Cary charm-and in the end serious side of war
despite the on-screen antics.]
Once Again Haunted By The Question Of Questions-Who Represented The “Voice” Of The Generation Of ’68 When The Deal Went Down-And No It Was Not One Richard Millstone, Oops, Milhous Nixon
By Seth Garth
I have been haunted recently by various references to events in the early 1960s brought to mind by either seeing or hearing those references. First came one out of the blue when I was in Washington, D.C. on other business and I popped in as is my wont to the National Gallery of Art to get an “art bump” after fighting the dearies at the tail-end of the conference that I was attending. I usually enter on the 7th Street entrance to see what they have new on display on the Ground Floor exhibition areas. This time there was a small exhibit concerning the victims of Birmingham Sunday, 1963 the murder by bombing of a well-known black freedom church in that town and the death of four innocent young black girls and injuries to others. The show itself was a “what if” by a photographer who presented photos of what those young people might have looked like had they not had their precious lives stolen from them by some racist KKK-drenched bastards who never really did get the justice they deserved. The catch here, the impact on me, was these murders and another very disturbing viewing on television at the time, in black and white, of the Birmingham police unleashing dogs, firing water hoses and using the ubiquitous police billy-clubs to beat down on peaceful mostly black youth protesting against the pervasive Mister James Crow system which deprived them of their civil rights.
Those events galvanized me into action from seemingly out of nowhere. At the time I was in high school, in an all-white high school in my growing up town of North Adamsville south of Boston. (That “all white” no mistake despite the nearness to urban Boston since a recent look at the yearbook for my class showed exactly zero blacks out of a class of 515. The nearest we got to a black person was a young immigrant from Lebanon who was a Christian though and was not particularly dark. She, to my surprise, had been a cheer-leader and well-liked). I should also confess, for those who don’t know not having read about a dozen articles I have done over the past few years in this space, that my “corner boys,” the Irish mostly with a sprinkling of Italians reflecting the two major ethic groups in the town I hung around with then never could figure out why I was so concerned about black people down South when we were living hand to mouth up North. (The vagaries of time have softened some things among them for example nobody uses the “n” word which needs no explanation which was the “term of art” in reference to black people then to not prettify what this crowd was about.)
In many ways I think I only survived by the good graces of Scribe who everybody deferred to on social matters. Not for any heroic purpose but because Scribe was the key to intelligence about what girls were interested in what guys, who was “going” steady, etc. a human grapevine who nobody crossed without suffering exile. What was “heroic” if that can be used in this context was that as a result of those Birmingham images back then I travelled over to the NAACP office on Massachusetts Avenue in Boston to offer my meager services in the civil rights struggle and headed south to deadly North Carolina one summer on a voting drive. I was scared but that was that. My guys never knew that was where I went until many years later long after we had all gotten a better gripe via the U.S. Army and other situations on the question of race and were amazed that I had done that.
The other recent occurrence that has added fuel to the fire was a segment on NPR’s Morning Edition where they deal with aspects of what amounts to the American Songbook. The segment dealt with the generational influence of folk-singer songwriter Bob Dylan’s The Times They Are A-Changin’ as an anthem for our generation (and its revival of late in newer social movements like the kids getting serious about gun control). No question for those who came of political age early in the 1960s before all hell broke loose this was a definitive summing up song for those of us who were seeking what Bobby Kennedy would later quoting a line of poetry from Alfred Lord Tennyson call “seeking a newer world.” In one song was summed up what we thought about obtuse indifferent authority figures, the status quo, our clueless parents, the social struggles that were defining us and a certain hurried-ness to get to wherever we thought we were going.
I mentioned in that previous commentary that given his subsequent trajectory while Bob Dylan may have wanted to be the reincarnation Plus of Woody Guthrie (which by his long life he can rightly claim) whether he wanted to be, could be, the voice of the Generation of ’68 was problematic. What drove me, is driving me a little crazy is who or what some fifty plus years after all the explosions represented the best of what we had started out to achieve (and were essentially militarily defeated by the ensuing reaction before we could achieve most of it) in those lonely high school halls and college dormitories staying up late at night worrying about the world and our place in the sun.
For a long time, probably far longer than was sensible I believed that it was somebody like Jim Morrison, shaman-like leader of the Doors, who came out of the West Coast winds and headed to our heads in the East. Not Dylan, although he was harbinger of what was to come later in the decade as rock reassembled itself in new garb after some vanilla music hiatus but somebody who embodied the new sensibility that Dylan had unleashed. The real nut though was that I, and not me alone, and not my communal brethren alone either, was the idea that we possessed again probably way past it use by date was that “music was the revolution” by that meaning nothing but the general lifestyle changes through the decade so that the combination of “dropping out” of nine to five society, dope in its many manifestations, kindnesses, good thought and the rapidly evolving music would carry us over the finish line. Guys like Josh Breslin and the late Pete Markin, hard political guys as well as rabid music lovers and dopers, used to laugh at me when I even mentioned that I was held in that sway especially when ebb tide of the counter-cultural movement hit in Nixon times and the bastinado was as likely to be our home as the new Garden. Still Jim Morrison as the “new man” (new human in today speak) made a lot of sense to me although when he fell down like many others to the lure of the dope I started reappraising some of my ideas -worried about that bastinado fate.
So I’ll be damned right now if I could tell you that we had such a voice, and maybe that was the problem, or a problem which has left us some fifty years later without a good answer. Which only means for others to chime in with their thoughts on this matter.
Live Fast, Steal Cars, Die Young And You Figure The Rest Of It-Nick Cage’s "Gone In Sixty Seconds" (2000)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Josh Breslin
Gone in Sixty Seconds, starring Nick Cage, 2000
It will do no disservice to his memory that the late Peter Paul Markin, forever known in his old neighborhood as Scribe after one Frankie Riley knighted him with that title after he wrote about ten thousand words describing his, Frankie’s, exploits as leader of the corner boys in the Acre section of humble pie working-class North Adamsville that he, Scribe was the greatest “hot wire” guy I ever met. And that includes Johnny Blade, not his real name, but the name everybody knew him by up in Olde Saco in Maine where I grew up and where I hung out with him as he made his legend. I refuse to give his real name because I still owe him fifty bucks for fifty years for spilling coffee all over his 1957 two-toned, red and white, Chevy to die for passenger seat. He might still be looking for me, he was that kind of guy but the last I heard he was doing a nickel at Saw Ridge for grand theft auto when he got caught stealing a Mercedes for a guy who left him in the lurch. Something that definitely would not have happened in his prime, in the days when he could steal five cars in a row and not work up a sweat.
But enough of Johnny B. because this is about Scribe, actually it is not about him either but a strictly from nowhere film review of Nick Cage’s epic boost film Gone in Sixty Seconds where he plays the legendary Memphis Raines a guy that even I had heard of working some devilish magic out in West Coast high end luxury car heaven. I had admired his work and work ethic from afar once he retired unscathed and unrepentant. The Scribe part is important though because the film doesn’t make sense, or rather why I grabbed this assignment doesn’t make sense since while I have nothing but respect for the real Memphis Raines, the role Nick Cage made his own, I was never that car mad that I would want to write about freaking cars, or guys who loved them more than girls maybe. Although I did do a short piece on Lonesome Slim who was the greatest “chicken run” guy in the back roads of Maine who grabbed all the chicks when he went toe to toe with some reckless farm boy who lost his girl even before he put his pedal to the floor.
Here is the Scribe conundrum though, maybe two. To look at Scribe, to know him as I did when we met out in San Francisco in the Summer of Love, 1967 no way would you think this guy could open his front door without drama much less boost any car he wanted to, if he wanted to, in the days when hot-wiring cars was a lot easier than today with all the computer wrap around before you can even jimmy the door. I didn’t know this until many years later but when I met Scribe on Russian Hill in Frisco town he was sitting in a Camaro which I though was odd for a guy who looked like your mother’s worst son nightmare “hippie.” Especially true after I asked him if he had a joint and he gave me a huge blunt telling me not to Bogart the thing which naïve as I was I didn’t know meant basically not to throw the damn thing away when I was done. That car thing was pure Scribe, who was running under the moniker Be-Bop Benny out there just then. He had hot-wired the Camaro against all probabilities in broad daylight right at the summit of the Golden Gate Bridge (I laughed when Sam, the guy who told me about this Scribe exploit, the guy was probably then still looking for it in that parking lot, maybe thinking the cops had grabbed it). The other part of the Scribe mystery was that he couldn’t drive worth a damn, got more dings in more cars than you would believe possible. Thankfully when we were on Captain Crunch’s transformed yellow school bus he had his own bus driver, a guy who was a cousin of another legendary auto guy Neal Cassady.
But like Seth Garth, who told me once he was afraid of automobiles, afraid to be in them, likes to say enough of cutting up old touches even if it about mad monk Scribe who we all seriously still miss after he fell down young, too young. Just figure in your head that this is in honor of hot-wire Scribe, who could have been in the crew Memphis put together to grab 50, count them, fifty cars in one holy goof of a night. Probably would have had the whole thing figured in about an hour-see that was the contradiction-you wouldn’t want the guy to drive anything except maybe a tricycle, but you would give your whole share for him to plan the capers. Right up there with Memphis who like most boosters who don’t do serious time had to retire when the adrenaline rushes didn’t do it any more and the hands got a little shaky, maybe he started missing a step or two.
Car-stealing let’s call it boosting like they do in the profession, like bank-robbing, hell, like jack-rolling and like stealing kids’ milk money abhors a vacuum. Somebody will step up to be the next legend, the guy young guys talk about. That is what happened when Memphis put away his tools, went straight. Problem though was his half-ass younger brother, Kip, was the guy who wanted to be the next legend. But boosting stuff is not in the genes, DNA or whatever you call it. It is all about cool nerves and taking care of business-first. Kip fell down just like Scribe in his time did. Fucked up a boost for a hard-ass gangster named Raymond or Ralph something, a guy out of England who was looking to run the rackets stateside and was going to be pressed as thin as a pancake if Memphis didn’t come out of retirement to grab that 50- car run-and not 48, 49 either 50 or Kip was dust. Memphis might not have loved his younger brother, but blood is blood and that Raymond or Ralph whatever knew it.
Retired or active though to do a job as big as this you need a crew and need some serious inside connections to find out where the luxury cars are being held in a big city like LA. They are there in such a rich car-necessary and loved town but you have to dig them out. Memphis reassembled his old crew together and along with the remnants of Kip’s cowboys they had a team. They also had an idea that the whole thing had to be done in one night and fast because once the stolen vehicles started being reported the booster cops would be on the scent, would be dogging the whole operation. Not good.
Game on. The night time is the right time and Memphis and his savvy crew including an ex-lover gal who got off on boosting cars and not just sitting in boss cars with some bozo showed some real skills in grabbing that first easy twenty-five just waiting to be picked off. The next twenty-five though required plenty of work-and nerves since the booster cops were hot on the trail. Finally they grabbed 49, not fifty and that Raymond or Ralph whatever said no go-short meant one dead Kip. Of course that would never happen when brother Memphis was on the case. The bad bad guy took a fall-literally and because bad guy Memphis saved a booster cop’s life he and the crew walked. Scribe showed me many of the techniques of the trade, of the art of the boost I am sure if he had been around to see the film in 2000 he would have had a max daddy critique. Pound for pound though Scribe was the greatest hot-wire guy I ever saw-no doubt.
“Shoot Pools ‘Fast Eddie,’ Shoot Pools”-With Paul Newman’s “The Hustler” In Mind
By Lance Lawrence
“Fast Eddie” Felson was the greatest pool player to ever put
chalk to stick and you had better believe that hard fact because I know from
whence I speak. In most quarters, among the serious followers of the game, I,
Jackie “Big Man” Gleason think that title belongs to me. Think an old tub who
learned the game in Hell’s Kitchen at Jackie Kane’s dimly lit pool hall from
guys who would break your knuckles if they even had seen a breath of air that
you might be hustling them. I never had my knuckles broken but they also never
knew when I hustled their carfare home if I had the chance. I was that raw and
thought I was that good. Until “Fast Eddie” came strolling in the door one day
all hungry and eager to take on “Big Man,” make a name for himself and put me
on cheap street. I knew that I would take that strutting bastard down at first
but I also knew deep down that whatever the “official” rankings which in those
days was how much jack you took from the competition I also knew that someday I
would be uttering those words that I just said to start my story about “Fast
Eddie”
Maybe you never heard of “Fast Eddie,” never knew the story
behind the story of how for a couple of years anyhow, maybe three, he ruled the
roost, he was the king of the hill. All I know is from the first moment Eddie
entered Sharkey’s Pool Hall, the place where my manager, Bart, and I hustled
all comers at the sport of kings, down on 12th Avenue in the teeming
city of New York I was afraid to play him. Afraid he would damage my reputation
as the king of the hill. I had never played game one against him but still I
sensed something in his swagger, in his bravado that made my hands shake. Shaky
hands the kiss of death in our profession.
I don’t know if I can explain that pit in my stomach feeling
I am not much given to introspection a word I never heard of before the guy who
I first told this story, a journalist, he called himself, and as long as he was
not blowing smoke my way I believe him and if this little story ever gets
published that my view of fucking hard luck sports reporters who get assigned
to interview “retired” sports figure like me will improve greatly. If not, fuck
it I just wanted to get the tale told and that is that. This introspection
stuff, this thinking about why I had that pit in the stomach and why I worried
about cheap street like a lot of other guys, Willie Hoppe, the legendary
“Minnesota Fats, “Jersey Fats,” guys like that who had to hang up their hats when
they magic left their when a guy like me, like “Big Man” or then “Fast Eddie”
came up and took at the dingy pool hall air away. Let me try to give you an
idea, okay. I was a guy, a wiseass guy no question, laughing at the idea that
some two bit strong arms would miff my play, would do my knuckles in when I was
in my Jake. But see I had learned the game, learned all angles and hustles by putting
what they nowadays call doing the 10,000 hours of work to perfect whatever
skill you were trying to perfect. I knew at any given time on any given night
what I could and could not do with the rack when they spread their wings. That
and maybe a cynical hustler’s sense of another man’s weaknesses (woman as far
as I knew did play, play high stakes pool then at least I never ran across and
who wanted to play although I ran into plenty of women was wanted to help me
spend my money, and they did).
“Fast Eddie” though the minute he came in the door, the
minute he put chalk to stick just had a feel for what to do. Maybe he spent
about five minutes doing the work I spent those lonely 10, 000 hours and the
rest was pure spirit, karma, Zen whatever the fuck you want to call it. Made me
almost pee my pants when he strutted up the table all lean and hungry, a guy
named Shakespeare I remember from school or maybe my father who loved the cat,
told everybody to watch out for those kinds and avoid them like the plague.
Yeah, strutted right up to the table knowing that I was sitting right there
with my manager Bart and proceeded to run the rack without stopping to look,
closing those damn blue eyes before every fucking shot. So I knew I was done
except I also knew, or maybe Bart had a better handle on it just then that I
would take him down the first time he wanted to challenge me. He had to be
bloodied first before he took over the kingship. There was no other way. Bart
and I laughed, maybe a cynical laugh, how we would skin that cat before he even
knew what hit him. See young lean and hungry guys, blue eyes or not forget
about the barrelful of tricks an old pro had accumulated to keep the landlord
from the door.
In case you don’t know, and maybe some readers might not
having decided to read my homage to “Fast Eddie” based on the “hook” that this
was about Paul Newman the movie actor shooting big-time pool, hustling pool in
the old days before Vegas, Atlantic City, Carson City started putting up money
to have high dollar championships was about more that learning technique,
having a vision of where the fucking balls would enter the pockets like your
mother’s womb. A lot more. It was about having heart, about something that they
would call Zen today but which we called “from hunger” in my day. Eddie’s too.
That’s what Eddie had, that is what I sensed, what brought me to cold sweats
when that swaggering son of a bitch came looking for me like I was somebody’s
crippled up grandfather. It took a while, Eddie took his beatings before he
understood what drove his art but he got it, got it so good that I left the
game for a couple of years and went out West to hustler wealthy Hollywood
moguls who loved the idea of “beating” “Big Man” Gleason at ten thousand a
showing just for the sake of playing will a big time pool hustler.
But forget about me and my troubles once Fast Eddie came
through that long ago door after all this is about how the best man who ever
handled a stick got to earn that title in my book. Like a lot of guys after the
war, after World War II, after seeing the world in one way Eddie was ready to
ditch his old life, was ready to take some chances and say “fuck you” to the
nine to five world that would be death to a free spirit like him (that “free
spirit” would put a few daggers in his heart before he was done but that is for
later). Eddie, against my doughty frame, my big man languid frame, was a rangy
kid, kind of tall, wiry, good built and Hollywood bedroom eyes like, well, like
Paul Newman when he was a matinee idol making all the women, girls too, wet.
Strictly “from hunger” just like in my time, the Great Depression, I had been
the same before I left Minnesota for the great big lights of the city and
“action.” Like I said raw and untamed but I could tell that very first time he
put the stick to the green clothe he had the magic, had that something that
cannot be learned but only come to the saints and those headed for the
sky.
So Eddie came in with a few thousand ready to take on the
“Big Man.” While I feared this young pup I sensed that I could teach him a
lesson, maybe a lesson that would hold him in good stead, maybe not, but which
would at least give me enough breathing room to figure out what I would do when
Eddie claimed his crown. His first mistake, a rookie error that I myself had
committed was not having a partner, a manager to rein him in, to hold him back
in tough times. He had some old rum dum, Charley, Billy, something like that,
who cares except this rum dum was a timid bastard who couldn’t hold up his end.
His end being strictly to estimate his opponent and rein the kid in when he was
off his game like we all get sometimes. Me, like I said after I wised up,
teamed up with Bart, Bart who knew exactly who and who was not a “loser” and
who didn’t lose my money by making bad matches or bad side bets (those side
bets were the cushion money that got us through hard times and many times were
more than whatever we won at straight up games).
All I am saying is that this kid’s manager did Fast Eddie
wrong, let him go wild that first night when he was all gassed up to beat the
Big Man. You already know that I whipped his ass or you haven’t been paying
close enough attention. But that was all a ruse like I said, all kid bravado
and swagger added in so it was like taking candy from a baby that first night.
But I knew I was beat, beat bad in a straight up contest. What saved me that
night was two things, no three. First, Fast Eddie like lots of kids figured that
he could beat an old man with his hands tied behind his back and so he started
his “victory lap” drinking, drinking hard high-end scotch even before the match
had started. Second, he was cocky enough to declare that the only way to
determine the winner was who cried “uncle” first (Bart smiled and whispered
“loser” in my ear at hearing that). Third and last he had picked up this broad,
some boozer and maybe a hooker named, Sandy, Susie, no, Sarah whom he was
trying to impress somehow. She looked like a lost kitten but I didn’t give a
damn about that just that Fast Eddie’s mind would be half on getting her down
under the sheets, maybe had dreams of getting a blow job for his efforts she
looked the type who was into some kinky stuff just for kicks. At least that was
the way it looked at the time. As I will tell you later it was very different
and I was totally wrong about the dame.
It took almost twenty-eight hours in that dark dank smelly
booze-strewn Sharkey pool hall which looked like something out of the movies’
idea of what a low rent pool hall should look like complete with low-lifes but
eventually between the booze, the bravado, and the broad I took Eddie down,
left him about two hundred bucks “walking around” money. Left him to cry
“uncle.” Cry it for the last time. Between grabbing Fast Eddie’s money and the
side bets Bart made I, we were able to lay off for a couple of months (usually
after a big score that was standard practice since the one-time suckers who
want to brag to the hometown folks that they played hard and fast with the Big
Man and almost won scatter to the winds for a while before they inevitably come
back for their well-deserved beatings). Bart said, no crowed, that he had had
Fast Eddie’s number, a “loser.” Was another gone guy, forget him.But I had seen some moves, some moves
especially before the booze got the better of the kid that I could only dream
of trying without looking like a rube.
This part of the story coming up I pieced together from what
Bart told me, what Sharkey had heard, and what little Fast Eddie let on when he
came back at me in earnest, in that Zen state or whatever the fuck you want to
call it when a guy is “walking with the king.” Eddie went into “hiding,” went
licking his wounds, which in the pool world meant that he was trying to put a
stake together hustling at pool halls in bowling alleys, places like that where
the rubes are dying to lose a fin or double sawbuck and not cry about it. A
player at the kid’s level though would have a hard time of making much scratch
with the carnival-wheelers so unbeknownst to me Eddie got in touch with Bart
who staked him to some dough for a big cut of the proceedings. They made money,
a fair amount, but Bart, at least this is what he told me later after I pistol-whipped
him before I left for Hollywood and the big beautiful suckers there figured
that would just come back to me in the end because Bart still had the kid down
as a loser, a big bad loser.
This part is murkier still. Along the way on this trip that
Bart and Fast Eddie took to fleece the rubes this Sarah started to get
religion, started wanted to settle down with Eddie, make Eddie settle down.
After I had beaten him when he was laying low he moved in with her, they got
along okay until Eddie connected with Bart whom Sarah definitely did not like,
I guess she was off the bottle for a while but started in again once she saw
that Eddie wouldn’t give up his dream, his dream of beating the Big Man. This
part is even murkier but one night Eddie was hustling some Bourbon king and
Bart and Sarah were left behind to drink the night away. Somehow Bart, who
except when negotiating bets and matches was a pretty smooth talker, conned
Sarah who was miffed at Eddie like I said into bed. Got her to either take him
around the world or let him take her anally (or he forced the issue figuring
she was just a bent whore anyway he had odd sexual desires from what I was able
to figure out after a few years with him). The boozy haze, the rough sex, being
unfaithful to Eddie, maybe her whole fucking life marching before her left her
with who knows what angry feelings. In any case that night before Eddie got
home she had slit her wrists.
This last part is not murky, not murky at all. After beating
the hell out of Bart he took the bus back to New York and one night he came
through Sharkey’s door and I knew I was roasted (Bart had telegramed about
what had happened and told me that he would put up fifty thousand dollars
against Fast Eddie’s luck). I had no choice but to play the play out. After
Fast Eddie took that fifty thousand and another twenty-five that I had put up I
cried “uncle.” Cried uncle and left for Hollywood and the bright lights. Left
Fast Eddie to play out his string, left Eddie to “shoot pools, ‘Fast Eddie’,
shoot pools.”