Sunday, April 07, 2019

The Roots Is The Toots: The Music That Got The Generation Of ’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-The Real Scoop Behind Brother, Can You Spare A Dime?-With Martha and the Vandellas- Dancing In The Streets In Mind

The Roots Is The Toots: The Music That Got The Generation Of ’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-The Real Scoop Behind Brother, Can You Spare A Dime?-With Martha and the Vandellas- Dancing In The Streets In Mind



By Allen Jackson

[Not everybody including myself from the now halcyon days of the Generation of ’68, those now called baby-boomers and beginning to fade fast had an easy and successful transition when the bright flame that we thought that as the Scribe put it via Robert Kennedy and him via Alfred Lord Tennyson “to seek a newer world” had not arrived, had gone to ground. I have mentioned my own problems coming back from Vietnam to what we called the “real world” as did Scribe and a few others I know. The Scribe, the portent guy, the fortune-teller, the soothsayer around our corner boy way growing up went down in flames early, went to seed in drugs and bullet shells, as has been describe by me and others over the past several years here as well all who mourned that lying, crazy, beautiful son of a bitch and whom we all still miss like crazy even fifty years later. I also did a whole series on that “transition” problem with thoughts of Scribe in mind in the late 1970s after I had gotten through the roughest part of coming to terms with the “real world” and could deal with a bunch of guys, returning veterans who still couldn’t cope and were holed up down in Southern California living as best they could along railroad tracks and under bridges.

Fuck, excuse the language although I don’t swear often this remembrance of fate of Scribe, of the returning veterans from that god awful war which we still don’t have a grip on today as the Ken Burns documentary makes ominously clear, of the children of the light who succumbed to whatever was burning in their mixed-up brains, of the likes of Ellen Carroll who gave all the love she had to anybody who wanted it or could hold her long enough to garner in that love and then wound up turning tricks as Madame La Rue in some souped up whorehouse in Frisco catering to Asian business who wanted to walk on the wild side of her love, of beautiful growing up corner boy Timmy Riley who turned himself into the reincarnation of Miss Judy Garland once he fled that growing up neighborhood and freedom to be what he was, of the million riders on Captain Crunch’s’ yellow brick road school bus buzzing up and down the Pacific Coast Highway looking for that inner light the Quakers were always talking about one time when I went to sanctuary with them in the depths of my despair and I stayed calm for a while as my rages against the night, against the night-takers abated a bit.     

Fuck, and I don’t give a damn if you excuse my swearing twice in one short piece right this minute my inner light which has guided me somewhat has evaporated as I think about those bastard night-takers, those hired guns of the ruling classes, those guys and gals who have spent the past forty or so years fighting a winning battle against all we were trying to do to turn the world upside down, to bring a little rough-hewn justice to this un-sceptered orb. Raging about the beloved Scribe wasted down in Mexico, Lenny whose last name I never did get or if I did it was not his real name who threw himself under a train before my eyes out in that lost brothers under the bridge Southern California land when he thought he was still in ‘Nam and there was in-coming, beautiful Rizzo from our own corner boy nights who was so gung-ho he actually enlisted right out of high school and now holds a place of honor on black granite down in Washington-and in the town square and who never had that chance to go to Frisco with us in the Summer of Love, 1967 and get his head turned around, of all those lost boys down in the sullen nights, of all the lost girls in those same sullen nights, and all the stark naked runaways who photographs dotted the lost and missing bulletin boards, mostly high school graduation pictures all that frantic parents had, of half the police stations from Chicago to the Coast. Of course as well the fate of Billy Bradley who too had his own dreams and now has only fifty year remembrance.

Yes, not all who entered the cave went the distance some were just slumming anyway but damn we have had our share of casualties in that night-taker reckoning. Allan Jackson]  
*******
This sketch takes place in the 1970s at the outer edge of the time of the Generation of ’68 musical jail  break-out  started in the mid-1950s with the roll out of classic rock but is driven, and driven hard, by the music of the early 1960s when the grifter described here first came of age and hence its inclusion.

“Hey, brother, can you spare a dime?,” (or sister now something unheard of back in the day, back in the early 1960s, when some cop might pinch you at her request for disturbing the fair sex  for  being unseemly in public asking a proper lady for anything. Now here in the go-go 70s any human form is qualified for the hustle where every low-rent guy takes a shot figuring maybe to get something so the other party, particularly women, can get you out of their faces and move on) followed by “Got an extra cigarette, pal (or gal, ditto the sister thing except unlike back in the day, pal or gal, in the new age, as likely as not, probably has no butts, has no “cigs,” doesn’t touch the stuff ever since the Surgeon-General’s report put the fear of God into lots of people)?”

Yah, Billy Bailey, William James Bailey, used-to-be brash corner boy, a contender for the title of king hell king of the corner boy night around Salducci’s Pizza Parlor, “up the downs” back in North Adamsville in the old days, the old days these days being the early 1960s before smart and brash corner boy Frankie Riley put an end to that dream by trumping all upstarts since  he was “in” with the shop owner, certainly had the panhandler lingo down, down pat, after only a few days on the bum. Funny during these few days on the bum this time he would almost blush when he thought back to the days when he used to laugh in the faces of swollen-faced raggedy-assed guys trying to pan-handle him for dough, trying to bum a smoke, and here he was with the brethren. Hustling maybe a little cleaner in attire that the brethren since he had not gotten down to second-hand Sally goods yet (that Sally for the clueless is not somebody’s aunt but the Salvation Army which took in many a stew bum without question when they were on the skids and nobody else would take them in so throw some change in the bucket the next time you see them around Christmas time in some shopping mall ringing their ubiquitous bells)although a few more weeks with constant use of the few clothes that he did have might have him howling. Hustling too with cleaner breathe since he did not drink (that jones long over and done with substituted by several subsequent joneses including his current burden. He still felt that contempt for the buggers since he “knew” that a few days of this street work and he would be off the skids, on his feet again and then able to go back to laughing at the brethren, a good laugh too, while they pipe-dreamed their lives away.

Yeah, this was strictly temporary because his ship would come in before he wound up on cheap street like the boyos hanging around the Common swilling rotgut wine (or maybe low-rent whiskey if the day’s take was good) smoking tobacco “roaches,” butt end really off the ground and pissing all over themselves. However every once in a while he would get a funny feeling, kind of turn up his collar a little more, push his baseball cap lower on his head, put on sunglasses ( a real no-no in the pan-handler racket since you want the “marks” to see your desperate eyes, your pleading desperate eyes, to close the deal. Besides sunglasses might make them feel you just blew in from the coast) when he realized that he was on the bum in his own home town, his ever-lovin’ roots, Boston. (His growing up hometown of North Adamsville close enough so that he did not have to tell people who asked the name of the town and could get by with Boston unlike if he was from Lowell or Lawrence or places like that.) Sure he had been on the bum a few times, nothing big, once on the Mission in Frisco (where in the same day he walked across the Golden Gate Bridge and that night slept, slept newspaper for a pillow sleep, under that edifice), a couple of times on Larimer Street in Denver before they gentrified the damn place and along the arroyos down in Los Angeles with a bunch of Vietnam veterans like himself who unlike him couldn’t adjust to the “real” world. 

Yeah, those were a few days’ bums, maybe a week, couple of weeks, no more than a month and then back to the world. Short falls, maybe drunk too much and jobless, later maybe too much gambling on run-out horses and dogs (and no money coming in to feed the habits once he got behind), maybe some twist threw him over for a steady guy after he wore out his welcome (and her pocketbook). On the bum this time, this time though a real fall, in hock and up to his ass in debt, mostly big score no-go dope on credit deal debts,  when he had tired of drunk risks, gambling risks, frail risks,  guys looking for him, not Boston guys thankfully, well, looking for him to pay up. During the long days of pan-handling this time though he would think back to the old days, the days before the “falls” when hustling dough was just for some short money, pick up some spare change, to wander into free campsite, Volkswagen bus pick-up sharing stews, brews and dope hitchhike roads looking for the great blue-pink American West night with some honey, some Angelica honey, bum like a few years back.
Angelica, the proto-type of his sexual desire in those days, all Midwest blonde, slender, frisky, proud and sensible, traipsing after him across half the continent before going home to Indiana and then later joining him in southern California before she decided on white picket fences and kids. Sweet kiss, baby, you were probably right when that last night you said your gallant knight was made of sawdust. Yeah, that was a while back, late 1960s back when even he sensed the world might be turned upside down. Hoped maybe he and his would get a fair shake in the world even though more pressing personal issues drove his days and nights. 

Those days, those days after the hellish army routine, the ‘Nam bummer, the ‘Nam bummer before he hightailed it with the arroyos brothers who couldn’t face the “real” world down in L.A. he practically made a religion, yah a religion out of living “free,” living out of the knapsack(oddly an old World War II surplus job found at Snyder’s Army and Navy the kind which he father had told him he carried all thorough Europe when it was time to kick ass with the Nazi), living under bridges (not “arroyo brother” bridges but nice, meaning girl company nice, sleeping bag also Army surplus and light campfires and fine stews), no sweat, if need be. But those “golden days” dried up a few years back and now here in 1976 he was facing a real skid row choice. How it happened he will get to along the way but first let’s set the parameters of what 1976 panhandling, to put an eloquent name on it for “bumming”, shiftless bumming , looked like and how to survive in the new age of everybody me-ing themselves, even with people who were not on the bum. Christ, lord the times were hard, hard times in old Babylon, no question.

See, a guy, a guy who called himself “Shorty” McGee for obviously physical reasons but who knows what his real name was, maybe he didn’t remember either after all the rum-dum sterno heat years and the endless backsides of skid row haunts, that he had hitched up with for a minute, an overnight minute at the Salvation Army Harbor Lights Center over in the South End kind of hipped him to the obvious tricks of the new down-at the-heels road. Like putting the two requests, got any change and “got a cig,” together when you were panhandling. See, Shorty said it was all a matter of psychology, of working the crowd, the downtown crowd, the bustling workaday Park Street Station crowd hurrying to and fro looking for quick lunches, maybe a minute shopping spree in Jordan Marsh’s or Filene’s, and the Copley Square sunning themselves crowd on the benches across from the library maybe reading a book or feeding the pigeons, right to get you out of their sights and back to whatever sweet thing they were doing. So you endlessly put the two requests together, time after time after time, and always. And what happened was that when they turned you down for the dough ( as happened a lot), or maybe took you literally and pieced you off with just a dime, Christ a dime that wouldn’t even buy a cup of joe, or could feel good about themselves, if they smoked, smoked cigarettes anyway, by passing you a butt. Billy thought, nice, this Shorty really does have it worked out just about right. Of course dimes and drags were not going to get him out from under, not this time.

Well, rather than leaving the reader out in the dark, Billy Bailey this fair 1976 spring was not just on the bum, but on the lam as well, keeping his head very far down just in case there were some guys who were looking for him, or worst, the cops, in case some irate victim of one of his scams took a notion to “fry his ass.” Of course he was counting on them, those victims, being mainly friends and acquaintances, of not putting “the heat” on him since he had already promised through the grapevine that he would make restitution. But we are getting a little ahead of the story, let’s step back.
The early 1970s were not kind to “free spirits” the previous name for what on this day were “free-loaders” and Billy, well, got behind in his expenses, and his bills, his ever expanding bills. But see the transition from free “s” to free “l” caught him off-guard, moreover he was just then in the throes of a fit of “the world owes me a living,” a serious fit. Why? Well see, he as a pauper son of the desperate working poor, “felt” that since he missed out on the golden age benefits of his youth that he was to make up the difference by putting the “touch” on the richer friends that he had acquired through his doing this and that, mainly high-end drug connections (not really rich but richer since the really rich were hunkered down behind about fifteen layers of fortresses, physical and legal, and as some writer who knew what he was talking about really were different that you and me, no question).

The long and short it was that he work the deal this way, this way once he got his hard wanting habits on first he would “borrow” money off Friend A under some scam pretext of putting it to good use, usually using some exotic drug story as the front (yes, his own good use, including several long airplane fight trips to California and other points west-no more hitchhike roads for this moving up the food chain lad) and then borrow dough off Friend B to cover some of his debt to Friend A. Something like an unconscious classic Ponzi scheme, as it turned out. And then when he got to Friend X or somewhere around there things got way too complicated and he started “kiting” checks, and on and on as far deep into his white- collar crime mind as he could think. That could only go on a for a short while and he calculated that "short while" almost to the day when he would have to go “underground” and that day had sprung up a couple of weeks before.

So it took no accountant or smart-ass attorney to know that dimes and drags were not going to get him back on his feet. Nor were many of the schemes that Shorty had outlined over at Harbor Lights as ways to grab quick cash. Hitting the poor boy charity circuit, good mainly one time, grabbing stuff on credit using somebody’s credit card gained through guys who sold fake credit cards and then selling the stuff quick and deeply discounted. Some check finagling. All things that really took sunnier times to work and squeak maximum benefit from. These were chicken feed for his needs, even his immediate needs, although some of the scams would fill the bill for a rum-dum or life-long skid row bum. But here is the secret, the deep secret that Billy Bailey held in his heart, after a few nights on bus station benches, cold spring night park benches, a night bout under the Andersen Bridge over by old haunt Harvard Square (girl-less and with no cozy sleeping and stew campfires), and a few nights that he would rather not discuss just in case, he finally figured out, figured out kicking and screaming, that the world did not owe him a living and that if he wanted to survive past thirty he had better get the stardust and grit out of his eyes. But just this minute, just this undercover spring 1976 minute, he needed to work the Commons. “Hey, brother, hey sister, can you spare a dime?” “Pal, have you got an extra cigarette?”

Postscript: Not all wisdom ends happily, and not all good intentions grow to fruition. Yes, Billy paid off his debts to his friends, mostly. However, Billy Bailey was killed while “muling” in a drug war shoot-out in Juarez, Mexico in late 1979 trying to do an independent score when the bad boy Mexican and South American cartels were bundling things up. Found face down with two in the back of the head. Just like Markin, the Scribe bought it the same way and with the same hubris, no, let’s call it the same fucking wanting habits. Yeah, Billy Bailey had moved down the chain a lot since the days when he was a contender for the king hell king of the corner boy night. So cry a tear for Billy too.

Toulouse-Lautrec and the Stars of Paris

Experience the celebrity culture of 19th-century Paris
Aristide Bruant snarls. Loïe Fuller swirls on stage in the “serpentine dance.” The critic Édouard Dujardin eyes Jane Avril as they listen to the vulgar songs of Yvette Guilbert. These are celebrities of 19th-century Paris made famous by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, who captured the spectacle of the fin de siècle in evocative posters, prints, and paintings.
“Toulouse-Lautrec and the Stars of Paris” explores the celebrity culture of Lautrec’s time and the artist’s fascination with the personal lives of les stars as well as the roles that they played. With expressive lines and brazen colors, Lautrec depicted the defining gestures, costumes, and expressions of spectacular performers, many of whom were his personal friends and habitués of Montmartre, the focus of Parisian nightlife and a haven for acrobatic dancers and destitute students, reprobate aristocrats and middle-class pleasure-seekers.
The exhibition includes approximately 200 works and is composed of thematic sections highlighting Lautrec’s formal innovations, such as dramatic lighting effects and color combinations; the changing artistic and social landscapes of Paris, with scenes of the city by day and by night; cafés, cabarets, and theaters; and celebrities of the age. The display also incorporates works by Lautrec’s contemporaries Pierre Bonnard, Mary Cassatt, Edgar Degas, John Singer Sargent, James Jacques Joseph Tissot, and others—presenting him in the context of his heroes, peers, and followers. Organized by the MFA in partnership with the Boston Public Library, the exhibition draws on both institutions’ rich holdings, and includes key loans of paintings and graphic arts from public and private collections.

The Trials And Tribulations Of The Generation Of ’68 Tipping Its Hat- Honky-Tonk Man-The Times and Troubles of Hank Williams-“I Saw The Light” (2015)-A Film Review



The Trials And Tribulations Of The Generation Of ’68  Tipping Its Hat- Honky-Tonk Man-The Times and Troubles of Hank Williams-“I Saw The Light” (2015)-A Film Review  



DVD Review

By Sam Lowell

I Saw The Light, starring Tom Hiddleston, 2015

I remember one time several years ago in reviewing a Hank William Golden Classic CD that although I was Northern born boy I had actually been down in the South while I was in my mother’s womb. Now that would not be of any particular note except somehow country music long suppressed was in my genes, made up my DNA since I did not find out until much later that my own father played in a country music band, did covers of Hank Williams’ song so you can see where I have made a special exception when it comes to Hank. My late mother told me that my father would sing Cold, Cold Heart to me to quiet me down. So except for maybe an outlaw country minute in the early 1980s when country music was moving away from Nashville and the Grand Old Opry restraints Hank is the only I give a bye to. And off of a viewing of the film under review, I Saw The Light, I made no mistake in that decision.    

Probably everybody knows a Hank Williams song, or a cover of it because almost everybody from pop to folk to rock and roll has tipped his or her hat to the man, one example being the elusive Bob Dylan who even in his most folky heyday was sitting up in his hotel room in some far off land singing The Lost Highway. I have chosen that particular song because Hank’s whirlwind live aptly fits the lyrics to the song. The film deals in passing with his young life starting out being escorted everywhere by a very demanding mother who had some sense that her son was a notch above the hokey stuff that was passing for country music back in the mid to late 1940s when Hank made his mark. Deals with the usual musician’s dilemma of getting a hearing from some record company who will take a chance on the performer.

The heart of the film though deals with the other stuff besides the music. First off his stormy love-hate relationship with his first wife Audrey who drove him crazy (and he she) and which created the ups and downs of his life. Then there was the drinking and drugs (the drug part as usual with all performers then keep hidden by a wall sealed with seven seals). The physical medical problems too some of which contributed to his early death. And the other women, including wife number two, which gave him his reputation as a honky-tonk man as per the title of this entry. 

But in the end you really do have to go back the music, the incredible number of songs that he wrote and that we serious hits in that short six- year span when he was the king-hell-king of the hill in country music. More than that though the effect of music can be summed up in the scene in the film where he was being interviewed by a reporter who asked him why he was so popular. Answer: his songs made the average listener forget about their woes. That was a heavy burden to carry, in the end too heavy. See this well-done film with great covers of Hanks’s songs done in his style and with his energy. 

The Trails and Tribulations Of The Generation of ’68- I’m Going Away My Own True Love


The Trails and Tribulations Of The Generation of ’68- I’m Going Away My Own True Love



By Sam Lowell

Lana Jamison had been frustrated for most of her twenty-eight young years. Frustrated by her whole past, her past that included a serious bout of a childhood where she was not listened to by her parents, was treated like a dishrag, was told to be silent and like it by her tyrannical father and her go-along-with father mother. Had spent years in therapy after college trying to get to the bottom of what that did to her psyche and had come up with few good clues as to how to proceed with her life without feeling she had to look over her shoulder every time he made a remark that expressed her true feelings. That situation had been made worse by the seemingly inevitable run of boyfriends and lovers who had decided on the basis of her demur presence that they could treat her like a dishrag as well. Didn’t feel the need to expect that she might have an opinion of her own and tried might and main to direct her life for her. That woeful series included one husband, Jeff Mullins, who made an art form of putting her down wherever she had an idea that did not jell with his. That marriage had fallen apart of its own weight after a couple of years when Jeff decided one night to run off with the next best thing that came along and left Lan cold.     

Then Fritz, Fritz Taylor came along, came along like a fresh breeze after that disaster with Jeff. She had met him one when she was feeling lonely at a bar in Cambridge that she would frequent before her marriage to Jeff and where they played country music of all things in the heart of Harvard Square. That country music thing had been a throwback to her days on that silent father farm and he would play the stuff on the radio every day. Fritz’s interest had been more recent, what he called his outlaw country music minute when that genre had a run even in urban areas of this country. The Wheatstack had been playing, a group that he followed which played Willie Nelson covers among others and so he had shown up there one Friday night and kissed fate. He had spied her, so he said, while he was sitting a bit forlorn at the bar since he had recently been divorced from his own didn’t understand him wife. Spied her sitting like heaven’s own angel at  a corner table with her girlfriend, so he said as he talked to her as she passed by his bar stool as she was going to the Ladies’ Room. She had been impressed by his light touch, his giving her room to speak about what interested her, and most of all by the no pressure way that he handled the idea of calling her up once she insisted that she really had to go home with her girlfriend. But gave him her phone number. In response he gave her the most gentle good night handshake she had ever received from a man. And so started their love affair.           

Fritz proved, mostly, to be as advertised that first night, except his own bouts of withdrawal and distance which he told her he had inherited from his own dismal childhood down among the working poor by parents who were way over their heads trying to raise six kids on an unskilled worker’s pay. He called them, he and she, soulmates and that stuck, stuck as true as anything he ever said. Lana could take those bouts of darkness for a while as long as they were mixed in with days of happiness. But that mix had of late fallen on hard times. Many times burned she needed some space, needed room to think things through and so one day she mentioned to Fritz that she wanted to head to California by herself, wanted drive across at her own pace and see the country she had missed seeing all her sweet young life. They battled back and forth on the matter for weeks. Fritz telling her that he would improve his disposition and she, having heard it all before and really wanting to get away, arguing for her space. Finally, one morning out of the blue he gave in, wished her Godspeed and that she should keep in contact with him in case anything happened along the way. The idea being when she left that she would return and they would try to start over again, start their love on a higher plain.                

So one sunny April day Lana took off in her Chevrolet, a car filled to the brim with seemingly every possible thing that she owed. No pioneer woman trekking across the country intrepidly, not Lana. Told Fritz as they kissed good-bye that she would call him when she hit Philadelphia. Would see if she couldn’t find him some nice gift to make him feel better, make him get through their separation better. Fritz said in reply simply that he didn’t want any material gift but that the thought of her speedy return was enough to keep her going. That brought a tear to her eyes but she still insisted that she would get him something. So in Philadelphia she called him and asked him if he wanted a nice gold ring that she had seen in a jewelry store that would be a sign of their friendship and love. Fritz begged off again saying he only wanted her own sweet love.       

Beating Down The Legend-Hawkers And Night-Takers-The Legend Slayer Cometh Yet Again-De-Stinging “Spider Man-The Homecoming ” (2017)-A Very Necessary Film Review


Beating Down The Legend-Hawkers And Night-Takers-The Legend Slayer Cometh Yet Again-De-Stinging “Spider Man-The Homecoming ” (2017)-A Very Necessary Film Review 



DVD Review 

By Will Bradley 


I have said it more than once and you have probably said it too that on some days you cannot win. I have recently gotten back in harness in the legend-slayer business which is how I originally got my by-line when I went toe to toe with, well, legendary film reviewer Seth Garth over the fake news legend and serious criminal activity of one Larry Lawrence, his name on the Scotland Yard and Interpol police blotter but better known as Sherlock Holmes. From there it was almost child’s play to sift through the evidence to see what was real and what was baloney going back to the time of Robin Hood and his greasy like a stuck pig PR operation run be a defrocked priest and serial child molester Friar Tuck. (Defrocked not for those myriad later crimes but for robbing the church alms box and for selling votive candled out of his cart stealing them from the altars so nothing really has changed that much as far as the abuse of helpless kids is concerned,)   

What I learned along the way and this is important is that not all legends are spun from pure cloth, fake news, press agent bull or movie studio or literary digest paid hand-outs. The best example of that in the past was the Green Hornet, the individual and the organization of the same name who really did save our asses when the usual greedy humous giant decided he wanted the universe on a platter starting with poor benighted New York which has been the target of many, too many nefarious deadbeat deals and was not particular about who or how many he had to step over on the way.   

More recently and this is where I have been taking some heat although I am not sure if it isn’t from Tony Stark’s massive publicity department, a publicity department whose budget is larger than the American military budget whereas by comparison the Stark Industries research and development department gets something like 25 million and has been cut repeatedly in recent years. (That drastic decrease to pay for the huge and expanding high maintenance costs of keeping a fistful of hit men and women at the ready in case anybody threatens his world-wide operations headquartered in that same benighted New York. You can image the upkeep for a guy like fake legend Hulk to keep him doped up 24/7 and then ramp him up when duty calls.) For what purpose. To tout his so-called Avengers operation made up of himself as a guy called Ironman and a bunch of mutants, men and women, adult men and women. So Tony needs two things one a massive publicity campaign spreading the word, the false word, that the world is safe as long as his operation is around and the profits keep rolling in and another addition to his Avenger vigilante posse. I might be wrong although I have a pretty good nose now for this kind of stuff, but I think Stark was trying to get this Spider Man gag spider kid really to appeal to the younger crowd since the young as usual were getting bored with a bunch of old fogies who could hardly keep themselves safe never mind the world.   

That is background but what has been dogging me of late is this hate campaign ever since I exposed Spider Man as a teenage mutant, a nerd and a holy goof. A fake legend in the making no question. Some anonymous maybe paid e-mailer took umbrage (his or her word) when I mentioned that this so-called legend changed from his high school teenage day clothes to his “uniform” in some wino piss dumpster back alley. So much for legend status for this bum of the month   

But enough of my sorrows and tribulations and on to the latest efforts to turn this teenage mutant into the stuff girls dream about at night. Spider Man (I really hate to call this punk a man but I will play the game as long as I can destroy the bastard’s budding legend which will be my first chance to nip this fake stuff in the bud right at the beginning unlike say that Robin Hood generosity noise spun out before by that ravenous beats Tuck) originally didn’t make the final cut as an Avenger after falling down in what was called the Battle of New York. (For those with short memories that is when some lizards tried to take over Central Park and it took something like the combined might of NATO and American state forces combined to subdue the damn pests after Spider Man, aka at nowhere high school as Peter Parker, a name which was a source of many witty ditties and some salacious remarks as well, fell down, lost the battle against a freaking lizard and had to be evacuated by the aforementioned forces and Tony Stark’s vagabonds and grifters)    

Back in high school Pete is the average flop that a nerd and holy goof relishes looking for some sympathy from girls or maybe fellow nerds. I will say this for the kid he never lost the dream of getting that suit back from Tony Stark even if he did have to put it on in some wino piss dumpster back alley. He decided to free-lance for a while trying desperately to get back on the team. Fortunately, New York, Jesus always New York like Pasadena or Boise couldn’t use a little help for what menaces their existences was being menaced by a guy who used to haul the debris from the Battle of New York and was pissed off that he lost the contract to some low bidder, actually some no bidder, some alphabet soup deep state operation with high budgets and no oversight. In revenge Mack, aren’t the bad guys always named Mack, started stealing whatever was not nailed down and having his techie make some awesome weapons and other stuff to menace the world.

This guy’s operation was strictly low-rent, showed that it was nothing but a start-up dream. This guy, let’s call him Mike because I hate the name Mack, but like a lot of things down in the mud of society don’t get hung up on names, had his techie make up some contraption, that is the best word I can use to describe it, that would let him fly around and steal whatever he wanted unmolested. You should have seen this thing. It would have embarrassed the Wright Brothers, Jesus, even poor Icarus. Strictly nuts and bolts. Even then when Spider Man went up against the guy he took a few beatings before he was able to subdue Rust Man. Here is the howler though, the thing that made me realize this was very much a Tony Stark hijinks, this guy’s daughter went to school with Peter and he had a crush on her. Naturally when Dad went to jail that romance was kaput. One budding legend down.    

The Legend Slayer Cometh Once Again-Dismantling Or Trade Puffing The Legend Of One Jack Reacher?-Tom Cruise’s “Jack Reacher: Never Go Back” (2016)-A Film Review



The Legend Slayer Cometh Once Again-Dismantling Or Trade Puffing The Legend Of One Jack Reacher?-Tom Cruise’s “Jack Reacher: Never Go Back” (2016)-A Film Review





By Will Bradley 

I am not as a legendary-slayer (and on occasion as here a legend promoter I guess we would call it) impervious to the taunts and barbs of the latter-day press agents, flak-catchers and toadies whose sole reason for existence is to grab a soft paycheck hustling their client’s claims to legend status. In this business those noises come with the territory and are what I would call collateral damage incident to getting the average citizen to think through who deserves if anybody legendary status. In my last review touting Jack Reacher’s candidacy for that status I mentioned in passing a few legends that I have put a dent in. That however had not stopped the press agents from howling bloody murder when I step on their clients’ toes.

People are surprised and maybe the reader of this piece will be too that a deadbeat like Robin Hood once he grabbed every piece of land King Richard would grant him turned from cheapjack highway robberies to gouging his yeomen tenants until they cried “uncle” and was so cheap he left his bastard daughter with one of the milkmaids three sheep and said good luck. Three fucking sheep. Yet his paid press agent Friar Tuck filled the Domesday books with so many lies about his generosity that it would take centuries to answer every one. Here is the surprising part this press agency did not stop with Tuck when he passed on to hell but was taken up by his son and the son’s boyfriend and from there passed to the Dominicans who have perpetuated the malarkey until I put a big crimp in their operation. Same with the slaver Captain Blood whose latest flak-catchers have proposed that there be reparations to any descendants of slaves who passed the Middle Passage on one of the Captain’s ship. Bullshit since there is no money attached to that so-called plan. Worse of all and my fellow writer here Laura Perkins can testify to this since she had to deal with this bastard while defending herself against the crazies who wanted to trash her idea that all serious 20th century art is twisted up with sex and erotica are the defenders of Larry Lawrence, aka Sherlock Holmes and his sidekick who worked under various aliases from Nigel Bruce to  Doc Watson like Doyle, Arthur Gilmore Doyle who has attempted a massive counter-attack on the Lawrence legend ( I refuse to call him Holmes as the documented records in Scotland Yard have Lawrence as his real name on his extensive police rap sheet).

Needless to say, when I went to bat for Jack Reacher all hell broke loose not only from the various press agents whose clients I have dinged like those above who came out of their caves with massive furor but those who question why I would proffer an “off the grid” ex-servicemen as worthy of legendary status. A guy who claimed to have known Jack over in Iraq when he ran a big-time MP unit after the heavy fighting subsided claimed, erroneously when I checked the facts, that Jack was running a numbers racket forcing his underlings to fork up dough, or else. Noise, just noise. Moreover, anybody except some toady of some busted legend would have noticed that I went out of my WAY in capital letters to say that I was touting the guy not based on his military record although the skills he learned there would have helped with his actions in the Barr case. Particularly as he went about his “off the grid” business and was impervious to press agent build-ups. I liked that.

The silliest e-mail I received, and I am not sure that it might not have been a ruse put out by the Marvel Comics cabal was challenging my subsequent debasing of the budding legend machine around some punk high school kid name, get this Peter Parker, aka the Spider Man. The kid a joke promoted by one Tony Stark aka Ironman to build up his own legend by having what he called a swarm of docile avengers ready to save the world, or given how many times the place been invaded, marauded, twisted and plain bombed New York City. This kid, this Parker for crying out loud puts his “uniform” on in back alleys with the cats. Give me a break. Last I heard he had been fighting red-tail lizards the smallest variety of the species and barely holding his own after some mad scientist who knew his late father went too fast in his protocol and almost screwed up the world, or least New York. Some young woman classmate had to bail him out by figuring out a formula to stop the little bastards. I will have more to say about the Stark “creation” shortly since the publicity department at Stark Industries had decided to make a film about the kid’s “exploits.”                              

The beauty and it really is a beauty in modern times when everybody with access to a smart phone and that means about everybody is promoting themselves or some silly cause here is Jack out in the wilderness what I have already called “off the grid,” a nomad. Even I could not believe the story when I heard it being just cynical enough not to buy into legends having spent some serious time debunking the run of the mill bums. I initially thought Jack was an invention of some agency, some “deep state” agency who were running him like the old time Soviet sleeper operations (keep the agents under cover and then spring them on an unsuspecting world like they did with Trump). On misty nights when I am in a funk I still think that may be true. But I have taken the leap of faith on this one based on the case he had just finished, the Barr case where he saved a guy he didn’t even like from the big step-off. That intrigued me.

The funny thing about Jack and in the deep recesses of my mind make me finch is how he is as isolated as his is “connected,” knows his way around Washington, D.C. (a town that Stark and his dumbass minions in the Marvel/DC Comic cabal giving New York City a break should think about saving for it surely needs saving). From nowhere Jack can call up his replacement at the old 110th MP unit, the elite unit now led by a woman as it turned out. This woman, a major, is in trouble on two scores-one a couple of her agents got wasted by some rogue U.S. agent in Iraq and closer to home was relieved of her command and charged with espionage. (I might as well forewarn the romantics out there that nothing with take place between the two under the silky sheets, although not for her not giving him some encouragement but Jack is built differently as they say these days. After leaving a hint in the Barr case where Jack did not take on the drop-dead beautiful lawyer defending the sniper that Jack was probably gay and that was okay in this day in age when our legends can be gay or whatever. This case confirmed my suspicions and it is clear that Jack is at least more comfortable around men and we will leave it at that)  

Jack to the rescue following all kinds of false leads after personally springing the Major from the stockade to find out why her people were killed and for what reason (no mean feat and a rather high bar that those fake legends like Robin Hood, Larry Lawrence, Casanova and the crowd would crumble under). This pair, this skilled pair after seven kinds of hell finally figure out that the whole thing is a scam being run at a high level involving weapons to the bad guys in  Afghanistan in exchange for high grade opium to help a faltering state-side business (which Afghans at while moment a good question if you can figure out who is good and who is bad something the British, Russians and American have never figured out to their respective sorrows). A scam that big meant somebody in the American command, a General, was running the whole operation using rogue Black Water-type ex-military to do their bidding. Case closed Jack walked away (away from a bogus paternity suit as well but that was only filler here since we now know Jack’s sexual preferences). Walked away to hitch a ride to some place leaving me here to sing his song of glory. Enough said    


Saturday, April 06, 2019

In The Age Of The Buddy Film-Not-Well, Maybe-Charles Grodin and Robert DeNiro’s “Midnight Run” (1988)-A Film Review


In The Age Of The Buddy Film-Not-Well, Maybe-Charles Grodin and Robert DeNiro’s “Midnight Run” (1988)-A Film Review




DVD Review

By Bart Webber

Midnight Run, starring Charles Grodin, Robert DeNiro, 1988

Funny, lately I have been cutting down seriously on my film reviews working at the behest of site manager Greg Green on the fundamentals of an on-going series on the history of folk music, not the whole history I do not believe that I would live long enough to complete that vast task but the stuff from the 1960s folk minute that slammed through American youth nation and then disappeared almost without  a trace, music that I grew up with. I am deep in research and in doing interviews of whoever is still left standing from the diminishing number of active performers (a la endless tour Bob Dylan), to those who have hung up their cleats tot the coffeehouse owners and promoters who provided the initial infrastructure. That series is scheduled to start in the Summer of 2019.

Then along come the same site manager Greg who knows I am working my ass off to get the series off the ground (and knows as well from the less than perfect start of Laura Perkin’s Traipsing Through The Arts series how important a good start is) and asks me, pretty please, asks me to help him out with this 30th anniversary tribute to the classic buddy film from an age that make an art out of such films Midnight Run. Greg told me he could not get anybody else to do the review the right way meaning having a feel for the buddy film genre having grown up in corner boy society in the Acre section of hometown North Adamsville where every trait exhibited in this film got a similar work-out.  And more importantly that I had had the role as Cash in the earlier buddy work Cash and Dale, not the film version but the off-Broadway production. (You will note, and Greg used it as a selling point, that this film’s 30th anniversary was in 2018 and we are now in deep 2019 he is desperate.)  

The plotline to every buddy film, male or female, think Thelma and Louise is almost unimportant compared to the emerging merging and bonding of the targeted pair. Except that whatever exploits or travails the pair find themselves in should be long and varied enough for the audience to cheer the budding merger on. Midnight Run has that and more.  The plotline is simplicity itself, taking a page from other buddy films and having the pair run through every possible mode of transportation to get to their destination. Let’s cut to the chase.

Duke (Grodin’s role) was the max daddy accountant for Jimmy Swags, you remember that name if you are old enough, since after Bugsy Siegel fell down Jimmy Swags and his boys took over Vegas without a murmur. (Funny how these mobsters like to shorten their names to one syllable ever since Eddie Mars, Marston real name, started the trend in the 1920s when he ran all the rackets in LA after his previous boss, Pat Scanlon, fell down. Fell down according to rumor from a couple of well-placed slugs from the gun of one Eddie Mars). Except the Duke though he was working an up and up racket for real businessmen not as a launderer until he found out he was fronting for the mob. Reaction: take Jimmy Swags down for 15 million no small amount even back then, blow town and give most of the dough to charity. But as the mob’s money man the Feds were looking for this brother too and somehow he got himself in criminal trouble needing bail from his local friendly bail bondsman in beautiful LA. Then he skipped out and is nowhere to be found with only five days left before that crumb-bum bail bondman defaulted for something like half a million for his error in not knowing the Duke was hotter than a pistol. Ouch.

Not to worry though, at least for now since ex-cop crackerjack Jack Walsh (DeNiro’s role) is the max daddy bounty hunter who will make the situation right. With a little razzle-dazzle Walsh finds out that the Duke is hiding away with his wife in New York, finds him and through the first of many ruses clamps Duke and is ready to head west and the big pay-out. (That LA-NYC connection beautiful since three thousand miles will allow for many adventures and misadventures.) A few hour’s plane flight and done. Well of course not otherwise that would be a very short film. The “hook” is the Duke has a well-grounded fear of flying which gets them off that five-hour plane ride and down on the ground. A very much longer way to head west and fraught with more troubles than one could shake a stick at. Along the way they will use every form of private and public transportation except maybe covered wagon heading west. From trains to cars and trucks (borrowing that formula used in other such buddy travel-oriented films.) Naturally nothing will stop Jack from getting his man to LA and his dough to start a new life and in the end he does deliver his bounty to LA.

What counts though is the changing relationship between hyper working- class shoulder to the wheel Jack and droll and wise guy middle class Duke-they don’t like each other much. At the start. Can’t figure out what makes the other guy tick (especially when Duke offers Jack more dough that the bondsman to let him go-can’t figure Jack’s stay with the girl who brung you code). Through a million ups and downs being harassed by a second bounty-hunter courtesy of that bastard bondsman who deserves to get shafted, the Feds once they know Jack has Duke and Jimmy Swags who you know cannot let some holy goof underling get away with 15 mil they get to know each other. Jack in the end gets the Duke to LA mission accomplished but not to said bail bondsman. They part ways as minute friends. Classic.     


 

From The Marxist Archives On The 100th Anniversary Year Of Their Deaths-For the Communism of Lenin, Liebknecht and Luxemburg

From The Marxist Archives On The 100th Anniversary Year Of Their Deaths-For the Communism of Lenin, Liebknecht and Luxemburg



Workers Vanguard No. 1147
18 January 2019

TROTSKY

LENIN
For the Communism of Lenin, Liebknecht and Luxemburg
(Quote of the Week)
One hundred years ago, on 15 January 1919, Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg were murdered in Germany at the behest of the capitalist government run by the Social Democrats, which unleashed the fascistic Freikorps to crush a workers uprising. After receiving news of the assassinations, V.I. Lenin, leader of the October 1917 Russian Revolution, heaped further scathing condemnation on the social-democratic betrayers of the proletariat, including the wing led by Karl Kautsky, in the letter excerpted below. Upholding the revolutionary tradition of the early Communist International, this month we commemorate the “Three L’s”—Liebknecht, Luxemburg and Lenin himself, who died in January 1924.
The foundation of a genuinely proletarian, genuinely internationalist, genuinely revolutionary Third International, the Communist International, became a fact when the German Spartacus League, with such world-known and world-famous leaders, with such staunch working-class champions as Liebknecht, Rosa Luxemburg, Clara Zetkin and Franz Mehring, made a clean break with socialists like Scheidemann and Südekum, social-chauvinists (socialists in words, but chauvinists in deeds) who have earned eternal shame by their alliance with the predatory, imperialist German bourgeoisie and Wilhelm II. It became a fact when the Spartacus League changed its name to the Communist Party of Germany. Though it has not yet been officially inaugurated, the Third International actually exists....
Against Liebknecht are the Scheidemanns, the Südekums and the whole gang of despicable lackeys of the Kaiser and the bourgeoisie. They are just as much traitors to socialism as the Gomperses and Victor Bergers, the Hendersons and Webbs, the Renaudels and Vanderveldes. They represent that top section of workers who have been bribed by the bourgeoisie, those whom we Bolsheviks called (applying the name to the Russian Südekums, the Mensheviks) “agents of the bourgeoisie in the working-class movement,” and to whom the best socialists in America gave the magnificently expressive and very fitting title: “labour lieutenants of the capitalist class.”...
The foregoing lines were written before the brutal and dastardly murder of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg by the Ebert and Scheidemann government. Those butchers, in their servility to the bourgeoisie, allowed the German whiteguards, the watchdogs of sacred capitalist property, to lynch Rosa Luxemburg, to murder Karl Liebknecht by shooting him in the back on the patently false plea that he “attempted to escape” (Russian tsarism often used that excuse to murder prisoners during its bloody suppression of the 1905 Revolution). At the same time those butchers protected the whiteguards with the authority of the government, which claims to be quite innocent and to stand above classes! No words can describe the foul and abominable character of the butchery perpetrated by alleged socialists. Evidently, history has chosen a path on which the role of “labour lieutenants of the capitalist class” must be played to the “last degree” of brutality, baseness and meanness. Let those simpletons, the Kautskyites, talk in their newspaper Freiheit about a “court” of representatives of “all” “socialist” parties (those servile souls insist that the Scheidemann executioners are socialists)! Those heroes of philistine stupidity and petty-bourgeois cowardice even fail to understand that the courts are organs of state power, and that the issue in the struggle and civil war now being waged in Germany is precisely one of who is to hold this power—the bourgeoisie, “served” by the Scheidemanns as executioners and instigators of pogroms, and by the Kautskys as glorifiers of “pure democracy,” or the proletariat, which will overthrow the capitalist exploiters and crush their resistance.
The blood of the best representatives of the world proletarian International, of the unforgettable leaders of the world socialist revolution, will steel ever new masses of workers for the life-and-death struggle. And this struggle will lead to victory.
—V.I. Lenin, “Letter to the Workers of Europe and America” (21 January 1919)