Thorin reacting to Bard's heritage. |
Books to Movies: Desolation of Smaug, Lake-Town and Character Investment
A Cop Can Be a Gentleman: Crabtree in Murdoch Mysteries
One of my favorite examples of Crabtree's gentlemanly behavior occurs in "Game of Kings." Station House 4 needs someone to go "undercover" at a chess tournament. Crabtree immediately bemoans that women aren't allowed to play since his girlfriend, Nina Bloom, is brilliant at the game.
Crabtree, in fact, attends the tournament with Nina whispering instructions in his ear using Murdoch's up-to-date technology.
At the end of the episode, Crabtree brings Nina to the Station House to play against her real opponent, the female relation of a Russian master, who has suffered a lessening of his mental faculties. He gleefully sits on the cot beside the master. He is thrilled to watch two virtuosos at work. He demonstrates no sense of emasculation at witnessing the women's skill.
Give Characters Jobs: Blue Bloods
Blue Bloods demonstrates this truth excellently. Although many of the family dinner conversations are about relationships and school and friendships, nearly all of them deal in some manner with the "family business."
Crime. Detection. Loss. Punishment. Fairness.
Granted, the ganging up on Erin gets tiresome (sure, she can hold her own; it still gets tiresome). But some of the absolute best dialog emerges when people in the family try to thrash out a problem. I've mention elsewhere Jamie's great scene at the dinner table after he gets beaten up and family members share memories of stuff he swallowed as a kid.
On the crime side, I like the scene in "Payback" when Jamie and Erin exchange views on the problem of "he said-she said.""Like trying to deconstruct a milkshake," Erin says in exasperation.
Frank and Henry then make the wonderful point that a cop can be a gentleman.
If you are a writer and suffering from a lack of decent dialog...give your characters WORK! Some of the best dialog I've written--and the most fun--was people arguing over what belongs in museums and what doesn't, precisely because one character assessed pieces for museums. The conversation was the natural result of people discussing what they do and care about and have invested themselves in.
Belated Happy Rat and Mouse Day
Yesterday, November 12th, was Rat and Mouse Day. It reminded me of a subplot in a Castle episode where Alexis takes care of her boyfriend's rat while he is away. It gets lost, and she spends most of the episode trying to find it (with Martha declaring that she is checking into a hotel). She apologizes to the boyfriend who is very accepting.
I Forgive You: Why Theories Always Ultimately Fall Apart
I'm not a fan for numerous reasons--one reason is that the labels within these theories often take on a life of their own. Observed life is twisted to fit the theory. John Douglas discusses in one of his books on serial killers that labeling one particular serial killer unintentionally narrowed the investigation. The investigators began to look for the serial killer along the location where he was labeled to reside. They missed opportunities to look elsewhere. They weren't stupid, but they had bought into the label's presumptions.
One of those presumptions is that people will behave according to the theory rather than according to their experiences and characters--at the macro rather than micro level.
My favorite example of how character overrides designated behavior occurs in Castle, Season 3. *Spoilers* In the search for her mother's killer, Beckett learns what her mother uncovered, which led to her death: that a group of police officers had kidnapped mobsters and held them for ransom. Inadvertently, they killed an FBI agent.
Beckett then discovers that her captain, Captain Montgomery, was one of the original officers.
And she knows him. She knows what type of man he is. She knows what he has done for her. She knows how he has trained her. If one thinks deeply about their relationship, one could well-imagine that she would feel a deep sense of betrayal. But in the moment of his confession and her knowledge of what he plans to do, she reacts not according to some theory or pre-determined response."I forgive you," she declares and pleads with him to remain alive.
Ultimately, the world is personal.
Books to Movies: What Makes an Epic an Epic?
So, if you are going to create an epic, how do you do it?
Latest McCall Smith: The Great Hippopotamus Hotel
Over the last few years, I have been reading all the books in Alexander McCall Smith's series, The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency.
I got caught up last fall.
This past month, I read the latest: The Great Hippopotamus Hotel.
I am astonished, all over again, that McCall Smith can resist the pull of "after so many books/episodes, I must get melodramatic!"
Television shows suffer from this assumption all the time. Even Bones, which was better than most, gave us Pelant arc. *Sigh.*
McCall Smith, without being repetitious (though, in fairness, there are only so many crimes to go around), gives us human beings who go on living their everyday lives while dealing with the related vagaries and oddities and unexpectedness and mundaneness. There are the mysteries, of course, but the interactions are ones that we can all relate to. Dorothy Sayers, I believe, once remarked that any gathering of people can find common ground in a discussion about plumbing. With McCall Smith, one such discussion involves men and their socks!
There is also a hint of magical realism, which terms often makes me roll my eyes since it seems like an intellectual euphemism for "fantasy." But in McCall Smith's series, the enchantment of the country--to its characters, to its visitors--lays over everything. Magic is not unexpected, as with Mma Makutsi's talking shoes.And the writing is very funny in a gentle, calm way that almost creeps up on the reader. So, regarding those shoes and the small man who wants a sports car (but isn't going to tell his wife)--
What shoes allied to the female cause--as most ladies' shoes are--would remain silent in the face of the arrival at the garage of Mr. Mo Mo Malala, unashamedly planning to deceive his wife over the not unconsiderable matter of a small but high-powered Italian sports car.
Every book is a delight!
Dysfunctional Relationships in Crime Shows: Disguise in Castle
In Castle, the dysfunctional relationships often come down to the problem of disguises. That is, one member of the couple has been hiding not just A truth (a dirty secret) but an entire alternate reality: a legal identity, a complicated past, another self.
While romance shows and novels often see disguise as an opportunity for forgiveness and reconciliation (the Duke in Twelfth Night is happy, not disturbed, by Viola's revelation), murder mysteries correctly pinpoint how the revelation of a "new" self could devastate a lover.
As I comment in my post on Jessica Fletcher:
"[Jessica] is completely devastated [when she thinks her husband may have cheated]. It isn't so much the straying that bothers her. It is that she thought she knew [him]. Not only would her husband have strayed and kept that secret to himself, he would have kept a life-changing occurrence (his child) from her. And he simply isn't the kind of man to abandon his own child. Did she even know him?"
Do I even know you? is a question that crops up again and again in Castle. "Vampire Weekend" pits a son against the woman who raised him as well as a husband against the wife who entirely betrayed his trust. In the "The Mistress Always Spanks Twice," the victim doubled as a grad student and a dominatrix. Several Castle murderers are camouflaged as upstanding citizens while in "The Fifth Bullet," an amnesiac character accepts that he could be a murderer. In the meantime, the "3XK" killer deliberately and cruelly uses the investigators' identities against them in one of the show's darkest episodes.
Of course, Castle also supplies a great deal of humor. There's the pizza episode with shop owners vying over who is the true "authentic terrific Nick's." In the episode "That 70's Show," the entire station house pretends to belong to an earlier era, all to help a man who hid his true feelings from other gangsters several decades earlier.
However, my favorite example of how disguise or double identities can entirely disturb a person's mental health occurs in Season 3's "Nikki Heat" when the actress shadowing Beckett begins to adopt her clothes, hair, and mannerisms. Castle assures Beckett that he didn't sleep with the actress: "It would have been way too meta."
Ryan: We really should have a code word |
so we know... |
Come Dressed Up to Work Day: Happy Halloween!
Castle ran with this trope quite often. My favorite is Beckett's marvelous beaded red dress in Season 1. She is wearing it on a "stake-out" at a charity shindig for high-rollers (Castle gets them in). I don't normally like sleeveless dresses (seriously--they always look like they are about to fall off, even on royalty), but boy, Stana Katic wears it well!
When she shows up later at the station in her normal clothes, the boys are disappointed. She merely rolls her eyes.
The 1970s episode is another of my favorites: everybody at the station gets to dress up!And Major Crimes offers a great moment when Tao shows up to a crime scene in a tux.
Tao is a consultant on a show called Badge of Justice, and it just won Best Teleplay for Non-serialized 60-minute episodic Police Procedural on Basic Cable.
He arrives in a limousine and he is dressed to the nines. Michael Chan looks sharp!
Books to Movies: Is the Flawed Character Likable?
The issue for this post is:
Can a a movie help us audience members love a flawed character?
Loving a flawed character is is not quite the same as loving a villain. Lots of viewers love villains! Fredric Lehne from Supernatural discusses how Supernatural fans adore him. In fact, he has been treated better as a fantasy villain than he has as a "realistic" villain, proving (once again) that fantasy and sci-fi fans are much more level-headed than people who favor "true to life" drama.
I personally am endlessly amused by Cigarette Smoking Man in X-Files. Good villains are rather easy to love.
But--can people love the hero who not only makes mistakes but is not always entirely appealing?
That is, movie/television can go a long way towards selling a character who is not entirely appealing on paper.
When I read The Warden by Trollope, I honestly thought the author was being more sardonic than supportive regarding the titular character, Mr. Septimus Harding. There is a very funny sequence in the book where Harding sneaks around to avoid his family members; he is worried that they will overbear him with their arguments before he can make the right decision. Trollope uses a slightly aloof tone--he comes across as not entirely sympathetic to Harding though he entirely sides with Harding at the end.In the BBC production, Harding is played by Donald Pleasance! I mean...it's Donald Pleasance! He is totally adorable. Go, Harding! The audience WANTS him to get away from his overwhelming family.
Likewise, Sean Bean in Lord of the Rings is a far more sympathetic character as Boromir than the book Boromir.
This issue may be one where movies have an edge over books--as long as one can get the right actor!
Books to Movies: The Desolation of Smaug, Mirkwood, More on Pacing, What to Keep, What to Ignore
And they introduce the Tauriel/Kili romance. I have mentioned elsewhere why I'm a fan--though I wish the movie had paid the romance off better (not necessarily happier, just better). I will discuss the trilogy's ending more later.
The Wood Elves are great characters in general: "less wise and more dangerous," as both Beorn (in the movie) and the narrator (in the text) state. The Elf King, Thranduil, played by Lee Pace, is a fantastic damaged leader.The conflict between him and Thorin is more direct in the movie than in the book but the dispute over gems is there plus the sense of long-held grievances and lifelong distrust: "Take him away...even if he waits a hundred years...I'm patient. I can wait."
In the book, Thorin and the other dwarfs are separated during their imprisonment. The others don't know what happened to Thorin, and Bilbo carries messages between him and the others. He also reconnoiters over several weeks and waits until the feast to free the dwarfs.
The movie speeds everything up.
Frankly, the Mirkwood sequence is one of the best in all the films with excellent pacing. It also has one of my favorite "nope, Martin Freeman doesn't need a voice over" scenes when Bilbo realizes he failed to get a barrel for himself.
Even the chase-chase-chase scene doesn't bother me. The dwarfs escape; the elves chase them; Azog and his people join in to get the dwarfs but end up inviting the elves' ire. The sequence is engaging, has a point, has mini-emotional arcs, and is actually fun to watch. It also brings several plots together, and there's no breakaway until the dwarfs get free. Then, the movie cuts to Gandalf.
Generally speaking, the action from Beorn through to the barrels is some of the best in the trilogy! The choices of what to keep and what to discard and what to speed up are very smart.
In sum, I think there are several reasons for the apparent seamlessness:
1. What happens next is naturally what would happen next, including Tauriel and Kili's conversations.
2. The characters' personalities--specifically Thranduil, Thorin, and Bilbo--are well-established enough to explain certain actions and reactions. Everyone behaves believably.
3. The main characters remain the center without feeling "showcased," so Bilbo's reaction to the ring in Mirkwood--a scene where he is separated again from the others--feels in pace with the rest rather than a breakaway.
4. The barrel-chase scene, again, highlights personality rather than being just a bunch of people getting felled by axes and falling into water. It even has some humor, as with Bombur's barrel act!
Consequently, The Desolation of Smaug, extended version, is the one DVD set of Jackson's movies I purchased for myself. I consider the piece fairly high quality as an actual movie.
All the Ms: MacKay to Mackenzie
Mackay, Malcolm: How a Gunman Says Goodbye is a hitman story in Glasgow. Gangs/assassins with noir nobility. Engaging. But the truth is, “gangs” and all related topics are kind of a blind spot in my brain. I can't locate my interest. (I did enjoy Red though!)
Mackay, Shena: A collection of short stories. From Dreams of Dead Women’s Handbags, I read “The Stained-Glass Door,” which is depressing modern life made poetic. And I began to ponder if short story writers inevitably write depressing short stories with contemporary settings. There are plenty of sci-fi and romance short stories out there, but frankly, it is harder to write a short story with plot than a rambling depressing story with supposed meaning.
Mackel, Kathy: Alien in a Bottle is a book about a kid who wants to blow glass and gets help from aliens. Not a plot I ever would have thought of!
Makechnie, Amy: Ten Thousand Tries has a great first-person narrator in the person of a twelve-year-old boy with attitude who wants to be the best soccer player ever. The book starts out strong and is one of those I can imagine coming back to.
MacKenzie, J.R.: A Temptation Tale: A Father Tom Novel is a novel about Catholic priests in which a cat plays a character.
In fairness, A Temptation Tale is also about a community. But the cat seems oddly irrelevant, and I moved on.
MacKenzie, Ian: Feast Days is contemporary self-awakening in Brazil (Americans in Brazil). The writing is very contemporary: vignettes as story, at least in the beginning. I did like the line in the first chapter, “Every man tells himself he could have been a spy in another life.”
Mackenzie, Jassy: Random Violence begins with the death of the victim. Although Columbo episodes start this way (or rather with the murderer’s plan), I don’t care for the approach in books. And even with Columbo, I sometimes just skip to the parts where Peter Falk shows up. The actual investigation interests me more (even with Matlock, I sometimes skip the court scenes–again, the actual investigations interest me more).
Chivalry: Bert and Lydia in Murdoch Mysteries
A great example of chivalry occurs in one of my favorite Murdoch Mysteries, "Dead End Street." An autistic woman has created a cityscape, specifically of her street, including clues to a murder.
The autistic woman is cared for by her brother, Bert. And I love Bert's chivalry. What I like is not that Bert is "look at me as I swoon over my sacrifices." Other people on the street imply that Bert's wife left him because he cares for his sister. But Bert never makes that argument. Nor does he act put upon or burdened. He makes no excuses. He deals with issues as they arise. His sister's condition is a reality, no more, no less.
He doesn't come across--as some Murdoch characters do--as enlightened. He comes across, rather, as entirely matter-of-fact.
And the episode makes great points, including a point about "political correctness." When the inspector uses the term "imbecile," Crabtree replies, "I believe such people as Lydia are no longer referred to as imbecile. It's felt to be demeaning. The correct term nowadays is moron."
Bert amused by Lydia contradicting Murdoch. |
I like history that does what the episode does here: presents a modern issue within the context of its time. People only know what they know. And they do the best they can.
In the context of his time and now, Bert is a great guy.
The Violence of Back to the Future
As many people doubtless remember, one of the objections to the first Back to the Future was that it teaches violence as a solution. I've always considered this a rather petulant objection.
1. The movie isn't about violence. It is about assertiveness. Marty's dad is a wimpy guy who gets some spine and voila, it changes his future. Spielberg carries the theme into the next two films, although he changes it slightly (possibly in answer to the objectors) by making Marty's assertiveness a matter of "Just saying, 'No'." But it's the same idea in different form.
2. However, let's suppose that the film is a kind of Hamlet meets Rambo declaration regarding the uses of violence to improve life...what is the answer? When the bully starts harassing the girl is Marty's dad suppose to call the police, lecture Biff on his non-PC behavior, write a strongly worded article, try a diplomatic solution? And when Biff starts wrenching on his arm, should Marty's dad have called a cease-fire and asked the UN to get involved?
Now, granted, movies set up their own problems or strawmen. Which is why evil capitalist businessmen abound in droves in Hollywood. Set 'em up, kick 'em down, shake your finger a lot. And Biff is an over-the-top villain.
But the easiest solution is just to hit the guy. Yet the objectors never seem to stop to think about the problem as an actual problem. Here's a situation: what do you do about it? Which question is, I think, one purpose of fiction.
I suppose what the objectors dislike is that Marty's family benefits from this punch, which, as I've noted in my (1) response kind of misses the point of the punch, or what the punch represents. It's a kind of weird literalness which insists on taking the action literally but subjectifying the result to a bizarre degree. So, the movie was JUST about the punch, but the viewers won't understand that it's JUST about the punch; they will extrapolate the punch for use in their own lives. So viewers are too left-brained to see the punch as symbolic but too right-brained to say, "Hey, this is just a movie."
When, the fact is, standing up for yourself violently can make a difference in the future, good or bad. The whole point of turning the other cheek isn't that the Rambo approach doesn't work. Jesus Christ was advocating an alternative for entirely separate reasons from the effectiveness of violence. He was saying, "Let it go, even though you could take the guy's head off." Which is very different from saying, "Hey, this doesn't work." The Romans believed bulldozing Palestine would solve their problems in that area, and it did (temporarily). It didn't solve them for anybody else, but it certainly solved them for the Romans. (Their particular end-of-the-line came from an entirely different direction.) On the more positive side, the Revolutionary War worked too. Of course, the French Revolution didn't, but Waterloo certainly worked for the British.
I will agree that protestors behaving violently is pointless and chilling. But again, it isn't because violence doesn't work as a statement. A number of academics have complete bought into it, much as they bought into riots during the lockdowns. The question is, Should violence be used? and Is it effective in the long-run? But those questions can only be asked if violence is realistically addressed, not turned into something entirely metaphysical (bad for you but good for me).
I will also admit that there is value in Marty's final insight--when faced with Old West Biff, instead of reacting with a gun fight, he throws up his hands and goes, "Are you kidding me?"
But suppose he had needed to face off Biff in a high-noon situation? Hey, Star Trek: TNG solved that problem with technology! But Worf still shot his gun.
Sometimes, one does have to handle a physical confrontation. Better to do it well than not.
Books to Movies: Plays are Not Movies Either, Shaw's Pygmalion to My Fair Lady
Agatha Christie understood this truth very well. The plays she wrote of her own books are not the same as the books. In one case, she actually changes the identity of the murderer. In another, she changes the love interest. In another, she leaves two people alive. And so on...
The point here is that a movie is ALSO not a play (and, to make things more complicated, a stage drama is not a musical). One of my favorite Hitchcock's, Rope, points the difference. Based on a play, it was filmed in several long takes in a single location, like a play. I think it is a great experiment, but I can also see why it is seldom repeated. Although the film mimics a play, the elements that benefit a play are missing: spectacle and context.
Musical productions such as Webber's Phantom and Les Miserables the Musical provide continual spectacles--almost a series
of magic tricks--while the songs perform the same function as soliloquies: they encourage the audience to invest in specific characters.
A stage drama relies far more on context, the overall experience. The eye can roam more naturally than it does with film. The result is about the drama's overall impact or purpose, though the stage type itself can make a difference. I saw Ian McKellan live in both Richard III and The Cherry Orchard during a study-abroad Theatre in London program. Richard III was captivating but mostly I remember it as a series of images. Cherry Orchard,
which was performed in a smaller theater with audience members on three
sides (a thrust stage), was gripping. I still remember hanging over the "standing
room only" area watching Ian McKellan WALK. I was utterly captivated.
I would have yet a different reaction to a movie version of either play.
Shaw's Pygmalion and then My Fair Lady showcase the changes that occur when a story moves from stage drama to musical to movie.
One major change is who Eliza ends up with. In the stage drama, she ends up with Freddy, not the professor. Shaw provides a long explanatory essay at the end of Pygmalion regarding Eliza and Freddy's future. Their ineptness at running a flower shop leads to the couple being continually supported by the Colonel and Higgins. Shaw remarks,
"And it is notable that though she never nags her husband, and frankly loves the Colonel as if she were his favorite daughter, she has never got out of the habit of nagging Higgins that was established on the fatal night when she won his bet for him. Galatea never does quite like Pygmalion: his relation to her is too godlike to be altogether agreeable."
Shaw is right at the human level. A movie, however, creates investment at the personal level. In My Fair Lady the movie, the camera focuses on the professor--the audience is drawn to him (quite literally) and invests in him. Since the couple have chemistry, the audience can "buy" into Eliza returning to him rather than going off with Freddy. (The musical numbers further that bond. Besides, in a musical, the leads always end up together.)
On stage without music, Freddy is one of several people Eliza can go off with. He isn't really the point anyway. Professor Higgins isn't either. The point is the scenery or--if the director goes in for bare bones--the lack of scenery. It's the costumes. It's the cast. It's the banter at full volume. It's the entire stage.
On the same study abroad when I saw McKellan, I saw Heartbreak House (another Shaw) with Paul Scofield, Vanessa Redgrave, and Felicity Kendal (Good Neighbors). It was a fantastic production with the addition of music (the director was Trevor Nunn). What I remember now is the main characters standing about the sumptuous drawing room in the final scene. The combination of set and lighting created a portrait. (I remember equally sumptious sets from a production of The Importance of Being Earnest staged by SPAC's in-door theater.)
Prevent the Christie Murder: Save the Teenage Girl
*Spoilers*
One of the saddest deaths in Agatha Christie books--and proof that she was capable of great pathos--is the teenage girl in The Body in the Library, the one who is used to replace the target and confuse time of death.
She is young, pretty, and utterly taken in by the slick bad guy who persuades her that he is an agent looking for upcoming stars. It is the wildly implausible, wished-for idea--the equivalent of winning the lottery: "She was strolling along the boardwalk, an agent spotted, her, and she became an overnight sensation."
That type of thing does happen--but an examination of stars' backgrounds indicates that many more of them have networks already in place when they arrive in Hollywood. The rest scrimp and save and take whatever jobs come along until they get their breaks.
But the myth of the "Instant Star" is a popular one, and the young girl falls for it. The 1984 Pamela Reeves is presented as excited and innocent and completely trusting in her good fortune. She tells her friend who is excited on her behalf but keeps her secret. Pamela goes to the hotel, expecting to be chaperoned while she is made up for a screen test...
Only to be drugged and then killed.Agatha Christie mentions in several books the importance of a young woman having reliable adults who look out for her. Christie's position is far less sermonizing than she sounds. She was a concerned but not hovering mother. She also believed quite firmly in young women taking chances and leaving the family nest--parental figures who can't let go also come in for her criticism. And she shows great compassion to the parents in Body in the Library, who cannot have foreseen their child's willingness to ignore "Don't Talk to Strangers" when the pay-off was so alluring. (Likewise, children stop considering a stranger a stranger if that "stranger" asks them to help find a pet.)
The mother and daughter relationship |
in Bertram's Hotel is characterized |
primarily by abandonment. |
My murder prevention detectives would be able to easily protect Pamela--warn her parents, scare off the murderer, distract her--but not if she gives them the slip. They are dealing with a potential victim who is truly that self-defeating, as many parents have discovered.
There's a reason teenagers are considered borderline nuts.