Final Act: Revenge

    Final Act

    As the end of the year approaches, so does Six In 2006, my big plan to complete six screenplays in one year. Here’s a quick recap.

    January & February: rewrite STRANGE ANGELS. Done. Though, it needs yet another pass. Can’t quite seem to crack that one. It’s difficult and rather large in scope.

    March & April: Write ELEMENT. Done. It’s an obscure idea, but turns out closer to my original vision than I’d dared hope. I end up finishing it in the second week of May, so I’m a little behind schedule.

    May & June: Write BLOOD & MIST. I get a late start, but nine weeks later I’ve got a 139 page script printed and waiting for the hedge clippers. Way too long. And it’s got focus issues. It’s the prequel to BLOOD & DUST that I’d been wanting to write for a long time, and my original idea was sort of a Heart Of Darkness on a Mississippi riverboat in 1886. With teeth. The result has promise, but it needs work. Since I can’t nail where the problem is, I move on to…

    July & August: BLOOD & GLASS. It’s the conclusion to the trilogy, set in today’s Los Angeles. And it works beautifully (again, way better than I’d hoped.) Though, since I’m now about four weeks behind, I don’t finish it until the end of September. The finale comes together so well that I realize how I can go back and fix MIST.

    October: I have to decide what to do. I have a couple more scripts to go and no real expectation that I’m going to pull them off. And one of the scripts I’d finished needs work. I decide to return to MIST and work out the bugs because I really want that Blood Trilogy to be done. I want to stack ’em up and look at ’em. I want to hold them in my hands and come up with synonyms for “heft.” I just want the bloody things to be done. So I jump back into the river.

    November & December: The final act of the year. I find myself working more doing the freelance web design because funds suddenly grow scarce. Amoeba kicks into higher gear as the Holidays rush in. I find that time gets thin. I’m tilting at BLOOD & MIST but it’s becoming quagmire-ish. I’ve almost worked it out, but there are still problems. Who’s it really about? What’s the best spot for the sex scene? When do we find out how John Kelley lost his arm? I decide it’s time to do something I rarely do when screenwriting: I pull out the index cards.

    I make a quick stop at Staples and pick up four cork panels (smaller and lighter than a regular cork board.) I affix them to my wall using the provided sticky tape, which is really annoying because I can barely peel that tape off my fingers. It’s like super glue in rubber form. I arrange a ton of index cards on the boards. I play with them. I arrange them. I move them around. Oh yes. This is helping.

    But two weeks later, I haven’t returned to the project. My to-do list is getting long and a depressed aimlessness has entered my flat like a shambling, oafish creature and is now taking up the whole couch. I’m like Luke, Leia, Han and Chewy in the Death Star compactor, caught between Thanksgiving on one side and New Year’s Day on the other while Christmas coils beneath the water with its single, unblinking eye.

    Then a couple days ago I’m cooking vindaloo and sugar cookies (not at the same time) and I hear a commotion from the living room. I emerge from the kitchen, cook’s hat askew, apron blood-stained and blackened, to see that in spite of the supertape, three of my four bulletin boards have just given up the ghost and dropped to the floor. The only one remaining is the last one, and on it, a single card:

    Revenge

    I don’t know what it means, but somehow it seems oddly appropriate. In the end, Six In 2006 turns out to be Four in 2006. Four’s not bad, but it lacks rhyme. I should have tried this two years ago. So now… Seven in 2007?

    Yeah, right.

    • Music

    SFX: Electric President

    electric prexy

    Occasionally I’m scrolling through the music folder on my hard drive and I come across something that I just don’t recognize. It happens this morning as I’m loading up the ol’ Rio Carbon for the drive north to Santa Barbara. “Electric President?” WTF? Who the heck are they? I run a quick check on allmusic.com. Yep, they exist. But where did I get it? What made me grab it from work? I throw it onto the player in case I get a moment to check it out.

    It’s not until on the way back home, after having a nice lunch with lovely, witty Nicole (whom I haven’t seen in a decade, and whom I didn’t realize how much I missed until today) and dinner at the Brewhouse with Christian and Briana and then a late coffee with my old boss Tom Hurd (who wants to start a website called itchyforearms.com — I’m all for it) that I finally track to the opening cut on the album and press PLAY. I expect to be mildly interested for a few tracks. I’m just pulling onto the 101 at the time. That means I don’t expect to be still listening past, say, La Conchita. But as I pull back off the 101 at Highland and glide down past the Bowl and into the bosom of Hollywoodland I’m still listening.

    Electric President is an electro-acoustic wonderland. It’s what you might expect to hear if Mark Linkous (Sparklehorse) met up with Jimmy Tamborello (Dntel) and birthed a little electric baby. Who…uh…then went on to win the primary and then the nomination and then…well, you get it.

    I get home well after ten o’clock that night and check out their site. Seems they were on tour recently. Too bad I missed it. From the site:

    The U.S. tour is now over with. Special thanks to everyone that came out, and sorry if the show sucked. We don’t play live very often anymore. And another thanks to Alias and Tarsier for putting up with us. You guys are sweethearts.

    Alias & Tarsier. Ah, I remember now. I’m talking to Burgess at Amoeba. he hands me the Electric President CD and tells me to give it a shot. Burgess records under the name Healamonster with his girlfriend, Rona, who goes by the name Tarsier. And… are you seeing the connection? Burgess and Rona have recently returned from the road, where they performed with Alias on a number of dates across the country. Apparently, Electric President was part of that.

    Mystery solved. And this what I’ve gained. Check out “Ten Thousand Lines,” a nice little track that actually makes me smile during its final moments (somewhere around La Conchita, actually).

    ep

    • Hollywoodland

    Condom Torn

    I get back from New Mexico on Saturday. Everyone is talking about the windy Friday. Evidence is all around; leaves in piles in the gutter, downed palm fronds everywhere…and the once proud column of white at Sunset & Vine hangs in tatters.

    Thank goodness the banners (kinda) survived.

    Sunset & Vine

    Again, I just have to know what the heck all that plastic is (was) for. Are they going to re-wrap it? Can they just keep going? Are those Motorola banners the only reason the thing was wrapped in the first place? Does anyone know?

    Tattered plastic

      Fire on Martel

      Martel fire

      “Hey, I dont know if you like fire, but there’s a big one across the street.”

      My neighbor has just knocked on my door. I just got home from a long day at work. I had awakened at four AM in Mew Mexico, hopped on a plane to LAX and driven straight to Amoeba where I ran around for nine hours in service of hundreds of last-minute shoppers. A hard day. A tough job.

      But as I step outside to the chaos and craziness of Martel Avenue I realize that there are some people who have far tougher jobs than I do:

      Firefighters arrived quickly to reports of a structure fire with a person trapped to discover flames extending from the front portion of a subdivided single family home threatening a three-story apartment building to the south.

      According to witnesses, an 18 year-old male had been seated in the living room of the one-story duplex, when he noticed a nearby artificial Christmas Tree catch fire. At first attempting to unplug the tree, he was driven back by intense heat and flames, and subsequently proved unable to find or muster a fire extinguisher within the home.

      His 61 year-old father departed his spouse in a rear bedroom in an attempt to assist his son, before both men were pushed from the house by searing heat and ink-dark smoke that rose from floor-to-ceiling, making their rescue of the man’s 56 year-old wife impossible.

      Read the full account at the LAFD blog here.

      See a few more photos (taken by my ailing digital camera) here.

      • Hollywoodland

      Amoeba in Repose

      Amoeba

      This is how Amoeba looks on December 18, 2006 at 7:50 PM. By the time you read this I’ll be in the air on my way to New Mexico for a couple days. I’ll fly back in on Saturday early, pick up my car at LAX and then drive straight here, where I’ll work what will likely be the busiest day of the year. You should drop by that Saturday and say hello. It’s really something to see, a Saturday before Christmas at Amoeba.

        McSweeney’s: Jokes For Robots

        robot

        This is another thing that would have made milk come out my nose had I been drinking it. McSweeney’s lists are always worth a few chuckles. This one is excellent. Jokes Made By Robots For Robots.

        And as long as we’re at McSweeney’s again, here are a couple more lists for your pleasure:

        Errors in Communication Between My Hairdresser and Me, in the Form of What I Said and What He Heard

        The Extended Family of Thespian Rip Torn

        Eleven Lunchmeats I Have Invented

        From the Prog Rock Ice Cream Shoppe: Flavors Inspired by a Certain Canadian Power Trio (Rush fans only)

        • Music

        SFX: Rainer Maria

        Catastrophe Keeps Us Together

        It’s Monday. You know what that means. Time to share with you all my new favorite song. Way back in the mists of early 2006, Rainer Maria released their first new studio thingy in years. It’s called, “Catastrophe Keeps Us Together.” It takes me until now to actually listen to it because, well, sometimes I’m overwhelmed. But I’m glad I did. The album’s opening title track, “Catastrophe,” wins the award for “Song Most Sounding Like It Should Be At The End of A Really Good Movie” for 2006. That’s an important award in this one’s universe.

        Here ya go.

        • Music

        Joy! Noel! Ding! Dong!

        LEDs!

        Christmas is here. It’s hard to tell, here in Hollywood, except the sparkly illuminated stars stretch down Santa Monica Boulevard from La Brea to Doheny. I love those. They always seem to magically appear one night, like presents under a tree. One day, it’s just plain ol’ Santa Monica Boulevard, the next it’s the Avenue of Joy. Except a couple Wednesdays ago when I spin with Nick at Carbon I come back through town at two AM and see the elves hard at work with their pneumatic lifts. And the magic evaporates.

        I get my own dose of Christmas cheer yesterday at Rite Aid. Someone’s finally making LED Christmas lights on the cheap, so I pick up a couple strings. As I wrap them around my window sill, I’m spinning the new five-disc exercise in excess known as “Songs For Christmas” by Sufjan Stevens. It seems every year he gets together with his buddies and records a session of Christmas tunes to give out as presents to friends and family. The guy is absurdly prolific (although even at this rate, he’ll never get around to recording those fifty CD’s for fifty states).

        I try to avoid Christmas carols like ebola, but when they’re dressed up in the jangly, intimate fluffiness of Sufjan and friends, I’ll make an exception. Besides, there are plenty of original tracks to be had. Since it’s the season of giving, I’ll share a couple with you here.

        Nothing says Hollywood Christmas like LED Christmas lights and music by Mr. Stevens.

        Songs For Christmas

          Cat and Girl

          Cat and Girl

          Just clicked on a random installment of the web comic Cat and Girl by Dorothy Gambrell (took me forever to find her name.) This episode made me laugh out loud. I dunno why.

          • keefe
          • Music

          Michael Keefe Reviews: November

          We’ve been at this for two years now. Tuneslinger, man of letters and wielder of the golden pen, Michael Keefe, has been writing the music reviews and I’ve been posting ’em on my site. I think I’ve got the easy end of things. Mr. Keefe has been doing all the work. and here it is, December and he’s got a new cluster of excellent reviews for you pleasure. It’s interesting to look back on the reviews from the past and see how his writing style has changed. He’s always written well, but I think his stuff is better than ever now. The adjectives flow more freely and with more confidence. Maybe it’s because in that time, he’s become a professional. Not only is he still wriitng for Pop Matters, he’s also got a gig at about.com.

          Anyway, enough gushing. Check it out. Ten new reviews, including releases by Babybird, TV On The Radio and Joanna Newsom.

          Joanna Newsom

            Dead Letter

            I send cd’s to my friends in San Francisco sometimes. I haven’t as much lately, but occasionally a bit of music comes along that they just need to hear, or I’ll throw together one mix or another for fun and drop it in the nearest mailbox. Only once have the cd’s not made it to their intended targets. I made a couple discs for Lauren, one of them, the new album by Carmen Rizzo, the other a collection of tunes by Laura Viers, sequenced according to the setlist from her Spaceland show. She never got ’em.

            I guess I was short by a few cents postage, or perhaps I typed the address wrong. There’s also been the theory that her mailbox was just too small and there was no place for the carrier to just leave it. Whatever the case, they were just gone. That was in November. Of 2005.

            But today, a year later, I get ’em back.

            returned cds

            Anyone have any idea why it would take a year for these to get back to me? What happened? Where would they have been sitting all this time?

            • Cinema

            Inland Empire

            “Um…what’s it about?”

            Inland Empire Poster

            We’re at LACMA. David Lynch’s new and nearly impenetrable film, Inland Empire, has just finished a three hour onslaught. Many of us are blinking our way back into the conscious world. The man who was next to me–who squirmed and gasped through the entire film–is gone. I don’t know if he left the building or went insane. Lynch is onstage, along with Laura Dern for a brief Q&A.

            The only thing he can tell us, he says, waving his fingers in his characteristic style, is that “it’s about a woman in trouble.”

            Laura Dern: a woman in trouble

            Trouble indeed. Looking at the reviews that have begun to emerge around the blogosphere, it appears that this new film, shot entirely on low-res digital video, people aren’t quite sure what to make of this new one. Whereas Mulholland Drive gave us that perfect Lynchian balance of narrative and nightmare, this one plunges without hesitation into a dream world so dense and obscure that I’m willing to bet it’ll serve as the source for scores of dissertations.

            Metacritic provides a nice cross-section of reviews. TV Guide and Premiere lavish praise. Other critics scratch their heads. My favorite review comes from David Edelstein at New York Magazine:

            Having passed the Mulholland Drive exam with flying colors, I was almost recklessly confident going into David Lynch’s newest dreamscape, Inland Empire: primed to follow the story as it splintered, reformed, folded back in on itself, and splintered again; prepared for the notion that all identity is mutable and all reality approximate. Three hours later, I barely knew my name, let alone what had happened in the movie. Inland Empire is way, way beyond my powers of ratiocination. It’s the higher math.

            Inland Empire does tell a story. There’s an actress (played by Laura Dern, who also gets co-producing credit.) She wins a role in film. The script for the film may carry a curse.

            And that’s it. I think. The rest is a bizarre, surreal journey through the mind of a woman. Is it the actress? Is it a prostitute living on the streets of Hollywood? Is it a simple woman married to a mysterious Polish man? And what’s with the rabbits?

            Inland Empire

            I love it, though it’s about as difficult as they come. Those who like to climb about on narrative threads will find themselves frustrated. Who are those Polish men? Why did that woman disappear? What’s with all the gorgeous dancers? These are dream images. The only way to understand them is to try NOT to understand them. Let go of the desire to impose order on the parade and let it mill about. Let your unconscious deal with it. That’s how I survived.

            And when the final scenes unfold I find myself realizing that the Lynch has somehow managed to achieve perfect closure. How? I don’t know. In fact, I can’t even really tell you how the film ends. I just know that it ends perfectly.

            Lynch

            Afterwards, my friend Maria, who’s about as big a Lynch-head as I know, laments the film. She feels disappointed, let down. She hates digital video and she wishes he had been more focused. But she also admits that she felt the same way about Mulholland Drive when she first saw it, and Lost Highway before. And now she thinks they’re among his very best.

            She’ll come around.

            • Cinema

            The Hollywood Code

            code

            Matthew Inman over at drivl.com gives voice to what lurks in every movie-goer, especially those of us with computers, as a common gripe. Why can’t Hollywood get the cinema of code right?

            Here’s the link.

            I always notice when FX designers take special liberties in designing computers in the movies. Sandra Bullock, for example, uses a terminal in the film The Net that bears less resemblance to a real world computer than a loaf of banana bread bears to Pope Benedict. And Scotty, in Star Trek IV, calls up a remarkable, rotating molecular model for “transparent aluminum” with just a few strokes of what he deems a “quaint” keyboard. At least the tech on duty tried to get him to use the mouse.

            But it’s such an easy target. It’s fine to swing the flame throwers on Hollywood when it comes to computers, but while we’re at it, let’s get on their case for putting people through plate glass without a scratch or chasing heroes down the hallway with a grenade blast or dusting them off after a building collapses on them.

            They take liberties for two reasons. Ignorance is the obvious one. Sometimes these people just don’t know the limitations of the computer and they imagine that nine-year-old Joseph Mazello can slip behind a UNIX machine and gain root access to the computer system running an entire island. The other reason is the oldest one in pictures. What happens up on the screen has to be cinematic. It has to entertain. Drama is the goal, above all else. And the basic truth is that movies move. Coders do not.

            Check out the article. It’s a good read.

            • Hollywoodland
            • Music

            SFX: Buffalo Tom

            Buffalo Tom

            Man, I love Buffalo Tom. And I’m only posting about them because I want to test out another music streaming plug-in. This one’s called PodPress. I think, with a little tweaking, it could work put better than the last one, which is a tricky pilfering of the Google Video interface I read about here. The only thing I don’t like about it is that one has to remain on the post page to listen. If you leave the blog, the audio leaves too. PodPress allows you to listen in a popup window.

            Anyway, here it is. Buffalo Tom. “Taillights Fade”. I have much more to say about Buffalo Tom, but as I say, I’m only here to try out the music player.

            • Music

            SFX: Julian Jabre

            Destination Lounge

            Several months ago I’m returning home from Amoeba. As usual, it’s late and Nocturna is on KCRW. The tune spinning across LA is called “Swimming Places” by Julian Jabre. I find it that night on eBay and place an order. It arrives a few days later, warped, but still playable, from a record shop in Ashville, NC. I long to play it live somehow, but my most recent Amoeba set doesn’t provide an opportunity. Then last Wednesday I pack it along with me to Carbon, but the moment just never arrives. So finally, I find an abbreviated version on a recent “Destination Lounge” compilation that I can offer up on this blog. So here you go.

            And you’ll notice I’m testing out a new embedded media player for simplicty and elegance. Enjoy.

            Julian Jabre – Swimming Places