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Archive for August, 2013

Killing Me Incrementally

@henrytheclear  

            It’s the last week of August, 2013. I walk through this town lonely as a bean. That’s during the daytime, of course. At night, I stand before le miroir  in the bathroom of my cheap hotel room and make love to myself. A disciple of I Ching, I embrace the power of solitude. Prostitutes hustling tricks downtown sense my power. Of course, I have to take out my roll of hundred dollar bills and wave it in their faces, but they sense it. No one ever called a harlot prescient.

I eat my meals at Ben’s Chili Bowl, an historic landmark. I’m told that even the president eats there! A little too many nègres, but they are the flavor of the month: Reverse apartheid, everybody brags about having at least one black friend.

Checking the Activities section of the newspaper, I find several public events that might attract a hard-cooked liberal like Janika: The March On Washington, the Martin Luther King, Jr. 50th Memorial celebration, a hearing regarding three ex-Naval Academy footballers accused of rape. This last is being held at the Washington Navy Yard. Excited at the prospect of imminent action, I disassemble, oil, reassemble and test-fire my firearms, sans ammo.

I think it was Alexandre Dumas Sr. who first told us to “cherchez la femme.”

I show up Tuesday morning, August 27th, for the 8:30 a.m. Navy Yard hearing, but Janika’s not there. I spot another woman with luxuriant red hair, but she lacks Janika’s Neptunian green eyes and pendulous breasts the size of fresh cantaloupes.

Turns out the March On Washington reenactment was last Saturday. That only leaves the MLK-50 event tomorrow. Knowing her, she’ll be there! I mustn’t fail! Returning to my hotel room with a fifth of Scotch, I get thoroughly plastered.

*

@janiecock

            Well! Dear “Smartyhearts,” my new smartphone diary app! — I don’t know how others spend their time here in the nation’s capital but I have bought bobble head dolls of Barack and Michelle Obama and even Bo the White House dog. I found the cutest donkey pin which the salesperson insisted represents one of the political parties. I forget which one. Imagine that! An ass! What a bunch of donkeys!

Let’s see. I’ve been to the Corcoran, the National Gallery of Art, the Air and Space Museum, the Hirshhorn and the Natural History Museum. This last to meet my contact André who told me to keep my wits about me since word has arrived that our movements haven’t completely escaped the attention of our old friends at La Sécurité.

Bliksems!

*

@henrytheclear

            I wasn’t always like this. I once had a wife named Monique, but she left me to go play the sitar in India. Effete cow! When I met her, she was a flamenco guitarist and had never touched a sitar in her life. The job opened up and within a day, she went and purchased one. How do you compete with a musical instrument as seductively round, profound and fulfilling as that? Her little baby, plink, plank, plunk! Monique spent 20 hours a day practicing. I guess I should have felt proud that my wife was becoming the new Ravi Shankar, but it also meant she was abandoning our marriage. All I know about India is how to make curry rice. Familiarity breeds contempt.

Needing to blend in here in DC, I buy a dirt bike. The black community and law enforcement are at loggerheads over off-road biking on city streets. I figure I can use that to my advantage, camouflaging myself as a local bro’ while inching closer to my prey.

“Who da fuck is you?!” ask a pack of about 20 angry young black men, roaring into a circle around me at the intersection of Alabama Ave. and Branch Ave. SE.

“Wha’ yo’ beef?!” I reply, pulling up my tee to reveal my bidness.

“FUCK YOU!” they scoff, pulling up their tees to reveal everything from Smith & Wesson .38’s to Glock 21’s to a sawed-off shotgun.

Merde! “Uh-h-h-h,” I improvise. “My bad!”

“Get the fuck off that bike!” says a gnarly older dude. No sooner have I relinquished the seat than a local kid, maybe thirteen, squeals with delight, knocks my hands from the controls and takes over my ride. From sidewalk to saddle in less than 10 seconds!

“Listen— ” I try to warn them, just as Jan & Dean sang in the 1960’s, “You’ll get a ticket sooner or later if you can’t keep your foot off the accelerator.” I’m talking to an acrid white cloud of exhaust fumes. The throaty roar of their bikes— and mine— echoes into the distance.

I start walking. I get picked up by a good Samaritan white guy driving a Prius. Concerned for my safety, he lists several reasons why I shouldn’t be in that neighborhood. “Down here, you’re right in the middle of it,” he points out. “It” being African-Americans. It’s the 50th anniversary of Dr. King’s speech  and the March On Washington, and this well-wisher is suggesting that white folks avoid contact with blacks or pay the consequences. What is wrong with this picture?

*

@janiecock

            Dear diary— Aren’t I just like Anne Frank? I simply have to write things down to validate my emotions. So… Georgetown just overflows with the most fun shops ever. What a joke that Americans can’t get their fill of Danish Modern. I mean… how quaint can you get?

Adams Morgan is the perfect venue for trolling the bars and hooking up with naive young professionals. I can’t even walk into Smoke & Barrel without boys lining up to buy me a craft beer. That’s the inconvenience of being charismatic, everybody LOVES me. I order German sour ale and that floors them!

When I lead some horny young stud back to my “room” and make wild sex, he has no idea that my “uncles” will pop out of the closet and hold him at gunpoint. We show him the video on a smartphone, threaten to tweet it all over the Twitterverse and my work is done! Poor little poopsies! They look so disappointed. Hey, dudes, that’s what happens when you twerk around! Can’t you keep your hands off my swinging little derrière? Don’t roll the dice if you can’t afford the price! I know, getting sandbagged has all the appeal of rutting season at a petting zoo. Oh well! At least we don’t demand money. All we want is to influence legislation. That is worth so much more! I douche, powder myself and return to prowl the jungle of opportunity that is summer among these awkward, young millennials in Washington, DC.

*

@henrytheclear

            I’m no military historian, but I must give credit where it is due: Kurds are fearless, going to war with AK-47’s and flip-flops.

I suspect Janika is in the U.S.A. to link up with members of the Sovereign Citizen Movement. They believe that all government is oppressive. Anarchists are immature brats. Bakunin’s anarchy is a political placebo for people who are too lazy and terrified to commit themselves to a higher calling. Nietzsche’s nihilism and Jean-Paul Sartre’s existentialism are flamboyantly expressive, but they require you to live your life as a drama queen. I should talk! My coworkers call me “the Sam Spade of assassination.” Only Louis Ferdinand Céline and Franz Kafka successfully thread the needle of life’s incongruity. Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? Le Fantôme connait!

Clever, as always, Janika is financing her aggressive lifestyle with patentable inventions: Marketing online, her current product is a simple conversion kit for making your automobile into a car bomb in five minutes or less. “Who woulda thunk it,” as the Americans says. I don’t want to call Janika a sociopath. Like America’s Bill Maher, she simply has difficulty divining where the line goes between politically incorrect and totally anti-social. She lives life large, giving society an exorbitant gesture with her nuanced middle finger.

*

@janiecock

            Dear diary— Yes, they find my Dutch accent exotic, but I find their American drawl equally quixotic. I can always spot a Californian— by ear! “Rar ru ra rum na oobloo bum,” they say. How can people talk that way? Like they have a mouth full of marbles. Must run! Bert says he’s spotted a boy who sounds like he might be interning at the NSA. What a catch!

Push-up bra from Victoria’s Secret, ankle chain from Tiffany’s. Wish me luck! Cheers!

*

@henrytheclear

            August 28th. Now I’m ready! I mean, I’m here on the Mall. I’ve passed through magnetometers at three checkpoints on 17th Street and received two pat-downs. That hasn’t stopped me from visiting my secret stash amidst the shrubbery. My bidness nestles securely in my waistband, a .38 special sits in a holster at the small of my back and an ankle holster cradles a .45 under my left pant leg. It’s either kill Janika or star as Dirty Harry in a Hollywood movie. Fortunately, it’s a rainy day with a chance of thundershowers. I can wear a gray plastic raincoat and long pants without attracting undue attention. I am so ready! True, there must be 100,000 people here today, but after all, it shouldn’t be too hard to pick Janika out of the crowd.

*

@janiecock

            Dear diary— Don’t you just hate rain? My hair is a mess! I’ve been tweeting to my followers, mostly boys who paid a pound of flesh for their adulation only to discover they are UNABLE to let go! It isn’t MY FAULT that my sweet laughter has ensnared them for ever and ever and ever and ever!!! They LOVE me. I’m Janika, I’m nice. So I let them adore me. Tee-hee!

What a crowd! I say “Hi!” and everybody says “Hi!” in return. It’s like we’re all one big happy family! I make no pretense of being negroid, but in my Rihanna “Clean Your Clock” T-shirt, I fit right in. Put that weapon down, girl! (Who remembers the video?) I ask if the president will speak and people say “Oh yeah!” in that funny American sing-song. I’d rather be here than in Den Helder any day! I think it was wrong of the LAPD to beat up Martin Luther King’s nephew Rodney. For shame! Although I do enjoy watching Larry on TV. Such a talented family!!! They’re just like the Jacksons. Anyway, I want to get as close as I can to take some shots of the president with my phone. I can use them as conversation-starters anywhere— “Hi, I met the president of the United States at the Lincoln Memorial and he gave a speech.”

Zo cool!

*

@henrytheclear

            Crowds aren’t my thing. Normally, I investigate my quarry, gain an understanding of their behavioral tics, await an opportunity and… strike! Here, it’s taking hours just to locate the bitch.

I have a dream! That I’ll be able to subdue and cuff Janika without the use of lethal force. Joking! Had you going there for awhile, n’est-ce pas? Il n’y a pas raison de diminuer l’engagement. Who knows, maybe I can bore her to death. Discuss French politics…

Eventually, I find her by the Reflecting Pool, about 100 feet from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, just past the sign that says “NO GREEN PAINT BEYOND THIS POINT!” Janika is jammed in among the gawkers and tweeters. As I surge forward, making very little headway, our eyes meet.

“You!” she gasps as the president’s well-rounded phrases ring out over the crowd: “And so they came by the thousands, from every corner of our country— men and women, young and old, blacks who longed for freedom and whites who could no longer accept freedom for themselves while witnessing the subjugation of others. Across the land, congregations sent them off with food and with prayer,” says Obama. “In the middle of the night, entire blocks of Harlem came out to wish them well.”

One in five Americans think that Obama is a Muslim.

“I know you!” Janika hisses, clawing at my face with green-painted stiletto nails. “You’re a European assassin. You’re French! What the hell are you doing here?”

And then, on a hot summer day, they assembled here, in our nation’s capital, under the shadow of the great emancipator, to offer testimony of injustice, to petition their government for redress and to awaken America’s long-slumbering conscience,” says the president.

One in five Mitt Romney voters think Obama is the Antichrist.

“Hello! So how’s the terrorism business?” I growl at Janika. “Did you see where the Americans whacked al-Qaeda’s number two man? How about this Syrian Electronic Army? Pretty wild, huh? K’suckt muck! Sickening, serious snapshots supposedly show Syrian siblings suddenly stuck somewhere so sensational, someone should share some sequential solutions. Listen, that’s war! Times are tough all over. I’m not here to sing you a song of woe, Janika. I’ve been sent to even the score.” I find the crush of humanity too tight for me to get a clear shot. I’ll have to devise a feint.

“I’m getting a cop!” swears Janika.

Aha! As she slides sideways out of the crowd, I follow suit. There! Now! Reaching for my waistband, bam! Janika clobbers me over the head with a full Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center double-stitched, reinforced nylon tote bag emblazoned with black straps, a black bottom and a full-color portrait of a lighthouse. The Velcro fasteners leave welts across my face. What does she have in there? Books? Groceries? Bricks? Sacré bleu!

            Whatever.

“Every time I use this,” she screams, “I am carrying a message of hope for cancer patients and their families everywhere! Even in Malaysia!”

“Give it a rest, Janika!” I bellow, but I’m wasting my breath.

There were couples in love who couldn’t marry, soldiers who fought for freedom abroad that they found denied to them at home. They had seen loved ones beaten and children fire-hosed. And they had every reason to lash out in anger or resign themselves to a bitter fate,” says the president.

One in ten Americans think the Mid-Atlantic gray squirrel should replace the bald eagle as the symbol of American sovereignty.

Fifty years hence, the grandchildren of these Americans will hold another March On Washington, still crying for economic equality. Life is unfair, there will always be “haves” and “have-nots.”

Jamming a gun against Janika’s head, I frog-march her around to the backside of the Lincoln Memorial, the side facing the bridge. I want to drag her down to the Potomac and feed her to the bull sharks, but we are surrounded by police officers, their guns drawn. “Drop your weapon!” one screams.

I do.

“Fucking A,” he exclaims, moving closer and frisking me. “This guy is a fucking arsenal!”

I could grab le flic in a judo grip, twist him in front of me as a human shield, pull the revolver from my ankle holster and blast away in several directions. Instead, I play my ace in the hole: “I have diplomatic immunity!”

“Wha-at?”

“Get real!”

“Tell it to the judge, ass-hole!”

“You all right, young lady?”

Bâtards! “Wait!” I command, hands held high. “Unhand me! Return my armament. I am an honorary consul of República de Cabo Verde!”

They gape at me like I’ve just pulled a banana out of my nose.

“It’s true!” I insist. “The Cape Verde Islands!” Never-the-less, I am handcuffed and led away to a police van. Je ne m’en fous! Win some, lose some. When it comes to terrorism, I’d rather be on the inside looking out than on the outside looking in.

As a French citizen, I ask to speak to the judge privately in his chambers. He grants me my wish. “I am Henri Le Claire,” I explain. “The woman I was trying to eliminate is Janika Kuuk, chief operative of the DSP, La Défense Socialiste Pluviale, closely aligned with the FARC guerillas deep in the rainforest of Colombia. When we failed to get extradition papers on her, I was sent here on an ad hoc basis to… alleviate the problem.” I end lamely, holding aloft my manacled hands.

“Put your hands down,” orders the judge. “Why didn’t you tell the police officers to hold the girl for questioning?”

“I did! But they seemed to think I was the bad guy and she la victime innocente.”

“Harrumph!” grunts the judge. I’m returned to a holding cell, but eventually the French Chargé d’Affaires comes to the courthouse and arranges my release.

“You sure made a mess of this one,” he observes with Gallic forthrightness.

“The more things change,” I observe, “the more they remain the same!”

*

Eulogy to a Mystery Writer

  

            Hardboiled detective writer Arturo Dinkelstam is dead. He died as he lived, a resident of ennui, doubt and Santa Monica, California. Age: 66. Cause of death, a heart attack. L.A. isn’t my cup of tea but I’ve flown out here on a moment’s notice to do justice to an old friend with whom I grew up. Passing over innumerable wildfires, the weather is still too pristine for words, with temps in the 80’s.

Known as “Arthur” to his readers above the Rio Grande, it’s true that Arturo (his preferred handle) made his living as a copywriter grinding out luscious prose for mail order catalogs in the lingerie industry:

“This frilly, fluffy wholly appropriate teddy just waits for the right fingertips to caress its soft, supple cloth, unfasten its snaps and slink into nothing less than imperial elegance. Imported cotton/nylon/spandex. Available in Large, Special and Extra Large sizes for the discerning woman.”

There are those who will decry Arthur’s/Arturo’s place in the pantheon of hardboiled detective writers because he was self-published.

It was a dark and stormy morning at Lex & Borden copyshop. “Dinkelstam’s gone,” reported Craig “Molson” Larson to his crusty, moustachioed boss, the incorrigible James “Jim” Rothgate.

“What d’ya mean, gone?!” thundered Rothgate, who knew a thing or two about proofreading marks. His specialty was the squiggly line over the reversed letter “e”. “How can he be gone? Page 11 in the October issue. Two Brazilian supermodels entwining a mangy goat. We can get in a lot of trouble unless the copy is exactly right. I CAN’T DO IT! YOU CAN’T DO IT! Get Dinkelstam!”

“He’s dead, boss.”

The shock made Rothgate physically ill. He clutched the high, black composite plastic back of his executive office chair as images of a small dog rabidly disappearing into the middle distance flooded his brain.

*

Genealogist Lev Kosygin tells me Arturo and I may be related on Lev’s uncle’s side. Since Lev and I are fifth cousins, I find a Dinkelstam connection tenuous at best. “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon,” according to Lev, everyone is related to everyone else in some way. Fuhgeddaboudit!

Philologist Harvey Crystal posits Dinkel as a form of German Dunkel or “darkness.” Stam is the equivalent of the English “clan” or “tribe,” so Dinklestam comes out meaning “tribe of darkness.” Nothing would have pleased Arturo more! “Hitler’s family name,” adds Harvey, “was Schickelgruber, meaning ‘trader of the hollow.’ German is lousy with family names made up of two-word combinations.”

Arthur’s detractors will insist that the low sales figures of his three outstanding novels limited his influence. True, his first book sold only 17 copies in hardback, but Arthur contributed over 100 copies to local libraries and the USO. His second book— considered by some to be his masterpiece— sold a respectable 152 copies. Not bad for a self-published vanity project in an industry chock-a-block with talented competitors. His third and last effort returned to the disappointing teens in hardcover, but saw somewhat brisker sales as a trade paperback. Ninety-eight copies might not sound like a lot, but it is the spirit of Arthur’s writing that impresses:

“Boozily, he sucked on her D-cup sized breasts. Tammy Sue’s languid fingers massaged deep into the murky lust of his consciousness, kneading his brow and temples with uncontrollable abandon. Slowly, searchingly, her right hand extended down, down, across his chest, his stomach, along his hip to the repository of his power: His left-hand pants pocket and the brown, alligator skin wallet resting therein.”

Wow! That’s writing.

Here are three testimonials I have gathered.

Mahjong Washington, a black man discreetly panhandling on Santa Monica Pier: “You The Heat? You Five-O? No? Well, yes, I know who you talkin’ ’bout. Dinkelstam. I was in the Army an’ read one o’ his books in boot camp. Damn fine author! Say, bro’, you got change of a twenty? Or maybe you just give me a twenty an’ we calls it even.”

Leon Backus, next door neighbor: “The neighbor from Hell. No, don’t object! You asked. I expect you to be honest and include my answer. You can’t edit out negative criticism. That’s what Arthur never learned. It’s not enough to call yourself a ‘Renaissance man.’ You also need to clear the derelict jalopies on cinderblocks from your front yard.”

Juliette Bush, checkout lady at the local grocery: “Dinkelhauser? Dinkelhurst? Oh, Dinkelstam! Yes, of course. She’s Chancellor of West Germany. I admire her. I had no idea she had died!”

Perhaps soliciting comments from local denizens isn’t the best approach.

*

            Elmore Leonard, Dashiell Hammett, Mickey Spillane and other titans of the genre exhibited styles equally distinctive as Arthur’s, to larger audiences and with greater commercial success. Never-the-less, Arthur attempted to hold his own. “I’m a leviathan,” he complained in 2010, only too aware that the proliferation of the blogosphere shattered his last, lingeringly rebellious reason for being. “How can I be the go-to guy for alternative literature when everybody is the go-to guy?” Arthur groused, still smoking a pack of menthol cigarettes a day and sinking scotch on the rocks several times every afternoon, Old School. Empty, decorative bottles littered his waste baskets both at home and at work.

His most lasting feud was with manager Stan Teller at Santa Monica Books & Smokes, the funky bookstore facing the beach. Arthur begged Stan to mix copies of his work in the remainder bin, going so far as to surreptitiously drop several into the square, dusty, black metal receptacle by the door. “I would have stocked his stuff,” reminisces Stan upon news of Arthur’s passing, “but I felt such trash lowered the quality of the entire bookstore experience, y’know?”

As with the exceptional Tesla electric automobile, it’s hard to argue with the man who owns one!

You’ll be missed, Arturo! Your penchant for maudlin self-aggrandizement. Your tendency, when criticized, to go into attack mode. Your needling, whiny demands for ever larger financial loans to support your ever more grandiose literary ambitions. You won’t be forgotten!

— Kevin Feingold

*

I Have A Dream, 2013

  

            Good day to you all here at the Lincoln Memorial.  They’ve scrubbed off the green paint and we are celebrating freedom. Your freedom and mine. Yours because you are Americans. Mine because this is my last term in office. I am a lame duck president, but I am not a quack. Get it? Duck… quack. That one is from my daughter Masha. Thank you, Masha! Okay. I like the pomp and speechmaking but not the circumstances. Too much responsibility. I like the pageantry and photo ops but not the boring administrative details. The Oval Office is for squares. Give me the campaign trail. Give me the open road! Hand me the mike! That defines who I am.

You elected me as a deeply stirring motivational speaker. That defines who you are!

I have a dream! That the people of Latvia will link hands and sing a song of freedom. I’m told the Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians did that on August 23, 1989 to great effect. They formed a human chain that stretched over 370 miles. Anyway, Latvia is important as the source of Stolichnaya vodka. Listen, if there’s no Stoli, there is a lot less fun in this world! And we surfers know fun.

Fifty years ago today, on these very steps of the Lincoln Memorial— on August 28, 1963— Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his famous “I Have A Dream” speech. My response at the time was “Mommy, mommy, lookee!” After all, I was living in surfurbia in Hawaii and only two years old. As a fellow orator, I admire King’s speech: his elocution, his wording, his phrasing, his extemporaneous outbursts of divine inspiration. Hopefully, today, I can emulate that fine oratory and continue in the great tradition of Abraham Lincoln, William Jennings Bryan, Patrick Henry, Henry Clay, John Wilkes Booth and all the other rabble-rousing, crowd-pleasing Cicero’s of their time and place. Hang five!

I speak to you today as one nation under God, indivisible. Specifically, I address all people with a room temperature I.Q. or above. You’re the ones who vote.

In spite of life inside the presidential bubble, I know blacks, liberals and Democrats are all bellyaching that I haven’t delivered. Well, that’s a two-way street. I often feel like Harrison Ford in a movie asking, “Who are you people? What do you people want?!”

I am a drum major for justice, peace and righteousness! I am a communard but not a communist. Nothing new about that. As George W. Bush’s Chief of Staff Andrew Card once pointed out, “You don’t introduce new products in August…”

In the face of Egypt’s violence and bloodletting, allow me to quote the Wiesenthal Center’s Efraim Zuroff who wisely said, “To get a Nazi in prison you have to take a photo of him in his underwear.” Take a moment, people, and think about that! All I’m saying is: Before you tweet any more selfies of your junk, folks, consider what happened to Anthony Weiner. ‘Nuff said!

I have a dream! That unlike George III, my later years will be spent as king of Togo. Stranger things have happened. Google it and you’ll find it on the map. Let me be clear. We’re black and I cannot envision a finer ending to my meaningful political career. At least as king of Togo, I’ll get a little respect! No more carping Tea Party conservatives, Fox News commentators and midwestern 47%-ers to deal with. The ethics in this country have more holes than Swiss cheese. I could drop an F bomb here, but I am showing restraint for the sake of our children. This speech is rated “G” for general audiences.

I’m criticized for letting Vladimir Putin run roughshod over human rights. I do have an answer to both the critics and President Putin: As the rock band Love‘s immortal lead singer Arthur Lee once sang, “Boo bip bip, boo bip bip, yeah!”

I have a dream! That Putin will release the imprisoned young ladies in Pussy Riot as a gesture of reconciliation toward the “Hello, Kitty” generation and freedom-loving punk music enthusiasts everywhere. Thank you Masha and Natasha for that addition to my speech!

To our visitors from outer space, quarantined in Area 51 in Nevada, I say “Greetings! Abu nabu nosferatu! ” Like at Guantanamo, we would love to release you guys, but we don’t know how to do it without polluting the atmosphere, bringing on terrorist attacks, etc. ‘Nuff said!

The staff of Secretary of State John Kerry has asked me to insert the following sentences, although I freely admit to my personal mystification as to the “why.” Well, okay, then, here goes: America is not the liberal country many of us envision and desire. We forget this at our peril. The American people prize freedom over regulation, individual rights over the good of the community, “me, me, me, I got mine.” That makes it damn hard to govern.

Thank you, John, for those kind words!

I have a dream! That here today the Esmé Louder Band will play songs from their new album “For Love of Squalor.”

We want you to have fun, we want this to be an all-day event. As soon as it turns dark, we’ll have an extra showing of “Screen on the Green” right here on The Mall. Tonight’s movie is Harry Poofter and the Songs of Usher. For ninety minutes, we watch Harry and his girlfriend Abigail Storm listen to songs by Usher on a Bose sound system in his bedroom. They also chew gum and talk. A compelling slice-of-life docudrama. Whose executive producers contributed a nice chunk of change to my 2012 campaign. See? Full disclosure. This administration has nothing to hide! Nothing we’d tell you about, at any rate.

God bless you and GOD BLESS AMERICA!!!

*

Film Festihell

 

 

Happy Endings

by Silvian Rochester 

            I hope for your own benefit that you never awaken as I have in a faux chateau bedroom perched on a cliff above one of Europe’s mightier rivers. The deafening roar of surging water! The strange surroundings. The eerie gray light. Not. Recommended. In fact, quite assuredly guaranteed to produce a panic attack. All right, if not a full-on panic, at least an anxiety attack. There! Satisfied? Are you trying to ruin my whole day? I think it was Evelyn Waugh, bless him, describing the effect of World War I, who said: “Before the war, if one thing went wrong, your entire day was ruined. After the war, if one thing went right, your day was made.”

And to think that just two weeks ago, I covered our beloved Comic-Con in San Diego! Dressed as the most adorable Rich Uncle Pennybags from the board game Monopoly, sporting a fine black top hat upon my head and spats. Sanguine, no? Oh, posh!

No, the raison I’m here on a fetchingly frigid mountain top is to cover The Vivex Film Festival. Whenever I say those four words, I hear a voice in my head — suspiciously like that of Anthony Hopkins— chanting, “Good old Vivex! Lacking the notoriety of Cannes, without the vigor of Sundance.”

I was met at the airport by troops in green uniform toting rifles, as well as barbed wire barricades, so I knew instantly that a terrorist alert is underway!

To paraphrase Lewis & Clark, “Location, location, location.” These festival organizers aren’t stupid. A European film festival, we’re as equidistant to Stockholm in the north as we are to Istanbul in the south. It’s as far west to Lisbon as it is east to Odessa. We’re in Germany, the Schwarzwald, home of the Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte. Black Forest cherry-cake. Specifically, Baden-Wurttemberg, famous for the aerial tramway in Nußloch, ten kilometers south of Heidelberg. Cross the Rhine and you’re in one of the more boring parts of France, the industrial northeast. The very fact that the European Union felt compelled to choose Strasbourg as one of its capitals indicates a capitulation to grim reality, making still another vain attempt to breathe new life into an economic crater. Even if Strasbourg is French, it’s still a disaster. On our side of the river, the nearest metropolis is Freiburg. We all agree that it’s a great place to recover from a heart attack. That kind of exhausts its list of attractions. To the east, Würzburg, Nürnberg and Munich get all the kitsch. We get movies.

I don’t know why they let me write for The Atlanta Sentinel. I hope that’s an honest enough confession for you, dear readers! I grew up in Antwerp in Jefferson County, New York. Population, less than 2,000. Perhaps because I was solitary and film crazy, my childhood made me a critic in embryo. I wrote for our high school newspaper, critiquing dances, plays, the cafeteria slop, my classmates’ clothes, girls’ make-up. And movies. Naturally, I ended up penning an advice column. Under the pseudonym “Dear Gwendolyn”! Good Lordy, I was glad I graduated! I went to Tulane, in New Orleans, on a football scholarship. Eventually, I gravitated to Atlanta. I have a nice house, nothing precious, across the river in Marietta. Three cats— a Siamese and two hapa mixed breed shelter cats— whom the neighborhood children insist on petting and feeding when I’m away. Probably because I pay them! The children, of course, not the cats.

A quick search on the Net and you’ll see our website, theatlantasentinel.com, ostentatiously featuring portraits of the Rideau brothers, Robert and Roger, owners of our fine news sheet. How amidst the dire demise of so many other fine newspapers has our daily managed to blithely sail ever onward? Serendipity. Ranking as America’s fortieth largest city, our rag escaped any voracious hostile takeover bids by Knight Ridder or the Times Mirror Company. Remaining a family-owned enterprise, Robert and Roger avoid the pitfall of greedy nieces and nephews by carefully doling out shares. Let members of the Rideau extended family work in other professions. If they find themselves over-extended— as they often do— Robert and Roger might arrange a loan through the Rideau Commerce Bank, but the newspaper stock remains inviolate.

None of that would matter if we were located in New York, Chicago or Los Angeles. Many perfectly adequate journalistic enterprises have bitten the dust in those locales despite careful and considerate stewardship. No, Atlanta is special… AND DON’T WE KNOW IT! Slide a copy of The Atlanta Sentinel across the table and examine it. Notice the internationalist front page, chockablock with news of the world. Those stories continue inside the A Section, but otherwise, the entire remaining first section is dedicated solely to news of Atlanta. The second section ends with the comics, of course. Before that, however, you have ten choice pages chronicling  high society, appropriately entitled The Social Scene. The Atlanta Sentinel is not ashamed to hold high aloft the torch of propriety! Private lunches, dinners, fundraisers, charity occasions and cotillions fill our column inches, proudly celebrating Atlanta’s heritage. Blacks are still referred to as Mr. (Last name) and Miss (Last name). By never including a given first name, we signal place without giving offense. These things take breeding.

The third section, on Thursdays, is simply labeled The Flea Market and contains as many classified ads as people have paid for.

I know, plus royal que le roi. Being an outsider, I am steadfastly more patriotic than the locals who take all this color for granted.

*

            I remember as a child watching a subtitled East German or Russian film. They made my hair stand on end! When I see those same films today on Netflix, they seem both dated and excruciatingly slow.

As fewer and fewer American moviegoers find themselves with a surplus of coin to spend on movie theater attendance, Hollywood’s fixation on the “first big weekend box office” has given way to a longer view. Gone are the days when a motion picture recouped its entire production costs several times over within its first three days at the multiplex. Don’t get me wrong, pictures still compete for big box office bucks. They still make money the first weekend, only not THAT kind of money. Misfires continue to occur, too, of course. Some rockets barely lift off the pad. In such an environment, the importance of European and DVD revenue increases dramatically. Just witness the corporate brass attending festivals in Cannes, Berlin and even here at Vivex.

In our programs, a bright red sheet of A4 typing paper announces, “Achtung! Heightened Security! Pls Pay Attention!!!” We are told to be aware of our surroundings, to report suspicious activity to the proper authorities, not to try to intervene ourselves and, lastly, we are given five different phone numbers we can call: National Defense Military HQ, Regional Defense Command Central, Local Police, the Film Festival Administration and 911. Whew! They haven’t even told me what’s going on and already I’m getting heart palpitations.

The precarious position of the Euro has made us Americans the rich siblings of Europe. Such a pleasant change! In the old days, the Deutsche Mark was so schneidig, it all but decimated my yearly expense account.

“All I’m saying,” Otto von Bonn insists, “is that Iron Man 3 displays decidedly fascist tendencies.” Also known as Otto Bonn, he’s a radio correspondent on Norddeutscher Rundfunk.

“Balderdash!” I retort. We film critics are seated at lunch in a bistro in the center of town: Marjorie Richard from Paris, James Metcalf from London, Otto and me.

Everyone has their favorite place in Europa. Mine is Deutschland, where I can add to my collection of Willy Brandt memorabilia. I especially like Osnabrück in Saxony, because the girls have such pretty faces and the physique of Sherman tanks. Once you break through their icy demeanor, the heat from their bodies leaves scorch marks. They’re not so much uneducated as world-weary, living in the European equivalent of Katmandu, a city at a crossroad of the world. I always make it a point to visit Osnabrück, if only to get laid.

“You stupid…” Otto mutters, head down among the wine glasses, before straightening up and flashing his bifocals at me rambunctiously. “All I’m saying is, take your screener copy, sit down on the couch in your room and watch the film in peace and quiet. Hitlerian propaganda, ist das wahr oder nicht?

After viewing the film in my room, far from the madding crowd, I admit that the movie may not be the most brilliant screen adaptation of a comic book character ever made. I much prefer Robert Downey, Jr. as Sherlock Holmes. But fascist propaganda? Pul-lease! I think my German colleague had one glass too many of the excellent champagne.

*

            Any TV guru will tell you the prime demographic for American television is the 18- to 34-year-olds. This is such a Madison Avenue drum beat, its percussive blast reaches all the way across the country to Los Angeles. The Hollywood film industry makes films that are palatable to 13-year-olds. PG-13-year-olds. Parental Guidance suggested. One instance of swearing per film. Otherwise, Hollywood takes no responsibility for action content. Guns blazing, cars somersaulting, fireballs reaching to the heavens, it’s all movie magic!

Hollywood isn’t dumbing down so much as keeping things simple. There’s complex language and then there’s movie dialogue, two very different species. Just as you can’t tell a book publisher squat since they’ve been grinding out books since Gutenburg (1390 – 1468), Hollywood has been honing film language ever since the days of silent two-reelers and title cards.

Today’s audiences are “pre-sold”— they’re comic book enthusiasts, video gamers or fanboys and fangirls who are familiar with the characters, plot and environment of a film and have invested an emotional stake in that franchise. Always risk-averse, the studios much prefer to greenlight productions based on these already tried-and-true formulas. Bandwagons are bigger than ever, as an endless series of zombies and werewolves battle mutants, narcotics agents, super heroes and space invaders for dominance over your local movie screen.

*

            If you like blondes, you’ll never come closer to a perfect “10” than 23-year-old Aija Barkava. The amazing thatch of golden hair, the perfectly round chin, high cheekbones and of course the perky little ski jump nose leave her resembling some Überblondine from Valhalla. I land an interview through her agent. They’re flacking her latest pic, Pro-Choice Werewolves vs Vampires of Diversity.

“So very blond!” I blurt, plopping my digital recorder on the table and stumbling against a metal chair.

“Whoa, tiger!” she exclaims in a voice as peepy as a canary. Smiling ruefully, she asks, “Are you nervous?”

Forcing myself to visibly slow down, I never-the-less scrape the chair along the terra cotta floor. “This restaurant is a minefield!” I bitch.

“Temper, temper,” says Aija, wagging a tiny finger in my face teasingly. Her little white teeth resemble a pearl necklace.

Securely seated, clamping my pen spastically, I check to confirm that the red diode is lit on my recorder. “You are so very blond, my dear,” I try again, taking it from the beginning. “Is there an origins story I have missed?”

“You don’t read the movie mags?” she asks archly.

“I’m sorry, I confess, I do not.”

“I’m Latvian. This latest project is a Latvian-Swedish-German-Italian co-production. We got access to some great countryside here in the Black Forest and, of course, all the island stuff was filmed on Sardinia. Sweden provided tech support. Studios, the soundstage in Trollhätten, equipment and laboratories.”

She is not what I expected. Personable, totally sincere, extremely professional. Impressed, I tell her that.

Sipping from a glass of ice water with lemon, she carefully modulates her voice, very angry. “I grew up in this little town and all the boys went ape over me. All the adults called me ‘Our own little Marilyn.’ I thought to myself, ‘Fuck it, it’s pre-ordained.’ And I love acting. I was in all our school plays. They always had me play the Virgin Mary at our annual Christmas pageant. So I learned to act. If you know your Baltic, Estonia is like 90% blond and we’re not so far behind. Even Finland is evenly split between blond and brunette. You go to Murmansk in Russia, the women each have one set of clothes and dress like fashion models. Very blond. No one expects anything less. It’s in our genes. I come south and I get treated like an idiot because I have big boobs!”

I refrain from lustily exclaiming, Yes, you do!” Just barely. “Yet the werewolves are pro women’s rights and the vampires are all Hispanic,” I point out instead. “Why is that?”

“Have you seen our little film?” she asks suspiciously.

“I popped in a screener. How many languages are they speaking?”

“Well, you’re doing a lot better than most of the people who’ve interviewed me. Five. It’s all subtitled. I once saw a Polish film with subtitles in English, French and German. You could barely see the actors between all the white text,” she laughs. “The vampiros speak Spanish, the villagers speak Sicilian, the international forensic team is actually Doctors Without Borders so they speak French, the Indian U.N. Peacekeepers speak Hindi and the news media people speak Euro-English. That’s a simple form of English based on 150 common words. The werewolves are mute.”

“Yes, I got it,” I bleat, scribbling notes frenetically, my head reeling. Jesus, Mary and all the saints! Blond bimbo??? I spend the next 20 minutes in a cold sweat, trying to keep up.

*

            Of course, you know me in quite another capacity. No, no, not as a gag-writer for Seth MacFarlane, although a gig like that would assure me additional income for life. Hello-o, I’m told I have a sterling sense of humor, Seth! No, of course, you know me as Leon Rakhmanov’s official biographer. Of course you do! I am THE EXPERT. Assistant to Sergei Eisenstein’s cinematographer Eduard Tisse on the epic film The Battleship Potemkin (1925), the stormy life and loves of Leon (orig. Lev) Rakhmanov (1897 – 1951) resulted in my exhaustively all-encompassing monograph The Stormy Life and Loves of Leon Rakhmanov. The man was a fighter! His military exploits during the Revolution saw him fighting with everybody, his commanding officers, his tent mates, even the cooks. Later, married, a belligerent drunk, he fought with his wife Irina and son Georgy. Only the infinitely patient Tisse could get quality work out of his old comrade. Leon also assisted Tisse on Ten Days That Shook the World (a k a October or Oktyabr, 1927). And Alexander Nevsky (1938). And Ivan The Terrible (1944 – 1946). They were so busy filming this two-part masterpiece, it’s like World War II never happened! Fittingly, Leon died in a drunken brawl. The Rakhmanov dacha in the woods was no scene of domestic tranquility, I can assure you. And I do. For 328 exquisite pages of superlative prose. Sixteen black and white photographs. Full index and end notes. Published by Dalecarlia Press. $29.95 at fine bookstores everywhere!

Tip: If you wish to make your way in the world of academia, establish your credentials by selecting some obscure but accessible cultural figure and become the go-to guy on all things relating to that person’s career, family, lifestyle, ideology, religion and belief system. If your subject threw bones and secretly thought mankind was controlled by bats, rats or ghosts, that helps! Like me, you’ll become a sought-after lecturer, panel discussion debater and dignitary in foreign lands. “Oh,” people say in a multiplicity of tongues, “that’s Silvian Rochester, he’s the well-known authority on Sergei Eisenstein’s cinematographer Eduard Tisse’s assistant Leon Rakhmanov.” You’ll be able to afford your own summer dacha in the woods! Or at least a timeshare in Florida. You’ll be able to own Fabergé-style hand-blown glass eggs hand-engraved by Russian artisans with the double-headed Romanov eagle. I myself own two! And they cost almost $100 each. Choose well!  Good luck! Sorry, Leon R. is taken.

*

            I never thought with my starched cuffs and 1920’s mannerisms that a bona fide Hollywood actress would give me a second glance. Which is not to say I live a monk’s life at festivals, only that my female accompaniment usually consists of Italian movie actresses. “Multo bene. Dormi da solo?… Sì, io continuare a scrivere.”

            So when Pamela Mercer (née Gromulko) approaches me at the bar, I’m unsure what to do. I know her curriculum vitae: Twenty-eight years old. She’s been making movies since some lady talent agent in SoCal latched onto her at age sweet 16. On average, Pamela has made two films a year. You check her filmography, that’s 24 films to her credit. The lady is also 100% American born and raised. Even my antecedents include a British mother.

“Buy me a drink,” says Pamela, pulling cigarettes from her purse and lighting up with a gold lighter. A sexy demeanor and a Chicago accent so refined, it could curdle milk.

“What would you like?”

Glenlivet on the rocks.”

I don’t even need to ask. Ricardo raises his eyebrows knowingly and fills a glass with ice, pulls down the bottle from a glass shelf over the bar lined with various brands of Irish and American whisky and pours Pamela’s drink. Putting a napkin on the mahogany finish of the bar, he places her glass just so.

“Perfectissimo!” I remark.

“Muchas gracias,says Ricardo.

The kind of money we’re paying, good service is included.

Pamela and I talk scripts. “I dunno,” she suggests, “it’s another spy movie or a sci-fi piece of shit from outer space. I’m pretty tired of this. If I do another sci-fi epic, I run the risk of getting typecast. Why don’t I ever get the Jen Aniston or Aston Kutcher romantic comedies?”

“Talk to your agent,” I say off-handedly. Earning me a punch on the shoulder.

Pamela jumps off her stool. “Nice knowing you!”

“Well, wait a minute!” I plead. “Sit back down here. Look in the mirror behind the bar, Pam. Look at that face. That’s a shark’s face. That’s a femme fatale. Come on, people have told you this before!”

“Of course,” she chortles. “I just wanted to hear it from you! We’re not on Jay Leno. We haven’t practiced our talking points beforehand.”

“Take your drink and come with me out front,” I say, collecting my Clausthaler in one hand and beer glass in the other. We sit on the front steps of the hotel, the roar of the water ringing in our ears.

“GREAT PLACE TO TALK!” she shouts.

“THIS WAY YOU HAVE TO SNUGGLE UP AND SPEAK WITH YOUR LIPS PRESSED TO MY EAR!”

Laughing richly, she entwines my arm in hers, presses close and whispers sweet nothings in my ear.

Over dinner— in the hotel dining room, to keep it simple— Pam suggests I relocate to L.A. and become a screenwriter. “Or something.” Looking at me.

We order “Victory Salad,” a Caesar salad with blue cheese dressing. The fall of Communism never tasted more tart.

Unable to ignore the smirk, the eyebrows, the twinkle in her eye, I ask, “Aren’t you together with anybody? I don’t keep up with the tabloids.”

“Was. Not now.”

I make a face, considering it. “Well… hey, I’m honored!” I stammer.

“My room or yours?”

“Either one! I’m sure they’re identical.”

“Actually, yours would be better,” Pam says, considering. “I have people in my suite.”

Reaching into my pocket, I pull out my room key and hand it to her over the table. I watch as she memorizes the number and hands it back. The waiter brings us complimentary cognac in small, round glasses.

Lying next to her in bed, I watch a mouse climb the wall and disappear into the bottom of the decorative cuckoo clock. “If I ever meet Anthony Weiner,” I muse, “I’ll say what Nick Carraway told Jay Gatsby. ‘They’re a rotten crowd. You’re worth the whole damn bunch put together’!”

“Who’s Anthony Weiner?”

“Ha ha!”

“Don’t laugh! Do you know where I’ve been filming for the last eight weeks?!”

“I’m sorry, I apologize,” I reply and bring her up to date on New York politics.

*

            Pam’s on the first floor and has an entire suite. I’m on the third floor in a cubbyhole. I pick her up next morning and we do breakfast. Then she spends the next few hours back on the first floor, granting interviews. I sit upstairs writing, researching the Net and browsing through screeners. At 12 noon, I pick Pam up and we do lunch in the hotel dining room. I didn’t realize how lonely I was until I’m no longer alone!

At one o’clock, we go down to the conference center for the day’s event. What the French call le Spectacle. We get patted down by members of the Bundeswehr. The stocky, blue-eyed, blond Valkyrie running her gruff hands over my body sends me into an instant erection. “Bitte! ” she insists. “I save you cost of one pill Viagra, ja?”

Jawohl, das ist richtig,” I flirt.

“Next!” she shouts, pushing me along.

There are glam shots on the walls of the Ayatollah Khomeini, Saddam Hussein and the Shah of Iran left over from previous conventions. Boy, do I ever get a different reception with Pam Mercer by my side! Striding into the jammed foyer, Mr. Invisible suddenly becomes visible!

Pam introduces me to her crew. “This is my friend Silvian. He writes for the The Atlanta Sentinel.”

The young Asian bodyguard types shake my hand and nod.

“Oh, you’re a journalist!” declares R. Scott “Scottie” O’Rourke, greatly relieved, shaking my hand. “I was worried you were another movie director horning in on my territory!”

“No, no, adjacent on the field.”

“Pardon?” asks Scottie, still gripping my hand warmly.

“I’m adjacent to you on the field. You produce the pictures and I write about them.”

“Yeah, that’s what I mean,” says Scottie. A modern Busby Berkeley, he adapts Broadway shows. His credits include Broadway Bobby Brown, Lights Over LaGuardia, Flat In Flatbush and Hiking The Great Wall of China.

“Scott,” I ask, since he’s still gripping my hand in both his, “why don’t you— ”

“Pardon?! Call me Scottie!”

“Why don’t you reduce your film titles to single words? Broadway, LaGuardia, Flatbush, China!

“And…?”

“It’s so much more forceful!”

“Says who? Google Earth? National Geo? That’s a stupid suggestion,” he says, releasing my hand. So at least I got something out of it.

“We go din-din later,” an Asian boy in a black leather jacket, white shirt and slacks tells me. “You in-vi-ted. My name Chen. You come! Six o’clock.”

“Um. Will Pam be there? ‘Cause I sorta…”

“Of course! You Pam Crew Member now.”

“Oh! So cool!” I remark, lustily pumping his hand.

The Vivex Film Festival was founded in 1973. God save us! They are still  having the same panel discussion — dissecting the identical topic— as they did 40 years ago! “The Future of European Film.”  Again!!!

The Spaniards and Hungarians complain about not having any money. The Italians say they don’t have any money and they don’t care— they make their product solely for the Italian market. If the British or the Swedes want to show an Italian film on TV, they’ll gladly take their money. The Swiss complain that Swiss comedy doesn’t translate. “No one wants to watch our films,” the Swiss rep exclaims dourly.

Mickey Shapiro, who’s had more blockbuster hits than you can shake a stick at, contributes the American view: “Even if we witness online ticket sales flatlining, the popularity of streaming video on-demand opens up still another revenue stream. Every bit helps! Count your pennies before you count your dollars! Considering what rampant technology has done to the world of book, newspaper and magazine publishing, the film industry is way ahead of the curve.”

Time to hear from the Parisian, Monsieur LeGrand! He speaks to us in French like we are an auditorium full of third graders: “On emploie préférablement la langue française dans le monde diplomatique et le monde postal. Je ne comprends pas pourquoi les autres pays préferent d’employer l’anglais dans ses films.”

“Monsieur LeGrand,” answers British filmmaking icon Harry Butterfield, “the answer is as plain as the box office receipts in your cash register. L’anglais, English, is the lingua franca of world commerce. You use it in films because everyone speaks it! Outside of France and the Benelux countries, of course, and certain Caribbean islands.”

“Here! Here!” shout the Brits.

“Boo!” bellow the Haitians.

“These people are crazy,” whispers Pam. “I’m going to find a bar.”

“There’s one in the foyer,” I tell her quietly. “I have to stay for this— ”

“Sure, sweetie,” she says, kissing me on the nose. Once she’s left, I suddenly realize that— mirrorless— I probably have a giant ruby smear of lipstick on my schnoz!

I go to an afternoon viewing, but truth be told, a lot of the footage is the same summer blockbusters I can see Stateside. I cannot help it that so many films are in worldwide release. In the 1980’s, the studios used to release films in America and then ship the same prints to Europe three months later for a second run. Now the American and European versions aren’t even necessarily identical. So I’m stuck: Why review an American film at Vivex when I can review it in Atlanta? I limit my focus to European and Asian films. Wow!

I highly recommend Danny Boyle’s Trance, a heist film in which the thief cannot remember where he has stashed the goods! Hiring a hypnotist, his troubles are only beginning. Currently available Stateside.

*

            Film director Scottie O’Rourke gets very drunk at dinner. His lamentation: “Twenty years of schoolin’ and they put me on the day shift! Foreign markets account for two-thirds of our revenue, so we’re reduced to three lines of dialogue and 87 minutes of car chases and things blowing up. Iron Man 3 has a Chinese version with a chink doctor and nurse supposedly helping Willie Stark survive. This especially produced extra Chinese footage was necessitated in order to get the vehicle passed by the Chinese Film Board.

The Lone Ranger was a disaster. That film went nowhere! White House Down, the biggest film of the year, right? Forget Olympus Has Fallen, nobody fucks with Roland Emmerich… It did zilch! Nada! Not a particularly strong contender.

“We’re facing a total Sharknado, people! It’s the end of Hollywood as we know it!”

“Wait a minute,” I object. Pamela smirks. “In 1972, economists, film executives and the general public all declared Hollywood deader than the dodo bird. ‘Nothing works! Hollywood has lost its way. American film dominance is at an end!’ So said the pundits and everyone agreed. This went on for five years! Then along came George Lucas’s Star Wars and Hollywood could do no wrong! These things take time.

“Every 20 years, there’s a dip in sales and the Hollywood execs— who should know better, but are plagued by night sweats— visit Jerusalem and wail at The Wailing Wall, ‘Woe is us! Our time is over!’ I cover the industry and I don’t buy it! Hollywood has very large bones. It will take a meteor shower of mammoth proportion to kill off this dinosaur.”

“Bravo!” shouts Pam, toasting me with her wine glass. The sommelier has steered her to a good Riesling from a local vintner. “Serves you right, Scottie, for making me film eight weeks in Colombia!”

I’m not sure our complement of Asian boys understands the drift. They sit talking Thai or Cantonese among themselves.

*

            For one brief, shining moment in the Spring of 2013, it seemed like the European sensibility might win out. Juan Diego Solanas’ Upside Down, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo trilogy and Lars von Trier’s Melancholia cast long shadows. But then Zero Dark Thirty, The Hunger Games, Red Dawn and Looper brushed aside all competition, reestablishing American hegemony.

Happily jumping into bed on our second night, I’m amazed when Pam succinctly knees me in the nuts. Groaning, I exclaim through gritted teeth, “Was that an accident or what?!”

“What’s that, honey?” she asks, all big-eyed innocence, caressing my cheek with her hand.

I remind myself to arrange my end runs in the future far enough afield to avoid the lady’s obtrusive kneecaps.

Produced in 2012, the Swedish film Call Girl hit European theaters in April 2013. Based on true events, you don’t want to miss this one. A well-meaning hooker finds herself with the wrong clientele and all hell breaks loose. Basically free of CGI, it touts production values of the highest order. An eye-opener!

One of the major perks of film festivals is getting to schmooze with producers. Not only do they describe the reasoning behind this season’s storylines, art direction and acting choices, they also function as crystal balls, allowing us to glimpse what is ahead in 2014 and beyond!

“Well, well, look what the cat dragged in,” Pam chuckles as I approach the lunch table. “Tiny Nutworth!”

This might sound harsh coming, in public, from my so-called girlfriend, but Pam is under a lot of pressure. She’s young and insecure, still in pursuit of her true self. First impressions count, however. She’s obviously been ridiculing my sexual prowess. During my afternoon of pearl diving— “Please share with me some of your pearls of wisdom, Mr. Weintraub!”— I get left in the shallows.

My digital recorder sits clearly on the table among the water glasses. Let’s look at the transcript:

Tony Hassler: “When amusement parks offer fireballs as part of the roller coaster experience, synergy has gone too far.”

Brian Keating: “Now you’re chattering! One enforces the other.”

Jerry Fleming: “Speaking of chatter. The government monitors al-Qaeda’s chatter, but most of the really meaningless chatter is on TV. Talk is cheap, but simply by chattering, al-Qaeda sends America into a defensive crouch and paroxysms of paranoia.”

D: “We should shut down the U.S. government in protest.”

Jerry Fleming: “So far al-Qaeda has not targeted the film industry, but if we’re as wussy as the Obama administration, al-Qaeda may smell blood in the water. Don’t wave red meat!”

D: “We should shut down the U.S. government in protest!”

Tony Hassler: “You’re telling me the NSA needs to monitor my 14-year-old daughter’s Twitter account?”

“You’re over-reacting,” says a Swiss voice.

“You’re under-reacting,” says the Spaniard whose country experienced a train derailment in the previous month.

Jerry Fleming: ” How about this new president of Iran? ‘I want to say the following… I wish to say the following… I want the Americans to follow what I tell my followers!’ This guy is so camera-ready for Twitter.”

Brian Keating: “Here’s the kind of personal information the NSA is seeking: Have you ever had sex with an underage, minority prostitute? If yes, was it here at this conclave? If yes, what’s her phone number? Is she available for ‘interrogation’ and maybe a little ‘torture’?”

Tony Hassler: “I refuse to believe that women politicians don’t engage in sexual hanky-panky!”

Pamela Mercer: “If they do, it’s because their husbands are unable to fulfill their sexual needs.”

Jerry Fleming: “You’re only saying that, Pam, because you own shares in Viagra.”

Tony Hassler:Yada, yada, yada, everything happens in Glamerica! Let’s do a post-apocalyptic epic where all you see is dust and ruin for 90 minutes! Oblivion without the plot. No people, no animals, no narration, nothing. You heard me! A feature film where absolutely nothing happens! That would be interesting.”

Brian Keating: “I hate to tell you, Tony, but you just described most of last year’s French feature films.”

“That’s not fair!” says a Swiss voice.

D: “We should shut down the U.S. government in protest!”

In the background, a kind of Saturday Night Live version of a Euro rap song fills the gaps between the diners’ conversation:

Don’ get bitchy, Nicole Richie!

Enemies, you can stay seated.

Osama, I be overheated.

Butt out, Paris Hilton!

Obama, you need to BE somebody.

Frenemies, I need to be needed!

            Jay-Z it is not. It’s not even Ke$ha. More like Nicki Minaj.

Feeling sorry for me, Murray Weintraub throws me a bone: “We’re optioning a property by a writer who calls himself Mustafa al-Kuwaiti. Targeted release, 2015. The story of Jesus based on a new translation from the Aramaic. I’m thinking what Marty Scorsese did with The Last Temptation of Christ. We’ve been taught that Jesus was a carpenter. Mr. al-Kuwaiti believes we got a mistranslation. The sandalwood thing was sandal-maker. See, that explains Jesus’ foot fetish. Why Mary Magdalene washes his feet and all that biblical palaver. I’m thinking Jim Caviezel, if we can get him. Mel Gibson directs.

“There is no more moving moment when working on a movie idea than the battle cry, ‘What else is playing?’ It tells me to take a project out of turn-around hell and to shelve it permanently.”

Mr. Weintraub offers to pay for my lunch if between now and when the waiter brings the coffee, I can come up with a title and logline for a movie that interests him. Zipping my lip, I shake my head and put on my thinking cap. As the cappuccinos hit the table, I announce my idea. “Title: ‘Rolling’ — Confined to a wheelchair, Rocky Balboa becomes the bowling champ of his old folks’ home.”

“I’ll pay for lunch,” says Mr. W, “but in no way am I putting that idea into production. So Rocky succeeds. Where’s the hook, the irony, the unexpected?

“The favorite story of my youth was my Great Aunt Esther. A Frenchwoman and a Communist, she lived in Paris, defending Comrade Stalin’s reputation against all comers. Stalin starves the Kulaks, the Moscow show trials of the 1930’s, Aunt Esther always found a justification. Collectivization. Protecting the revolution against traitors like Trotsky. Finally, the day came when she boarded a train to Moscow for a private audience with Stalin. The NKVD Secret Police picked her up right on the platform, drove her across town to Yaroslavl Station and put her on a train to Siberia. She never even got to sightsee. Straight from Paris to a forced labor camp in the Urals. That’s irony for you. That’s the unexpected!”    

*

            Back at the hotel, it’s true I am rather sour in the elevator.

“What?!” demands Pam. I see her in front, side and back view in the wraparound mirrors. She looks like she’s been poured into that dress. Her beauty is so preposterously overpowering, it tends to put an end to any complaints. “What’s this?” she asks. “Are we having our first fight?”

“No, no,” I demur. “It was simply an uphill climb trying to counter your suggestion that I am an impotent eunuch.”

“Ha ha ha ha ha!” she laughs gaily, clutching my arm for support, a toothy, red-lipped smile cracking her face from ear to ear. “Really, Silvian honey, you can’t take our little joshing around the lunch table personally! I’m an actress, for God’s sake. Producers expect me to be catty.”

“Oh. Okay,” I admit, realizing that I’m a little out of my league hanging with an A-lister. “This is all quite new to me, you know!”

“Ah-h-h! Is the wittle boy feeling bwue?” she chortles, squeezing both my cheeks in a teasing grip before slamming her thumb against the “1” button. “I don’t have time t’ come up to your place,” she explains. “My afternoon schedule looks like something out of LAX.”

“I guess I’ll see you at dinner.” As I watch her exit the elevator, admiring her seductively swinging hips, I try really hard not to be judgmental, not to analyze or categorize. The two of us are friends, after all. I try not to think about whether or not I like Pamela, but rather, is our relationship a realistic pursuit? What are our chances of success when we are both busy career people? Neither has any right to be overly needy, possessive or demanding of the other.

Checking the Sentinel website, I find that Parade magazine has Forest Whitaker and Oprah Winfrey on the cover. Celebrity, celebrity, celebrity. The two of them are starring in a movie about a White House butler. I can’t think of two people who are less in need of publicity.

German output in 2013 centers on Hannah Arendt, a movie about the lady journalist who covered the Adolf Eichmann trial in Jerusalem and helped define the very nature of evil in modern society. Otherwise, it’s all comedies as far as the eye can see.

France. Young & Beautiful by Francois Ozon. Another wow, do not miss! movie. A young girl spirals into a vortex of Internet sex. Again, no CGI, but great production values.

After a year of successes, the Danes have come back strong in 2013 with The Hijacking by Tobias Lindholm. A story ripped from the headlines, the crew of a cargo ship gets hijacked by Somali pirates. A real nail-biter.

*

            Dinner is fantastic. It’s at a Eurasian restaurant, five star quality. Giant wall hangings divide the room into four distinct dining areas. Food and drink, but not gratuity, go on the Weintraub account. Always the puritan, I’m gobsmacked at the vast amount of food and liquor consumed by our party. Chen and I work our way through several bottles of non-alcoholic beer, which leaves us at a slight disadvantage amidst the revelry. People say things like, “I threw up in the trash can in our hotel room!” and roar with laughter.

“Our taxi driver ran over a chicken. Imagine! A chicken! Ha ha ha ha ha!

“I found that 14-year-old minority prostitute you were asking about!”

“We’re putting in a $40,000 second-story redwood deck. California state law requires a loadbearing capacity of 90 lbs. per square inch.”

“We should shut down the U.S. government in protest!”

“My wife’s a basket case. We’re still waiting for the next canyon fire, mudslide, earthquake or coyote attack.”

“That’s my California! Love it or leave it, but you’ll never defeat it.”

“How do you say ‘cuckoo’ in Indo-European?”

“Where’s the wine list?”

“Nice medal.”

“I arranged a co-production with the Greeks and they gave me this medal. I may as well wear it. We’ll be lucky to get back ten drachmas on the dollar.”

“There’s no charity in golf or the biz.”

“I saw Tiger Woods last night on TV. He’s gotten his game back at the Bridgestone Invitational in Akron. They’re six hours behind us.”

“Two zuzeem says he beats Jack Nicklaus‘s record.”

“I remember what my dad used to tell me. ‘Son, get a real job.’ He was an investment banker and he’s telling me to get a real job?”

We feast on Berlinertorte for dessert, thick slices of white cake decorated with striped icing to resemble sections of the Berlin Wall.

The lady on my right says, “I don’t know if you’re aware of this, but we own property in The Hamptons.”

“Wow! Is that an invitation?” asks the long-haired, extremely young fellow one seat over.

“I would. Most definitely. But I can’t. A previous commitment. Our dog lives there.”

There are ten of us and it’s so noisy at our table, I am truly grateful for the wall hangings. Pamela sits as far from me as she can and still be dining together. We’re at polar opposite ends of the table, like north and south on a compass. Her perfect white teeth flash as she jokes with Mr. Weintraub and needles Scottie. Whenever I stare too long or too forlornly, she graces me with her middle finger, jabbing it at me for all to see.

“She like you,” Chen assures me.

“You’re kidding. She’s giving me the finger!”

“She pay a-tten-tion to you mean she like you,” he insists.

“Really?” He works for her, he would know.

“Oh, yes.”

I frown. He’s part of her entourage, he certainly knows her better than I do.

As we part company out on the sidewalk in front of the restaurant, Pam yawns in my face and pushes me away. Well, everyone wants a piece of her, it should come as no surprise that she might be a bit standoffish! “I’m going with Scottie and Murray,” she says, pointing at Messieurs O’Rourke and Weintraub who are busy pressing bills into the palms of the parking attendants. Yawning again, Pam straightens my tie. “See y’all around sometime. It’s been great! ” She delivers this last line with gusto, grimacing ghoulishly.

“Is it something I said?”

“Well, well, loverboy, aren’t you the touchy one!” she laughs, doing her Audrey-Hepburn-in-Paris imitation. “So long, Charlie! Ha ha ha ha ha!

Obviously, she doesn’t mean to be mean. She’s not trying to hurt people. It’s only that the glare of the spotlight makes it imperative that Pamela focus on her own identity. Maintaining her personal sense of self rules out any wider commitments. She’s young.

Demurely, she allows Murray Weintraub to fold her into the passenger seat of his $120,000, hand-crafted, turbo-charged Italian chariot. It’s a classic!

That last salvo of laughter still grates in my ears, indicating the pratfall which awaits each of us when we get in over our heads. Celebrities aren’t like the rest of us, they have glamor and talent in endless abundance.

*

            On the corner in front of the hotel, a night battle royal shakes the very ground under my feet. Standing on the steps watching, I find the noise ear-splitting, the smoke disorienting and the smell of gunpowder overpowering. Federal troops engage in gunfire with jihadist terrorists. I’m amused to see that the jihadists are dressed as tourists in Hawaiian shirts, dark slacks, multicolored crocs and sunhats. “Allahu Akbar! ” they scream, firing automatic weapons.

I grab a few quick photos before uniformed policemen rush down the steps and hurriedly usher the other bystanders and me inside. “Bitte! Gegenwart verboten! Please!” they say, which itself is confusing. I find myself shouting in pidgin Plattdeutsch, arguing about the inalienable rights of the Fourth Estate. To no avail. Up in my room, however, they cannot prevent me from hanging out my window to see what’s happening. Unfortunately, the angle gives me a clear view of tear gas or white smoke blowing across the grass and not much else. I use my digital recorder to document the sounds of battle for possible use at future symposia under the title “Full Frontal Attack On the Senses: When Movie Violence Meets the Street.” I can always get corresponding images from social media on the Net. Already, Twitter is in full cry, albeit in German.

Maybe this is the movie I seek, The Film Festival from Hell starring Ricky Gervais. Ta-ta!

*

Characters

(in order of appearance)

Silvian Rochester

BRD troops in uniform

Otto von Bonn

Marjorie Richard

James Metcalf

Aija Barkava

Pamela Mercer

Ricardo the bartender

Waiter

female officer, Bundeswehr

R. Scott “Scottie” O’Rourke

Chen

Mickey Shapiro

Monsieur LeGrand

Harry Butterfield

Murray Weintraub

Tony Hassler

Brian Keating

Jerry Fleming

D

Swiss man

Spaniard

lady at dinner

young man

two parking attendants

armed BRD troops

jihadist terrorists

police officers