The blog of author Dennis Cooper

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4 books I read recently & loved: Renee Gladman Houses of Ravicka, Hedi El Kholti A Place In The Sun, Andrew Durbin MacArthur Park, Douglas Payne Salted Rook

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‘The recent Dorothy Project release Houses of Ravicka is now Gladman’s 13th book, and her fourth about her invented city of Ravicka. Her Ravicka novels are strange and obsessive and in many ways singular. But Gladman also follows in a robust literary tradition of surreal urban creation. In Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, Marco Polo describes over 50 fictitious cities to emperor Kublai Khan. In Julio Cortázar’s 62: A Model Kit, “The City” feels like Paris, Barcelona, or Oslo as it shifts around its characters. Samuel Delany’s 800-page novel Dhalgren is an extended trip through the Midwest city of Bellona, cut off from the rest of the world by some unknown catastrophe. With Ravicka, Gladman conjures a city in which everything is vivid and nothing is fixed. I often tell people Gladman’s Ravicka books are like The Phantom Tollbooth for adults.

‘In its exploration of language, space, and time, Gladman’s writing achieves an uncanny balance between evocative specifics and hazy uncertainties. The first Ravicka book, Event Factory, features a “linguist-traveler” studying the city and its speech. “Listening to [the Ravickians] was like gathering water without a pail,” the narrator says. “Water gathered around my feet. I tried to capture it with my mind. I asked Dar to hold some. But it was water.” In The Ravickians, the second book, Gladman writes, “The closer I get to the end of a sentence, the less certain I am of its beginning.” In the third book, Ana Patova Crosses a Bridge, the narrator says, “I could write pages and pages without disruption, but if I stopped to think, ‘What is this language and how is it that I know it,’ I could not progress.”’ — Los Angeles Review of Books

 

Renee Gladman’s Site
A visit with Renee Gladman
RENEE GLADMAN’S ‘HOUSES OF RAVICKA’
Language and Landscape: Renee Gladman by Zack Friedman
Buy ‘Houses of Ravicka’

 

Renee Gladman Houses of Ravicka
Dorothy, a Publishing Project

‘Since 2010 writer and artist Renee Gladman has placed fantastic and philosophical stories in the invented city-state of Ravicka, a Ruritanian everyplace with its own gestural language, poetic architecture, and inexplicable physics. As Ravicka has grown, so has Gladman’s project, spilling out from her fiction—Event Factory, The Ravickians, and Ana Patova Crosses a Bridge—into her nonfiction (Calamities) and even visual art (Prose Architectures).

‘The result is a project unlike any other in American letters today, a fictional world that spans not only multiple books but different genres, even different art forms.

‘In Houses of Ravicka, the city’s comptroller, author of Regulating the Book of Regulations, seems to have lost a house. It is not where it’s supposed to be, though an invisible house on the far side of town, which corresponds to the missing house, remains appropriately invisible. Inside the invisible house, a nameless Ravickian considers how she came to the life she is living, and investigates the deep history of Ravicka—that mysterious city-country born of Renee Gladman’s philosophical, funny, audacious, extraordinary imagination.’ — Dorothy, a publishing project

 

Excerpt

I live here, and have done so for at least a decade, and have furnished brightly this spacious top-floor flat of seven rooms, this wall-less, invisible flat, and in all that time, I’ve gotten up, made coffee, dressed, and walked out the door. To leave an invisible structure is just as difficult as returning to one. I’d like to try to explain what it’s like: first, how you leave, and then, how you return. Probably, before all that, I should describe the events that led to my occupying 32 Bravashbinder, events belonging to an even larger system of events and weather that are so in situ it’s hard to gather them. But I do know that if I’m to tell a story about how I live, I’m also to tell about work and sex and how the city breathes, and this requires me to back all the way up to the Barbaras Wall, which long ago used to divide the upper and lower parts of the city on the east side, or back even further up to the emergence of the old city, unfolding, literally, beneath this one — born both of it and before it — and the new laws of motion it introduced into the science of the land (something always changing beneath you changes your chemistry, historians now say). No, perhaps I should begin by saying what it means to see or how measurements occur in time, because first you have to let go of the notion that sights enter the eyes, or merely the eyes. I like to travel far out of the city center, stand in some improbable place, and describe the things obstructed from my view. I try to see them even though they are behind me or are blocked by the buildings of ciut centali, cast in shadows by the trees atop cit Ramtala. You see something by calling its name and doing a pondü with the body. I go to the dirtiest part of the city, the old dilapidated docks, and I dream of the hafshahs; I see the grasses and tij. I stand against the north-side wall of the National Library and press my face into the grooved concrete of its facade and I write a letter about what people are reading inside. I send the letter to the building and try to erase it from my mind: I don’t read, I try to tell myself. Books don’t exist. I’m lying in the woods that run along the a5 with my face against the moist ground, reading the last book. Some hum extends from the city, and the walls of every home creak: a single electrical bend that divides time. Only a third of the residents bear a record of the break, only half of that third had actually heard it, only a third of that half of a third reflected on it, and just a few of these tired, still deeply dreaming souls, a sixteenth of the third of that half of a third, connect this minuscule eruption to those from previous nights and previous residences. I don’t see anything in the ground of the forest, but I hear pages turning in the book. The book, these creaks in the walls of houses, the hum of the city, the lines in the asphalt, have backed me up to the forest, my face against the ground. I was trying to tell you what it means to see a city that itself sees, that looks out of its structures toward some imagined place, some activating force. We have a whole science that says the buildings of Ravicka are on the move — the houses, the buildings — and although the science doesn’t say it’s because the houses see that they move, it’s clear that they move because they see. Otherwise, we wouldn’t be studying the migration of buildings but rather the behavior of some further exterior force. For example, if experts believed the migrations were due to wind or erosion, then we’d be looking more deeply at the properties of wind, the effects of erosion; and perhaps some group is studying one or the other of those things, because the Balsha winds are strong and erosion occurs wherever there is ground; but when it comes to what sets a house in motion, science seems to look primarily at the subjectivity of houses, not going so far as to say they have psychology but definitely allowing for instinct or bewilderment. Houses have creaked for a long time. Long before the first house got up and walked off, the walls of houses creaked, and not just in Ravicka. Nearly every ghostly tale has something that creaks. Wouldn’t it be logical to argue this as the first evidence of buildings seeing? As I said earlier, seeing does not extend foremost from the eyes. I get my face dirty in the forest, but I don’t come here when it rains. I don’t want any trouble with drowning or suffocating; I want to lie down and see what’s happening on my street. Understanding what’s happening in the houses that surround my house — noting the schedules people keep, which neighbors commingle, which keep to themselves, what books they read, whether or not they work, what the clocks on their walls say — helps me to define my own house, to give it shape, to know how to enter it today. To be clear, though, 32 Bravashbinder is not in motion. That is not one of its characteristics. It’s not off somewhere touring the city or the outskirts wreaking havoc on stationary structures; despite its invisibility, it is not a mystery. It doesn’t go on Brunza’s list; people are not talking about it behind closed doors. No. 32 bears the condition of many other houses in Ravicka; it exists on a degree nth parallel to some other house, usually on the opposite side of the city, and, for reasons laid out in The Book of Regulations — oblique to a layman like me — that other house relies on the invisibility of these houses in order to exist. But how do you know the place where you live is invisible, and how did you come to live there? It’s not only visitors from faraway countries who ask me these questions; some of my friends from the oldest families in Ravicka grow flustered when it comes to the question of Rah’s houses, many setting themselves up in the heavier homes (granite walls, deep foundations), hoping to stay grounded. However, I would argue: for any one house to be in motion every other house must be as well. It would be different were this open country, where miles separated one living structure from another; in that scenario, houses could do whatever they wanted — probably for centuries — before any other house knew about it. And that would be an entirely different science we’d be crafting, having no need to take propinquity into account. However, except for the forest, the grasses, and the outskirts, this is a densely built city; even bodies alter environments when they move through them. And for a long time, we seemed to understand how to read these changes. We knew how to adjust our thinking when we came upon a protest at the city’s center, a crowd of bodies standing in a U formation or bodies in a moving, furious cluster, pushing toward a gate or a door, a stage. There is a pareis for throngs; there’s a pareis for one body sprinting through the train station; a pareis for an excited family running up or down steps toward a park or carnival; a pareis for a couple in a fight, where one of the two storms away, or where they both storm away but in opposite directions; a pareis for when they make up and embrace and stay still for an hour (though stillness is another kind of movement; it affects the ground, even if not the wind). Most Ravickians are excited when the environment changes. The more awkward the situation one is observing, the more elaborate the response; but also, the more subtle its performance, the more public. Many people who seem to be in motion are most likely just in the middle of a response to something else. It’s hard to know: somehow the elders didn’t account for this. We exist in a society of complex gestures, all running along their own time; we are all interrupting, witnessing, performing simultaneously, and this was much easier to accept and discern when it was believed that all of our movement happened upon an unmoving ground, when it was believed that the ground itself was a dense impaction of dirt and sediment, when we didn’t think about the ground. Now as I move along the streets of Ravicka I think how odd it must have been to have this sort of geographic numbness I’m talking about, where your sense of the planet is on one hand a picture of a green and blue sphere rotating in a lonely vast darkness and on the other hand that indisputable flat, one-dimensional ground upon which we built our houses or took off in our planes. We have always acted as if we understood the space between the ground and sky, because this is primarily where we place our bodies, this was our living space, where we could most understand breath and language and light and contour. Someone at some point in our history said it was safe to walk across the ground, to walk without thinking about the ground; we were free to study the sky, to figure out how to build in empty space; birds were our mentors. We laughed at things that burrowed underground; we left them to the dark. Our understanding of space became implicit, complex, ornate, but always extending from the body, which began at our feet or at our crown and returned to the body. We would have sworn the environment was complete — not quite closed or sealed but unchanging enough that we all had access to the pattern: we shared memory, language; in the depths of our homes we shared our bodies; we touched our breasts to one another, we pulled our limbs through, we drank each other’s fluids. Living comprised all these movements, all these collectivities, and while it seemed to be transpiring on top of a silent, crystallized ground, among glued-down props, you could drop your books while you were running for the bus and I could jump back twice, then slowly forward in a somer­sault, and grab a leaf from a tree and a rock from my pocket (hand you the book you neglected to retrieve, the one under the tire of the parked car), and if we walked away from this scene without exchanging names or other means of contact, it would have seemed strange but not conspiratorial. I would have made a small notation later in my notebook, and that would have been the day. But the ground opened or lifted, and an ancient city began to carve itself beneath us, talking to our structures, setting them in motion — a city most of us can’t reach. I have never seen the door, which awaits the traveler many kilometers underground, nor have I found the vaunted gate at the bottom of the stairs inside Shadow of Courts Park. I have read about these portals in Amini novels; I’ve seen them drawn and mapped out and passed around at the Cartographer’s café, but I don’t know whether these stories and maps actually lead to the ancient city or whether they merely take one along the elaborate roads and sentences of fiction.

 


This Side of Real: Renee Gladman’s New Narrative


Renee Gladman @ Small Press Traffic


Renee Gladman at Georgetown University

 

 

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‘— Last year I went to see Peter Hook, the bass player from Joy Division/New Order, perform their debut album Unknown Pleasures at the Henry Fonda Theatre. I was with my friend Stephanie. We got tickets without thinking too much about it. As the event drew closer, it became obvious that it was terrible idea. Still, I was hopeful that Hook and his band could somehow pull it off. Maybe he knows what he’s doing and this isn’t just a way to make some quick cash now that he’s left New Order.

‘The place is packed. Old and young people, couples with kids are standing around waiting for the show to start. A transmission of knowledge. We sit at a booth and exchange trivia about Joy Division with a couple, while a documentary retracing the band’s career is projected on stage. The show finally starts and after hearing the first song, we completely lose hope. Stephanie leaves during the third song to go to our friend Heather’s Christmas party. She wants to buy a t-shirt but I convince her not to. I promise her that I’ll make her one. I think about the band’s off-grooves etchings and describe them to her. The one on Still, released after Ian Curtis’s suicide, says, “The chicken won’t stop” and “The chicken stops here.” The chicken tracks across the grooves on the opposite side would make a cool t-shirt. They reference the ending of Werner Herzog’s 1977 movie, Stroszek, where the character played by Bruno S., a street musician, leaves Berlin for the US, to escape the constant bullying his girlfriend’s ex-pimp subjects him to. After his trailer gets repossessed, and an absurd attempt to rob a bank, he ends up committing suicide. The film ends with a sequence showing a chicken dancing. Presumably this is the last movie Curtis, who was a fan of Herzog’s, saw on the BBC the night he hanged himself. All of this, and pretty much everything else, is common knowledge now, and features in the film’s Wikipedia page.

‘I walk upstairs to smoke a cigarette. I am vaguely hopeless but not angry as I gaze dreamily at Hollywood Boulevard. I think about what Joy Division meant to me then, what the sound signified and triggered. A floating atmosphere of defeat. Things that would unfold later, once I’d patiently deciphered the clues and researched the influences contained in the records. The two news stories I remember most from that time: the Tenerife Airport disaster in ’77, the deadliest accident in history and so close to Morocco. Jim Jones’s Guyana cult suicide on the cover of Paris Match in December ’78, a green-tinted black and white photo of bodies face-down on the ground. Leaders of men, made a promise for a new life.’ — Hedi El Kholti

(cont.)

 

Hedi El Kholti @ Semiotext(e)
An Interview with Hedi El Kholti
HOLD UP TO THE LIGHT
theotherhedi @ instagram
Buy ‘A Place in the Sun’

 

Hedi El Kholti A Place In The Sun
Hesse Press

‘”A childhood game. Too many blank spaces and unsupervised hours. There was an history, with nebulous trajectories to decipher, trivial facts to memorize, a multitude of characters and a narrative that would open up a world of possibilities and teach me how to live.

‘Divide, displace, itemize, everything has to go, 20 years of accumulated magazines and this absurd desire to consume it all, to let nothing escape, and encapsulate all of it in a final embrace.”

‘Hedi El Kholti’s A PLACE IN THE SUN is composed of more than 60 collage works, selected from hundreds of pieces produced over the last 12 years. Accompanied by El Kholti’s original texts, these works have previously circulated in limited-edition, print-only ‘zine form. His images—culled from alternative cinema and art magazines, cult tracts, gay porn and slasher movies—evoke states of ecstasy, isolation, liberation and horror, often simultaneously.

‘Hedi El Kholti is a co-editor of Semiotexte, and the founder and publisher of Animal Shelter, an occasional journal of art, sex and literature.’ — Hesse Press

 

Excerpts

 


Otis MFA Graphic Design Lecture: Hedi el Kholti


Waiting for Brainard (Trailer)


Semiotext(e) at the Whitney Biennial

 

 

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‘Andrew Durbin writes prose with narcoleptic tendencies, his sentences like sleepers suddenly jerking awake. In his new novel, MacArthur Park, Durbin’s protagonist Nick Fowler, a young poet who occasionally writes about art and is also working on a book, is trying to recall the details of a hookup. He knows he made out with a boy to the backdrop of a rising sun; it might have been snowing. Durbin writes, “All winter I kept thinking that it was snowing, though it was often too warm to stick or seemingly too cold to snow, and so the silver-gray clouds, like the underbellies of fish, kept their close, mindful distance, always refusing to break out of their steady overhead stream into an event. The weather did not like to make itself understood.” But Durbin does. His character’s interiors are well-lit, even during blackouts.

‘The book Fowler is writing, loosely, throughout MacArthur Park, is about weather. At the onset of the novel, he survives Hurricane Sandy while housesitting for an art collector in New York City’s West Village. The relative privilege of his circumstance becomes a smudge on his memory; he no longer trusts how people, including himself, recall disaster. When asked at a dinner party about his writing, he remembers the “Untitled book thing” folder on his computer, where he postulates that his “sense of weather had enlarged to include the turbulent atmosphere of human events, the ways in which we face or avoid crisis, the ways we skid toward crisis, helplessly, together and alone.”

‘Together and alone are jarring modes of MacArthur Park, breaking down the sometimes intimidating integration of making art and making the party. Durbin’s writing doesn’t assume the position of being above any of his peripheral characters, except maybe as a drone, scanning their expressions for “the cheerful daze of a member of a cult.” A writer should write, he doesn’t exactly argue. He seems to understand when others make a case for “not-making-art,” but he just can’t help himself from expressing himself in writing. The proliferation of his words become an argument unto themselves.’ — Thora Siemsen

 

Andrew Durbin’s Site
TALKING DISCO AND THE DISASTER IMAGINARY WITH ANDREW DURBIN
Stormy Weather: on Andrew Durbin’s ‘MacArthur Park’
Andrew Durbin & Lucy Ives Discuss the Poet’s Novel
Buy ‘MacArthur Park’

 

Andrew Durbin MacArthur Park
Nightboat Books

‘Andrew Durbin’s debut novel asks what it means to belong to a place, an idea, and a time, even as those things begin to slip away.

‘After Hurricane Sandy, Nick Fowler, a writer, stranded alone in a Manhattan apartment without power, begins to contemplate disaster. Months later, at an artist residency in upstate New York, Nick finds his subject in disaster itself and the communities shaped by it, where crisis animates both hope and denial, unacknowledged pasts and potential futures. As he travels to Los Angeles and London on assignment, Nick discovers that outsiders—their lives and histories disturbed by sex, loss, and bad weather—are often better understood by what they have hidden from the world than what they have revealed.’ — Nightboat Books

 

Excerpt

In 1853, William Money, a mystic from NewYork who claimed Jesus had cornered him in a Manhattan alley and told him to cross the West for Los Angeles, arrived in southern California to save the world. A self-proclaimed healer and scientist, Money wrote many books about the medical and scientific fields he claimed to be an expert in, including the first book about LA to be written in English. He made maps: “William Money’s Discovery of the Ocean,” which he completed at the end of his life, revealed that San Francisco—a city he deeply hated after locals rejected his faith healing practices and he was hauled out of town—sat precariously on top of a secret ocean. He moonlighted as an astronomer and a prophet of the weather. He founded the Reformed New Testament Church of the Faith of Jesus Christ and was nicknamed Bishop Money, Doctor Money, and Professor Money. He healed thousands in the city before voluntarily retreating into the desert to found a spiritual commune of octagonal buildings called The Moneyan Institute, where he later died with an image of the Virgin over his head and a skeleton etched into his footboard. In dying he was said to have placed a curse on the city for refusing to publish his map of California’s secret underground ocean and predicted that Los Angeles would meet the same fate as San Francisco and fall into the sea. Neither have yet, but Money’s prophecy sparked an imaginary of disaster that continues to destroy the city anyway: early to recent fiction, films, video games have all traded in on the moody suspicion that the land is cursed, sourcing the city’s geological, climactic, and social precarity—and the anxiety it produces—to provide images of destruction and demolition for the visual discourse of the city’s dystopian present and future.

Recast as an amoral city in the early noir of the 1920s, Angelino writers quickly scripted the destruction of LA in their forecasts for its future, notably in Homer Lea’s Valor of Ignornace (1909), a racist vision of a Japanese invasion of LA; and Myron Brinig’s Flutter of an Eyelid (1933), a novel about Christian fanatics and an earthquake that destroys the city—apocalyptic tropes that were taken up and expanded in disaster films, including War of the Worlds (1953), Earthquake (1974), Escape from LA (1996), and San Andreas (2015), a film that imagines a spectacularly violent earthquake,“The Big One,” that not only annihilates the West Coast, but much of the country. In it, the Rock, one of the stars of the film, rescues as many people as possible while Los Angeles and San Francisco are destroyed around him, the concrete, wood and steel dissolving into piles of dust before the viewers while the continental shelf transforms below into an unstoppable serial killer.

In a survey of fictional and film accounts of the annihilation of LA in the 20th century, Mike Davis enumerates the modes of its demise: by nuclear weapons (49 times), earthquakes (28), hordes/invasion (10), monsters (10), pollution (7), gangs/ terrorism (6), floods (6), plagues (6), comets/tsunami (5), cults (3), volcanoes (2), firestorms (2), drought (1), blizzard (1), devil (1), freeway (1), riot (1), fog (1), slide (1), Bermuda grass (1), global warming (1), sandstorm (1), and everything (1). In destroying the city, Hollywood ups literature’s speculative ante in additionally imagining the destruction of itself, presenting the fantasy as one of national tragedy—and cathartic fantasy (for the display of male bravery)—while covertly inviting us to imagine a world without the studio system that manufactured this work in the first place. If LA goes, Hollywood goes. Disaster films about LA (all great disaster films are about LA) are the entertainment that imagines a spectacular end to itself, a totalizing destruction of not only a place but of the medium, outsizing the U.S.’s doomsy anxiety about its future in the post-war to include one if its most popular industries.

In Myron Brinig’s Flutter of an Eyelid (1933), one of the first novels to imagine the city’s obliteration, everything goes to hell, beginning with the arrival of a woman named Angela Flower. Flower opens a church called The Ten Million Dollar Heavenly Temple, a loose disguise for the activities of Christian activist and mystic Aimee Semple McPherson, an evangelist and media personality who founded the Angelus Temple in Echo Park (its actual price tag was 1.5 million, not 10) in 1923 and who radioed to thousands her fiery and stupefying sermons. (Louis Adamic referred to her believers as “the undead.”) In Brinig’s novel, Angela finds and fucks a blond Jesus, later using him to brainwash the city.Angela invites Jesus’believers toVenice Beach to behold the miracle of him walking on water. He does so, hovering slightly over the ocean before thousands of onlookers, for a few seconds, after which he sinks below the waves and his body disappears (all of LA is structured from a series of disappearances), leading his shocked and now suicidal followers to fling themselves into the water with him, where they too drown at the moment a massive earthquake destroys the city, shaking it off into the Pacific. (William Money’s curse returns.) In reality, McPherson staged her own kidnapping on Venice Beach and was later found to be hiding out in Arizona. She returned to LA under pressure form the local press and almost immediately regained the following she’d nearly lost.Angelinos greeted her a hero. A parade in her honor drew 50,000 people. The city wasn’t convinced and took her to court for fraud. Trial coverage soured her believers and she became a laughing stock. Off the hook, she left for a new life back east, a laughing stock, though the case was dismissed.

Brinig initiated a kind of disaster literature that specified Los Angeles as a teetering platform for a city of fanatics, communalized and self-organized into delusional and profiteering cults. Coincidentally, when Brinig’s novel went to print, an earthquake struck Long Beach and the southern parts of LA, actualizing the cheap novel’s ending and seemingly assuring Money’s curse was real. Rumors spread east of the city’s destruction; the disaster imaginary had entered national consciousness. LA wasn’t safe; everyone knew it. By the 1930s, suicide rates climbed high over the national average and sat there. In his 1931 essay “The Jumping-Off Place,” Edmund Wilson ascribed the trend to the region’s communalized eccentricities.

 


Poetry will be made by all! Andrew Durbin


Andrew Durbin @ LUMA Foundation


The Side Dish #23 Featuring Andrew Durbin

 

 

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‘Barrett Busto headed down the road towards home with two buckets full of salmon in the back of his truck as noon washed over the quiet valley of Wasilla. He had been fishing since he was a boy. Now, as an old man, he owned a bait and tackle shop in Anchorage. He was the widow of a content but childless marriage, his wife now ten years dead. Busto was nearing seventy and word had somehow reached him that the neighbors, and even his customers at the shop, thought he was losing his mind. Damn them to hell, he thought. What did they know?

‘He flicked through the radio channels as he drove on; the receiver gave him nothing but fuzz. Over the dissonant static, he heard a clear and heavy sound ring out like thunder. Moments later he heard the whir of a plane overhead. When he looked up and saw the plane cutting through the sky, he identified it as belonging to a prominent local politician named Stella Peyton. Hunting wolves is a hobby of hers. The revised law stated that aerial hunters had to chase down the wolf with the plane to the point of exhaustion, before shooting it from the ground. Not Stella Peyton though. As a state employee she was granted special provisions that allowed her to shoot it from the plane. She never even had to look it in the eye.

‘Barrett Busto never saw the sense in hunting wolves. When the wolf population was at its peak a century ago and a possible threat to other wildlife as well as dogs or livestock, the practice might have been justified in some eyes. Now though, with the creature just rising up from near extinction because of such killing, what point was there? Now that the animal had been forced into small isolated populations on the part of human expansion into their territories?

‘A pelt to hang by a mantle piece.

‘A righteous extermination of some symbolic evil. Something that is primitive and heathen and ungodly.

‘Maybe Stella Peyton being a steadfast fundamentalist played into her justification of this supposed sport.’ — Douglas Payne

 

Douglas Payne @ Twitter
Douglas Payne @ Facebook
Douglas Payne @ Muck and Muse
‘Birdsong’, by Douglas Payne
Buy ‘Salted Rook’

 

Douglas Payne Salted Rook
Chest-O-Drawers Press

‘Douglas Payne’s debut chapbook is a work that navigates with unflinching grace the graveled and beautiful landscapes of memory marked by apostasy, pain, intoxication, lust, and loss.

‘Douglas Payne’s poems and stories have appeared in journals and anthologies, including Muck and Muse, Shot Glass Journal, The Far East: Everything Just As It Is, A Year in Ink Vol. 5, and others. Payne is a San Diego native and an alumnus of Grossmont College’s Creative Writing Program. Salted Rook was selected in 2016 as the Grand Prize Winner of the Grossmont College “First Book” competition.’ — Chest-O-Drawers Press

 

Excerpt

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. I was very happy to do so. Oh, you and I both forgot that I restored/reposted your LaTouche post this past June. But I did restore your ‘Eyes Wide Schnitzler’ post, and it’ll be up later this week. ** Steve Erickson, Hi. It’s obviously very popular these days to decide rumors are facts. It’s a plague. I’m glad to hear everything went so well and interestingly in the meeting with your actor. I’m half-suspicious, half-open mindedly curious about the Dahmer film. ** Armando, Hi. Happy to add my happy birthday to Mr. Caprio. He used to live a block away from me in LA before he got huge and could afford a mansion, and I bumped into and talked to him a bunch of times back then. Nice fella. ** Chaim Hender, Hi! I remember Corey Heiferman, yes, hello again! What a great Wes Anderson encounter story. That’s how I imagine he would be precisely. And his enchantment ‘by slight differences in decor between miniatures’, etc. is exactly why I would so love have a long tete-a-tete with him. Thanks so much for sharing that. Wow, you’re just recently relocated. I’m guessing you knew Tel Aviv before you settled there? One of Gisele Vienne’s and my theater works, ‘Kindertotenlieder’ is going to play there next year, although I don’t think my coming along is in the budget, unfortunately. You know, I don’t remember there being many frustrations upon relocating in Paris apart from the difficulties back when I didn’t understand any French. But the joy of newly living here was considerable, and I haven’t lost that joy years later. I’ve been really productive ever since I moved here, and I think I’ve been doing my best ever work, which must have something to do with the magic and foreignness of my surroundings. So, yeah, no real issues or warnings to you that I can think of. What are you experiencing there so far? You sound happy and inspired, awesome. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! I’m still tinkering with the film script, but I think I’ll be able to show it to Zac tomorrow maybe. I’m drafting up a rough script for the first, oh, 1/3 to 1/2 of the film. After that, there are just notes and ideas about what I think should happen. I’m really into what I’m writing. We’ll see what Zac thinks. I’m sure there’ll be a lot of revisions and things he wants to do. The concert I went to was by this French/Argentinian artist whose work I love, Dominique-Gonzalez Foerster, who’s designing the set for the future opera project I’m working on with Gisele and her and Zac. Part of her work is performative. She does these very elaborate physical makeovers to become a different person, often well known (Edgar Allan Poe, Queen Victoria, others), and completely unrecognizable as herself. For the concert, which was at Club Silencio, she became this strange 80’s style New Wave rock singer who deliberately looked like ‘Priss’ from the original Blade Runner, and she sang these very witty, parodic, deconstructive 80s New Wave songs she wrote. It was wonderful. And the guitarist in her band was the great Arto Lindsay, one of the architects of No Wave, and just a genius, master guitar player. Your day off sounds quite like just what you needed and deserved. I hope you feel refreshed today as you head back to work. How was everything? ** _Black_Acrylic, Howdy, Ben. Super that the ‘mini’ karaoke event went down gang busters. But, ack, shit, about you not getting that funding. Damn. What are your other options? I’ve never crowdfunded, and it seems like a hassle, but I guess it works, especially in a situation like yours where the needed funds won’t be too large? I don’t know. Sorry. ** Nik, Hey, man! Oh, there’s no dialogue in ‘Crowd’. It’s a non-verbal dance piece. 15 young people enter a warehouse where there’s a rave/dance party, they ‘dance’ until the rave ends, and they leave. What I did was create specific characters for each dancer and narratives for each one that causes them to interact with each other during the piece as their characters. When we were making the piece, we worked on that first until they knew their characters and narratives very well, and then Gisele choreographed the piece using the characters and storylines as a structure to build around. The characters and stories are there and visible/buried to different degrees, but everything is presented through movement. I’m a video game nut, but I’ve had to forcibly keep away from them for too long now because they swallow me, and I’m too busy right now. It sucks. What you say about your editing process makes total sense, yes. I’m totally interested to hear anything about the work that you want to share. I’m a real process junkie. I hope you have a good week too! ** Bill, Hi, pal. Oh, gosh, no sweat on the post. I’m just thrilled that you’re doing it. Thank you! I don’t know Mariana Enriquez’s work. It looks good. I’ll go look for her stories. ** Misanthrope, George, morning. Oh, well, I guess it’s technically possible that writer knows my stuff. Huh. I’ll see if I can come across that book in store here, and, if I do, I’ll at least flip through it and check the prose. Laid back weekend, nice. Mine was good. Working on the film script. Seeing pals. Concert (see: above). Hit a book fair. Ate delicious shit. A-okay. ** Keaton, Move your furniture around or something. That can weirdly help. I’m in a flowing creativity moment too. Awesome. High as a kite or thereabouts. Manly, ha ha, gotcha. I think ‘Golden Fruits’ is by Sarraute. Salut a toi! ** Sypha, A kind of horrible guy I used to know who was gay but had a girlfriend told me he got into having sex with her by imagining her breasts were a butt with two big pimples on it. Eek. I had a post about C.J. Bradbury Robinson? I don’t remember that at all. Assuming you’re right, it must have been a post I made as a way to start investigating his stuff or something. I don’t think I’ve read him, or else I’m blanking out. Huh. I’ll check. Thanks, James. ** Okay. Should you need something new to read, I recommend those books up above as possibilities. See you tomorrow.

Jason Schwartzman Day *

* (restored)

 

‘This bushy-browed Hollywood progeny of producer Jack Schwartzman (Lion Heart, 007: Never Say Never Again) and actress Talia Shire is no stranger to the LA beat. On his latest Coconut Records album, he croons, “I miss you; I’m going back home to the west coast.” Home indeed. Nephew to Francis Ford Coppola, cousin of Nicolas Cage—Jason Schwartzman was practically bred for the multiplex. Fortunately, he chose not to stretch his creative muscle in the oily blood-and-guts melodramas of Cage and Coppola. Instead he wielded drumsticks for the rock band Phantom Planet and spent his formative teenage years championing a subtler, more sensitive brand of cinema a la Sofia Coppola and her inconspicuous brother, Roman (a serial Second Unit director, writer/director of the underappreciated CQ, and, um, uncredited Senate Guard in The Phantom Menace).

‘For the past decade, Jason Schwartzman’s M.O. has been offbeat, quirky, personal films. Kudos to Wes Anderson, who’s spent the last decade casting Schwartzman as his tenured darling. Schwartzman charms the screen as actor and co-writer of the acclaimed Darjeeling Limited as much as he did in his unforgettable breakout role as Max Fischer in Rushmore. The iconic high school dissident and melancholy lover turns twenty-eight years old today, June 26. On this, the eve of his premiere role as a television lead in Bored to Death (in which Schwartzman plays a writer-turned-private-eye alongside latent funnyman Zach Galifianakis) we take a retrospective look at one of his most unrecognized accomplishments—Hotel Chevalier—the short film prologue to the Darjeeling Limited.

‘A.O. Scott calls the thirteen-minute prolegomenon “an almost perfect distillation of Mr. Anderson’s vexing and intriguing talents, enigmatic, affecting and wry.” Without Schwartzman’s guileless melancholy, barefooted calm, and steadiness, Hotel Chevalier would be nothing more than an obsessive-compulsive exercise in symmetry. As vital to the jigsaw Andersonian mise-en-scène is the presence of the actor inhabiting the space. Gene Hackman hits the target in The Royal Tenenbaums with his comedic gloom. Bill Murray does the same in The Life Aquatic. Schwartzman masters the look in Hotel Chevalier. It’s not ambiguous so much as it is withholding. It forces the viewer to wait and guess at his inner turmoil. The way Schwartzman wears his face reminds one of Kuleshov’s famous experiment. In the 1920s, Russian filmmaker Lev Kuleshov photographed “a close-up shot of an actor with a neutral expression on his face; when the same footage of the actor’s face was edited with shots of a bowl of soup, or a dead body, or a baby…ordinary filmgoers praised the actor’s performance, believing that his face had registered an appropriate response to what they had just seen.” Some think this is the result of psychology. Take Alfred Hitchcock, for instance. Inferring from Kuleshov’s experiment that actors are nearly inconsequential to a film so long as the montage is effective, Hitchcock treated his actors with notable contempt. In 1938, he made the infamous observation, “Actors are cattle.” No one knows whether the Kuleshov phenomenon is a result of camera trickery or talent, but a sober, committed actor like Schwartzman gets the benefit of the doubt.

‘In Hotel Chevalier, Schwartzman plays Jack Whitman, a reclusive expatriate who has been hiding in one of the ritziest hotel rooms in Paris for more than a month after a messy breakup with his girlfriend—the beautiful but jejune Natalie Portman. She shoves a fat toothbrush in her mouth as he waits patiently at the door and answers her banal questions. “What the fuck is going on?” she inquires. He doesn’t answer. Later, they make hurried love, and as he undresses her, garment by garment, each fallen article reveals a dark blotch on her skin. “You’ve got bruises on your body,” Jack remarks. She hesitates for an instant before shutting his mouth with kisses.

‘In a way, this moment communicates one of Schwartzman’s most finely tuned sensibilities. He has a pitch-perfect temper. Two butterflies stand pinned to a white taxidermy card at the desk. Isolated, beautiful, nostalgic, dead—that is their tone. It’s Schwartzman’s as well. The unfinished painting by the mirror—he eyes it with neither pride nor disgust. Schwartzman delivers his lines from the same frequency of his environment. He asks not who made the bruises or how they got there, he only brings them to light—freezes the moment before us spectators. He becomes one with the room—observant and quiet. He shows no feelings—yet the viewer feels compelled with emotion. Effectively, Schwartzman gets out of the way of the film. He removes himself from the role. Cezanne writes that the artist must discard “interpretive bias even of vague emotional memories, prejudices, and predilections transmitted as part of one’s heritage.” A blank slate. In a way, one must discard oneself. That is the sign of a true artist. Jason Schwartzman is well on his way.’ — J. M. Harper

 

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Stills






































 

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Further

Jason Schwartzman @ IMDb
Jason Schwartzman’s mass interview @ reddit
Young Baby Records/Coconut Records
NERDIST PODCAST: JASON SCHWARTZMAN RETURNS
‘An Abridged History of Jason Schwartzman’s Most Loathsome Characters’
‘The Resurgence of Jason Schwartzman’
‘Jason Schwartzman on why he keeps playing neurotic authors’
‘Want to Make a Movie, Jason Schwartzman?’
‘Can Classical Music Find a Modern Audience with JS’s “Mozart in the Jungle?”‘
JS interviewed @ Interview Magazine
‘An unconscious JS guest-stars on ‘Tim & Eric’s Bedtime Stories’
‘All Jason Schwartzman Fans Look Like Jason Schwartzman’
‘As Lit’s Biggest Prick, Jason Schwartzman Wears Us Down’
‘JS interviewed @ Slant Magazine
‘Eating Vegan Ice Cream With JS and Director Alex Ross Perry
‘JS Is More Likable Than He Thinks’
Jason Schwartzman Introduces “The New Yorker” iPad App
‘Literary Foibles: Talking Books with Jason Schwartzman’
‘Jason Schwartzman teaches us How to Sneeze at Parties’
Jason Schwartzman’s “Thor” Audition Reel
fuck yeah jason schwartzman.

 

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His music
Three years after his departure from the band Phantom Planet, musician/actor Jason Schwartzman returned to the L.A.’s music scene with the solo project Coconut Records. Schwartzman had launched Phantom Planet in 1994 and served as the band’s drummer for nearly a decade, simultaneously furthering his acting career with roles in Rushmore, CQ, Slackers, S1m0ne, and Spun. The offers increased once he left Phantom Planet’s lineup in 2003, but Schwartzman nevertheless had trouble shaking music from his system. With Incubus guitarist Mike Einziger serving as producer, he decamped to Malibu during the summer of 2006 to record Nighttiming, handling most of the vocal and instrumental duties himself while granting cameos to a slew of fellow actors and musicians (including Kirsten Dunst, Zooey Deschanel, Brandon Boyd, Ben Kenney, and brother Robert Carmine). The album was released early the following year on Young Baby Records, with the initial copies containing Polaroid photos taken by Schwartzman himself. Coconut Records’ sophomore release, Davy, was released in January, 2009.’ — collaged


Coconut Records ‘Microphone’


Coconut Records ‘West Coast’


Coconut Records ‘Any Fun’


Coconut Records ‘Wires’

 

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Misc


Don’t Talk – Jason Schwartzman


Jason Schwartzman – What’s In My Bag?


WES ANDERSON and JASON SCHWARTZMAN Shop for CDs and DVDs


Jason Schwartzman – In Character: Actors Acting


Ghost Stories: Jason Schwartzman

 

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Interview
from Paper Magazine

 

What kind of teenager were you?

Jason Schwartzman: I started playing drums when I was ten. I was into sports too, I feel like that sort of gave me a focus. I was angry but in a more internal way. I had a rebellious feeling in me but I was afraid to get in trouble. I don’t think I was into hardcore music, I was never that kind of angry…

What were the big bands in LA like when you were growing up? Was it like Guns N’ Roses or…

JS: Nirvana, Weezer.

What about LA bands?

JS: LA bands? There were a lot of great LA bands. Weezer is an LA band. I like melodic music.

Even then.

JS: I had lots of friends, my school was very small, but I was always feeling a little … girls didn’t talk to me, you know? I mean, I wasn’t on a rock by myself — there were those people at my high school, you know, sitting alone. Within that I had a hard time with girls. Specifically, I think of romance. I related to things like “In My Room,” by The Beach Boys, that type of music, and to people who liked being alone. I feel like I did not have an abnormal teenage experience.

You felt alienated.

JS: Yes, I had that. I wasn’t necessarily angry, but moody, extremely moody. Quintessentially moody. Like. “What do you know?” and, like, “Mom get off my back!” And it’s funny because, when you read the book and you watch the movie, it was interesting because at the time I remember my mom saying something like, “Oh you teenagers, trust me, you think what’s happening is new, but this is not new and you’ll get over this” and I remember thinking that’s the last thing you want to hear, that what you’re feeling isn’t unique.

So you’d be in your room listening to music. You didn’t try to sneak out or go into clubs or that kind of stuff?

JS: Well, my band, we played a lot of clubs. Some of them were 21 and over, but we’d have to wait outside and then go in.

And you didn’t drink or act out that way?

JS: Maybe at 16 or 17 a little bit. But not really. There would be parties but I didn’t really have a lot of fun in that type of situation. I had a problem with the group…

Being in social in groups can be tough at that age.

JS: It’s still tough. And I respect it, like my wife loves the idea of a game night with friends, and to me a game night is not fun. That’s not my idea of a good thing but to each his own.

Even music itself, was that a kind of rebellion — to do music in the Hollywood world that you were from.

JS: Not at all. I think I was on a set maybe three or four times as a kid that I can legitimately remember and for not very long. My mom loves acting, but she has a very kind of apprehensive attitude towards the Hollywood mechanism in general.

So she didn’t buy into the whole thing.

JS: No. The ’80s, that was blockbuster central. We would go see movies with Mel Gibson in it. I’ve read interviews with actors who describe watching a movie and saying, “Oh I’m going to be up there one day.” I never really thought that.

You started with music before acting.

JS: I got into music because that seemed like you could do that, in your house. I got into music and I loved movies. As a kid, we had cable so I saw a lot of really bad movies a lot. And I had a friend who now is one of the key guys at the Cinefamily movie theaters in Los Angeles. We would just watch movies, like Human Highway — do you remember that movie, Human Highway, a Neil Young movie. I didn’t really like “movie” movies. Of course I saw ’80s movies that are now classics, I guess, like Ghostbusters, but my mom would aldo rent stuff like The Graduate, Harold and Maude, and Dog Day Afternoon. And I remember seeing those and thinking, “Where were these the last few years? I could’ve used these.” I just know that when I would listen to music, I would get a rush and a feeling of like “Oh my god, I want to rip off my skin.”

So when you finally did start acting, was it weird?

JS: I think that in the very beginning I was like “Me? You want me for this audition?” What the hell’s happening?

So someone just approached you, you didn’t seek it out.

JS: I was at my uncle’s house in San Francisco at a hybrid party/ family occasion in honor of a piece of music that my grandfather had written, a score for [Abel Gance’s] Napoleon. And there was a casting director, a friend of the family there, talking to my cousin Sofia. And Sofia said “What are you working on?” and she said, “Oh I’m casting a movie for the director Wes Anderson but we’re trying to find a person to play the character and we’ve been auditioning lots of people.” She described the character and Sofia said, “Oh, that sounds like Jason.” And I remember saying “No… I’m in a band, you should meet the other guys they’re great.” She said, “No, no take my number” and I gave her my address and she sent the script. It was the first script for a movie I had ever read. And I went in and auditioned for Wes and I got a callback and another callback and I got the part.

And it turned out to be this wonderful relationship.

JS: Yes. Beyond wonderful. He’s my mentor and best friend.

It seems to me like you’re the reluctant actor.

JS: Reluctant in a good way or in a bad way?

No, not in a bad way. It seems like you’re not someone who’s really out there trying to get the part, auditioning, working hard to be a star.

JS: I’m surprised that I’ve been in as many now that I’ve been in. It’s very improbable. I went to the Critics’ Choice Awards and I was looking around and I was like “All these actors, they all seem pretty comfortable here” and I’m wondering like, how do you get to that point, where this is not unusual?

Bored to Death is one of my favorite shows. There’s talk of a film version, right?

JS: We pitched a movie idea to HBO which they bought. But at the same time, I don’t want to say that it’s happening because sometimes they just don’t happen. It’s a combination of not wanting to get my hopes up too high and, in my mind, preparing for it because it was really heartbreaking [when the show was cancelled]… It would’ve been, in a weird way, less heartbreaking if I didn’t know what the fourth season was going to be. Because Jonathan Ames told me the whole thing. I know what I missed.

And now you’re also in Wes Anderson’s new movie, The Grand Budapest Hotel.

JS: I haven’t seen it. I’m only in it for a few seconds. I’m probably in it longer in the trailer than I am in the movie.

They’re just using you for bait in the trailer.

JS: When you make a short trailer and you keep me in it for the same exact amount of time, it’s great. It’s like double spacing. I’m doubled spaced. I’m a longer essay.

 

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19 of Jason Schwartzman’s 50 roles

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Wes Anderson Rushmore (1998)
‘It was the best. It was so much fun. It’s funny, of the top five most amazing experiences of my life, Wes Anderson is in, like, three of them. That was amazing, because it was just him and me and a guy from Disney making sure we didn’t get into too much trouble, in this bus that’s made for 12 to 14 people. We just kind of drove around and took ourselves around the country, rather than having people have to fly to us. We took ourselves to the masses, just basically visiting every college and big city in America. We met tons of really great people and saw the country. It was one of the few times I’ve lived in the lap of luxury and felt totally comfortable. It was really nice. It was one of those times where every day, you’re excited. But by the end, I was a little burnt out. Looking back on it, it was really nice, but at all crazy times, you don’t realize they’re happening until they’re over. I was nervous. It was my first movie and everything, and it all just seemed to happen so fast. The next thing I know, I’m being interviewed, and people are like, “What do you think about this and that?” And I’m like, “I think a couple things, but don’t you want to ask somebody who counts?” I was like, “Why do you want to know anything about me?” I don’t think the human body is designed to talk about itself for three weeks, or even two hours in a day. It kind of threw me out of touch, but overall it was really good. I have no complaints.’ — Jason Schwartzman


Excerpt


Excerpt


Jason Schwartzman auditions for the film Rushmore

 

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Roman Coppola CQ (2001)
CQ is set in 1969 Paris. A young American film student (Jeremy Davies) is the editor on a sci-fi/secret agent/revolution type of picture called ‘Codename: Dragonfly’. If that sounds discombobulated, it is, and so is its director (Gerard Depardieu) who can’t seem to find an ending for his film. The producers fire him and bring on a flashy young American director (Jason Schwartzman) to snazz it up and finally finish the movie. Along the way, Davies falls in love with the production’s beautiful star, who plays the sexy secret agent that must save the Earth from the moon base’s rebel revolution! The cast on this one is worth the price of admission alone. The previously mentioned Davies, Depardieu and Schwartzman are all fantastic in their parts. Billy Zane has a small but wonderful role as the leader of the moon base revolution. Giancarlo Giannini, Academy Award nominee and recently of James Bond fame (he plays Bond’s friend Rene), is the Roger Corman-esque producer. The late, great John Phillip Law (‘Barbarella’, ‘Danger: Diabolik’) shows up, as does Dean Stockwell. The unknown female lead, model-turned-actress Angela Lindvall, plays Dragonfly. She’s beautiful and perfect in this role. Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like much has come from her transition to the silver screen.’ — The Bonus View


Excerpt

 

_________________
Dewey Hicks Slackers (2002)
Slackers is an odd little movie. And not in a good way. A teen comedy with a stalker at its center – and it plays this guy for laughs – this film wants to carve out a niche for itself. It concentrates on deviousness rather than foolishness (there’s a dash of Dangerous Liaisons/Cruel Intentions in its lineage), and it includes big-name cameos. But giving a few moments of screen time to Gina Gershon and Cameron Diaz does not a cool film make. Slackers starts off promisingly enough, with an ethereal version of the Who’s “Baba O’Reilly” playing over the opening credits. Turning this anthem of teen rebellion into something like church music is an intriguing conceit, but the film never builds on that promise. Schwartzman, so good in Rushmore, is nothing if not game; he’s a force of energy who’ll do anything for a laugh. But in a world with too many real and dangerous idiots, a vindictive stalker is just not a funny guy.’ — Baltimore Sun


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

__________________
Jonas Åkerlund Spun (2002)
Edward Havens: When I was watching the film, I kept thinking to how many of today’s actors look for something in a character where he grows as a human being from the start to the finish, and this character just seems to crank on throughout the entire film. At one point, he says “The great thing is that I’m not an addict” as he’s taking his eighth snort in a span of a few minutes. It just didn’t seem that he was any better off at the end. Jason Schwartzman: That’s the life of a crystal meth addict. It’s all about the next five minutes. That’s all they care about. That’s their world. These characters are otherwise just normal people with boring lives. My character’s job here is as the narrator. The movie is seen through Ross’s eyes, and since it only takes place during the course of three days, he almost has to be neutral and unchanging in order to see the changes in the others, to see them really self-destruct. I think it’s a good thing he doesn’t change that drastically in the course of three days, because it’s an honest and very real portrayal of what it’s like to be a crystal meth user. I think that drugs keep people from changing.’ — filmjerk


Trailer


Excerpt

 

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David O. Russell I Heart Huckabees (2004)
‘If you’re pissed off by that precious little heart in the title meant to be pronounced I Heart Huckabees, then this ad-spinning fourth film from the prodding, risk-insensitive David O. Russell (Spanking the Monkey, Flirting With Disaster, Three Kings) may drive you up the wall. Trying to balance mirth and metaphysics, Russell walks a tightrope and tips recariously into incoherence. But how do you not heart a movie that breaks ranks with tight-assed formula and gets dissed by The New Yorker as an “authentic disaster” What’s it all about? Don’t ask. It sounds silly to say that Jason Schwartzman, in his richest role since Rushmore, plays Albert, an environmentalist et tormented with questions about the meaning of existence, especially his own.’– Rolling Stone


Trailer


Excerpt


Behind the scenes

 

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Nora Ephron Bewitched (2005)
‘The funniest thing in BEWITCHED is an oddly touching attachment Will Ferrell’s character, Jack Wyatt, develops for a bottle of ketchup he picked up during an off-screen interlude in New Mexico. It’s barely mentioned, but there it is in a couple of scenes, clutched tenaciously the way a kid clutches his blankie in times of trouble. It’s classic Ferrell, silly and yet moving in a way that is at once Dada-esque and childlike. The second funniest thing is Jason Schwartzman as Jack’s agent who, whether by chance or design, is doing a surprisingly credible impression of Tom Cruise. Apparently it is all about the hair and the jawline. Beyond that, what wants to be an affable homage to the spirit, if not the exact storyline of the original television series of the same name, is, instead, an effort that appears to be held together by baling wire and chewing gum. That would be an off-brand of both items.’ — Killer Movie Reviews


Trailer

 

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Anand Tucker Shopgirl (2005)
Shopgirl is a 2005 American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Anand Tucker and starring Steve Martin, Claire Danes, and Jason Schwartzman. The screenplay by Steve Martin is based on his 2000 novella of the same name. The film is about a complex love triangle between a bored salesgirl, a wealthy businessman, and an aimless young man. Produced by Ashok Amritraj, Jon Jashni, and Steve Martin for Touchstone Pictures and Hyde Park Entertainment, and distributed in the United States by Buena Vista Pictures, Shopgirl was released on October 21, 2005 and received generally positive reviews from film critics. The film went on to earn $11,112,077 and was nominated for four Satellite Awards, including Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay.’ — collaged


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Sofia Coppola Marie Antoinette (2006)
Marie Antoinette the movie is a lot like the real Marie-Antoinette must have been. It’s pretty to look at, but ultimately pretty meaningless. The real Marie-Antoinette was only 14 years old when she married Louis XVI of France. Kirsten Dunst is 24. Louis XVI was 15 when he married and Jason Schwartzman is 26. This wouldn’t be so much of a problem if one of the few actual plot points in the movie wasn’t the fact that Louis won’t have sex with Marie when they first marry. At 15 you could excuse this behavior by saying he was too nervous or inexperienced to make a move, but at 26 you start looking for other reasons. I was waiting for it to be revealed that he was either gay or mentally challenged. The movie also covers 20-plus years and neither character seems to age or mature a day.’ — Three Movie Buffs


Behind the scenes


Behind the scenes on MTV’s ‘Cribs’

 

________________
Wes Anderson The Darjeeling Limited (2007)
‘Three stooges antics mingle with subtler silliness, painful life-wisdom, bittersweet vicissitude and his trademark whimsy in this unmistakable Wes Anderson special. Anderson again explores the sad peculiarity of a dysfunctional family, in what could be viewed as a companion-piece to The Royal Tenenbaums. But he enters new territory by removing the quirky siblings to colourful Rajasthan, where heady exoticism and atmospheric alien culture (plus the local, opium-rich cough mixture) all have their effect on the damaged Whitman brothers and their tragi-comic personal journeys.’ — Empire


Trailer


Wes Anderson – Jason Schwartzman Talk Darjeeling Limited

 

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Wes Anderson Hotel Chevalier (2007)
‘As an extra treat, The Darjeeling Limited is preceded by a Wes Anderson short film in which Schwartzman’s heartbroken Jack is holed up in a Paris hotel when his ex-lover (Natalie Portman) turns up. It’s a more apt prologue than it initially appears, the incident paying off dividends aboard The Darjeeling Express. Watch for a stunning last shot that goes straight to the heart.’ — collaged


the entire film

 

________________
Todd Louiso The Marc Pease Experience (2009)
‘In a squandered lead performance, the adorable, winning Schwartzman plays the non-adorable, non-winning title character, a myopic dreamer who never recovered from freaking out and humiliating himself during a high-school performance of The Wiz. Eight years later, Schwartzman still hasn’t moved on. He hangs out at the high school, where he’s dating senior Anna Kendrick and badgering would-be mentor Ben Stiller, a musical-theater phony who’s fucking Schwartzman’s girlfriend when not ducking his calls. Schwartzman has finally raised the money to record a demo for his a cappella group, but would-be producer Stiller has no interest in further encouraging Schwartzman’s fantasies of a music career. Stiller and Schwartzman look like long-lost brothers. Even more disconcertingly, they seem to be playing variations on the same character, both smiling cheeseballs who’ve internalized the smarmy artificiality of the musical-theater world to the point where even their true selves are phony. The difference is that Schwartzman is a sweetheart/true believer and Stiller is an oily cad, though neither character is developed enough for the pathos of having pathetic dreams crushed to have any resonance.’ — The A.V. Club


Trailer


Excerpt

 

________________
Wes Anderson Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)
‘What Wes wanted to do, which was incredible, was … typically, an animated film is made over a long period of time and the actors all record their lines separately over the course of many years, with very little interaction. The voices are recorded cleanly, and there’s a sheen to it. What Wes wanted to do was make it a little more rough, with more interaction, and make it feel more like a movie. So he had actors overlapping, cutting each other off, really giving us a sense of the people who were in the room together. He got all the actors at one point — although Meryl Streep couldn’t come — but most of the actors, myself, Bill Murray, George Clooney and many others together. We all spent a week living together in a house, and the days were spent acting out the movie like a play. There was one guy running around with a boom microphone — none of us were mic’d — getting the sound in a crude, realistic, field-recording way. And that’s how we did the majority of the film.’ — Jason Schwartzman


Trailer


Jason Schwartzman Becomes Fantastic in Mr. Fox

 

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Edgar Wright Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (2010)
‘Part video game, part teen romance, part postmodern collage experiment, Edgar Wright’s sui generis adaptation of Bryan Lee O’Malley’s graphic novel is so visually ADD, I was expecting the Universal reps to be handing out Adderall after the screening. Install a camera in a pinball and you won’t approximate the whip-pan visual acrobatics at work here. Contemplative cinema this is not (duh), but it’s hardly worth picking on the pace and narrative. Let’s face it: it’s not the film that has an attention-span problem, but the new generation. Scott Pilgrim is just one in a string of recent pictures geared toward pixilated youth, which want to conflate the moviegoing experience with the synesthetic dispersion of the video arcade. Not my idea of a good time at the cinema per se; but then again, the inherent non-linearity of this movie may find the new kids getting experimental despite themselves.’ — Film Comment


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Michael Cera & Jason Schwartzman Interview for SCOTT PILGRIM VS THE WORLD

 

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Wes Anderson Moonrise Kingdom (2011)
‘Cousin Ben is a very fine man with a moral centre. Otherwise, I would have obviously refused to play him. No, but to me he was like the Han Solo of the scout world, a man with a sense of humour who could be tough and bend the rules. Everyone needs a cousin Ben. I gave Moonrise Kingdom, er, three days. Which doesn’t sound very much, but I didn’t want to go home after. Wes is got so good at establishing this vibe on set. It’s much more efficient than when we started, very nimble and agile. There are no trailers for actors to hide in, no nonsense. Most movies are like coffee, herky-jerky, spike and drop, action then nothing for hours. This was more like afternoon tea, but from first thing in the morning.’ — Jason Schwartzman


Cousin Ben Troop Screening with Jason Schwartzman


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Wes Anderson, Jason Schwartzman ‘Moonrise Kingdom’ Cannes 2012

 

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Roman Coppola A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III (2012)
‘A film is a terrible thing to waste. For Roman Coppola to waste one on A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III is a sad sight to behold. I’ll go further. For Charlie Sheen to waste a role in it is also a great pity. I stop not: For Bill Murray to occupy his time in this dreck sandwich is a calamity. Of Charlie Sheen, we’ve seen more than enough, at least until he gets his act together. But there’s a sad shortage of Bill Murray performances, and his work here is telephoned in as if Thomas Alva Edison had never been born. Every detail has been pushed to 11 on the Spinal Tap scale.’ — Roger Ebert


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John Lee Hancock Saving Mr. Banks (2013)
‘In the Disney movie, Saving Mr. Banks, Jason Schwartzman plays one of the songwriting brothers tasked with charming P.L. Travers (Emma Thompson) into giving up the rights to Mary Poppins to Walt Disney. Schwartzman got the chance to meet his real-life counterpart, Richard M. Sherman, whose sunny optimism (along with Walt Disney’s) persevered over Travers’s fierce negativity. (His brother, Robert Sherman, played in the film by B.J. Novak, passed away in 2012.) “I got home that night from the [Moonrise Kingdom] premiere and there was an email from him: ‘Hey, bro. I’m doing a movie with John Lee Hancock called Saving Mr. Banks. He’s going to contact you soon. It’s a great script, you’re going to love it. It would be really fun if we could maybe work together.’ But then it was another week before John Lee Hancock got in touch with me. I describe it as “you will be visited by three ghosts…” I was like, “When is it gonna happen?” But when I read it, I was so interested in it because I love Mary Poppins and I love anything that’s the “making of” in the creative process. And I loved [Hancock’s previous film] The Rookie, which my brother had shot and told me John Lee Hancock was so nice. So when I went to meet him, I felt comfortable with him.”‘ — moviefone.com


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Alex Ross Perry Listen Up Philip (2014)
‘Written and directed by Alex Ross Perry, Listen Up Philip looks like the kind of movie film classes would study in the 1970s. Perry swings his hand-held camera so close to the faces of the actors it feels like he might clip one of them in the nose. Narrator Eric Bogosian has a wonderful, offbeat and almost cheerful delivery as he details the latest horrible behavior by Philip or Zimmerman, to the point where we’re rooting for the women in their lives to pack up their dignity and run. Run! Philip is one of the most unlikable but also one of the most fascinating characters of the year. Schwartzman is an expert at playing whip-smart, socially awkward misfits who seem incapable of being in the moment. Even when he’s saying “that’s great” to his girlfriend, he feels compelled to tell her she doesn’t understand him and how he feels right then and there. Another time, when a student shyly asks him for a letter of recommendation for an internship, he tells her why he won’t do it while he staples a blank piece of paper, and he concludes the conversation by saying, “Here’s a piece of paper with staples in it.” OK.’ — Chicago Sun Times


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Wes Anderson The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014)
‘If you’ve ever watched a precocious niece play with a dollhouse, you know what it’s like to sit through a Wes Anderson movie. It’s soothing to see a world so organized, where even the problems are curated by its god. Wes Anderson has taken the appeal of orderly minutiae and fetishized it into a cinematic aesthetic, if not a genre: His dollhouses are inhabited by melancholy adults who are stymied by their inability to escape established patterns and energetic children who don’t understand why their elders are such assholes. The Grand Budapest Hotel offers yet another character who never changes, this time Ralph Fiennes as the gay manager of the titular hotel who sleeps with rich older women for the twin purposes of making them happy and getting presents. He peppers his Queen’s English with fucks and goddamns and, like Anderson, is particular about his surroundings. The hotel and the boxes that house bonbons and prison escape tools baked into cookies are the same cool, chalky pink, and the baker is a lovely young woman with a port-wine stain shaped like Mexico on her right cheek. Bill Murray is a member of a secret upscale concierge syndicate. Willem Dafoe is a Eurotrash fixer. Tilda Swinton is an old-ass lady who is serviced by Ralph Fiennes.’ — Esquire


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Jason Schwartzman explains the plot of Grand Budapest Hotel

 

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Tim Burton Big Eyes (2014)
‘Jason Schwartzman will get artsy in Tim Burton’s upcoming film, Big Eyes. Schwartzman, who starred in Rushmore, Spun, I Heart Huckabees and The Darjeeling Limited, will play a San Francisco art gallery owner named Ruben.’ — The Hollywood Reporter


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p.s. Hey. ** Jeff Coleman, Hi, Jeff. That’s funny, I made that gig post about six days ago, and since then I’ve gotten quite into that very Trupa Trupa album you mention, and I almost slipped a track from it in the gig at the last minute. Yeah, it’s a real intriguer. Thanks for thinking of me and for your always excellent radar. ** Armando, Hi. Oh, I was joking. I think my comical-skewed phrasing was off. You can be melodramatic, no issue. I’m very, very sorry to hear about your grandfather. Hugs. And also to hear that your life and consequent feelings are treating you disrespectfully at the moment. I don’t know what a p.s. can do to help, but know that it’s wishing it could. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Ha, nice. Well, I’ll see ‘BPM’, so I’ll find out. Cute actors are never enough to sway me into liking a movie if that’s its biggest plus. I think porn has spoiled me, ha ha. It sucks being in France only in the sense that you are continually reminded that Alain Delon has evolved into a far-ish right asshole of a person, but HBD to him anyway. ** Steve Erickson, Hi. Very curious to read your review, and I’ll ‘clap’ when I do. Oh, I have go join the site to read it? Hm, I’ll sort that out. Everyone, Mr. Steve Erickson in his own words: ‘Here is my review of CALL ME BY YOUR NAME. While this is technically “members-only,” people who aren’t Medium members can read up to 3 pieces on that portion of the site a month. As I warned, this contains spoilers. Along with my review of the beloved Turkish cat documentary KEDI, this is the most contrarian review I’ve written this year. By the way, if you like my CALL ME BY YOUR NAME review, please click “clap” on the Medium website. I need people to do this in order to get paid for it.’ Be sure to “clap”, you guys. Yes, the actor in your film seems really immersed in the delivery and physicality. Really excellent. I’m glad you liked some of the music in the gig. The Elucid record is real good. It was stuck on repeat here for a while. Thanks! ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! If only I could pop in. Xmas over there sounds pretty nice, but I fear I’ll be stuck in also nice Paris for a while. How did everything go today? Thanks for enjoying my talk about the film work. I like talking about that. Well, one of the only things I don’t really like about making films is that a finished film has to begin its life by being only shown at film festivals for quite a while, and that only the people who go to those festivals get to see it for too long a time. When it will debut depends on how soon a festival accepts it. We’re hoping that it will get to premiere early next year at the Berlin festival, but we have no idea yet if they’ll want it. That’s the soonest it would get to start its life. If Berlin says no, then we have to wait until another big festival says yes. It’s nerve-wracking. Ideally, the film would get distribution deals at the festivals, and then it will get to play in movie theaters and so on like films do. I’m anxiously awaiting a phone call from Gisele to get her report on the ‘Crowd’ premiere. I’ll let you know. Your yesterday sounds to have been awesome. Mine was another quiet, work-y one. Today Zac gets back from his travels, happily, so I’ll maybe see him, and I’m meeting up with a young writer who’s visiting Paris. Should be okay. How was today? ** Sypha, Hi. My pleasure about your writing. I admire your work a lot, as I hope you know. I feel a little about filmmaking like you do about book writing because getting a film you’ve made out to the public is such a weird, slow, disempowering process that I don’t understand. I love that questionnaire you used to make your dad fill out. How cool would it be to get one’s readers to do that, although I guess it would be pretty scary too. ** B.R., Hi there! Excellent to see you and your excellent avatar too. I only discovered Machine Girl just recently. Yeah, very exciting stuff. I did like the recent Blanck Mass record quite a lot. Cool you like it too, and thanks for thinking of me. You were so right. I’m good. How are you? ** Amphibiouspeter, Hi! Yeah, right, about the Ziur track. The whole record is pretty good. Yeah, all the dark is weirdly good. And it makes every day feel kind of depressive, and it makes life’s shortness more inescapable-feeling or something, which I like too for some contrary reason. What happened last night? I want to hear your things to say. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Cool, glad you liked those tracks. Yes, I too am a fan of that Carla dal Forno. I think I had something from it in a recent gig? Hm. If not, I’ll cue something up. ** Misanthrope, Hi. Yeah, I’ve ‘seen’ as in noted the existence of those videos. They’re too willies-making for me. But I have wondered why I’ve yet to come across a slave who’s into that. Yeah, but maybe half of the people who were disappointed that I went back to being gay were gay themselves. Strangeness. Actually, while the ‘age gap’ in relationships is not as much of a tenable outrage-generator over here, true, I think that has as much to do with how much more discrete Europeans tend to be than your usual blathering, expository-prone American. ** Right. I decided to restore Jason Schwartzman Day for some seemingly perfectly good reason. Have at it. See you tomorrow.

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