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The blog of author Dennis Cooper

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Douglas Sirk (in the 1950s) Day

 

‘Douglas Sirk is a tough sell in a cynical age. Perhaps he would be in any. His plots are often shallow and seeped in wish-fulfilment; the performances are overwrought and slightly archaic; his sets, despite being deeply expressive, are purposefully synthetic. Known for his run of lush, indulgent melodramas in the mid-to-late fifties, he was dismissed by contemporary American critics as a creator of superficial “weepies” or “woman’s pictures”. Yet, owing to his fluent visual style, its searingly satirical lens, and the vibrant strains of expressionism throughout, he has since been reclaimed as one of Hollywood’s greatest artists.

‘Born Claus Detlef Sierck in Hamburg, 1900, Sirk had a prolific and exciting career even before his most famous films. As critics are keen to point out, he studied (and cared greatly for) philosophy and art history before becoming a prolific theatre director. His parents were Danish but he only spent a little of his childhood there, and so his first outings on stage and screen were in Germany. He made nine features in the Nazi period, leaving in 1937 due to his disgust with the ideology as well as the obvious fears he shared with his Jewish wife.

‘Upon moving to America he made some notable melodramas (Summer Storm, A Scandal in Paris) and noirs (Lured, Shockproof) which showed his supreme talent with actors and his constantly moving, subtly emotive camerawork – an aspect that is overlooked but always brilliantly in tune with the most nuanced of character’s feelings. Something like Shockproof suggests how his ironic sensibility differs from Sam Fuller’s, who wrote the film. Sirk is less acerbic and far more sensitive. He lulls us into the conflicts and the discomforts of modern bourgeois life and then explodes them.

‘While he may have lacked some of his key tools at this stage – Technicolor, for instance – famous traits such as blocking the frame with screens and windows and shooting through mirrors are present. This tendency to capture trademarks of modern American life as though they were a prison is one of the reasons Sirk is now heralded as a genius of irony. However trite or repetitive his scripts, he consistently provided symbols and subtextual hints that challenged or perfected the desperate characters of his domestic landscapes.

‘Yet this was not always the case. He was originally viewed as nothing more than a director of ‘women’s pictures’ and given little respect by the male-dominated critical establishment as a result. Later viewers saw his ironic gaze and elevated his status accordingly, but this reclamation has its own problems. The focus on irony in Sirk’s work has bordered on obsession in some critical circles, to the point where his original wave of admirers had to label everything in his films as such. Tag Gallagher criticises this impulse as essentially forcing a distinction between those who ‘got’ the films and the original audience (mainly women) who were too naïve to see the subtext of social criticism and Brechtian detachment. He writes that his irony operates rather in the Aristotelian sense – less a kind of bitterness and more a set of complex contradictions seeking to “clarify and anneal” society’s own. His approach to Sirk denies any cynicism and argues that original audiences experienced, or “felt,” the great ironies and contradictions of his work all along.

‘While I agree for the most part, I don’t think we can wholeheartedly say that these elements are never framed through bitterness or a more subversive gaze. When Bob Merrick (Rock Hudson) restores the sight of the woman he has blinded in Magnificent Obsession (1954), for example, are we not constantly aware of the very lurid psychodrama of this power imbalance? The fact that this could only happen in cinema points to the absurdity of these narratives, though the emotions are achingly real. This is not to say that viewers didn’t understand, however. The beauty of Sirk is that neither a moviegoer nor a hardened critic can really explain the strange, dazzling undercurrents of his melodrama. No one definitively “gets” it.

‘The famous deer in the window at the end of All that Heaven Allows (1955) is much the same – a slightly too artificial sign of reconciliation; we cannot quite believe it. As a director of peerless visual acuity, Sirk cannot resist bathing his romantic scenes in shadow, or undermining “good” characters by highlighting their banality. His endings may seem to exist as either happy or sad, but there are always aspects of the mise-en-scène clouding this view. The joy of watching his films comes from a position between these critical perspectives, embracing artifice while also recognising melodrama’s unique capacity to articulate our most passionate desires and fears.

Magnificent Obsession was the first of his ‘50s masterpieces, and, though it introduces two of his greatest stars as well as the opulent style of his Technicolor experiments, its ludicrous plot may be off-putting to some. The amount of operations and injuries sustained through Hudson’s quest to love Jane Wyman’s character Helen is astounding. As far as it concerns a rich brat trying mercilessly to mould the future (and people) to his needs, it is unsurprising that someone like Pedro Almodóvar found it just one step away from gothic horror, clearly taking a little influence for his The Skin I Live In (2011).

‘Hudson and Wyman’s next collaboration, All That Heaven Allows, may be Sirk’s best film. Wyman stars as Cary Scott, a respected widow in suburban New England who falls for her gardener, a handsome young man played by Rock Hudson. Reinforcing the strained passion of the relationship through complex red and blue lighting schemes, Sirk suggests the somewhat irreconcilable differences between Cary’s class and that of her poorer, more freewheeling lover. The satire here is at its most blatant and sincere, as Cary’s children and friends despise her new relationship, making the prison of middle-class womanhood seem utterly inescapable.

‘Playing Hollywood conventionality against societal critique is not always an easy sell, and the director’s last movie is either a white saviour story or a damning indictment of them depending on who you ask. What is inarguable however is that Juanita Moore’s stunningly layered performance as a black mother raising a daughter who passes as white really makes Imitation of Life (1959) special. Though she is a maid in Lana Turner’s affluent household (which is given more time), the horror of racism pervades the film. When Sirk left the industry shortly after its release, it took about a decade for a critical reappraisal of his filmography to occur. A constant spring of viewers willing to puzzle over his densely packed melodramas formed in recognition of his greatness. They haven’t left since.’ — Joseph Bullock

 

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Further

Where to begin with Douglas Sirk
Video: ‘The Vanity Tables of Douglas Sirk’
Sirk, Douglas @ Senses of Cinema
Douglas Sirk’s Glorious Cinema of Outsiders
The Artistry of Douglas Sirk
Douglas Sirk @ MUBI
Douglas Sirk: From the Archives
The Films of Douglas Sirk
THE FLAMBOYANCE OF DOUGLAS SIRK
Distanciation and Douglas Sirk
Douglas Sirk Revisited: The Limits and Possibilities of Artistic Agency
Book: ‘Douglas Sirk, Aesthetic Modernism and the Culture of Modernity’
Podcast: ‘Douglas Sirk and Representation’
The Essentials: Douglas Sirk
Douglas Sirk @ Letterboxd
All That Hollywood Allows: Douglas Sirk’s Brilliant Melodramas
The Case for Douglas Sirk as the First Postmodern Filmmaker
DOUGLAS SIRK’S OPPRESSIVE AND BEAUTIFUL WORLDS
Tragic Surfaces: The Alluring World of Sirkian Melodrama
Sirkus Maximus
Bruce Hodsdon on the Cinema of Douglas Sirk
Sirk/Fassbinder: Melodrama Mutations
In authenticity: Douglas Sirk and the Sirkian Melodrama

 

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Extras


Douglas Sirk interview


Rock Hudson – On ” Douglas Sirk ” – 1980


Video Essay: “Sirk/Anti-Sirk”


Fassbinder and Sirk filming together

 

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Interview

 

Sirk: I never saw my films after I finished the final cut. I never went to a preview. Universal of course did not favor re-takes. And I can’t recall that any of my pictures was affected by the results of a preview. Not long ago Mrs. Sirk and I watched Has Anybody Seen My Gal on television. It was in Italian. And I recently saw A Scandal in Paris—which I think is an excellent picture. Though it was no success, you know. It just barely got back its money. I saw Summer Storm about five years ago. Oh yes—and All I Desire too, after Halliday spoke of it.

But you go to Sirk retrospectives now and again—you don’t watch the films?

No, you don’t watch them. No.

Why not?

Because you don’t like them. Because you get depressed.

I see.

Because you are dissatisfied with anything once you finish it. But a poet, even a playwright, can re-write. Not a filmmaker. And in the studio days you were tied down beforehand by the script. You can change things but mostly in such a hidden way that the studio won’t object.

But as a writer you must know—you are writing a paragraph, you set out in one direction—then you write a sentence or get an idea that changes your whole conception. But if you’re making a picture and you shoot scene eighty-four and you find your conception changing, you are just stuck. You can’t start over, you can’t change those eighty-three other scenes any more.

Take Written on The Wind. I show the climax of the action even before the story begins. The audience sees Kyle coming to that house with the gun and so on, all under the opening titles. Now this I did because my conception of the film changed in the midst of shooting. I couldn’t re-shoot the scenes but I could re-arrange them.

How had your conception changed?

The continuity looked too regular to me. Too linear. I decided to play against the tension of the story—which I always like to do. What can I say? As a director you are building instinctively, almost musically at times.

Did you work with the writer before shooting that film?

Yes, but I’m not sure how regularly. Remember, I was doing three pictures a year at that period.

Anyway the writer is always your comrade, he is your friend. Often he is the only intelligent guy in the whole crowd, the only one you can really talk to.

Certain scripts you get, of course, you just feel hopeless. So you must try to do something with lighting, acting, décor, pace…all those elements. Or else the material is too usual, so you try to find an element of strangeness. In All That Heaven Allows, that scene where Jane Wyman sees herself in the TV set. Or the mechanical man walking across that table in There’s Always Tomorrow.

It’s usual to have a victimized heroine, as you do with the Lauren Bacall character in Written on the Wind. But there is some suggestion, isn’t there, that she is not as innocent as she imagines herself to be—that she was indeed attracted by Kyle’s money?

Definitely. She is ambiguous. That’s exactly why I cast Bacall. Because she has this ambiguity in her face. She has almost a designing quality at times. And people asked me why I didn’t cast a nice American girl type. But I wanted what Bacall has. She has this wavering light about her—and she is not a lover. The whole relation between her and Stack remains ambiguous then. I explained to them both that Kyle must constantly feel that he is losing her. And he is uncertain of her because she really is ambiguous.

You described yourself yesterday as a kind of handicraft worker: But surely it’s an odd sort of handicraft, when you so often worked to subvert what you were given. You functioned a lot as an ironist and a subverter.

Yes, yes…

What you do to the message of Fannie Hurst in Imitation of Life for example.

Yes. We played what was between the lines, so to speak.

Were the screenwriters in on that intention? Were they in on the satiric slant?

No. Yes, some of them—yes.

Did Laura Turner or Sandra Dee know that their characters were at all unsympathetic, that the film viewed them ironically?

No. No, actors you shouldn’t tell about technical matters. They lose their innocence. If you tell an actor the character is unsympathetic, he’ll tell you he’s sorry but he can’t do that—strange, but he never has been able to do that, and so on. No no, you should never tell an actor such things. In some ways a director is a bit of a doctor—and he must have a helpful manner with his clients.

Turner’s costumes are very garish; they often seem to be a joke. Was that intentional?

Yes, of course.

Did she care? Or didn’t she notice?

She was very compliant through the whole shooting. She trusted us. And I might add that she wasn’t sorry—she was very happy with the picture.

The producer, Ross Hunter, had a great manner with everyone. He was tremendously successful—very charming. “Oh, but it’s a crude charm,” someone said. Yes, but in Hollywood who will notice if you have a subtle charm? There is one word in the English language, and without this word you couldn’t have an American. This word is wonderful. Now, this was Ross’s word. He used it to everyone, and everyone loved it. He could get anything he wanted.

Some of the sentimental scenes in Imitation of Life seem very surefire to me, very effective in soap-opera terms. They seem devoid of irony. And so I’m not sure at those points what your attitude is.

What scenes?

When Annie finds her daughter at the Moulin Rouge night club and then has to pretend not to be her mother in front of the white roommate. It’s their final farewell scene. And as pathos, if I may say so, it’s extremely adroit.

[Shrugs]

Or the funeral scene.

The funeral itself is an irony. All that pomp.

But surely there is no irony when Mahalia Jackson sings. The emotion is large and simple and straightforward.

It’s strange. Before shooting those scenes, I went to hear Mahalia Jackson at UCLA, where she was giving a recital. I knew nothing about her. But here on the stage was this large, homely, ungainly woman—and all these shining, beautiful young faces turned up to her, and absolutely smitten with her. It was strange and funny, and very impressive. I tried to get some of that experience into the picture. We photographed her with a three-inch lens, so that every unevenness in the face stood out.

You don’t think the funeral scene is highly emotional?

I know, I know but I was surprised at that effect. When I heard how audiences were reacting to that…But that was the reaction of American audiences. When it was dubbed into German, all they got was the Negro angle. It’s true the picture wasn’t a great success in Germany—far from it. Recently a friend of mine was it and he said, “But it’s such a cold film—and there are no sympathetic people at all in it.” So I was surprised at the American reaction…. It may be—I have no talent for sentimentality, so perhaps I simply don’t recognize it.

The style of Magnificent Obsession is ironic then?

Yes. Overplaying can be underplaying. In Magnificent Obsession I often did this. When I have Otto Kruger’s face appearing in the glass above Rock Hudson during that operation—that is parody, of course. As I told Halliday about the novel, it’s a crazy plot and that saved it for me in a way. But in the film then, there has to be some parody going along with the sincerity. And that was true of a number of pictures of mine. But Magnificent Obsession has never been one of my favorite pictures.

A whole picture which I kind of liked was Written on the Wind.

Some critics talk about Written on the Wind as if it were a realistic film.

No, it’s even a kind of surrealism. The people are heightened versions of reality—not realistic characters. [Laughs] A European would say, “Strange people these Americans”—if he took it as naturalism.

Above all in its lighting and colors, it is a non-realistic film. Fassbinder wrote a very perceptive thing about my style—he spoke of the craziness of my lighting. He points out that my lighting is never realistic, almost never from where the real light source would be. I was pleased that he saw that.

Remember—Written on the Wind is basically one set. By this very fact then, I am investing—I am contriving to paint with a strange brush, so to speak. Imitation of Life. on the other hand, is much less compact, much richer in scenes and details. But in fact, with Written on the Wind, I had even more opportunity to furnish rooms and interiors lavishly. The studio expected it. But I determined to do the opposite. This material, I decided, is poster material—what you call placatif. And the whole picture is in a kind of poster-style, with a flat, simple lighting that concentrates the effects. It’s a kind of expressionism, of course like Wedekind, or the late Strindberg, or the early Brecht. And I avoid what a painter might call the sentimental colors—pale or soft colors. Here I paint in primary colors—like Kirchner or Nolde for example. Or even like Miro. I have the flashing red of a car and I want that to be just as red as possible.

Some people have commented on the blatancy of some of your symbols. In Written on the Wind the symbolism too is rather poster-like. One critic argues that this blatancy occurs because it is appropriate to the characters—it is they who turn the objects around them into symbols. For example, the boy on the mechanical rocking horse whom Stack sees just after the doctor has told him that he can never have children.

That was not a symbol. Some things in this film are meant to be symbols but not that. No no, I remember—the art director had put a horse in front of the drugstore. So I put a boy on top of it, and he was there when Stack came out of the doctor’s office. That’s all. I never saw any meaning to it at all until Halliday pointed it out to me.

Your films were never taken seriously in their own time by critics. It must have been astonishing to you to find the career that you’d abandoned taken seriously at last and so many years later.

I didn’t even know that Godard had written about me until Halliday came here. Of course while I was making films I didn’t read reviews. You can’t read them—everyone is saying something different. The first time I had any notion of what you call serious attention was when a French friend sent me a clipping from L’Express in the late Fifties. It said the Academy Awards as usual had slighted the two most important films of the year—Touch of Evil and Tarnished Angels.

When I was directing Ionesco’s Le Roi Se Meurt in Munich, in the mid-Sixties, I got this phone call. Two men from Cahiers du Cinema—could they come to the theatre and interview me? That whole interview took place while I was rehearsing actors, in between the scenes.

You said before that the real satisfaction comes from knowing you’ve succeeded. Do you recall having that satisfaction while you were in Hollywood?

I don’t think so. I believe the satisfaction being felt was by Mrs. Sirk mostly. I’m a skeptic—by temperament I’m a pessimist. Of course there are rare moments. Certainly I felt some satisfaction of a kind when the president of Universal told me they were all indebted to me—for giving them the biggest moneymaker in their history. How almost a whole people could switch from one moment to the next, almost completely. The younger people one could forgive perhaps—the attraction of something new, etcetera. But the older people—and the intellectuals. Because without the intellectuals, Hitler might never have made it to power.

 

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17 of Douglas Sirk’s 48 films

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Imitation of Life (1959)
‘Living a lie is a poor substitute for living the truth sometimes it takes the harsh realties of life to help us discover who we truly are. The legendary Lana Turner stars in this 1959 version of Fannie Hurst’s emotionally-charged drama, which chronicles two widows and their troubled daughters as they struggle to find true happiness amidst racial prejudice. Lana Turner plays Lora, a single white mother whose Hollywood starlet ambitions come at the expense of any meaningful relationship with her daughter, Susie (Sandra Dee). Lora’s black housekeeper, Annie (Juanita Moore), has troubles of her own as she faces the rejection of her own fair-skinned daughter, Sarah Jane (Susan Kohner), who abandons her heritage for a chance to be accepted as white. As years of selfishness and denial pass, tragedy strikes and forces the women to come to terms with their own identities. Juanita Moore and Susan Kohner were both Oscar-nominated for “Best Supporting Actress” for their stirring performances. This lavish production, directed by Douglas Sirk (Magnificent Obsession), was a critical and commercial success, and today remains both a testament to its time and a beloved Hollywood classic.’ — UM


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A Time to Love and a Time to Die (1958)
‘Douglas Sirk — the master of the Hollywood melodrama — turns back to his native Germany at the time of the Second World War for the film that would stand as his penultimate American feature: A Time to Love and a Time to Die. A CinemaScope production staged on a grand scale, Sirk’s picture nevertheless pulsates with an intimacy that has known longing for too long, and seethes with the repression of emotions poised to explode like bombs.’ — Eureka!


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The Tarnished Angels (1957)
‘In this spectacular adaptation of Faulkner’s Pylon, Roger Shumann is a disillusioned WWI ace eking out a living as a barnstorming pilot/parachutist during the early 30s. New Orleans newspaperman Burke Devlin meets Shumann at a two-bit carnival and becomes fascinated with his fall from grace.’ — MUBI


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Interlude (1957)
‘I thought it was boring for the first hour but then in the last act you realize you’ve been watching a horror movie all along about making someone disappear so that life can be simple and beautiful. But she’s there all the time in the extravagant tapestries and wallpaper and upholstery that are bursting with a gorgeous, scary energy against which June Allyson’s white dresses don’t stand a chance.’ — irmavep


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Battle Hymn (1957)
‘In what Sirk maybe lacks from a weaker script, he makes up for in his extraordinary visual prescence, peak melodramatic sincerity, and continued efforts in bringing the best out of a familiar lead. The newer directions he takes aren’t always successful, but when they are, it only further distinguishes Battle Hymn as a unique and interesting film for Sirk. Far from essential, but a nice addition to his work, falling in line between his masterpieces.’ — Puffin


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Written on the Wind (1956)
‘The film includes such sordid subjects as nymphomania, alcoholism, murderous jealousy and rage, phallic power and infertility, miscarriage, back-stabbing emotional blackmail, and illusory materialistic happiness. It has often been noted that Sirk’s film came at the same time as George Stevens’ epic Giant (1956) – another tale of a Texas family with Rock Hudson. And TV’s popular Dallas (on CBS-TV from 1978-1991) and Dynasty (on ABC-TV from 1981-89) – two prime-time soaps in the 80s, owe their heritage to Sirk. This great film was nominated in three Academy Award categories, including Best Supporting Actor (Robert Stack who should have won, but lost to Anthony Quinn for Lust for Life) and Best Song (“Written on the Wind”), with Dorothy Malone taking home the Best Supporting Actress Oscar (her sole career nomination and win) for an overacted slinky, catty role as a sex-obsessed, wild, nymphomaniacal, provocative member of the Texas oil dynasty’s family.’ — Filmsite


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There’s Always Tomorrow (1955)
‘Douglas Sirk is best known for his highly stylized Technicolor melodramas, but he also did superlative work in restrained black and white. There’s Always Tomorrow is a virtuoso study in tones, ranging from the blinding sunlight of a desert resort to the expressionist shadows of the suburban home where Fred MacMurray lives in unhappy union with Joan Bennett. Barbara Stanwyck is the old flame who turns up by accident, rekindling for MacMurray the dangerous illusion that happiness is still possible. Between his twin masterpieces All That Heaven Allows and Written on the Wind, Douglas Sirk created this razor-sharp study of male crisis, both a glittering testament to love’s labours lost and his most unforgiving vision of suburban conformity.’ — Dave Kehr


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All That Heaven Allows (1955)
‘This heartbreakingly beautiful indictment of 1950s American mores by Douglas Sirk follows the blossoming love between a well-off widow (Jane Wyman) and her handsome and earthy younger gardener (Rock Hudson). When their romance prompts the scorn of her children and country club friends, she must decide whether to pursue her own happiness or carry on a lonely, hemmed-in existence for the sake of the approval of others. With the help of ace cinematographer Russell Metty, Sirk imbues nearly every shot with a vivid and distinct emotional tenor. A profoundly felt film about class and conformity in small-town America, All That Heaven Allows is a pinnacle of expressionistic Hollywood melodrama.’ — Criterion Collection


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Captain Lightfoot (1955)
‘This won’t get mistaken for All That Heaven Allows or The Tarnished Angels but it shouldn’t be overlooked either. Sirk’s melodramatic/romantic impulses here are complemented by some action and adventure. This was a studio showcase for young Rock Hudson who comes through with all the necessary star ingredients. The Irish locations also play their part. The film doesn’t have enough substance to make it memorable but it is a rather gorgeous diversion.’ — CinemaShadow


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Magnificent Obsession (1954)
‘Sirk’s intriguing application of disciplined technique to ostensibly schmaltzy material continues to stimulate curiosity bringing to this effort the same combination of overblown, indulgent melodramatics and distanced perspective in which realizing how important directorial discretion is when communicating the essence of a story on where to place the right touches — a hint of music here, a pained expression there — to draw the reactions without ever being false or manipulative. The film pays it forward, and unlike the karmic build-up it simulates, it’s pleasures are never used up, that’s all the more bolstered by the pleasant performances from Wyman, Rush, Moorehead and in particularly, Hudson in this quasi religiously spiritual affair of an emotional and melodramatic tearjerking gem.’ — Scott Anthony


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All I Desire (1953)
‘Douglas Sirk’s 1953 melodrama “All I Desire” (which I discuss in this clip) launched the German-immigrant filmmaker (who had arrived here during wartime) on a new and decisive creative arc. The movie is a romantic melodrama set in an American town—at once a compact city and a preordained suburb—that looks lovingly at the underlying spirit of freedom and community while confronting the narrowness of shared values and the shattering risks of free-thinking. It stars Barbara Stanwyck in the first of two films they made together (the other, “There’s Always Tomorrow,” co-stars Fred MacMurray in one of the great dramas of frustrated manhood) and, in both of these films, she conveys the burden of the past, of a personal history that has burned painful wisdom into her soul. She comes off as a woman who has lived; and, in both, she utters the word “No” with a distinctive, unforgettably round-pointed vowel that she tears from her throat like a worldly, dignified, ladylike cry. Her performances in these films, and in others of the era, by Samuel Fuller and Gerd Oswald—like Joan Crawford’s, in films of the forties and fifties by Otto Preminger, Nicholas Ray, and Robert Aldrich—suggest the power of age-honest casting over the commercial lure of the ingenue. Would that filmmakers of today took that lesson to heart.’ — Richard Brody


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Take Me to Town (1953)
‘Apart from the story feeling like a comedic, perversely reverse version of Sirk’s own All I Desire the same year — a traveling-performer woman gets seduced by domesticity rather than runs away from it to be one — I don’t detect much of the director’s trace here. Doesn’t matter much though, as Sirk stages a mostly full-fledged comedy and (to me) nails it, with Ann Sheridan selling both the various physical comedy gags and the character arc of falling for this family/community. Slight but charming.’ — Peng


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Has Anybody Seen My Gal? (1952)
‘Whilst not generally considered one of Douglas Sirk’s better films, Has Anybody Seen My Gal? is an enjoyable morality play that makes a superb introduction to this director’s work. With its authentic 1920s sets and costumes and jaunty period music (which include the title number and the original Charleston), this is one of Sirk’s most vibrant and life-affirming works, a feel-good romp that is not weighed down by the darker undertones, subtle ironies and scathing social critique of his later films. For his first colour film, Sirk employs a bold feminine palette (dominated by pinks, greens and blues) that both emphasises the Art Deco design elements and evokes something of a kitsch fairytale – a distinctive visual style that the director would employ to great effect in his subsequent melodramas.’ — James Travers


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Week End With Father (1951)
‘After Douglas Sirk had gotten the hell out of Nazi Germany but before he had found his auteur vision as the author of lavish Technicolor melodrama dreams, he had a fairly conventional career as a director. He made a handful of war films, some noirs and a couple of romantic comedies, this being one of them. A Sirk project in black and white seems like a hard sell but to view it only as that would be unfair, not everything needs to be held the lofty standards of All That Heaven Allows. Besides seeing what he did before his masterworks could be interesting and reveal some insight into what his oeuvre would ultimately become.’ — opusinthecinema


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The Lady Pays Off (1951)
‘Douglas Sirk’s romantic comedies are sweet and weirdly pure, even when they try to be cynical and a little hard-boiled, like this one does. That said, it’s pretty fluffy and probably not worth watching unless you’re a Sirk completist, or are in the tank for either of the stars.’ — sakana1


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Thunder on the Hill (1951)
‘Coming at the start of the 1950s, Douglas Sirk’s Thunder on the Hill kicked off the, tragically, most successful period of his film career. A man who would wind up ending his film career by the end of this decade due to the lukewarm reception to his films, Sirk is obviously continuing to get a major reassessment as the years go on. However, this reassessment largely applies to his melodramas which have risen from being, as the introduction by Robert Osborne on the TCM release of the film states, women’s pictures and matinee-quality films to being classics. His early career noirs have not experienced such a switch, largely because few people have seen any of them.’ — Kevin Jones


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The First Legion (1951)
‘One of Sirk’s most abstract works. A film in which everyone is locked into his/her private world, and in which change doesn’t come easily, if at all, because everyone fortifies him/herself against his/her surroundings. The one thing everyone shares is the obsession with “miracles” – a term which only in the beginning can be defined as an absolute outside stepping in to solve all problems. In the end, the spell is broken by a breakthrough towards intersubjectivity – although the happy end seems a bit forced, if only because of Lyle Bettger’s rather weird acting (the only real problem of the film, imo).’ — dirtylaundri


the entirety

 

 

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p.s. Hey. ** _Black_Acrylic, Yay, soul and booty balm thanks to Mr. You. Everybody, High alert to venture sideways and do your ears and whole bods a world of wonders aka … _Black_Acrylic: ‘New episode of Play Therapy is online here via Tak Tent Radio! Ben ‘Jack Your Body’ Robinson has in store Russian Dungeon Synth, S&M-themed Italo and some good wholesome Acid for you too.’ Thank you for the vast weekend upgrade, B. ** David, Yeah, I don’t buy the ‘influenced towards evil by music/videogame/etc.’ propaganda thing at all. Kip Kinkel didn’t listen to that kind of music. His favorite album was the ‘Romeo + Juliet’ soundtrack. I don’t think he should still be in prison. I don’t think he should have ever been in prison. That’s my angle. ** Jack Skelley, In-the-Box! I loved your LARB essay. So good! I shared it on FB and it got a world of likes. Kudos, bud. Everyone, Jack Skelley has written a fantastic essay on new writing/ publishing and ‘auto-fiction’ and other stuff, and I extremely highly recommend it to you. And it’s called ‘The Descent of Autofiction … and the Rise of the Literary Thrill-Seeking Industrial Complex’. And it’s here. Dude, if you’re even remotely serious about that essay vis-a-vis the blog, I will waterboard you to get it if necessary. See you this morning (you)/this evening (me)! ** David Ehrenstein, I wondered if you’d met or even known Heliczer. The book is thorough and terrific. ** Maria, Isabella, Camila, Malaria, Gabriela, Hi, gang. I certainly hope so too. At least they’re not hungry lions? ** Misanthrope, Oh, I bet you say that to all the posts. Oh, man, American medical rip off nightmare. I’m sure I told you I had root canal which took three separate dentist visits to complete here in France, and it cost me $14. Sure hope that pain is historical by now. Ouch, been there. Nice of David to inquire. Uh, fundraising for the new film, fundraising to further develop the haunted house video game-like thing, writing some fiction, bundling up, going out and about. Iow, nothing that will interest him very much, I fear. Dare I ask what he’s up to? ** Dominik, Hi!!! The Real McCoy trip got delayed until today. So I can share my junk food investigations and acquisitions on Monday. I thought of you immediately when I saw there was a new RHCP song. Love adding Budapest to the RHCP’s upcoming European tour if they’re not already scheduled there and SMSing you a VIP/backstage pass and passing along the band’s request that you curate their setlist for the concert, G. ** Shane, I remain steadfast in my support for erasure. (The concept, not the band). ** LC, Hi. Welcome back. Far west Texas … I’m not sure if I’ve been there. Bad geography on my part. My parents were from Texas, so I was there as a kiddo seeing relatives. Mostly Corpus Christi, but I think that’s south. Anyway, … I’ve always wanted to go to Carlsbad Caverns. I love caves. I don’t know why I never have since it’s close-ish to LA. Have fun, no doubt. Was it? ** Steve Erickson, Did I miss another band camp Friday, Jesus. Excellent Poly Styrene-related interview. ** Brian, Hey, Brian. That porn is most definitely better in theory. I mean, it’s kind of campy semi-fun. I think it’s called ‘Ghost of a Chance’, or something to that effect, but don’t hold me to that. Little films, yeah, much better. My sewer trip got delayed to today. I’ve only never gone because people I know who went tended to say, ‘Ugh, stinky, boring’, but Zac went recently and said it was glorious, and he and I have fraternal twin brains, so that’s good enough for me. Our Sirk is ‘Imitation of Life’. Believe it or not, the coincidence of us talking ‘IoL’ on the very day this post launches is a total accident. ‘Moonfall’, I don’t know it. I want to see the new ‘Jackass’ too. Sounds like there’s a real chance your weekend will fall into the green zone. Even bright green. Seems possible that I might find a secret treasure in the sewers, but possibly one that should have remained secret. Excellent next 48, man. ** T, Hi. Yes, the very same bookstore I mentioned is also a little publishing house. Great store, really, very worth a visit next time you’re in the 10th. My sewers trip was delayed until today, so I guess I can be its travel agent or the opposite come Monday. Wow, weird about your heart and my wish for it. That’s kind of spooky. But … if I eat my weekend’s heart, it’ll die, won’t it? But if I wait to eat it until Sunday night, it won’t matter. So I’ll do that. Thank you. I hope your weekend is a donkey and you’re a little blindfolded kid holding its missing tail with a pin sticking out of it. ** Okay. Thanks to, I think, a suggestion or hint or something from someone here in the recent past, you get a post this weekend given over to the maestro of 1950s cinematic melodrama, Mr. Douglas Sirk. See you on Monday.

Please welcome to the world … Piero Heliczer Poems & Documents, edited by Benjamin Thorel & Sophie Vinet (After8 Books)

 

‘Poet, editor, filmmaker, actor, child star in Mussolini’s Italy, founder of The Dead Language Press and of the Paris Filmmakers Cooperative, Piero Heliczer (1937–1993) was an essential yet secret agent of the 1960s and ’70s counterculture. In the course of his nomadic existence in Rome, New York, London, Amsterdam, Paris, and Préaux-du-Perche, where he spent the last few years of his life, he met and worked with a constellation of avant-garde writers, forged friendships with figures from the Beat Generation and the British Poetry Revival as well as the New York art scene. At the crossroads of many underground experiences, Heliczer’s name appears in books dedicated to the artists and poets he collaborated with during his lifetime—names by the likes of Gregory Corso, Barbara Rubin, Andy Warhol, Jack Smith, Ira Cohen, or The Velvet Underground, a band he participated in creating with his friend Angus MacLise.

‘This myth obscures the fact that Piero Heliczer was first and foremost a poet. Today, this part of his work is overlooked; it is all the more difficult to encounter because Heliczer himself never collected it. So it was scattered, or lost, in the course of his wanderings. Heliczer favored the circulation of his works rather than their archiving: he was committed to the production of mobile forms—flyers, broadsides, and other ephemera—disseminated his verses in magazines, and preferred public readings and performances to the finished form of the book.

‘The present volume gathers a significant number of Heliczer’s poetic works through facsimile reproduction of his contributions to more than thirty periodicals—mostly stemming from poets’ presses or universities—published between 1958 and 1979. This collection isn’t “complete”—but it makes available again poems that, in some cases, never circulated after their initial publication. Piero Heliczer: Poems and Documents seeks to complement the anthology, A Purchase in the White Botanica: The Collected Poetry of Piero Heliczer, edited by Anselm Hollo and Gerard Malanga (New York: Granary Books, 2001), and also to circulate his work among a larger audience, thanks to its first translation into French.’ — After8 Books

 

 

Buy ‘Poems & Documents’
PIERO HELICZER WEB PAGE
Piero Heliczer @ The Allen Ginsberg Project
the invisible father – a piero heliczer documentary film
After8 Books

 

Sample pages

 

Who is Piero Heliczer?
by Wynn Heliczer

 

Biography

 

‘Piero Heliczer was born in Rome to a German mother and a Polish father. His film career began at the age of four when, ironically, he won a contest for the “most typical-looking Italian child.” Acting under the name “Pier Giorgio Heliczer,” he played minor roles in Italian films as a child, including, by his own account, an uncredited supporting role in Vittorio De Sica’s The Bicycle Thief (1948). When Heliczer was seven years old, his father, a doctor and resistance fighter, was tortured and executed by the Gestapo. The boy emigrated with his mother to the United States in the 1940s, graduated high school at the top of his class, and enrolled at Harvard in 1955. After two years he dropped out and moved to Paris, where he co-founded the Dead Language Press with his high school friend, the poet and composer Angus MacLise.

‘Heliczer published “alternative” authors, including himself, MacLise, the Finnish poet and translator Anselm Hollo, the Beat poet Gregory Corso, and the underground filmmaker Jack Smith, in whose film Flaming Creatures Heliczer appeared in 1963.

‘In 1960 Heliczer moved to London, where he collaborated on his first film, Autumn Feast, with Jeff Keen. After moving to New York in 1962 he became involved with the Film-Makers’ Cooperative, appearing in films by Jack Smith and Andy Warhol. Eventually he bought his own 8mm camera and resumed making experimental films, including Satisfaction, Venus in Furs, Joan of Arc (in which Warhol appeared), and an “unfinished three-hour epic,” Dirt. With their primitive technique, anti-Catholic bent, and depictions of alternative sexuality, his films are often compared to those of Jack Smith.

‘Most of Heliczer’s films were silent, with sound added later. In some cases he used live musicians to provide a soundtrack. One band, the Falling Spikes, who played for a Heliczer show called The Launching of the Dream Weapon in early 1965, later changed their name to the Velvet Underground. At Heliczer’s multimedia shows, which he called “ritual happenings,” his films were projected through veils hung in front of the screen with colored lights and slides superimposed on them, while dancers performed onstage and musicians played in the background. Andy Warhol began organizing similar events in 1966; his Exploding Plastic Inevitable incorporated many of the same techniques and performers.

‘In November 1965, during the filming of Venus in Furs, the Velvet Underground and Heliczer were featured in a CBS News segment titled “The Making of an Underground Film,” which aired the following month. This brief appearance turned out to be the only network television exposure for either Heliczer or the band. Venus in Furs was named after a Velvet Underground song inspired by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch’s eponymous sadomasochistic novella. It features Barbara Rubin, another underground filmmaker, dressed as a nun. Angus MacLise, who at the time was still the drummer for the Velvets, also appears in the film. MacLise contributed numerous soundtracks for Heliczer’s films, and appears in at least one other, Satisfaction, along with John Cale.

‘In December 1965, Heliczer’s The Last Rites was included in the New Cinema Festival (also known as the Expanded Cinema Festival), an extensive series of multimedia productions in New York presented by Jonas Mekas and featuring the work of such artists as Robert Rauschenberg and Claes Oldenburg. Afterwards Mekas wrote in the Village Voice, “Three new film-makers have appeared on the scene with glimpses of beauty and promises for the future: Andy Meyer, Robert Nelson, and Piero Heliczer.” The Last Rites also made a lasting impression on the playwright Richard Foreman, who recalled it years later as one of his favorites.

‘Jonas Mekas: “Among all the new movies (it has been quiet lately on the underground scene) Piero Heliczer’s Dirt touched me most deeply. Its beauty is very personal and lyrical. And every frame of it is cinema. I cannot do justice to this beautiful work in one paragraph. It was shot on 8mm and much of its beauty and its cinema come from 8mm properties of camera and film. It is all motion. Together with Brakhage’s Songs, Branaman’s abstractions and Ken Jacobs’s not yet released work, Heliczer’s Dirt is one of the four works that use 8mm film properly and for art’s sake.”

‘Many years after the murder of his father, Heliczer was awarded a sum of money by the German government in compensation. He gave much of it away to fellow artists, but kept enough to try and establish a filmmaker’s cooperative in Paris like the one in New York. He also bought a small house in Normandy. The filmmaker’s cooperative was not a success, so he moved to Amsterdam, where he lived on a houseboat for a time. Vandals sank the boat, leaving him homeless, and he spent some time living on the streets of New York. In 1984 he returned to Normandy, where he spent his remaining years working in a secondhand bookstore. The 56-year-old filmmaker was killed in July 1993 when his moped was hit by a truck near Rambouillet. He is buried in Préaux-du-Perche, France.

‘Of the many films Heliczer made, some are lost, in full or in part, and only a few are still in circulation. Heliczer’s publications are also hard to find. In 1979, the poet Gerard Malanga edited the ninth issue of Dennis Cooper’s zine Little Caesar and presented several hundred pages of tributes to and reminiscences of Heliczer. In 2001, Malanga assembled a collection of Heliczer’s poetry titled A Purchase in the White Botanica. A collection of Heliczer publications was exhibited at the Boo-Hooray gallery in New York in 2014.

‘His daughter Thérèse Casper (née Heliczer) began making a documentary film about his life in 2013. Another daughter, Wynn Heliczer, is an actress.’ — collaged

 

Films

w/ Jeff Keen AUTUMN FEAST (1961)

‘A grown-up fantasy based on Guy Fawkes Day, the great children’s holiday of England, which is a combination of Halloween and the Fourth of July.’ — Piero Heliczer

The Autumn Feast lays bare (there should be something that rhymes with hair here or bare there) the mythic structure behind the orange domes and cardboard battlements and gilded gables of our Pasty National Howard Johnsons Baghdad. It rubs the very noses of our mannequins in our mold and sends us spinning into the street – undone and toothless.’ — Jack Smith

Watch it here

 

THE VELVET UNDERGROUND (1965)

‘This is, I think, the only circulating excerpt from The Velvet Underground’s first TV appearance. The 31 seconds here are taken from the 1996 BBC documentary ‘Dancing in the Streets’. Shorter versions of the same clip have been more recently used in the John Cale documentary from 1998, and the ‘Seven Ages of Rock’ documentary. No sound because the original soundtrack isn’t included on any of the circulating versions.’ — msturdy

 

DIRT (1965)

‘DIRT is a poem in the form of scopitone. The pictures presented here are from a segment called Satisfaction, with the Rolling Stones on the sound track. 1. Hairdressing; 2. Kiss; 3. Dancing; 4. Undressing; 5. Wedding.’ — Film-makers Coop

 

Exhibition

The exhibition “Piero Heliczer” a comprehensive display of Heliczer’s photographs, manuscripts, publications and ephemera curated by Rose & Wynn Heliczer and Sophie Vinet, was held at the Paris art space Les Bains-Douches in 2015.

 

Ephemera

 

The Invisible Father

‘In the 1960s, beat poet and experimental filmmaker Piero Heliczer helped shape New American Cinema, and was enmeshed with iconic filmmaker Andy Warhol and The Velvet Underground at the very start of their careers.

‘Through interviews with family and friends, found photos, and archival footage, Piero’s daughter, Thérèse Heliczer, explores the promise and perils of leading an authentic, creative life, and the impact that it can have on the people you leave behind in the process. Wondering if she can make peace with her absent father if she can find a connection to him through his art, she explores the artistic legacy and life of a man she never knew.’ — Therese Casper


Trailer

 

Further

Piero Heliczer @ Verdant Press
Piero Heliczer – poet, publisher and filmmaker
Piero Heliczer @ MUBI
Piero Heliczer @ The Film-makers Cooperative
The Underground Life of Piero Heliczer
Obituary: Piero Heliczer
Book: ‘Piero Heliczer: I Must Be More Like An Ant Than A Cigale Because I Like To Sing In Winter’
Piero Heliczer, le génie oublié de l’underground
Piero HELICZER – Les Hommes sans épaules
La vie tumultueuse du poète Piero Heliczer

 

 

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p.s. Hey. I’m very happy to turn the blog into a red carpet for this fantastic new book of writings and visuals by the visionary poet/filmmaker/actor Piero Heliczer who’s finally starting to get his due after decades of sidelining. Those of you who know my old magazine Little Caesar from the early 80s might recall a special issue guest-edited by Gerard Malanga that was largely devoted to Heliczer. The book is fascinating, and it’s highly recommended by me. ** David Ehrenstein, Ha ha. But RIP James Bidgood indeed. ** Dominik, Hi!!! We align! I’m going that weird American store (with the very American name The Real McCoy) today to score some junk including a ‘heaven on earth’ dispenser! Oh, no, poor love. How do we rescue him from his doldrums on our limited budgets. By turning love’s cute but boring boyfriend’s penis into an aerosol whipped cream dispenser, G. ** Maria, Isabella, Camila, Malaria, Gabriela, Ouch! I’m thanking my lucky stars for your resilience. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Oh, Ben, I’m so sorry. Having gone through that with my mom, but having been halfway across the world for most of it, it’s really good that you can be there for and with him, and, yes, I hope he gets home as soon as humanly possible. I’m so, so sorry to hear that, my friend. Life can be so hideous. Love, Dennis. ** David, When I was in therapy, my therapist was always trying to get me locked into a memory cycle, and I was, like, fuck that shit, give my future daydreams. I don’t know if I’d say fuck it and eat the biscuits. Probably. Well, if they’re really ace biscuits. ** T, Hi, T. Cool, I was hoping to confuse. I do love confusion. Pathway to the stars. Maybe I’m a softie, but I thought all those kids were just total sweetie pies letting a little adorable complicatedness leak out for a safe few seconds. My feet … uh, thank you for making me a weirdo, ha ha? I hope today makes your heart do this every time you’re in public. xo. ** LC, Hi! Welcome! I was hoping that would happen, so … cool. Thank you. You doing good? ** Shane, The bottom of it is probably more disappointing than its erasure? ** Verity Pawloski, Hello. ** Dom Lyne, Hi, Dom. Tickling is a good effect. Apropos or not, tickling has suddenly become a big fetish in the master/slave community, I have no clue why. Your bro, man, what a mess. I’m very happy to hear that the medical community has given you almost entirely good news, and I hope your ears stay wide awake. And just as happy that you’re working on stuff. Awesome! I’m doing okay over here. Stuff’s happening to a sufficient degree. You take care, my friend. xo. ** rewritedept, Hi. If I’m there then and not swamped with film stuff, maybe, yeah. I’ll go listen to their new thing. Riff machine! Food of the gods. Have fun getting the garage turned into awesomeness central. ** Brian, Hey, Brian. There’s a really old porn movie from the early 70s whose premise is a horny guy dies and then his ghost haunts the guys he was into, and the movie consists of his ghost going around fucking said guys, which consists of a bunch poor porn actors bouncing around on beds trying to believably pretend they’re being fucked by someone who’s invisible. Needless to say, it’s not an effective film in the manner that I assume it was intended to be. I’ve never seen that Ophüls film, I don’t think, but, yeah, he’s great. I need do an Ophüls post, actually. Oh, wow, I get why making a film is intimidating, but that’s so cool. Except for the paying for it part. But still. That’s exciting. Maybe you’ll discover previously unknown talents in yourself. Today I’m doing a zoom thing with a woman who’s writing her dissertation on Gisele Vienne’s/my works. Then I’m going to the American junk food store. Then I think I’m going to make my first visit to the Paris Sewers Museum, which is basically a tour of the Paris sewer. Otherwise, some meetings and some work and my biweekly Zoom Book Club on Saturday (discussing a Douglas Sirk film, a story by Kafka, and some prose poems by James Tate). And god knows what else? And your weekend started wonderfully, I hope, and how? ** Okay. The post has been introduced and now you’re free to roam it. Please do. See you tomorrow.

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