Tommy

From Monthly Film Bulletin, April 1975 (Vol. 42, No. 495). — J.R.

Tommy

Great Britain, 1975                                        Director: Ken Russell

Cert-AA. dist-Hemdale. p.c—The Robert Stigwood Organisation.

exec. p-Beryl Vertue, Christopher Stamp. /;Robert Stigwood, Ken

Russefl. assoc. p-Harcy Benn. p. manager-John Comfort. asst. d-

Jonathan Benson. sc-Ken Russell. Based on the rock opera by Pete

Townshend and the Who. addit. Material–John Entwistle, Keith Moon.

ph–Dick Bush, Ronnie Taylor. In colour. sp. ph. effects–Robin Lehman.

ed—Stuart Baird. a.d–John Clark. set dec–Paul Dufficey, Ian Whittaker.

sp. Effects–Effects Associates, Nobby Clarke,_Carygra Effects. m/songs–

“Captain Walker Didn’t Come Home”. “It’s a Bov !” “’51 is Going to be a

a Good Year”, “What About the Boy ?”, “See Me, Feel Me”, “The

Amazing Journey”, “Christmas”, “The Acid Queen”, “Do You Think

It’s All Right?”, “Cousin Kevin”, “Fiddle About”, “Sparks”, “Pinball

Wizard”, ‘Today It Rained Champagne” ,”‘There’s a_Doctor” , “Go to the

Mirror”, “Tommy Can You Hear Me !’” “Smash the Mirror”, “I’m Free”,

“Miracle Cure”, “Sensation”, “Sally Simpson”, “Welcome”, “Deceived”,

“Tommy’s Holiday Camp”, “We’re Not Gonna Take It”, “Listening to

You” by Pete Townshend and The Who [Roger Daltrey, John Entwistle,

Keith Moon, “Eyesight to the Blind” by Sonny Boy Williamson. m.d–

Pete Townshend. musicians-Elton John, Eric Clapton, Keith Moon,

John Entwistle, Ronnie Wood, Kenny Jones, Nicky Hopkins, Chris

Stainton , Fuzzy Samuels, Caleb Quayle, Mick Ralphs, GRaham Deakin,

Phil Chen, Alan Ross, Richard Bailey, Dave Clinton, Tony_Newman,

Mike Kelly, Dee Murray, Nigel Ollson, Ray Cooper, Davey_Johnstone,

Geoff Daley, Bob Efford, Ronnie Ross, Howie Casey. vocal chorus–Liza

Strike, Simon Townshend, Mylon Le Fevre, Billy Nicholls, Jeff Roden,

Margo Newmano Gillian Mclntosh, Vicki Brown, Kit Trevor, Helen

Shappell, Paul Gurvitz, Alison Dowling. Music synthesizer programming

by–Pete Townshend. theatre organ played, by–Gerald Shaw. arranged

by–Martyn Ford. cost–Shirley Russell. choreo–Gillian Gregory.

make-up–George Blackler, Peter Robb-King. sd. rec–Ian Bruce.

sd. re-rec-Bill Rowe. Quintophonic Sound developed by–John Mosley.

l.p–Ann-Margret (Nora Walker), Oliver Reed (Frank Hobbs), Roger

Daltrey (Tommy), Elton John (Pinball Wizard), Eric Clap!on_ (Preacher)-,

Keith Moon (Uncle Ernie), Jack Nicholson (Doctor), Robert Powell

(Group Captain Walker), Paul Nicholas (Cousin. Kev!n), Tina Turner

(Acid Queen), Barry Winch (Young Tommy),_Victoria Russell (Sally

Simpson), Ben Aris (Reverend Simpson), Mary Holland (Mrs. Simpson),

Jennifer Baker (lst Nurse), Susan Baker (2nd Nurse), Juliet King and

Gillian King (Handmaidens to Acid Queen), Imogen Claire (Nurse), John

Entwistle and Pete Townshend (Themselves), Arthur Brown (Priest),

Gary Rich (Rock Musician), Dick Allan (President of Black Angels),

Eddie Stacey (Bovver Boy). 9,755 ft. 108 mins.

England, World War II. After a brief idyllic marriage to Nora,

Group Captain Walker, an R.A.F. bomber pilot, is shot down over

enemy lines, and a few months later Nora gives birth to a son,

Tommy. During a visit to Bernie’s Holiday Camp, she meets and

weds one of the employees, Frank Dobbs, and the three go to live in

her house. One night, Walker unexpectedly appears, finding Frank

and Nora in bed together, and is killed by Frank; Tommy, witnessing

the murder in a mirror, becomes incurably deaf, dumb and blind. The

1970s: Tommy is taken to a faith healer who has no success, then to

the Acid Queen, who injects him with drugs; the latter experience

permits him to see only a red image of himself in a mirror. Left with

his sadistic cousin Kevin who brutally tortures him, he is subsequently

able to see a yellow image in a mirror beside the red one; after

being sexually abused by his Uncle Ernie, he can also see a

blue image. His red, yellow and blue image leaves the mirror and

goes to an automobile junkyard; Tommy follows, comes upon a

pinball machine, and plays it so well that he immediately becomes a

celebrity, and beats the former World Champion in a tournament.

After a specialist fails to cure him and Nora has a nervous break-

down, she pushes him through a mirror and he promptly regains

all his senses. Declaring himself a new Messiah, he becomes an

evangelist with ‘Holiday Camps” in every major world capital,

offering tinted glasses, corks, ea4rlugs and pinball machines to the

converts while Frank collects the profits. But the followers rebel,

destroying the central holiday camp and killing Frank and Nora.

Alone and free, Tommy climbs a mountain to worship at the feet of

his own image.

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_pGL7iLcL8FE/S2Y_KLnEr-I/AAAAAAAAAds/5LcqJRc507k/s400/Tommy6(a).BMP

Like every other recent Ken Russell film, Tommy is decidedly a

mixed bag of effects; but for once, the unevenness of the mixture

seems evenly matched by the strengths and limitations of the original

material. After all his dogged attempts both to inflate and undermine

the romanticism in such diverse sources as Lawrence, Tchaikovsky,

The Boy Friend and Gaudier-Brzeska, evidently seeking to resolve

the contradictions of his approach in a kind of pure theatricality,

Russell finds in Pete Townshend’s celebrated ‘rock opera’ just the

right amount of imaginative possibility, open-ended pretension and

musical energy to make this adaptation neither a betrayal nor an

improvement but a true meeting of equivalent sensibilities. This is

not to suggest that he hasn’t taken certain liberties with the material:

the alternating use of separate choruses from “Tommy’s Holiday

Camp” and “We’re Not Gonna Take It” on the original album, for

instance, is replaced here by one song in toto followed by the other

– permitting both a gain in narrative continuity and a loss in moral

ambivalence (and, incidentally, still eliding any indication of why

Tommy’s followers decide to revolt) — while the concluding sequence

clearly offers only one of many possible readings of “Listening to

You”, fusing the stylistic narcissism of both The Who and Russell

into a summary statement acknowledging self-worship as the overriding

preoccupation that they share, with a comparable preference for flash

over depth and a hankering after profundity informing both sides of the

collaboration. For the most part, however, Russell’s illustration of

the lyrics is strictly literal — e.g., Sally Simpson actually does marry a

a rock musician from California — which places a considerable amount

of the creative burden on Townshend’s shoulders. (In the monaural

version under review, the lyrics of on-screen actors occasionally

register with a disembodied effect, but this actually helps to

highlight the parallel contributions of director and music). Among

the less successful aspects of this joint effort are the first twenty

minutes or so, which resemble a run-on TV commercial; the Las

Vegas inflections of Ann-Margret — rather at odds with the ethnic

tenor of the music, and not made any more palatable by her

strenuous efforts to ‘act’ the lines; and the unproductive ugliness

of the set in Eric Clapton’s faith-healing headquarters, riddled with an

assortment of unconvincing Marilyn Monroe icons. The best parts

generally feature the best songs : Tina Turner’s ‘”Acid Queen” sequence

is a mini-masterpiece of visual inventiveness and dramatic cohesion,

helped in no small measure by Turner’s extraordinary showmanship,

while the plastic conceits accompanying “Pinball Wizard”– from

Elton John’s outrageous outfit to the actual flipper machines, both

seen against a teeming mob of spectators — are lively and inspired. If

Russell’s imagination generally seems to operate more on-literary

than musical terms, and invariably within short units comprising the

length of the tunes rather than over lengthier structures — making for

a certain choppiness in continuity, and an acute absence of overall

dynamics (with every sequence characteristically pitched at a hit-or-

miss fortissimo) — it should be noted that even at its most lacklustre

and tasteless junctures, Tommy is never boring, and always full of

energy; and given the very loose narrative framework and imprecise

plot that Russell has to work with, this is no small achievement.

JONATHAN ROSENBAUM

Published on 12 Apr 1975 in Notes, by jrosenbaum

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Improvisations and Interactions in Altmanville

From Sight and Sound (Spring 1975); I’ve mainly followed the editorial changes (mostly trims) used in the version that appears in my collection Essential Cinema. — J.R.

[. . .] Unless it is claimed that a pianist’s

hands move haphazardly up and down the

keyboard — and no one would be willing to

claim this seriously — it must be admitted

that there exists a guiding thought,

conscious or subconscious, behind the

succession of organized sound patterns . . .

Of course, it does happen, and not too

infrequently, that an instrumentalist’s fingers

‘recite’ a lesson they have learned; but in

such cases there is no reason to talk about

creation.

– André Hodeir, Jazz: Its Evolution and Essence

***

I can never think and play at the same time.

It’s emotionally impossible.

Lennie Tristano, circa 1962

***

CHARLIE (Elliott Gould): This is the truth. You’re an animal lover, right?

SUSAN (Gwen Welles): Yeah.

CHARLIE: Okay, well: the great blue whale, right? You know about a great blue whale?

SUSAN (semi-audible): . . . got that wrestling guy, hunh?

CHARLIE: No, it’s a big fish, a big fish, there’s only two or three left in the world.

And the truth — the tongue: of the great blue whale : weighs more: than a full,

grown, African elephant…

SUSAN: No, that’s not true.

CHARLIE: You don’t believe it.

SUSAN: You’re just making it up to make me feel better –

CHARLIE: Aw –

SUSAN: –’cause you don’t like to see me cry.

CHARLIE: You feel a little better?

SUSAN (sniffing): Yeah, I do.

– California Split

The first quote comes from a theorist, the second from a jazz pianist; together they

only begin to describe the difficulties and ambiguities attending any effort to

describe the aesthetic conditions of improvisation — for audience, improviser and

theorist alike. Taking the third quote as a test case, it is hard to know where to begin.

Is the dialogue written or improvised? Is the scene — Susan, a prostitute, arrives home

in tears after falling for yet another of her clients; Charlie, her flat mate, goes to her

room to cheer her up — an integral part of Joseph Walsh’s script, or something that

Robert Altman and/or Gould and Welles partially or completely concocted on the set?

A skeptic could remark with some justice that it makes no difference: whatever the

sources, combinations or relative degrees of calculation and spontaneity, the results

on the screen are all that count. But the fact that these results give an unmistakable

impression of improvisation — as evidenced by such factors as Gould’s loose,

evolving syntax and Welles’ semi-audible, equally vague reference to ‘that

wrestling guy’ – is a matter of some importance; without it, our responses

to the scene would simply not be the same. If Gould’s rap and delivery

were more polished, our attention would be focused on his whole

statement as a single gesture: Charlie spouts nonsense to make

Susan feel better. But in the scene as played, what we observe is

the emphatic (if somewhat ham-fisted) exposition of Charlie’s

nonsense and Susan’s reactions, motored on suspense and an

element of risk.

One hesitates to make too much of a scene that is small and,

for Altman, unexceptional; but the distinction is crucial. Well-

composed, cleanly delivered dialogue would perhaps convey

an implied moral judgment: Charlie cheers up Susan, therefore he’s

‘good’. Throwing this emphasis slightly off-center, Altman invites us

to judge Charlie/Gould, aesthetically as well as morally, on a

moment-to-moment basis. Like a matador coordinating his gestures

to the unpredictable but inescapable movements of a bull, or a jazz

improviser accommodating himself to fellow musicians and chord

changes, Charlie/Gould is wriggling his way into the imponderables

of a given emotional situation, and to respond directly to his

behavior we have to wriggle accordingly; so, for that matter,

does Susan/Welles.

The difference between conventional methods and Altman’s

is one between directness and indirectness, actions and interactions

– the actors’, the characters’, the director’s, the scriptwriter’s

and our own. It is decidedly a group endeavor, and as such, one

that lives and breathes in an intangible no-man’s-land between

‘thinking’ and ‘playing’ for the film-makers, ‘thinking’ and

spontaneous ‘reacting’ for the audience: the relative strengths

of both values are held in perpetual suspension, with new

stimuli that can potentially shift the balance coming along

at every juncture. From this point of view, anything can

affect everything, and no two spectators are responding

to precisely the same film –- the complete ‘text’ is common

to all, but each reading of it varies according to attentiveness,

temperament and perceptual capacity: an individual selection

of what is interesting or relevant and what is not.

This is not an approach that Altman can be said to have pursued

with any rigorous consistency, although it seems to figure at one

level or another in all his films since Brewster McCloud.

Minor details notwithstanding, it cannot be found to any

appreciable degree in the box-office hit that made Altman’s name

commercially negotiable and the subsequent works financially possible.

MASH is Mr. Roberts revised and updated, but not substantially improved. In

striking contrast to the movies that follow, it leaves essentially nothing to chance,

programming its effects with the ruthless efficiency that one would expect from a

skilled TV veteran. Oriental gongs are intermittently rung on the soundtrack to tell

the spectator when to laugh; black-comedy interludes of blood-spurting surgery are

periodically introduced to maintain a ’serious’ war-is-hell backdrop; and for all

the apparent verisimilitude of the celebrated overlapping dialogue — controlled by

an adept handling of timing and dynamics, where lack of inflection becomes a form

of emphasis — no one in the bleachers is permitted to miss a single significant line.

Too single-minded to include any serious risks in its strategies, it is unswervingly a

thesis film which militates for the heady (if headless) consensus of a mob’s euphoria

as part of its overall message: that fun-loving, honest, proficient surgeons are much

healthier and a lot easier to take than bureaucratic, militaristic hypocrites and

religious fanatics.

For roughly its first twenty minutes, MASH amply demonstrates this ‘audacious’

postulate; after that, it can only repeat its position ad infinitum over a series of

tacked-on skits. When Hawkeye (Donald Sutherland) and Trapper John (Elliott

Gould) leave for Japan, the structure is already buckling; by the time we reach

the football match, the film has clearly been stretched to run on like a TV series

(as, indeed it subsequently has), with the Korean War at this point safely out of

sight and out of mind. The sensible way of dealing with death and madness,

we are good-naturedly instructed, is to forget about them, while the only

way to deal with solitude is to ‘join the crowd’ like Sally Kellerman’s ‘Major

Hot Lips’ (after being subjected to a proper number of qualifying sexual

humiliations), or else go mad like Major Burns (Robert Duvall) — who is

sent packing early on, in a straitjacket, to make way for further horseplay.

After this sort of high-powered speciousness, Brewster McCloud

(1970) registers as an honorable failure: a species of crazed

doodling with all the awkward, endearing earmarks of a promising

‘first’ film, in which a director tries to do and say everything at once,

trusting to find his coherence in the cutting room. Wildly overlapping

allegory, satire, TV burlesque, social protest, demented bird lectures

and conventionally dull songs by John Phillips, the film nurtures a

dream of ‘escape by flight’ from convention that is as innocently

vague as its hero’s, and as predictably doomed. But along the way

are some glancing pleasures that suggest some of the achievements

to come: the intercut and overlapping use of René Auberjonois’ bird

lecture in relation to the already fragmented plot, at least until this

relationship becomes overly rigid and predictable; the debut of

Shelley Duvall, an Altman discovery, as a Texas-grown variant of

Breathless‘ Patricia; the bold delivery of certain oddball gags –

like the instant splattering of a newspaper headline (’AGNEW:

SOCIETY SHOULD DISCARD SOME U.S. PEOPLE’) by a bird dropping,

or the appearance of a tough hard-leather delinquent sporting a

Porky Pig T-shirt — along with some looser forms of humor, such

as John Schuck’s likeable enactment of a conscientious, semi-retarded

Houston cop.

It is only after the exorcism of Brewster, in McCabe and Mrs. Miller, that Altman

arrives at a fluent and developed style which can support his semi-improvised

approach. Henceforth, even his ‘mistakes’, like Images – an old Altman project

predating MASH that was filmed after McCabe – will carry a technical proficiency

and assurance that can support many calculated risks.

***

Writing, when properly managed (as you may be sure I think mine is) is but a

different name tor conversation: as no one, who knows what he is about in good

company, would venture to talk all; so no author, who understands the just

boundaries of decorum and good breeding, would presume to think all: The truest

respect which you can pay to the reader’s understanding, is to halve this matter

amicably, and leave him something to imagine, in his turn, as well as yourself.

-- Tristram Shandy, Vol. 2, Chapter 11

According to me it’s a collaborative art. I set a boundary line and framework,

but I don’t try to fill it all in. If I tried to put in the middle of it everything that

was in my imagination, it would be simply that. It would be a very sterile work.

So I try to fill it with things I’ve never seen before, things that come from other

people.

– Altman in a recent interview

The ‘open spaces’ that Altman offers to his fellow craftsmen or creates for

himself are obviously not identical to the ones that his films offer to audiences,

but they are related none the less: the openness and variability of a film’s

conception can help to encourage an open and variable response. Broadly

speaking, shooting, editing and sound-mixing appear to be regarded by

Altman as a process of elucidation, elaboration and discovery as much as

one of execution. (’The script will indicate character and situation,’ he has

remarked, ‘what I do comes on top of that.’) Actors are occasionally employed

without written parts, invited to ‘fall in with the material“ and create their own

roles, or encouraged to alter or expand their scripted parts during rehearsals.

Rather than scout every location in advance, Altman sometimes chooses to

encounter them only when he arrives with his camera crew.

Equally significant are the ‘open spaces’ that Altman allows for during shooting and

then fills at the editing or sound-mixing stage. The various announcements over the

public address system in MASH, René Auberjonois’ bird lecture in Brewster and

Leonard Cohen’s songs in McCabe were all arrived at and introduced long after

shooting began; and one might deduce that the use of Susannah York’s children’s

book (In Search of Unicorns) in Images, the title tune in The Long Goodbye, the

radio shows in Thieves Like Us and Phyllis Shotwell’s songs in California Split

were all partially determined after shooting was over. (Only partially, one assumes,

because all four of these ‘independent’ elements figure briefly within the actions

of their respective films.)

Most often, these interventions pass from the role of a foreground commentary

(mainly explicit in Brewster and Thieves; more frequently loose, approximate and

dreamy in McCabe, Images, The Long Goodbye and California Split) to that of a

background murmur whenever the scene’s dialogue begins, generally regaining

volume over subsequent lulls in the on-screen talk. Bridging scenes or taking up

narrative slack while subtly shifting or dispersing an audience’s focus, this

procedure distances us somewhat from the visuals and discourages sustained

identification with the characters — the reverse of the way music is used in MASH.

But the same technique creates an impression of overloading in much of Thieves

Like Us, where the use of Depression radio shows as historical artifacts and

ironic commentaries on the characters tends to duplicate points that are already

being established by other means (such as the three bank robbers’ mythical

sense of their own exploits). Sometimes these editorial nudges are even

extended beyond simple redundancy: in the central love scene between Bowie

(Keith Carradine) and Keechie (Shelley Duvall), which the actors are clearly

capable of sustaining by themselves, the unnaturalistic use of the same

radio phrase three times — ‘Thus did Romeo and Juliet consummate their

first interview by falling madly in love with each other’ — which is apparently

intended to punctuate the successive bouts of lovemaking and convey a

mood of time suspended, merely comes across as a self-conscious tic.

In California Split, on the other hand, the supplementary sound material has art

inventive, dynamic function in relation to the action, serving more as a lively

contrapuntal counterline than as a static one-to-one gloss. In the second scene

at the local poker parlor, one of Shotwell’s songs begins loudly over a long shot

of the card players’ becomes faint and is overtaken by these players’ dialogue

in medium shot, and then resumes loudness over a close-up of Bill –

delineating a dodgy kind of fan-dance in relation to a spectator’s diverse

routes into the scene. And when Charlie and Bill arrive in Reno, Shotwell’s

jazzy recitative-with-piano and Charlie’s independent free-form rap

suddenly (and gratuitously) converge on the phrase ‘nobody there’

–- a striking demonstration of the blind vicissitudes of chance

(such as the curious proliferation of elephants end Barbaras), which

operate throughout the film on multiple levels. [2012 postscript:

Lamentably, due to rights issues involving the songs, this moment

has been deleted from the version of California Split released on DVD.]

In all Altman’s best films, the emotional center gravitates around a pronounced

feeling of Absence — a sense of opportunities lost, connections missed, kindred

spirits divided and scattered — and in many respects, the independent sound

material serves to embody some form of this failed utopia: a ‘commentary’ of lyrical

idealism abstractly bridging discontinuous characters.

***

The contrast with MASH is again striking; there, the solitary characters are the

villains, and even Trapper John is made to appear suspicious and unwholesome

until he pulls out his jar of olives and joins the snob elite. In Brewster, McCabe

and The Long Goodbye, membership in a group is generally depicted as a sign

of naiveté. The fantasies spun by minor characters about Brewster and McCabe

– like the remarks of Philip Marlowe’s candle-dipping neighbors and Marty

Augustine’s entourage of faithful hoods — usually come across as the utterances

of gullible, fanciful children; in Images, the ‘healthy’, ‘public’ response of Hugh

(René Auberjonois) to the solitary madness of Cathryn (Susannah York) is

shown to be comparably myopic.

In Thieves Like Us and California Split, these relationships are less fixed and more

complex: Bowie, Keechie, Chicamaw and T-Dub in the former and Charlie and Bill

in the latter oscillate restlessly between different kinds of solitude and communal

living, and strained or frustrated domesticity — broken homes and temporary

arrangements — is a keynote in both films. But even here, the minor characters

share a visible kinship with the assorted array of cranks who populate McCabe

and The Long Goodbye, each riding on an autonomous wavelength that runs

at an oblique angle to everyone else’s. Consider, for instance, Harvey in

California Split, an old friend whom Bill looks up in a paint store:

HARVEY: Wait a minute! Don’t tell anybody

you came, I’m getting a flash. You see, I

have a good amount of ESP. I’m blessed

with it — my wife kids me about it — but you

should catch it when I get these flashes. Let

me see how close I can get to what’s goin’

on here. I get — I get that you’re probably

back with your old lady . . . an-n-n that

you probably want to paint your garage

door — perhaps even the whole front of your

house — I’m gettin’ the colour . . it’s a

greenish color. Right, how close did I get ?

BILL: I need a loan, Harvey.

HARVEY: A loan?

BILL: Yeah.

And that’s all we ever see of Harvey. Like some of the Flemish peasants in

Brueghel’s landscapes and certain topics and individual chapters in Tristram

Shandy, he emerges briefly in apparent non-relation to his immediate

surroundings, but retrospectively blends into an overall pattern of awkward

everyday cussedness that comprises an appropriate setting for absurdist-

humanist drama. A distant cousin of the eccentrics in Preston Sturges’

gallery of grandiloquent bit players, he is spiritually closer to Dee Mobley

(Tom Skerritt) in Thieves Like Us, dislocating the screen door on his

shack while counting the money in his hand and not quite aware of it,

or Ken Samson’s gate attendant in The Long Goodbye impersonating

Walter Brennan to a bewildered gangster.

The pathos of these characters – and countless other examples could be picked

from Altman’s menagerie — is directly related to the way that they momentarily take

the plot away from the films’ equally displaced heroes; their fumblings are only

condensed versions of the clumsy, uncertain relationships of McCabe, Marlowe, the

bank robbers of Thieves and the gamblers of California Split to their respective

worlds. John McCabe (Warren Beatty) cracks a raw egg into a double-whisky and

gulps it down to impress Constance Miller (Julie Christie), but all she cares to take

note of is his ‘cheap jockey-club cologne’; more worldly-wise but similarly lost, she

inhabits an opium pipe-dream that is equally inaccessible and unknown to McCabe.

Legends and ‘professionals’ to the residents of First Presbyterian Church, they are

helpless amateurs when faced with the potential challenges of each another, and

in many respect the film they inhabit registers as a wistful ode to that lost potential.

Within this context, the banality of Leonard Cohen’s semi-abstract songs becomes

workable through its teasing relationships and non-relationships with the action,

postulating mythical archetypes that might alternately ‘fit’ or collide with the

characters on the screen. Because these relationships are so fluctuating and

ambiguous (e.g., is Constance a ‘travelling lady’?), we are forced to construct

our own myths and anti-myths out of them, situating ourselves somewhere

– Altman doesn’t specify a precise position — in relation to Cohen’s

discourse, the story’s and the characters’.

What might legitimately be regarded as a style whose accents and cadences –

expressed through zooms, pans and qualities of light and focus, along with

shifting stresses on the soundtrack — convey a dreamy vagueness, is equally a

broad invitation to find one’s way in it, to merge with a narrative rather than

simply be carried along by it. Thus we are free to notice or not notice Constance’s

heart-shaped. money-box (and draw or not draw ’significant’ conclusions); and

when we hear intermittent strains of ‘Beautiful Dreamer’, they are not accompanying

her opium sessions but figuring in less obvious places: screeched out on a fiddle

in Sheehan’s Saloon while McCabe watches her bolt down a tableful of food, and

sung by her newly arrived prostitutes as they splash about in the misty bathhouse.

***

MCCABE (muttering to himself): . . . I tell

ya, sometime — sometimes when I take a

look at ya I jus, I jus keep lookin’ and-a

lookin’ . . . Long to feel yuh little body up

against me so bad I think I’m gonna bust . . .

I keep tryin’ to tell ya, in a lotta different

ways — just one time you could be sweet

without no money around . . . I think I

could — well I tell ya somethin’, I got

poetry in me. I do. I got poetry in me! . . .

but — I ain’t gonna put it down on paper,

I ain’t no educated man, I got sense enough

not to try.

McCabe and Mrs. Miller

MARTY AUGUSTINE (Mark Rydell) (to

Marlowe): You remember the night that Jo Ann

became ill and we hadda take her to the

hospital. Well, as you can see, she’s had

extensive treatment — the finest surgeons,

had nurses around the clock, best attention

– because, as you know, she’s very near and

dear to me. And the prognosis is excellent.

Excellent. She’s gonna be fine. Now I left

the hospital that night, and I was — I was

really upset I was — what was I ?

JO ANN (Jo Ann Brody): Haunted.

MARTY: What, what?

JO ANN (louder, more distinctly): Haunted.

MARTY: That’s it. Haunted! I was haunted –

absolutely haunted by the idea that somehow

I’d been unfair to her.

– The Long Goodbye

As can be partially discerned from the above, inarticulateness and clarity can often

register as moral positions in Altman’s films– at least until California Split, where

the whole question of a moral context becomes largely suspended. In the absurdist

terrain traversed by McCabe and Marlowe, a hired gun (Hugh Millais) describing

how to make profits out of dead Chinamen can be a lot more articulate than

the leading citizen of First Presbyterian Church, talking to himself; and a

psychotic gangster (Augustine) can enunciate sentences a lot more distinctly

and lucidly than Roger Wade (Sterling Hayden), a published novelist –

even if the former is describing his guilt feelings after gratuitously smashing

a Coke bottle across his girlfriend’s face, and the latter is merely trying to

communicate affection to his wife through a series of helpless stammers.

Altman’s apparent preference here for his tongue-tied characters over

their smooth-talking counterparts (the pompous lawyer in McCabe,

the sinister Dr. Verringer in Goodbye) seems to rest on the notion that

emotions speak louder than words. And the most serious reproaches

that have been leveled against the director — whether for ‘laziness’,

lack of intellectual rigor or incoherent rambling — can mainly be traced

back to this bias. But on Altman’s behalf, it is worth noting that rigor and

clean articulation is not really what he is after: the vagaries of behavior,

the indulging of certain moods and the staging of chance encounters,

can be enormously expressive even without the dividends of what critics

like to call ‘an organic whole’. It is rather like censuring a jazz musician

because his improvisations lack the polished form and execution of a

classical musician performing a written piece. While it is certainly true

that the former is less likely to achieve a finished form, there is a

different kind of excitement in the way that he tries to achieve it — a way

of regarding ‘form’ as a verb rather than a noun, a process father than a

postulate. And the base lines established by Altman for isolating and

relating different kinds and degrees of coherence are anything but loose.

In Michael Tarantino’s article “Movement as Metaphor” [which originally

appeared in the same issue of Sight and Sound], a persuasive case is

made through concrete evidence that the nearly constant movement

of the camera in The Long Goodbye affects both our relationship

to the film and Marlowe’s relationship to the world around him. In

what I hope might serve as complementary evidence of that film’s

formal interest (which surpasses, I believe, that of Altman’s other

works to date), I would like to show how roughly comparable

parameters are at work on the soundtrack, above and beyond

the overlapping dialogue — particularly in the extraordinary use

of the title tune, a facet of the film that many commentators have

taken to be nothing more than a trivial joke.

***

‘The Long Goodbye’ is a 32-bar standard by John T. Williams and Johnny

Mercer that is performed throughout the film in countless versions, none

of which is ever heard in its entirety; out of the dozen or so times that

parts of it are sung on the soundtrack — mainly by Marlowe, Marty

Augustine and Jack Riley (a pianist in a bar) on-screen or by Jack Sheldon

and Clydie King off-screen — most of the lyrics can be pieced together,

and some of them are worth quoting:

There’s a long goodbye, and it happens every day –

Where some passerby invites your eye

To come her way –

Even as she smiles a quick hello, you’ve let her go,

You’ve let the moment fly –

Too late, you turn your head . . .

[. . .] There’s a long goodbye: can you recognize the theme?

On some other street, two people meet as in a dream –

[. . .] It’s too late to try, when a missed hello

Becomes a long goodbye.

(Copyright by U.A. Music Ltd.)

In simplest thematic terms, this is a commentary on the broken encounters

that punctuate the film (and it should be noted that the personal pronouns

become masculine whenever Clydie King sings the lyrics, thereby expanding

their inclusiveness), beginning with Marlowe and his cat and continuing through

virtually every subsequent relationship charted in the plot. As with Cohen’s songs in

McCabe, the relevance to the action is fluctuating but dynamic in relation to our

responses, and the same words can suggest different things at different times. In

more directly operative terms, the song functions as follows:

1. As a piano improvisation (by the Dave Grusin Trio) in the opening scene, before

the actual theme is stated; as Marlowe is woken by his cat and tries to persuade the

latter to eat something, he can be heard humming, singing (’Can you recognize the

theme?’) and whistling various fragments, completely out of synch with the piano

and in a different key.

2. Sung by Jack Sheldon as the credits come on, while Terry Lennox (Jim Bouton)

drives away from the Malibu Colony (and is momentarily entertained by the gate

attendant’s Barbara Stanwyck imitation), in a medium-tempo, somewhat Sinatra-

like version.

3. Sung by Clydie King (beginning a fresh chorus) in a slower, more moody and

lyrical version as Marlowe pulls up at a supermarket to buy cat food, her chorus

continued by

4. A soupy muzak version of soaring violins, parodying conventional Hollywood

mood music, as Marlowe enters the supermarket (where he’s told that he has left

the car headlights on), which is continued by

5. Sheldon’s version, while Terry drives towards Marlowe’s house, proceeding

through the next-to-last bar of a chorus, which is completed (and a new chorus

begun) by

6. The muzak version in the supermarket (Marlowe to clerk: ‘You don’t happen to

have a cat by any chance –’ Clerk: ‘Whadda I need a cat for? I got a girl’), continued

by

7. Sheldon’s version over Terry driving, which is in turn continued by

8. Grusin’s piano improvisation as Marlowe returns home, again humming and

singing parts of the tune-out of synch, in a different key — along with phrases

of his own (’I love the cat’).

Subsequent uses include (among many others) a statement of the theme by guitar

and castanets over Marlowe and Terry’s drive to Mexico; the first four notes

sounded whenever Eileen and Roger Wade’s gate bell is rung; a version by Morgan

Ames’ Aluminum Band continuing Clydie King’s rendition during the first scene

with Marty Augustine, when the music first comes over a car radio, then is made to

sound as though it is coming from the house of Marlowe’s hippy neighbors; back

in Mexico, as a funeral dirge played by the Tapoztlan Municipal Band while Marlowe

speaks to the local coroner; a loud, chaotic and sloppy jazz version played and sung

by guests at the Wades’ party in Malibu (a scene of social chaos gravitating around

Roger Wade, who is emotionally going to pieces); and sung with a slight Jewish lilt

by Marty Augustine in his office as he waits for Marlowe to arrive.

The continuities and discontinuities that are established or implied in Nos. 1-8

-– between Marlowe and Terry, home and supermarket, one car’s trajectory and

another, or one ad lib version over another-are not merely reflections but active

instruments of the divisions being set up between these discrete entities, at the

same time that a common tune is binding them all together. And the spectator’s

relationship to the action is being further played with by the multiple shifts

in the music’s volume throughout most of the above examples, as melody

and/or words fade in and out of the soundtrack in relation to the dialogue,

passing from ‘foreground’ to ‘background’ in a manner somewhat analogous

to the camera movements in so far as they repeatedly redefine our focus on

and distance from the events taking place — thus continually altering and

varying our grasp of them. We are required, in other words, to improvise our

own ‘Long Goodbye’, both figuratively and literally, in order to establish our

proximity to all the others.

The shifting volumes of other sound elements — the miaow of Marlowe’s cat, the

voices of his spaced-out neighbors – are simultaneously altering our impressions

of spatial depth and physical separations in these scenes, as is the sound editing of

Marlowe’s police interrogation, which cuts back and forth between the tinny

reverberations in the room he is being ’secretly’ observed from to the more full-

bodied sound in the room that he occupies.

But the spatial and spiritual distances suggested in the above are modest indeed

compared to those which accumulate in the movie’s later scenes, beginning with the

Wades’ disastrous party. In the scenes that follow — Roger’s suicide, Marty

Augustine’s threat to castrate Marlowe, Marlowe’s frantic pursuit of a glassy-eyed

Eileen Wade until he is run over, his regaining consciousness in the hospital — the

sharp divisions between characters reach an intensity that suggests a rapid

escalation of neurosis to schizophrenia, a state of total dissociation. This is

expressed not only through a shallow sense of space in certain shots (Marlowe

and Eileen rushing into the waves after Roger, Marlowe’s subsequent chase after

Eileen), where characters appear to be traversing enormous distances without

advancing anywhere, but even further in the loud, bouncy, cheerful and utterly

autonomous jazz piano version of the theme which accompanies Marlowe’s

frenzied pursuit of Eileen. When he is hit by another car, the sound suddenly

dovetails into a few raucous bars near the conclusion of Sheldon’s vocal

version, with a trumpet blaring over the voice; this in turn is quickly overtaken

by a cacophony of overlapping sirens that fade into a dead silence broken

only by maniacal, distant screams from other rooms in the hospital where

Marlowe wakes up.

For all its jokey overtones, the scene which ensues is decidedly the most

nightmarish in the entire film. On the bed opposite Marlowe’s lies a figure wrapped

mummy-like, from head to toe, in bandages. After coming to his senses, Marlowe

cracks to his room mate, ‘You’re gonna be okay — I seen all your pictures too’ and

starts to leave the room, until the figure grunts at him incoherently but insistently,

beckoning him over. ‘Hey listen, you tell that guy that it don’t hurt to die’ Marlowe

remarks to the virtual corpse that might as well be him – indeed, is him if we

consider how Marlowe stalks senselessly through the remainder of the film.

‘Hey, that’s the smallest one I’ve seen,’ he goes on, picking up the mummy’s

miniature harmonica. ‘No, listen, I can’t,’ he explains, ‘I gotta tin ear.’ He blows

a plaintive whine on the harmonica, adds, ‘I’ll practice — see you later,’ and

beats his retreat from the room and his dormant doppelgänger, evading a

nurse with the declaration, ‘I’m not Mr. Marlowe, this is Mr. Marlowe here’

with another distant scream of pain from another room heard over his

parting words.

***

In this crucial scene, we have Altman’s ‘universe’, themes and formal procedures

reduced to their barest expressions. And if the harmonica and Marlowe’s cryptic

adoption of it — he is blowing on it again in the movie’s closing shot –

immediately recalls the harmonica wails of Jean-Pierre Léaud in Jacques

Rivette’s Out 1 and Out 1: Spectre for its reduction of communication itself

and the production of ‘meaning’ to stark essentials, the relationship may not

be entirely fortuitous. Rivette has recently expressed an interest in Altman’s

work which began with The Long Goodbye; and the behavioral comparisons

of Juliet Berto and Dominique Labourier (or Bulle Ogier and Marie-France Pisier)

in Rivette’s Céline et Julie vont en bateau are not wholly irrelevant to those of

Elliott Gould and George Segal (or Ann Prentiss and Gwen Welles) in California

Split, however much more simplified and ‘protected’ the Altman-conducted

improvisations may be.

Central to the concept of modernism in all the arts is the idea of collaboration — the

notion that artist and audience conspire to create the work in its living form, that the

experience of making it is in some way coterminous (if far from identical) to the

experience of hearing, seeing or reading it. Even at his most venturesome and

‘experimental’, Altman cannot be described as a director who pursues this notion

unequivocally and consistently, in the sense that Tati does in Playtime (through

visual options) and Rivette does in Spectre (through interpretative options);

considering the fairly constant way he has remained active in the commercial

cinema since MASH in 1970 — and all the conditions that this fact implies –

he cannot really be considered in the same league at all. But virtually alone

among his peers, he has opened up the American illusionist cinema to a few

of the possibilities inherent in this sort of game — played for limited stakes

in controlled situations, but played none the less.

Published on 11 Apr 1975 in Featured Texts, Featured Texts, by jrosenbaum

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La Petite Marchande d’Allumettes

From Monthly Film Bulletin, April 1975 (Vol. 42, No. 496). — J.R.

Petite Marchande d’Allumettes, La

(The Little Match Girl)

France, 1928

Directors: Jean Renoir, Jean Tedesco

Cert-U. dist–Contemporary. p–Jean Renoir, Jean Tedesco . asst. d–

Claude H eymann. Simone Hamiguet. Sc–Jean Renoir. Based on the

storv bv Hans Christian Andersen. ph–Jean Bachelet. a.d—Eric Aës.

m -excerpts from works by –Schubert, Strauss, Wagner, Mendelssohn.

m. d–Manuel Rosenthal, Michael Grant. Lp—Catherine Hessling (Karen,

the Little Match Girl), Jean Storm (Young Man/Soldier), Manuel Raby

[Rabinovitch] (Policeman/Death), Amy Wells (Dancing Doll). 1,030 ft.

29 mins. (16mm; also available in 35 mm.). English titles.

Karen leaves her humble-cottage to sell match boxes under a heavy

Snowfall. She gazes wistfully at a handsome young man emerging

from a restaurant, then looks through a frosted pane at the people

eating inside until boys throw snowballs at her. As she gathers up her

spilled boxes a policeman arrives, and together hey look at a display

of dolls and other toys in a shop window. After lighting matches in

an effort to warm herself, she falls asleep and dreams that she enters

the toy shop — having become the same size as the dolls –- and sets

them all in motion. The young man glimpsed on the street appears

as Captain of the toy soldiers and declares his devotion to her,

magically conjuring up a tableful of food; but before she can eat, a

jack–in-the-box identifying himself as Death — another incarnation

of the policeman takes her carving knife and orders the soldiers

and other toys to stop. She and the Captain ride off into the clouds

with Death in pursuit; the men cross sabres, the Captain is slain,

and Death carries Karen’s prone body to a rocky hill and lays her

beneath a cross, which sprouts into a rose tree. Petals falling on her

face merge into snowflakes as the dream fades; passers-by stand

over Karen’s dead body, surrounded by burnt matchsticks in the

snow.

Asked by Rivette and Truffaut in a 1954 interview whether the

trucages in La Petite Marchande d’Allumettes represented his only

“complete experience” in that realm, Renoir replied: “No; I began

making films out of love for trucages. I had no intention of writing,

being an author, inventing stories — my ambition was to make

trucages, and I haven’t done badly since then”. The point is a crucial

one. If this lovely studio-cultured blossom seems at first glance an

exception in Renoir’s career — shot and processed in its entirety in

the attic of the Théâtre Vieux Colombier, in a project so artisanal

and home-made that Renoir and his partner Jean Tedesco supplied

their own electricity, painted the sets, and (with some outside

assistance) built their own lighting system to accommodate their

innovative use of panchromatic stock for interiors — it is a deceptive

first glance. Even as indefatigable a defender of Realism as André

Bazin tries to sneak this film in the back door by defending it as

“the incursion of Renoir’s realism into the themes and techniques

of the avant-garde”, and he is at least halfway right. From the evident

artifice of the toy train chugging through Karen’s impoverished

neighbourhood to the ‘life-like’ sizes and gestures of the toys in her

dream, The Little Match Girl serves as testimony to the unreality of

‘reality’ and the solidity of dreams. Forty-one years later, Renoir

expresses the same notion in the first episode in his Petite Théâtre,

explicitly harking back to his love of Andersen and evoking the

earlier film while inverting some of its details (such as emphasizing

the restaurant diners’ view of the beggar instead of the other way

round, and reducing the dream itself to a single image) to arrive at a

comparable conclusion. Even before she enters the momentary

solace of sleep, Karen is herself a figure of pure fantasy in the

measured doll-like comportment of Catherine Hessling. And much as

her match flames briefly illuminate visions in her mind’s eye (an

enormous sunflower, a Léger-like Christmas tree), thereby equating

life itself with the capacity to dream, the fancy table of food she is

unable to enjoy in the dream expresses her actual hunger more

concretely than her glimpse of guests in the restaurant. Renoir has

noted that neither the music accompanying the film nor the titles

belong to his and Tedesco’s conception (a different score was

originally prepared for a small ‘live’ orchestra, and no titles at all

were intended), and the faded textures of the print under review

suggest a further loss, but far from an essential one: the beauty and

splendor of Renoir and Tedesco’s attic of wonders still shine

implacably through the ravages of nearly half a century.

JONATHAN ROSENBAUM

Published on 02 Apr 1975 in Notes, by jrosenbaum

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