Respect for Kenny “Captain Trips” Rogers, who passed today at age 81. Everyone knows the kindly smile, the white beard and the legendary “Gambler” lyrics (“know when to hold ’em, when to fold ’em”). But Rogers’ 1967 recording of Mickey Newbury‘s “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In)” — otherwise known as the bowling dream fantasy song in The Big Lebowski — is what first came to mind when I heard the news.
Then again Rogers’ laid-back conservatism — the default posture of pretty much every country music star of that era — never jibed with the mindset of a psychedelic adventurer. I don’t know if Rogers actually tripped or not, but I always had my doubts. Anyone who’d claim to have “broken” his mind (whatever the hell that means) doesn’t sound like the kind of guy who could ever sail into the mystic.
Update: This morning I posted a riff about “Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love To Town” — it’s in the comment thread.
Hugs and condolences to Rogers’ family, friends, colleagues, fans, etc.
For decades the film has taken shots for being too long and jingoistic (i.e., spoon-fed rightwing patriotism) and for being historically fanciful, but otherwise it’s a relatively satisfying, better-than-decent effort. The performances are fine (especially Laurence Harvey as William B. Travis) But I can’t remember a single scene that I would call truly great. The night-before scene in which the doomed Alamo defenders talk about values and families and facing death is probably the best, but it’s not one for the ages, at least not by my yardstick.
But Dimitri Tiomkin‘s score is legendary. Particularly the overture track and the “Green Leaves of Summer” theme. It succeeds on its own terms better than the film itself.
From “Musical Score as Strong Supporting Character“, posted on 6.17.19. “I’ve written a few times about the four different kinds of film scores — (a) old-school orchestral, strongly instructive (telling you what’s going on at almost every turn), (b) emotional but lullingly so, guiding and alerting and magically punctuating from time to time (like Franz Waxman‘s score for Sunset Boulevard), (c) watching the movie along with you, echoing your feelings and translating them into mood music (like Mychael Danna‘s score for Moneyball), and (d) so completely and harmoniously blended into the fabric of the film that you’ll have a hard time remembering a bridge or a bar after the film ends.”
Tiomkin’s Alamo overture is mostly an (a). He was basically announcing that while his score reflects to some extent Texas history and period aroma, the music was primarily about itself, and about Tiomkin’s ability to sell a certain emotional feeling.
Excerpt #2: “We all understand that the era of classic film scores — composed by Miklos Rosza, Bernard Herrman, Franz Waxman, Max Steiner, Maurice Jarre, Alex North, Dimitri Tiomkin, Bronislau Kaper, Ennio Morricone, Leonard Rosenman, Nino Rota, Elmer Bernstein, Alfred Newman, Hugo Friedhofer and Jerry Goldsmith — is over and done with. Their work (i.e., the artful supplying of unmissable emotional undercurrents for mainstream, big-studio films that peaked between the mid 1930s and late ’70s) belongs to movie-score cultists now. It’s sad to contemplate how one day these awesome creations will be absent from playlists entirely.”
24 year-old Marilyn Monroe presented the Oscar for Best Sound Recording at the 23rd Academy Awards telecast, which happened at the RKO Pantages theatre on 3.29.51. She had scored with noteworthy supporting performances in 1950’s The Asphalt Jungle and All About Eve, but her big career breakout was two years away. She was generally regarded as a possibly interesting actress, but probably not much more than a sexy flash in the pan.
Notice how intimidated she seems at the podium — eyes down, not a hint of personality or casual humor, read the copy and get off. And poor Thomas T. Moulton, who accepted the Oscar on behalf of All About Eve, didn’t even get to say thank you at center stage. The camera doesn’t even get to see his face. Monroe walks over and hands him the Oscar at stage left, and they’re both gone before you know what’s happened.
From N.Y. Times editorial titled “Profiting from a Pandemic?“. Headline copy: “At least two senators engaged in suspiciously timed stock sales. All stock trades by members of Congress should be barred.”
“Crisis often brings out the best in a people. As the coronavirus spreads its devastation, countless Americans are stepping up to perform acts of heroism and compassion, both great and small, to aid their neighbors and their nation.
“Then there are certain not-so-inspiring members of the United States Senate.
“Richard Burr, Republican of North Carolina, and Kelly Loeffler, Republican of Georgia, are in the hot seat this week, facing questions about whether they misused their positions to shield their personal finances from the economic fallout of the pandemic, even as they misled the public about the severity of the crisis. According to analyses of their disclosure reports filed with the Senate, the lawmakers each unloaded major stock holdings during the same period they were receiving closed-door briefings about the looming pandemic.
“These briefings were occurring when much of the public still had a poor grasp of the virus, in part because President Trump and many Republican officials were still publicly playing down the threat. Instead of raising their voices to prepare Americans for what was to come, Mr. Burr and Ms. Loeffler prioritized their stock portfolios, in a rank betrayal of the public trust — and possibly in violation of the law.”
I’m feeling a bit woozy as I read the latest reports from Italy’s Lombardy region. 627 dead over the last 24. Roughly 500 died on Wednesday. Medical workers can’t keep up. 80something percent of the dead were over 70. Bodies piled high, loaded into military trucks, authorities overwhelmed. More than 4,000 dead so far — more than any other nation — and “nearly 6,000 new infections were confirmed [over] the past day, bringing the total to more than 47,000 cases.”
Excerpt: “Daniela Confalonieri, an Italian nurse in Milan, said the situation was so dire that the dead were no longer being counted. ‘We’re working in a state of very high stress and tension,’ Confalonieri told Reuters. ‘Unfortunately we can’t contain the situation in Lombardy. There’s a high level of contagion and we’re not even counting the dead any more. Look at the news that’s coming out of Italy and take note of what the situation really is like. It’s unimaginable.”
N.Y. Times critic Manohla Dargis, posted on Thursday, 3.19: “With social distancing, quarantines and self-isolation, many of us are now physically alone. I am fervently hoping for the best for us all. When we at last can go out again and be with one another, I hope that we flood cinemas, watching every single movie, from the most rarefied art film to the silliest Hollywood offering. The movies can be exasperating and worse, but they have seen us through a lot, including economic bad times and wars. And there is nothing like watching a movie, leaving the world while being rooted in it alongside friends, family and everyone else. I miss that, I miss you.”
HE reaction, posted on 3.20: The COV-19 solitude feeds my depression and vice versa. I know my life isn’t over, but it’s easy to feel that way. All you have to do is let go and slide down into the pit. We’re all hoping for the best, but the idea of living like this for two, three or even four or five months is shattering.
I’m also having trouble believing that Manohla really wants to watch movies with the unwashed rabble again. The negatives have always seemed to far outweigh the positives of seeing a film with ticket buyers, especially in the big Manhattan plexes. The cultivation levels have plummeted over the last 30 years. As Paul Schrader said on Facebook a year or two ago, it wasn’t just the films that were better in the ’70s but the audiences.
I’ll always love going to invitational screenings, large and small. Ditto screenings at the American Cinematheque Aero and Egyptian, which attract a better clientele. Ditto the Arclight cinemas, to some extent. And there’s nothing better than watching an HD Bluray of The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance on my 4K HDR 65-incher.
But seeing movies with Average Joes at the Grove can be tedious and at times off-putting. I’ll never miss seeing films with 21st Century knuckle-draggers. Manohla misses you — I don’t. Not for nothing is the invisible motto of this site “hell is other people.” If I could eliminate die-hard fans of the Fast & Furious franchise by clapping my hands three times, I would clap my hands three times.
Last Saturday Dylan and I listened to Joe Rogan’s discussion with public-health scientist and infectious-disease expert Michael Osterholm. It was taped as little more than a week ago. The bottom line, Osterholm said, is (a) We ain’t seen nothin’ yet, (b) This could be ten times worse than seasonal flu and just shy of the death rates of the 1918 Spanish flu, (c) It’s gonna stay around for months, (d) the most vulnerable are older people (75-plus) + those with obesity, high blood pressure, respiratory issues, drinking problems…those who smoke.
Translation: If you’re healthy, washing your hands often, in relatively decent shape (i.e., not obese) and getting good sleep, you’re less likely to succumb than sea lions who smoke, drink and have respiratory issues. As 70 million adults in U.S. are obese (35 million men and 35 million women) and 99 million are overweight (45 million women and 54 million men), roughly 40% of Americans are especially vulnerable.
Those clinging to notions that COVID-19 didn’t come from a bat virus in Wuhan “wet” markets are advised to scroll forward to 1:02 (one hour, two minutes).