Their Finest, a seemingly “can’t miss” idea for a
movie, let me down on numerous directions, although it got a 94% rating in Rotten Tomatoes, making me skeptically
suspicious about those tomatoes. Apparently,
only 6% saw the same disappointing movie I
saw, the 94% inconceivably missing the boat.
When are we going to stop relying on polling?
Dr. M and I walked
to that movie. After seeing it, I not
only wanted my money back, I wanted my walk
back as well. And we still had to walk back to the house.
The highly promising premise of Their Finest concerns a tripartite team of screenwriters during the
London “Blitz” toiling dutifully over a script for a War Office-demanded “uplifting”
picture concerning the valiant evacuation of the beleaguered British forces at
Dunkirk.
I shall not discuss the film’s numerous deficiencies, as I
am hardly a film critic. And besides,
who wants to offend a 94% movie-rating majority? (Who happen on this occasion to be wrong.)
This post isn’t about that.
This post is about how the movies always – with a single
glorious exception, which I shall delineate forthwith – utterly – and may I add
“laughably”, but not in a good way – fail
to convey the essential nature of “The Writing Experience” to the unknowing moviegoing
audience.
Movies are incapable of portraying what it actually feels
like to write. The best Their Finest could pull of was a
depiction what it actually feels like to type.
“The Writing Experience” itself is maddeningly
undramatizable. I will tell you how difficult
it is. Even writers can’t accurately communicate what they do. Although, in all honesty, they’re the only
people who have tried to. Maybe they’re
too “close” to the elusive experience and they should give plumbers a shot at
it instead.
PROFESSIONAL
PLUMBER: “By the way, they don’t
get ‘plumbing’ right in movies either.
To them, it’s all ‘giant wrenches and visible butt cracks’.”
I would say they should give up attempting to portray “The Writing Experience” in movies. Except that once, they portrayed it to
absolute perfection.
In a 1968 movie entitled Bye
Bye Braverman. (Written by Herb
Sargent, based on a novel by Wallace Markfield.)
Bye Bye Braverman
centers on a quartet of less than successful New York Jewish intellectuals,
traveling together to attend the funeral of their late intimate friend “Braverman”
arriving at a different funeral
instead, before belatedly reaching their appointed destination.
The character who most convincingly reproduced “The Writing
Experience” on the silver screen: a
freelance book reviewer, played by character actor Sorrell Booke who’d go on to
fame and fortune portraying “Boss Hogg” on the hit show, The Dukes of Hazzard. (1979-1985)
(Confessional Disclaimer: I have not seen Bye Bye Braverman in forty-nine years. The following, like those sports announcers
who were not actually at the game, receiving instead teletyped summaries of the
action, is a dramatized “recreation of events”, although the scene’s ambient tone
and ultimate “payoff” are reliably correct.)
In this quintessential sequence, we see “Holly Levine” confined
punitively in front of his typewriter, a petulant child forced to stay at the
table until he finishes his dinner, his tortured demeanor screaming “Writer’s
Block”, and its inescapable corollary:
“‘Writing’ equals ‘desperately needed rent money.’”
The guy can’t seem to get started. He takes an insecure stab at an opening sentence,
despises what he’s come up with, rips the offending putrescence out of his
typewriter, crumples and tosses it into a wastebasket, and agonizingly tries
again.
And again.
And again.
And again.
And again.
Nothing comes close to making the qualitative grade. The poor guy appears utterly defeated, a failed
writer pondering alterative way of making a living. He looks convincingly suicidal. But he’s not. I mean, what if he mistakenly committed serious
woundicide instead?
Finally – I forget exactly what turns him around – he is
infused with a bolstering gust of creative inspiration. The resuscitated writer types furiously away,
his reenergized fingers attacking the keyboard, his radiant face a blossoming
billboard of personal satisfaction.
“Certainly
blah-blah-blah, blah-blah-blah”, and so forth.
He completes his extended opening sentence. He reads over his work.
“Certainly blah-blah-blah,
blah-blah-blah”, and so forth…
And, like the Lord after the First Day of Creation,
He Saw that it was Good.
He gets up from the table, ready to reward himself for his
successful breakthrough, certain the remainder of his review will come
naturally and easily. He goes to the
refrigerator, takes out a Pepsi,
retrieves a bottle opener, and just as he’s about to pop the cap… he slowly looks
up, uttering, a single word that sends his new-found confidence crashing
shatteringly to the ground.
“Certainly?”
That’s writing.
And it was the one time I ever saw it done right.
2 comments:
I guess I have underestimated the difficulty. I thought it was a two step process. First, think about things. Second, write about them.
I'm sure I saw this process described somewhere.
Something I've always wondered about in the depiction of writing in movies and on TV is whether all the writing really takes place at the keyboard. I've seen some depictions where the writer dictates his ideas, too. Is that the way it really is? Or do you sit in a chair or walk and then the idea comes and you race to write it down before it escapes? I guess it would be dificult to show the writer playing around with ideas and phrasing in their head so they have to show the writer doing something.
Do you only think about these blog posts while you're at the keyboard? Do you carry a notebook or recorder during your daily activities or on your walks?
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