Saturday, 30 November 2019

November 2019 film review


LE MANS 66 (AKA FORD VS FERRARI) 2019 D- James Mangold
In 1964, someone persuades Henry Ford II that it would be good for sales if he could build a car to win the famous Le Mans 24 hour endurance race and thereby end the hegemony of Ferrari, who have dominated the race for years. Ford calls upon Carroll Shelby (Matt Damon), a man who has established himself as a winner (though not in Europe) and he in turn asks a friend, Jeff Miles (Christian Bale) to help him build it and, even more important, drive it. 
          But Miles is a ‘difficult’ man, whose face doesn’t fit, and the Ford hierarchy would squeeze him out of the plan. But Shelby is a man used to getting his way...
          This film has a lot going for it. Directed by James Mangold, whose last film was Logan, easily the best of the X men series, and featuring strong performances from the lead players, it is both thrilling and insightful. My only criticism is the lack of strong female roles, with the exception of  Caitriona Balfe as Miles’s wife, but even there her contribution is peripheral. Definitely a man’s film then, though women have praised it too, among them my own wife.

THE IRISHMAN 2019 D- Martin Scorsese
“Do you paint houses?” An Irishman (Robert deNiro) is asked. “Yes”, he responds, “And I do my own carpentry too.” It would seem this is Mafia code for “Do you murder people for money?” And “And I clean up afterwards” respectively. And there you have it. For this is the story, and for Scorsese a very well worn path I think you’ll agree, of a hitman and his hits. Some way into the film we meet Jimmy Hoffa (Al Pacino, who for my money steals the show), leader of the immensely powerful Teamster’s Union and “the second most powerful man in America”, who befriends deNiro and uses him as minder-in-chief. Of course everyone knows that Hoffa disappeared in 1975 and his body has never been found...
          When it comes to portraying the shady, violent world of the Italian Mafia, nobody has done it better than Scorsese. His Goodfellas was perhaps the definitive gangster movie. And in this film, produced by Netflix, he has the advantage of some remarkable technology with which has been able to ‘de-age’ the main characters, including a Jo Pesci, who when left ungraphiced clearly is in more need of this technology than any of the others. But in this reviewer’s opinion, this is only a gimmick, a piece of wizardry which doesn’t really add much to the movie. And like Le Mans 66, there is a distressing paucity of women’s roles. In Goodfellas we had the estimable Lorraine Bracco. In this, women stay well in the background.

LITTLE MONSTERS (2019) D- Abe Forsythe
In a rural township in Australia, a primary school teacher (Lupita Nyong’o) takes her class on an outing to a local theme park, well it’s more a farm that’s been done up as a petting zoo. Whatever. On the way there we meet no-hoper Josh Gad who manages to persuade teach to let him act as chaperone in place of a parent who has dropped out. She’s not entirely sure about him, and she may be right to be so, but in the event he proves an invaluable ally when the farm is attacked by a huge gang of marauding, wait for it, zombies.
            For yes, this is a zombie flick, Ozzie style. This is in fact a very tight little movie, well acted and directed, with not too much gore but plenty of laughs as well as nastier moments. I understand Mark Kermode, world’s biggest fan of horror movies, didn’t rate it, but maybe all that blood and guts have jaded his palate. The fact is, I did.
           

November 2019 book review

LITTLE SIBERIA, by Antti Tuomainen.
A meteorite falls in a remote Finnish village, Turns out it’s a very rare kind, and maybe worth as much as a million euros. Greed breaks out in the village as its inhabitants argue over ownership. The heavenly body attracts interest from outside too: the Russian mob reckons they can just take it for themselves.
          It is placed in the local museum while its fate is decided, and on the rota of people assigned to guard it is our hero, a pastor who has served in the armed forces in Afghanistan, so he can take care of himself. Which he will need to do, as one attempt after another is made to purloin the hot rock.
          A very different tale from Palm Beach, Finland; nonetheless Mr. Tuomainen has created another quirky, violent little tale of nastiness in the Arctic. And although I like to read important, significant books even, I also like a cracking good read. Which this very much is.

FEED THE RAT, by Al Alvarez
The ‘rat’ of the title being the itch to take risks and push the envelope that is within some people, which must be ‘fed’ if boredom is to kept from the door. Some ‘feed their rat’ by mountain climbing, and this skilfully crafted book is about these men, and one man in particular: Mo Antoine, a Brit despite his exotic name, who constantly seeks greater challenges on peaks throughout the world.
          Alvarez, an experienced climber himself, accompanies Mo on some of these ventures, though must bow out when the technical challenges become too great for him, and he is forced to sit and watch his illustrious friend negotiate vertical pitches that seem to lack any discernible hand or footholds.
          Alvarez has established a glowing reputation for his writing, especially in America where he regularly contributes to The New Yorker. And this is as good an introduction into his oeuvre as you might wish for.

MEMOIRS OF AN INFANTRY OFFICER, by Siegfried Sasoon
This achingly beautiful yet at times horrific account of life in the trenches of the Great War follows on from his book Memoirs of a Fox hunting Man and covers the period 1916-1917, as the British and French throw themselves continually against the German defenses, usually to little avail and at terrible loss of life.
           Sasoon himself, who calls himself Sherston in this book, has already distinguished himself in battle more than once and has won the Military Cross as a result. But soon he begins to realize the awful futility of war in general and this conflict in particular. Knowing that as a ‘war hero’ his voice will carry considerable weight, he hatches a plan to denounce the generals and political leaders who have chosen to continue the war for no readily discernible reason. But will anybody listen, even to him? Or will he simply be labelled a man driven mad by shell-shock and dispatched to a psychiatric institution? Read on, if you like crisp, exquisite prose telling a story of death and inglory.

Monday, 25 November 2019

AN APOLOGY

    Followers of this blog may have noticed a paucity of posts lately. This is because I have discovered Facebook and now use it as my ‘internet mouthpiece’, if you will. It’s a useful discipline to distill one’s thoughts into 100 words or less, though giving up the opportunity to write at further length has been a bit of a wrench.

I will still post on this blog from time to time, especially around the end/beginning of each month to post reviews of films and books I have encountered for the first time. For the rest you can find me on FB under the name ‘Steve Glascoe’ if you wish to keep up with my stream of consciousness, such as it is.

But once again, apologies if you have felt abandoned.

Thursday, 31 October 2019

October 2019 film review


EL CAMINO (2019) W/D- Vince Gilligan (Netflix production)
Which begins at the precise moment when Breaking Bad ends, with Walter White enacting his ultimate act of redemption by freeing his assistant, Jessie Pinckney, from his enslavement at the hands of the evil white supremacist meth gang. So then, we could call this “What Jessie did Next”. What he does is to find a way to disappear, because he knows the DEA are still after him, anxious to lock him up in a super-max facility for a couple of hundred years. But disappearing off the face of the Earth is not as easy as it might seem, even with a quarter of a million clams in your back pocket...

I haven’t come across anyone yet who didn’t think Breaking Bad was perhaps the greatest piece of television drama ever made, so its creator, Vince Gilligan had a lot to live up to. Yet he does, in this film which carries all the skill, humour and ongoing sense of lurking threat that characterised the original. Dotted with little flashbacks which take us back to the magnum opus, I can say for all BB fans, and for the 4 people who still haven’t got round to seeing it, this film represents required viewing.

DOLEMITE (2019) D- Craig Brewer (another Netflix production)
Eddie Murphy, perfectly cast and turning in one of his best acting performances to date, plays Rudy Ray Moore, a real-life character who in the 70s made a career out of a fusion of rap and stand up comedy, but who then wishes to make a ‘blacksploitation movie’ to showcase his talents. Eventually he puts his movie together on a shoestring. At first Hollywood has no interest in this upstart, but then the film gets shown in a theatre in Detroit which has its predominantly black audience in raptures of delight. Finally he is adopted into the mainstream and the rest is highly profitable history. 

In summary, Eddie Murphy finally comes of age in a movie of the front rank. We’ve already seen him shine in Dreamgirls, but here he has ensured his rep as a genuine class act.

October 2019 book review

THREE LETTERS FROM THE ANDES and A TIME TO KEEP SILENCE, by Patrick Leigh-Fermor
I review these two books together, for they are both barely 100 pages long and could easily have been placed in a single volume. The first is, as its title suggests, the only slightly edited text of three letters he wrote to his wife about an ‘expedition’ he undertook to Peru, ostensibly to climb some unnamed peaks, but really to hang with his friends and absorb the atmosphere of a country which at that time (the late 50s) had been only lightly touched by a tourism trade which has grown exponentially since the ease of plane flight made such places as Machu Picchu accessible to almost everyone. His friends make an interesting crew: the Duke of Devonshire, a couple of talented writers like himself and some acclaimed alpine mountaineers anxious to test their skills in an alien landscape. Paddy himself did not participate in these climbs, confining himself to cooking and chronicling events. His letters, exquisitely written as all his writing is, conveys all the travails, carousing and adventures in a totally engaging way.

The second book is also as advertised, describing his brief sojourns in two Catholic monasteries, the Benedictine establishment of St Wandrille’s in Normandy, known for its relatively benign regime, and then at Grand Trappe, a far more austere Cistercian monastery where silent contemplation and almost continuous prayer are the orders of the day: every day. And while Paddy seems to settle quickly into the life of the first, he cannot manage the severity of the second. One wonders how he managed to smoke in either of them. He was well known to smoke up to 100 fags a day (though he lived to 96, incredibly), and must have had to conceal his addiction with great care. Interestingly, he doesn’t mention it.

Finally he travels to Cappadocia in Turkey to visit an abandoned monastery cut into the limestone  mountainsides. Once again, with his immaculate prose, we find ourselves in his extraordinary mind as he imagines what life must have been like there. In all three sections there are detailed and fascinating accounts of the history of the places he visits, and as in his masterpiece A Time of Gifts, these diversions are what really bring the accounts to life.

SHACKLETON, by Roland Huntford
Being the life and exploits of one of Britain’s most renowned polar explorers. Like Scott, he ultimately failed in his ventures, though unlike him, survived his attempts and brought all his men home with him. Unlike Scott, he was an Anglo-Irishman, and therefore not quite the solid member of the establishment Scott was. But like Scott, he failed to learn the lessons the Norwegian explorers Nansen and Amundsen tried to teach him. They said the only way to explore the Poles was to ski and use many dogs. But both Brits had some strange aversion to a kind of ‘unmanly’ device which skiing represented to them, and saw dogs more as pets than beasts of labour, which of course huskies and their like are bred to be. As a result the Brits failed where the Norwegians succeeded.

There wasn’t a lot of love lost between Scott and Shackleton. In fact they detested each other, I think it is fair to say. And Huntford makes it clear whose side he was on. When Huntford published his notorious book “Scott and Amundsen” in 1979, he didn’t try to hide his contempt for Scott, whose arrogance and stubbornness, in his view, cost not only his own life but that of several of his comrades. The book resulted in a re-appraisal of one of Britain’s most iconic ‘heroic failures’, and it was only in 2003, when Randolph Fiennes published his own book “Captain Scott” that an attempt was made to rehabilitate Scott’s reputation. Fiennes felt Scott was the victim more of bad luck than bad judgement, and makes no secret of his dislike of Roland Huntford, who has never even been to the poles, never mind led voyages of exploration. That may be the case, but one thing is inescapable: Huntford can write. His account of Shackleton’s life is one of the most thrilling biographies I have ever read.

Wednesday, 16 October 2019

How should they play it?

The parents of Harry Dunne, killed in a hit and run incident by a woman driving on the wrong side of the road, met with President Trump yesterday to talk about what happens next. They can’t really have expected him to waive diplomatic immunity for the woman in question and force her to return to Britain to face justice. That would fly in the face of a convention in place for nearly 50 years; indeed, I think very few nations would have either. But the surprise came when Trump told the grieving parents he had the woman in an adjoining room and invited them to speak to each other.

But they declined such a meeting, insisting that the only outcome they were interested in was her coming back to Britain to face prosecution for causing death by careless or dangerous driving. And leaving the scene of an accident. But were they right to turn down a face to face meeting? If it had been me, I don’t think I could have resisted the chance to look into her eyes and say: “So, do you believe in taking responsibility for your actions?” And if the answer comes back yes, they could ask why in that case is she choosing to hide behind the cloak of diplomatic immunity. It wouldn’t change anything, but it might have made them feel a bit better to see her squirm. And can they not still sue her in the U.S. for wrongful death, maybe winning millions of dollars in damages?

I hope they do. I have made mistakes in my life, some of them serious, but I have always taken responsibility for my actions. And Mrs Sacoolas should do the same.

These are difficult, if not agonising decisions for a grieving family to make. I just hope they’re being advised by the best lawyers in America about how to take their case forward. And that they take that advice when it is offered.

Friday, 11 October 2019

From now on, it’s Falmouth, not Florida

Spare a thought for poor old Pelagius. He’s worked hard all his life to find himself in a comfortable retirement, on a good pension with a tidy nest egg. But what’s he going to spend it on? With no children to leave his money to, he might as well give it all to charity. He can’t go to a Michelin starred restaurant or stay at a luxury hotel anymore; can’t fly off to distant locations for bucket-list holidays anymore; can’t eat fish or meat, or drive a petrol driven car anymore.

With a climate catastrophe just around the corner, his conscience won’t allow him to do any of these things except very occasionally. Better just to stay at home, lights turned off, heating turned down and worry about feeding his cats meat or fish containing pouches.

And of course here’s your problem. Tackling climate change demands we change our lifestyles, especially those of us in the privileged west. We have to start moderating our excesses, whether it’s cutting our use of single use plastic, reducing our carnivorous appetites or having more than 2 children. Making a difference starts here, today.

Thursday, 10 October 2019

Bathing on Reunion


  A different post this time. Please find below a travel piece based on my stay on the French island of Reunion in September of this year. Enjoy...   




     BATHING ON RÉUNION



I’m on my way, and travelling in style. Having achieved the sunny uplands of retirement, I feel I can at last afford to fly club-class, a luxury I never felt I could justify during my working life.

So I lie here, legs stretched out in my little pod. Around me, my well-heeled fellow passengers, many of whom seem far too young to pay for such opulence, seem to be sleeping, though perhaps, like me, they are faking. Eyes closed, coaxed into a semi-relaxed state by the gentle hiss of our two giant turbines, I try to work out where we might be. I refuse to look at my watch; to keep checking the time on a twelve hour plane flight is to invite madness, but dinner has been served and the lights are now dimmed. Eight miles above the surface of the Earth, protected from the void by only the thinnest of aluminum skins, I try to visualize a picture of the globe: perhaps we are above Venice or Trieste, racing down Croatia’s intricate coastline along the Adriatic. In another two hours we will pass over Alexandria, continuing to head south-east to follow the course of the Red Sea. Hours later, still in the dead of night, we will cut across the Horn of Africa to cross the equator. But we will still be over a thousand miles from our destination, just two degrees north of the Tropic of Capricorn, and four hundred miles off the eastern coast of Madagascar: Ile de la Reunion. 
As the world turns beneath us, I drift into a fitful sleep.

When the Portuguese navigator Diego Fernandez Pereira discovered the island in 1507 it was uninhabited. From all accounts they found the place inhospitable, and a hundred years later it was ceded to the French, who named it after its ruling dynasty of the time, Bourbon. An almost circular island of about eight hundred square miles, with a highly active volcano at its core, they found its precipitous volcanic terrain difficult, though for the same reason, its soil was fertile and the few available flatlands would later support burgeoning plantations of lentils and vanilla. During the Napoleonic wars, the island briefly belonged to the English who then, unwisely in my view, returned it to the French in 1814. Following the French Revolution it had been decided to remove the old name, redolent of imperial overtones as it was, and it was renamed Reunion. 

Arriving after sunset I was hoping to be able to study the night sky and its unfamiliar southern stars as soon as my wife and I had settled into our hotel room, but this proved harder than I had anticipated. True, I could see Alpha Centauri glowing brightly, but any hopes I would soon be able to view the galactic core of the Milky Way (not visible in the northern hemisphere) and its attendant mini-galaxies, the Greater and Lesser Magellanic Clouds, were soon crushed. Skies are rarely clear on Reunion, night or day. Its peaks climb nearly 4000 metres out of the Indian Ocean, trapping cloud and moisture in an intense orographic effect. Warm, moist air from the ocean is forced up, cooling and condensing into clouds and frequent rain in the interior, though thankfully less so on the coast where our hotel is situated. But the following day we soon realized how this works in practice: cloud begins to form mid-morning and by lunchtime covers most of the island. It remains warm, of course; this is, after all, a tropical island. But it is not a location suited for star-gazing. Instead we headed for our first bathing experience, in a tiny man-made lagoon just below the hotel. 

Sea-bathing is not recommended here, as guidebooks and hoteliers stress repeatedly. Its steeply shelving seafloor allows sharks to approach within feet of the shore; every year a few unwary swimmers are dragged from its waters, limbs missing or worse. Here though it was safe, and I ventured in, basking in the delightfully warm tropical sea. But there was a heavy swell, and the artificial reef was not high enough to stop the huge ocean waves crashing over it. I lost concentration watching perfect little rainbows form in the spray, and a big wave pushed me against a rock, causing me to lacerate a finger on the razor-sharp coral. I didn’t notice until my wife pointed out the drops of blood falling on the sand as I emerged. Beyond the reef, I could imagine the sharks picking up the scent and massing...

Later that day we followed the tourist trail and traced the eastern coast of the island to see the church of Notre-Dame des Laves. This was the site of a ‘miracle’ that occurred in 1977. Apparently a particularly aggressive lava flow had come roiling down the slopes of the Piton de la Fournaise, the volcano whose main fumarole lies only ten or so kilometres to the west, threatening to engulf the little church. Then, for reasons that are hard, or easy, to understand depending on your point of view, the lava diverged almost at the front door of the church before heading down to the sea. The black lava field is still there today, almost surrounding the church for all to see, and marvel at. Perhaps they shouldn’t have built a church there in the first place. It lies very close to an area known as the Grand Brûlée, a huge expanse of lava which marks the favoured direction of lava-flows from the volcano. The flows may be dated by studying the vegetation that has formed on them. Until it cools, nothing. But within a year, bright green mosses and furry-white lichens, like lambswool, begin to take hold. Soon after, ferns, bamboo and small palm trees are shooting up in Reunion’s ideal growing climate. I will never forget watching my wife dancing about over those lava fields, delighting in finding new plant growth in lava fields that looked so fresh it seemed scarcely possible they had cooled sufficiently for germination to take place. This is what she came for, what she has dreamed of doing for over twenty years. Tomorrow we shall journey into the interior and see the great fumarole for ourselves. 

Rising at dawn to take advantage of the brief window of clear skies, we were greeted at breakfast by the hotel dog. A scrupulously disciplined animal despite his uncertain lineage, he waited patiently at our table until my wife relented and gave him a minute scrap of bacon. This disappeared in a flash and he was ready for more, but I could see a waiter looking at us and discouraged her from giving him any more. Nonetheless, doggie sensed he had made a friend.

The drive up to Piton de la Fournaise is little over twenty kilometres, but the road being narrow, busy and packed with hairpins, the journey takes over an hour. When we reached the car park there was an extraordinary sight: over eighty hire-cars parked in neat lines, and whether they were Citroens, Peugeots or Renaults, they all looked just the same; by some convention, every one was white. We had all come to take the famous 10 kilometer hike to the main crater, but it had finished erupting only a few days before and was not yet assumed to be safe. In consequence the entrance to the path down into the crater was barred by a padlocked steel grille. Among the small crowd of hikers the sense of disappointment was palpable. One angry young man jerked on the chains with all his might, his actions more symbolic than hopeful. But my wife refused to be downcast, and found an alternative walk along the wall of the crater, and we were treated to some amazing sights: a landscape devoid of vegetation, pockmarked with craters, and everywhere hues of red ochre, nut-brown and pitch-black. It resembled not so much a lunar landscape as an image from the surface of Mars. 

After an hour we decide to turn back. It is 2500 metres above sea level here, and we can feel it, not so much in our lungs as in a leaden sensation that afflicts the legs after even minimal exertion. We are glad to get back to the car and eat our brie-filled rolls, filched from this morning’s breakfast table. High above us a black kite soars with infinite grace, scanning the crater floor for anything foolish enough to move. 
The weather behaved predictably. By eleven it was ‘cloudy-bright’ and cooling off; by twelve most of the interior was covered in a dense blanket of cloud and it was cold. Only the coast and a half-mile strip inland remained bathed in brilliant sunshine. We raced back down the mountain to embrace it.
                                                 *

At breakfast the following morning our new friend was waiting. When she was sure no one was watching, my wife went into the buffet, took a plate and on it placed three chicken sausages, four rashers of bacon and a generous helping of scrambled eggs. This meal, which would have cost a visitor to the hotel thirty euros, was consumed by our shaggy friend in little more time than it takes to say “Woof!” I would imagine that this represents, not only for our puppy, but I dare say for any other canine ever born, the finest dog’s breakfast in history. He was our permanent companion until we left the hotel an hour later, and we could see him sitting at the gate watching us as we drove away, a look of ineffable love on his doggy features.

We stopped for a coffee further up the coast. Just outside the cafe was a tree festooned with the nests of weaver-birds, the brilliant yellow birds darting in and out of them repeatedly. I couldn’t take my eyes off them until, beyond the tree, I noticed how inviting the little bay down from us looked. I asked the barista if it was safe to bathe there. 
“Non. Je suis desole.”
In my schoolboy French, I pointed out that there was a surfer out there making the most of the magnificent breakers. In his schoolboy English he replied:
“Yes, but he will be aware of the risks.”
I asked if he knew the nearest location where we could swim safely, and he directed us to a natural lagoon about three miles up the coast. Coral reefs present a barrier for sharks, leaving a narrow strip of safe water between reef and shore. We lost no time driving up there and taking to the waters. A good sign: plenty of other people were in the sea already, and being the weekend, most of them were locals out for the day. They would know which areas were safe. The water was superb, warm and clear, though to my surprise there was still a powerful undertow which dragged swimmers parallel to the shore. Swimming against it was virtually impossible, and even standing knee deep in the water it was hard not to be swept off your feet. But you got used to it quickly, learning to swim at an angle to get back to the beach. It became a kind of game, providing yet another of those idyllic episodes this island provides in abundance.

We would have stayed longer, but we wanted to reach our next hotel before the weather turned. Cilaos lies almost in the middle of the island, and the road to it includes over four hundred hairpins and sharp corners over its thirty kilometre length. For all I know this is a record: I have driven over several Alpine passes in my time, but I have never encountered anything like it. By some miracle I achieved it without any damage to our car, despite the surprisingly heavy traffic, not even flicking off a wing mirror, something I have often done when driving on the ‘wrong’ side of the road. And it was hard to keep my mind on task, because around every corner was a new, amazing vista of jagged peaks, gnawing at the sky, towering rock walls, five hundred metres high, and terrifying ravines of vivid green, their floors hidden in deep shade.

The following morning, in brilliant sunlight, we set out to make a four hundred metre descent into one of those ravines to find a noted waterfall. Downhill all the way, negotiating a series of steps cut into the basalt, we often needed to step aside to allow younger and fitter hikers to overtake. I consoled myself with the thought that for many of them I was not only old enough to be their father, at sixty-eight I was old enough to be their grandfather. Half way down we came across a glorious plunge pool. Ten metres across, about two deep, with a huge, magical boulder at its centre, its waters, reflecting the lush vegetation that crowded around it, seemed to glow with an opalescent, blue-green radiance. We stripped off, caring little for the astonished glances of passers-by, and immersed ourselves in its depths. Allowing the sun’s warmth to dry ourselves off, we were ready to put our clothes back on and proceed within minutes.

Half an hour later we were at the floor of the gorge, scrambling with some difficulty over the huge boulders that surrounded the river, scoured smooth as polished marble by the passage of water over many millennia. But what was surprising was how far away from the river some of these boulders were. Some of them were a full twenty metres above the riverbed. What it implied was that on many, many occasions in the past, this fairly docile river must have been a vast, raging torrent of floodwater. And then I remembered. Reunion lies along the path of cyclones and tropical storms which regularly track west across the Indian Ocean, and its orographic effect ensures that prodigious amounts of rain are dumped upon it. Indeed, Reunion holds the world record for rainfall in a twenty-four hour period. Starting on the night of January seventh, 1966, Cyclone Denise passed over the island and released no less than seventy-two inches of precipitation. To put it in context, that represents the better part of two years of rain in Cardiff falling in a single day. So we are forced to conclude that this modest little waterfall, so innocent-looking in this dry season, must, once or twice each year, look more like Niagara.

To our relief, the sky clouded over during our exhausting ascent back up the ravine, and indeed, a few drops of rain did fall, almost as if conjured by my thoughts down at the riverside.
                                                   *

On our last full day on Reunion I decided to take my final bathe: in the pool at our hotel. Unfortunately, it proved the only discordant note in an otherwise blissful sojourn. I had watched as a tall young Frenchman dived in and swam two twenty metre lengths under water. I did likewise and achieved a single length submerged; not bad I felt, considering I was probably three times his age. He was as pale as a bedsheet, pencil-thin, and his face, which wore a permanently dour expression, was framed by a full, meticulously trimmed beard. Then he was joined by his partner, whose face, as pale as his, was characterized by that kind of angular severity so typical of many French women. She proceeded to wrap her long legs around him, and lock her outstretched hands around the back of his neck. Pelvises locked together, they drifted around the pool for many minutes, not smiling but staring intently into each other’s eyes. I soon got out and went back to my lounger, but they continued in this way, right in my eye-line, for another twenty minutes before I decided I had had enough. I stalked up to the hotel and collared an assistant manager.
“There are people down in the pool simulating sex! It’s not good enough!”
She stared at me for the briefest time before diverting her gaze and replying:
“Well, I’m not going to say anything to them.”
With that she walked away, and as the truth of it was that I didn’t have the balls to confront them myself, I retreated to our room. I was a little shocked at the under-manager’s complacency, but worse was to come later when during our evening meal I told my wife what I had done. She exploded.
“What the hell did you do that for? Are you nuts?”
This stunned me at first. Normally we are highly supportive of each other’s views, and her condemnation of my actions left me dumbstruck for a moment. Finally I spoke up. Such arrogant behaviour, I maintained, would never be tolerated at home. 
“I’d have said get a room, but...”
“I know, but this isn’t home, darling, it’s France. Just think for a moment. If this were Cannes or St Tropez, no one would turn a hair.”

She was right. I had been a fool to complain. On the flight home I reflected on the incident and why it had upset me so much. Was it envy of their youth and their uninhibited display of sexuality? Or was there something to my grievance, that people, French or otherwise, should indeed behave in a more circumspect manner in public places? I remained undecided, but as we retraced our route back to northern climes, I did resolve that, should anything like it happen again, it would be better to keep my mouth shut and just not look. And maybe, even relax a little...





Monday, 30 September 2019

September 2019 film review

YIELD TO THE NIGHT (1956) D- J. Lee Thompson
A pretty young thing (Diana Dors) falls for a smooth-talking git, but then he snags an heiress. In her mind, there’s only one thing to do: shoot the heiress.  Immediately apprehended, she admits her guilt and is sentenced to hang. End of. Pretty much. But no. Because actually the strength of this film, and what proves that Diana Dors was much more than a pneumatic British version of Jayne Mansfield, are the scenes inside her cell on Death Row, as she struggles to come to terms with the terrible fate that awaits her. Here we find that Diana Dors can really act, as we are totally persuaded by her reaction to her terrible plight.

The screenplay was apparently written before the story of Ruth Ellis broke, though the parallels are obvious. She, as you will recall, was the last woman in England to hang, following the murder of her errant boyfriend. The case hurried the long overdue removal of the death penalty in Britain. The death penalty didn’t deter her reckless act of pure emotion, just as it doesn’t deter the thousands of murderers every year in the U.S. But there they still hang on to the deterrence principle, just as they hang on to other outdated concepts of social policy, like allowing anyone to own AR15s or AK47s. But I digress...

AQUAMAN (2018) D- James Wan
In a hypothetical world, Aquaman (played by an excessively gorgeous Jason Momoa), a kind of well-toned merman, is the leader of the Ocean people in their struggle against the evil ones of the land (that’s us). In his quest for justice and freedom for starfish and so on, he is ably assisted by other equally gorgeous mermaids (Amber Heard, Nicole Kidman etc) and 143 minutes and a hell of a lot of CGI later the aqua-people emerge... well you wouldn’t want me to spoil it for you, so I won’t. Suffice it to say I was slightly underwhelmed by this effort, despite facing the opprobrium of millions who did, voting it 66% on Rotten Tomatoes and making it a profit of a cool quarter of a billion dollars.

But I will say the players look great on screen, and you can certainly see where the money went, when it wasn’t paying the salaries of the leads. If you like this sort of thing, you know, Avengers type stuff, then I guess this is for you. Enjoy.

LITTLE MAN TATE (1991) D- Jodie Foster
A trailer-trash girl in the boondocks has a son who has an IQ of 180 or so, making him one of the cleverest children in America. But she (Jodie Foster, for whom this film marked her directorial debut) isn’t really that interested. She’s more concerned about making an honest buck, and even when teacher Dianne Wiest implores her to take the proper steps to nurture his massive brain, she takes a bit of persuading. Finally she relents and allows him to go to a school for gifted children. Even there it isn’t that easy for our kid, who finds that a having a high IQ doesn’t mean you won’t get bullied by someone just as bright as you, only bigger.

I have to say I got a lot out of this movie, which demonstrated that Foster could direct as well as act. The difficulties of being brilliant are skilfully illustrated, and I loved the closing moment, when our hero, Fred, voices over:
“I was a bit overawed by all the attention at school, but then a six-year old kid joined us who’s going to law school and now nobody’s really interested in me anymore.”
Priceless.

HOTEL MUMBAI (2019) D- Anthony Maras
In 2008, trained and financed by a particularly evil jihadi group in Pakistan, a group of killers select various luxury locations in Mumbai, India, to carry out their dread mission: to wipe out as many rich people as they can.

Recording events in an almost drama-doc style, this film takes us very close to feeling the kind of fear the people exposed to it must have experienced. Although I know what happened, I still felt my knuckles going white as I watched to see who would escape the bombs and bullets, and who would not. And although the film has received some criticism for lack of character development, I found the whole package pretty worthwhile. There was a nasty Russian mafia type guy (played rather well by Jason Isaacs) who they could have done more with, and others they dwelled on a bit too much, but as I say, in the end it was a gripping, and, at times, extremely harrowing movie. This film was a ‘Sky Original’, which is something of a departure for them, because they tend to focus more on TV series, but it isn’t a bad attempt to break into the streaming platform movie production realm. Let’s see what they do next.

September 2019 book review part 2


UNDERLAND, by Robert McFarlane
In his latest book, McFarlane takes us on a dizzying journey into the depths of the Earth. He rightly points out how little we think about what lies beneath our feet, yet there is a whole world down there- or in fact many worlds. He shows us round a few of them: a dark matter detector in a salt mine half a mile under the Yorkshire dales, the labyrinthine corridors of now disused limestone quarries beneath the streets of central Paris, into a moulin, or sinkhole, in a Greenland glacier that leads hundred of metres down to the bedrock, and many, many others.

What struck me most vividly about this book, as with David Attenborough’s latest TV series Our Planet, is the way Mcfarlane drums into us, page after page, the jeopardy we have placed the Earth in, and how something MUST be done, and done NOW, to avoid an unprecedented catastrophe. There is a wonderful section on what has been called the ‘Wood-Wide-Web’, the underground connection between trees which is mediated through fungal networks, which benefits the trees as well as the fungi. Apparently trees are actually capable of helping each other by transferring nutrients to diseased trees through the network. Incredible, but true, yet all is under threat from ignorant and cynical exploitation of the Earth’s resources. 

This is a wonderful book, beautifully written as always with McFarlane, but deeply disturbing too.
I for one will never look at a tree, at a copse, or a forest, in quite the same way again.

PALM BEACH FINLAND, by Antti Tuomainen
A developer has the brilliant idea of creating a Florida-style beach resort on the southern coast of Finland. Only two things stand in his way: the fact that, as he admits, there are only 7.5 hot days in Finland per year, and a recalcitrant homeowner who won’t sell her beachfront house so he can expand. He gets two loser employees to put the frighteners on her, but that goes wrong and someone ends up dead. An undercover cop is brought in to investigate on the QT, but things get a bit complicated when he falls for the rather attractive homeowner. Later things get a lot more complicated than that...

With his quirky, jokey style overlaying some very dark events, Tuomainen has created a cracking little thriller, good character building and plot development being his great strengths. I charged through this book at great speed, and enjoyed every minute. Strongly recommended if you like a bit of Nordic noir.

September 2019 book review part 1

THE NARROW ROAD TO THE DEEP NORTH, by Richard Flanagan
A young Australian man does well at school, qualifies as a doctor and is about to carve a successful career for himself when two things happen: first he falls in love with a married woman, then, war breaks out and he is called up to serve in the Far East. Taking a lot of emotional baggage with him, he soon finds plenty of things to distract him, most notably that he is almost immediately taken prisoner by the Japanese, who regard P.O.Ws as cowards and therefore not worthy of any of the human rights guaranteed them by the Geneva Convention. As senior officer as well as the only doctor, he has to stand by as his men fall prey to beri-beri, pellagra, cholera and, worst of all, the cynical and extreme cruelty of their captors.

Finally he is released at the end of the war, irretrievably scarred by his experiences, he resumes his medical career, but there is always something missing in his life. Like love, for example...

This book is stunning. Full of beauty as well as horror, I found it quite the most powerful piece of writing I have encountered in some years. The reader is completely immersed in the lives of the characters, feels the heat and humidity of the jungle, suffers with the prisoners through their terrible ordeal. Carries my highest recommendation.

THE NARROW ROAD TO THE DEEP NORTH, AND OTHER TRAVEL PIECES, by Matsuo Basho
Basho was a poet who lived in Japan in the latter part of the 17th century, and is now regarded as the greatest exponent of Haiku, the 3 line, 17 syllable format by which poets express some special insight about the natural world, and sometimes themselves. And this story, which mixes prose with haiku, takes us on a journey the poet took to visit important Buddhist shrines, other poets and ascetics, like himself, and generally undertake a journey of the mind and spirit as much as the body.

It’s a very human story. On one occasion, for instance, he takes a long detour to see the full moon rise over a Buddhist temple, only for it to remain cloudy all night, thus denying him the experience he has dreamed of for so long. Or when he returns from one trip, and writes:

Shed of everything else,
I still have some lice
I picked up on the road-
Crawling on my summer robes.

Note this does not conform to the format I mentioned above. The translator, Nobyuki Yuasa, has made a decision that in order to bring the full character and beauty of Basho’s haikus to life in English, he needs to use this format of his own design. But it’s not “wrong” to do this. The Japanese poets themselves used a variety of different formats when it suited them. Finally, I cannot resist quoting one more haiku for you, this one being regarded as possibly the ultimate flowering of his skill:

Breaking the silence
Of an ancient pond,
A frog jumped into water -
A deep resonance.

Obviously Flanagan borrowed the title of his book from Basho, and I believe we are meant to take from this the fact that the protagonist of the novel is himself on a spiritual journey of his own- which in a way, he is. But what I found as I read Basho’s account of his travels, his gentleness, his love of beauty and peace, his supreme insight into the human condition that all the greatest poets have, that fast forward three centuries, his own countrymen, no different in essence from Basho himself, would be committing some of the grossest atrocities against their fellow human beings the world has ever seen.


Tuesday, 24 September 2019

Bolsonaro: the new Trump

We all worried when we heard Trump got elected, with his disregard of  any environmental concerns and his love of big money (these, of course, go together like beans on toast). But unfortunately, and just as some of us feared, the politics of the whole world took a lurch to the right, nowhere better personified than in Brazil, with the election of arch-populist Bolsonaro, who early on in his rule said he would be happy to pave over the Amazon if that would aid ‘progress’.

We thought he was joking, but unfortunately for the indigenous peoples of the Amazon rainforest, he wasn’t. He has allowed legal logging and development of this unique and precious place to proceed apace, and turned a blind eye to the even more pernicious practices of illegal mining projects. In their frantic greed for gold, these people are pouring toxins such as mercury into the watercourses, an agent which is poisonous to all forms of life. Mercury is part of the process of the extraction of gold, and gold fever has gripped Brazil. Who cares, as long as a profit is made? Not the mine owners certainly, and not Senor Bolsonaro either.

I was thinking yesterday that normally we like to think of the world moving gradually forward to a better, more enlightened place. But recent evidence, in Brazil and in a Trump administration that refuses to admit the reality of climate change and human involvement in it, we are actually moving backwards into a new dark age. Don’t say I didn’t warn you...

Monday, 16 September 2019

Jo takes a step too far

When Jo Swinson, leader of the LibDems, announced that should they win the next election they would cancel Brexit without even the recourse to a second referendum, I felt she made a serious error.

The LibDems have made major strides in recent months, constituting as they do one of the major bulwarks against the arch-right-wingers of the Brexit party. Many people voted for them rather than their usual fall-back position of Labour or Tory because of their ambiguous posture on Brexit. And they would, I believe, have made a terrific showing in the next election on that strength alone. Now, though, I’m not so sure.

I wish we’d never held a referendum in the first place. I wish David Cameron had held out against the Brexiteer ‘bastards’ in his own party in the same way as John Major did - basically by telling them to go and fuck themselves. But he didn’t, and 17 million people, 52% of the voters, voted leave. Certainly I would like to see a second vote- what’s wrong with testing public opinion again after a 3-4 year gap in a decision as important as this? But defying the wishes of those 17 million people altogether, ignoring them in fact, could have terrible consequences, for the nation, which might see not only the worst civil disorder this country has seen since the Civil War should such a thing come to pass, but to the LibDems themselves for even suggesting such a thing.

I foresee a dramatic downturn in their fortunes now because of it. Change your mind on this one, Jo, and do it quick, before you run your party onto the rocks.

Friday, 30 August 2019

Media review August 2019

BOOKS

THE DRAGON KEEPER, by Robin Hobb (Margaret Lindholm Ogden)
In a mythical world, there are humans, Riverwild folk, who have claws for toes and areas of scales where they should have skin, and Elderlings, who have evolved an intimate relationship with the dragons. I didn’t mention them? Perhaps I should have, because they lie at the heart of this fascinating little tale. These dragons can communicate telepathically with the humans (and ‘humanoids’), and can usually fly and breathe fire. Unfortunately, these ones can’t do either, because of some issue with their early lives as sea-serpents. In fact they’re a bit of a liability. Then some humans and Riverwild people get together to help them find their ancestral lands. Will they get there? We don’t know yet, because at the end of this entertaining romp, they’ve barely started on their journey. Don’t worry, there are 3 other books in the tetrad, enough scope to answer all questions.
Robin Hobb has chosen wisely to focus on dragon myths, considering the world-wide success of Game of Thrones. But she has created her own unique world, nothing like the Seven Kingdoms, and reading her is addictive. People I know can’t stop reading her books, of which there are many. Will I do the same? You know, I think I might...

HELTER SKELTER, By Vince Bugliosi and Curt Gentry
On August 8th 1969, a group of three women and one man burst into a Los Angeles townhouse and murdered five people who were unfortunate enough to be there at the time. One of them was Sharon Tate, wife of film director Roman Polanski, who by a lucky chance was in Europe at the time. The following night the same killers invaded another home and butchered a husband and wife. They then melted away into the Hollywood Hills. They might never have been caught, because they left virtually no clues, but then one of them was arrested on unrelated charges and blabbed to a cell mate about the terrible things she had done. 
Vince Bugliosi was the assistant DA assigned to prosecuting them, and once he began his investigations it began to emerge that the killings weren’t the idea of the killers themselves, but of a certain Mr Charles Manson. And he kept going on about something called “Helter Skelter”, his name for an apocalyptic war he foretold would take place between blacks and whites, which, hopefully, would be precipitated by the murders he planned. Crazy stuff? Damn right. Don’t expect a lot of cold hard logic from these people, either from the guru himself, or his followers, who saw Manson as the second coming of Jesus Christ. I kid you not. And where did Manson get his inspiration for all this bloodlust? From reading between the lines of Beatles songs, apparently, particularly the famous White Album, in which the song Helter Skelter is included.
Helter Skelter turned out to be the most successful nonfiction crime book in publishing history, partly because of the content, which is truly sensational, and partly because it is actually a very well written book. It’s all there; the investigation, the tracking down of witnesses, several of whom were threatened with murder if they spoke, the forensic evidence, and finally the extraordinary 6 month trial. 
I have made nonfiction books on the subject of murder something of a special interest over the years, probably read over 200 of them. This, in my opinion, is among the top three or four.

DON QUIXOTE, by Miguel Cervantes
In late16th century Spain, a gentleman is obsessed by the idea of medieval chivalry and the idea of ‘Knights Errant’, those who wandered the land rescuing damsels in distress and righting wrongs wherever they find them. His library is filled with books on the subject, but then all rather goes to his head when he takes it upon himself to adopt just such a role for himself, taking on a squire to assist him, in the shape of one Sáncho Panza. The latter is offered the governorship of an island if he does his job well, and who’s going to turn their nose up at a carrot like that? Not Sancho, certainly, even though he, and indeed many others come to seriously doubt his master’s sanity.
But is he mad, or is he, like some renaissance vision of RD Laing, the only sane one in an insane world? You decide. Or don’t, and just let this incredible story wash over you, as the ‘ingenious gentleman’ sallies forth on one astonishing quest after another. Try not to get totally involved with him and his hapless assistant. Try to keep a straight face. You won’t be able to.
Don Quixote has been called the ‘first modern novel’, and it is true that despite its vintage, in the 2003 translation I read by the American Edith Grossman, it comes over as remarkably modern in its feel. And it is saying something that some of the foremost writers in history, Laurence Stern, Balzac, Proust and Joyce among them, all counted it among their favorite books.
I thought it would be hard to read this book. I was wrong. It was as easy and delightful as drinking fine champagne.


MOVIES

A STAR IS BORN (2018) P/D- Bradley Cooper
An entertainer (Bradley Cooper, who does just about everything in this movie, including singing and playing his own instruments, so we certainly know, as I like to say, who to blame) is on a slow downhill arc in his career when he meets another (Lady Gaga) whose star is very much on the rise. What can go wrong? Turns out, everything. And you’ll know that if you’ve seen either the original 1950s version of this story with James Mason and Judy Garland, or the remake in the 70s with Kris Kristopherson and Barbara Streisand.
Not content with these two perfectly acceptable efforts, apparently Bradley Cooper became obsessed with bringing his own take on an old story to the screen, and spent years persuading the money boys to play along. Eventually he won them round, and everybody made a lot of money and, to be fair, a pretty good film got made. Cooper is good, as is the good Lady, and also Sam Elliott as Cooper’s long time friend and manager. And the music’s great too. I’m just left wondering why he didn’t go for something completely original, rather than yet another remake.

THE ANGEL’S SHARE (2012) D- Ken Loach
A probation officer in Glasgow has the idea of taking his charges to a whisky tasting session as a change of pace from picking up litter. Surprisingly, they take to it and one of their number becomes something of an expert. Ah, but there’s a hidden agenda here. For these recidivists soon realize that some whiskies, if rare enough, can be worth a fortune. Now you see?
In this film Ken Loach spins a yarn which might be called “Once Upon a Time in Glasgow”, because what happens is far from the gritty, realistic tales he usually spins, and resembles a kind of fairy tale for the Gorbals. But it’s all done with Loach’s legendary skill, and his main protagonist Paul Brannigan makes us believe all this could really happen. Even though it couldn’t.

ONCE UPON A TIME... IN HOLLYWOOD (2019) D- Quentin Tarantino
A western movie star (Leo DiCaprio) who’s slightly past his sell-by date is given another chance to make his mark, this time in spaghetti westerns. But he can’t take his long-time stunt double and closest friend (Brad Pitt) along for the ride. It’s the end of an era... Brad, a very laid-back guy, tries not to get too upset as he finds little DIY jobs to do for his friends. But there’s something going on in the background of this movie (there always is with Tarantino), and we’re not sure it will be a McGuffin, that is something that’s bigged up but actually not the point of the movie at all, or whether it is going to turn into something really big.

I’m a little reluctant to spoil the plot of what is Tarantino’s best films for years, so I’ll just say this one is really worth seeing, for the acting, for the cleverness of the story, and for Tarantino’s quite extraordinary observational skills.

Friday, 23 August 2019

Why he really tried to buy Greenland

In my last blog I wrote about Trump’s ridiculous offer to buy Greenland from its owners, Denmark. I said that he’d heard how the ice cap is rapidly melting, exposing all manner of treasures, coal, copper, etc that lurk beneath its surface.

Turns out there was another agenda, which explains why he cancelled his planned visit to Denmark, apparently in a fit of pique. As it happens, Barack Obama is due to visit Denmark next month, and can expect a joyous reception there, as he does almost wherever he goes. You can imagine the contrast with Trump’s reception when he arrives. Talk about a stark contrast... And faced with this contrast, Trump simply decided to find a reason not to go.

Why don’t you go to Russia instead, Donald. You’d get a much more positive reaction there, with rentacrowd out in force. Or North Korea. They’re all over you too, I understand. Or are they? No, wait. It’s got to be Brazil. There, President Bolsonaro has taken several sheets from your playbook to justify his burning of the Amazon rainforest, all in the name of progress. Apparently even among local landowners, who stand to make a great deal of cash out of exploiting the forest, there is disquiet about the rate of pillage. Never mind. This pres, like the other one, has his base, and we now know they’ll both do almost anything to keep them loyal- even raping their own most precious resource. Hey! Haven’t you worked it out yet? It’s about power, stupid.

Tuesday, 20 August 2019

Psst! Wanna sell your island? I give good price

Who says Donald Trump is ignorant about the effects of global warming? Not a bit of it. He’s heard that Greenland has just ‘enjoyed’ its warmest summer since the end of the last Ice Age. The extraordinary July heat wave in Europe extended far into the Arctic, leading to temperatures of 30 degrees being recorded in Thule, high above the Arctic Circle. 12 billion gallons of meltwater a day have been draining off the rapidly dwindling ice cap in Greenland’s interior. And Donald’s heard about it.

Well informed guy that he is, he’s also heard that Greenland is a source of all kinds of mineral wealth; copper, molybdenum and to him perhaps, most importantly, huge coal deposits. He doesn’t care that the rest of the world is moving away from coal as an energy source, that using it is accelerating the retreat of the ice fields that sooner or later, and now it seems sooner, will lead to a catastrophic rise in sea levels. If all the ice melts from Greenland, sea levels will rise by 9 metres. That’s enough to put most of the ports of America, New York, Washington DC, San Francisco and the rest, under water. We used to think melting off Greenland's ice would take hundreds of years. No longer. Already changes are being seen that were not predicted to occur until 2070. As the Yanks like to say, you do the math.

So, no wonder an opportunist like Trump seeks to take Greenland off Denmark’s hands. What would he give for it? A trillion dollars? More? It sounds like a lot, but remember it’s less than a month of America’s GDP. Thank goodness the Danes are a sensible people, and are well aware that as Mark Twain pointed out, land is the one thing they’ve stopped making. So they are not about to let nearly 900,000 square miles of real estate fall into his hands, ice covered or not. Thank God.


Wednesday, 31 July 2019

July 2019 film review

CRAZY RICH ASIANS (2018) D- John Chu
A perky New Yorker travels to Singapore to meet her BF Nick, not realizing till she gets there that he’s actually the scion of one of the richest (and most snobbish) families in Singapore. She’s an accomplished academic, but that doesn’t cut much ice with these guys. What they admire is money and the courage to spend it big. Chief among her critics is Eleanor, Nick’s mum (played by the only class act in the film, Michelle Yeoh), who doesn't think she’s got the right stuff and isn’t backward about coming forward in telling her so. Much complication ensues, with these and other related billionaires until, like some far-eastern fairy tale, it all comes right in the end.
          I’d say more, but I’m feeling a bit nauseous. Despite the film’s popularity (it cost $30 million and made nearly $300 million) I became annoyed early and it got worse. Sure, it looks good, full of gaudy colours and evidence of extravagant wealth, but, sorry, I found it a thin, vapid exercise in wealth-envy. However, as I say, I am clearly in the minority.

THE BREAKFAST CLUB (1984) D- John Hughes
A crew of high school kids are stuck in detention on a Saturday when they’d really rather be out having their adolescent fun. Well, they shouldn’t have been naughty, should they? It’s a mixed bag, the cool kid, the Goth, the geeky one, the misfit girl. Etcetera. The film is bravely shot almost entirely in this one classroom, the miscreants presided over by a teacher (Paul Gleason) who is in a kind of detention himself, as he has to stay there all day too.
          What follows is an essay in adolescent alienation as one pupil after another describes their life, in engaging, and sometimes heartbreaking detail.
          This film marked the debut of a number of stars who came to be known collectively as the ‘Brat Pack’, including Molly Ringwald, Judd Nelson, Emilio Estevez and Ally Sheedy. John Hughes, who wrote as well as directed the film, struck gold. Costing barely $1 million dollars to make, it grossed more than $50 million, ensuring his place as a Hollywood Player. I for one say he deserved it.

PRETTY IN PINK (1986) D- Howard Deutsch
A somewhat socially outcast Milly Ringwald finds herself dating a boy from the right side of the tracks, but soon finds trans-class relationships are not without their problems... Fortunately she has one true anchor in her life - her dad (Harry Dean Stanton, perfect as always), who is always there for her, no matter what.
         Written by John Hughes (see above), apparently in just 2 days, this was perhaps the high-water mark of the Brat Pack era, and like The Breakfast Club, featured excellent writing and some fine acting from its young stars. Some of them, like James Spader went on to even greater things; others, such as Molly Ringwald seemed almost to disappear from the screen altogether. Strange how that happens...

I KNOW WHERE I’M GOING! (1945) P/D- Powell and Pressburger
A feisty young woman travels from London to the outer Hebrides to marry her (much older) millionaire fiancée, who has rented an island for the occasion. But inclement weather prevents her from making the last leg of the journey and she finds herself stranded in a highland village until the wind drops. And there she meets Roger Livesy, the local laird, who despite all the land he owns (including the island in question) is, like everyone else in the village, little richer than a church mouse. There’s a key moment in the film when he says of one of his friends:
“She isn’t poor, she just doesn’t have any money.”
“Isn’t that the same thing?”
“Oh no, not at all.”
Our gold digger doesn’t get this at all, or at least she has to go through a number of formative and quite scary experiences before she does.
          A lot of people hold this film in very high regard. Martin Scorsese, for example, rates this among the ten best films he’s ever seen, and it is true that there is something very special about the atmosphere it creates, despite its low budget and limited material. I think it’s called cinematic magic, and in this film Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger takes that to its very highest level. Wonderful.

Tuesday, 30 July 2019

July 2019 book review

THE FATAL ENGLISHMAN, by Sebastian Foulks
Being three brief lives of Englishmen whose lives were cut short in their prime, their perhaps enormous potential never realized. Faulks’s book begins with the story of Christopher (“Kit”) Wood, who threatened at one point to be Britain’s foremost painter of the 20th century before opium and inner demons swept him away, in his case under the wheels of a train. No less a figure than Picasso saw his pictures when he was living in Paris in the years before the Great War, and surprising for a man more used to damning with faint praise, told Wood he had a touch of greatness about him.
             Unfortunately, he also got caught up with a playboy count who liked to smoke opium, and decided to travel around Europe in luxury with him rather than concentrate on his art. A series of women tried to save him, but it was a task doomed to failure. Only a few paintings survive (some of which are illustrated in the book), but it is clear from them that Wood had indeed discovered something new, something unique. Had he lived, he might have eclipsed Augustus John, but fate determined a different path...
            Faulks’s next portrait is of Richard Hillary, who as a Spitfire pilot in the Battle of Britain was shot down, surviving but horribly burned in the process. He went on to write one of the key books of WW2, The Last Battle, which chronicles his slow, agonising recovery. But he too had some kind of death wish and pulled every string he knew to get back into the air. But perhaps I shouldn’t spoil this story...
           Finally, Faulks turns to Jeremy Wolfenden, a man once described as ‘the cleverest young man in England’. At Eton he finished top of year apparently without any effort on his part, and the same thing happened at Oxford. But Wolfenden was gay in an era when that was a crime, not that that prevented him flaunting his sexuality in sometimes outrageous fashion. But his life took a radical new direction when he was recruited by MI6 and sent to Moscow, where the KGB soon heard about him and tried to turn him for their own purposes. Once again I shouldn’t spoil the story, but here again we see how a great future was blighted by inner demons, and in particular in Wolfenden’s case, alcohol.
           Sebastian Faulks is a fine writer of nonfiction and tells his stories with considerable compassion and insight. Highly recommended.

THE CHARTERHOUSE OF PARMA, by Stendhal.
A young man in a hurry would fight for his beloved Napoleon, but his first battle is Napoleon’s last: Waterloo. Fabrice, for lo that is his name, then finds himself in the complex political jigsaw that was northern Italy in the early 19th century. A good-looking young fellow, he is favoured by various well placed and gorgeous ladies, one of whom is his aunt. Are her intentions towards him entirely honourable? Even he is not completely sure, and she’s far too intelligent to reveal her hand until she’s ready. Then he manages to upset the prince of Parma, who, exercising his absolute power, imprisons him in the impregnable Farnese Tower. But even there he finds another beautiful woman to comfort him, albeit at a distance. Can she somehow help him to escape from a prison cell no one has escaped from before? Read on...
            Stendhal is best known for just 2 books, this one and The Scarlet and the Black. Each book has its adherents, but regardless of which they believe is the greater of the two, all are agreed they represent two of the finest novels of the 19th century. They both read like contemporary thrillers, and both demonstrate a deep understanding of the human soul. Read ‘em both, I say.

THE JOY LUCK CLUB, by Amy Tan.
Every week a group of four Chinese ladies in San Francisco get together to play Mah Jong and reminisce. The stories they tell are often of their old life in the home country, and are redolent of the exploitation they experienced at the hands of a patriarchal society and their menfolk in particular. Each has a daughter, and they too are given the opportunity to tell their stories, in their case of their lives in the Land of the Free. Four mothers, four daughters, their stories interweave like a game of Mah Jong (which was the author’s clever design) and in the process we gain a very special insight into the Chinese mind - not so different from ours in its fundamentals: they want to prosper, do better than their ancestors, and find some happiness along the way. If they can...
          A fascinating little book, well written and containing a host of intriguing, and sometimes heartbreaking tales.


   

Monday, 22 July 2019

We did it!

I was an eighteen year-old lad, waiting to take my place at Liverpool University medical school in just a few week’s time, when at around 4 o’clock in the morning of 21st July 1969, I watched the grainy images of Neil Armstrong making his way down the ladder of the LEM (Lunar Excursion Module). As he “stepped off the LEM”, I heard his immortal words “That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind”, badly garbled by static but still intelligible, and I knew my life, and the life of humanity, would never be the same again. A few minutes later I went outside into the early dawn, and there was the moon, just past half-full, and thought to myself: My God! There are people walking around on that thing! To me that moment marked a fundamental step forward in the progress of human kind. To develop the technology to visit our neighbouring world, across the terrible, airless void of space, remains the most significant event of the 68 years I have lived on this planet.

I wasn’t alone. Much later I heard Buzz Aldrin being interviewed about the world tour the Moonmen undertook in the months following their landing, and he said that everywhere people would say the same thing to him: “We did it!” OK, it was an American flag that was planted in the Sea of Tranquillity, and let’s face it, if we’d done it there would be a Union Flag there now. But the point Aldrin was making was that everyone felt it to be an achievement of the whole human race, not just the Yanks. They just led the way.

Yet not everyone was a fan of the Apollo project, and I’m not referring to the idiots who continue to insist that the whole thing was a movie made by Stanley Kubrick. A number of people felt the money, and to be fair it was an enormous sum, could have been better used to help end world poverty, or something else more relevant to humanity here at home. Trouble is, you can’t solve poverty simply by throwing money at it. Most poverty and hunger is politically based, famines especially so. I’m not saying we shouldn’t try to end poverty, hunger and famine, of course we should, but we should explore space too.

Human beings have been saying “I wonder what’s out there. Let’s go and find out” ever since the time of Cro Magnon. The Phoenicians regularly set sail to parts unknown in search of new trading routes way before the pyramids were built. The Vikings sailed right across the Atlantic Ocean and discovered the New World hundreds of years before Columbus tried the same thing. And what we did in 1969 was in the same spirit, even if it was a fortuitous consequence of the arms race and the Cold War. It’ll be the same when we finally set foot on Mars, then Titan, then Triton, as Arthur C Clarke predicted we one day will. The burning desire to find out what’s out there is as strong now as it ever was.

Wednesday, 17 July 2019

He said what they’re all thinking

One of the saddest things about the latest disgraceful tweets from US president Trump is the signal failure of Republican lawmakers to come out and call them for what they were: racist and completely un-American. But it isn’t hard to see why. They know they are doomed if they say what I’m sure a lot of them are thinking, namely something like:

“I believe in the Republican Party and the conservative views it stands for, but I cannot support a president who persists in his racist tirades. This is not an America I want to part of.”

By telling those congresswomen to “go back where they came from”, Trump broke they rules of his own Equal Opportunities Commission, which cites on its website the kind of language that if used in the workplace could be deemed, not just deeply offensive to people of colour but actually illegal. And perhaps the most worrying aspect of this is that bigots can now shout at an ethnic minority person walking down the street to go back where they came from, and if challenged, they can now say: “Hey! if the President of the United States can say it, so can I!”

But those Republicans who have reservations about Trump’s racism know that if they go against him, he will not back them in the upcoming primaries, and put his support behind an alternative candidate who will toe the Trump line, right or wrong, whatever it takes. So it’s really about power. There is nothing new about politicians abandoning their moral sense in their quest for power. I just think it’s got worse than it has ever been, and this in a world that ought to be moving towards a better, more humanitarian future.

Trump knows he is tapping into an extremely rich vein of underlying racism in the United States, just as the Brexiteers here know they’re onto a good thing with the closet racists in our own country. You can’t go wrong appealing to the worst in people, it seems...


Saturday, 13 July 2019

He said what we’re all thinking

Poor old Kim Darroch. Forced to resign for doing his job. Ambassadors are charged with explaining coherently the situation in their adopted nation to the powers that be at home, and he did that with wit, perspicacity and insight. He revealed the chaos that reigns in the dark heart of the White House, and the truth of his remarks was what caused Trump to launch yet another of now famous hissy fits against anyone fearless enough to call him on it.

Of course his remarks were not intended for his ears, or indeed anyone outside the higher echelons of the Foreign Office, but someone, probably an arch-Brexiteer, was determined to bring him down. We can probably expect more revelations from him or her as they attempt to trash the rep of anyone brave enough to label Brexit for what it is: the greatest folly the UK has ever enacted upon itself.

One of the more unseemly spin-offs of this whole farrago has been the signal failure of Boris to offer any kind of succour to Kim Darroch, despite knowing full well, as a previous foreign secretary, that ambassadors have a job to do, and that he was doing that job exactly according to his job description. Of course I understand that his position in Washington has been fatally compromised by the leaks, especially since Trump said he wanted nothing more to do with him (once again showing that Trump’s representation as an angry baby was uncannily accurate), but he should at least have been backed publicly by the UK establishment until his term of office came to end at the end of this year.

Shame on you leaker, and shame on you Boris for supporting him!


Wednesday, 3 July 2019

it isn’t just climate change that threatens us


BBC news last night ran an extremely disturbing story about the indigenous Indians of the Amazon and how their future is threatened by encroaching farmers and loggers. These people don’t see why the Indians should have the forest, even a relatively tiny portion of it, to themselves. They have a right to work the land themselves, they claim, and anyway, the Indians just waste what they have. 

Underlying this, I feel, is an undercurrent of racism. All over Latin America, the paler your skin, the more you can trace your ancestry back to Europe, the higher up the social scale you are. Conversely, the darker your skin, the less evolved you are, and the fewer human rights you should enjoy. The jungle bunnies are untermensch, if I may borrow a phrase from another culture, so why should we pay them any mind? Unfortunately, this despicable attitude is being encouraged by Brazil’s new populist president Bolsonaro, who has joked (we hope) that he’d be just as happy to see the whole of the rainforest paved over if it would help his country’s economy. And the fate of the indigenous populations, who have lived there in harmony with nature for thousands of years before the Europeans arrived? Fuck them. They don’t count. 

And what does count? Money, stupid, and the maintenance of power. Ask Donald Trump. He’s the fountainhead from which populists around the world got their inspiration. Which is why, even if he loses in 2020 (which I have no particular reason to believe he will) his toxic legacy will persevere for decades to come...