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Winter
2001 2002
Volume 1 Issue 2
Write Between
the Lines
is an exploration and articulation of the obvious and the obscure.
A cavalcade of creation and commentary designed to amuse and bemuse.
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He's
a Real Nowhere Man
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Memento Film Review
by
KE Monahan Huntley
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Photo
by Jane Monahan Garrison
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LEONARD
How can you read that
again? . . . You've read it a hundred times.
LEONARD'S WIFE
I enjoy it.
LEONARD
Yeah, but the pleasure of a book is in wanting to know
what happens next.
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Ironic
words coming from writer/director Christopher Nolan. The thrill
of the unusual, yet captivating, storytelling style of Memento,
based upon brother Jonathan Nolan's short story, is in wanting
to know what happens first.
The story backtracks, end to beginning. It sidesteps, omits,
and misleads as well. Leonard, an insurance claims investigator,
is determined to avenge his wife's rape and murder. Problematic,
as he suffered a head injury during the incident and has no
short-term memory.
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LEONARD
I know who I am and all about
myself, but . . . I can't make any new memories. Everything
fades. If we talk for too long, I'll forget how we started.
I don't know if we've ever met before, and the next time I
see you I won't remember this conversation.
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Cool
blue hues color Leonard's world of loss. He navigates his "romantic
quest which [he] will not end" with tattoos, handwritten
notes, charts, and Polaroids. Users and losers are on hand to
lend menace, pathos, and sardonic humor. Femme fatales look
vaguely the same: opaque-eyed and contemptuous. Including Leonard's
dead (if she is indeed) wife.
Tragedy thrives in the burnt embers of her mementosthe
love that he "can't remember to forget." |
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NATALIE
What's the last thing you remember?
LEONARD
My wife.
NATALIE
Sweet.
LEONARD
Dying.
Leonard is damaged and damneda
man with no context.
LEONARD
I have to believe in the world
outside my own mind. I have to believe my actions still have
meaning, even if I can't remember them. I have to believe
that when my eyes are closed, the world's still out there.
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Certain
to become, at the very least, a cult classic, Memento
is reminiscent of other noirish films like Blade
Runner, Blow
Up, and Double
Indemnity. The line between reel and real
life blurs after I exit the movie theater, right into Memento's
world. You see, the Limbo Land in which Leonard chases
ghosts, is the neighborhood I live in.
All quotations from the Memento
shooting script.
"Natalie's House" Photo by Jane M. Garrison
This dilapidated house located
on Magnolia Blvd. in Burbank is inhabited by a cranky old
man who does not take well to nosy parker neighbors peering
in his windows. Look closely in the film and you can see his
pastel portrait hanging on the living room wall. (By the way,
that's Paul Thomas Anderson's Magnolia
Blvd., as well.) The neighborhood is also home to Memento
film crew member Cory
Geryak, a dynamo (Lunge Queen JoDee), and their
towhead (son Cole).
"Ferdy's"
(pictured
at top of page)
Local watering hole where Natalie tends bar. In reality,
it's Burbank's The
Blue Room, where Lew pours lethal Lemon Drop
cocktails and Judi serves them up with a side of
bitter. The
Blue Room is (in)famous for its annual New Year's
Eve shindig.
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