The
House of Yes and Love and Death on Long Island
are two recent indie presentations that have more than 90210
cast members in common. Without getting too caught up in
histrionics and endless details that often attend melodrama,
each film offers the same premise-that mad love exists.
Each film holds the same expectation as well-the viewer
will not look askance at the "all's fair in love and
war" tactics, but will instead nod their head in affirmation
that the heart does what it damn well pleases.
For
recent widower and recluse, Giles De'ath (John Hurt), the
main character in Love and Death on Long Island,
written and directed by Richard Kwientniowski and loosely
based upon Thomas Mann's Death
in Venice, the story begins as he ventures into
the present day (overall story concern) after accepting
(story driver-decision; overall story solution) an invitation
to be interviewed on the "wireless." When asked
if he uses a word processor for his novels, he is bemused-he
tartly replies he is a writer; he does not "process
words." It is established here that the notable British
author is completely out of touch with the 20th century
(overall story domain-universe), illustrated again as the
camera focuses on him ruefully looking through the front
door mail slot at forgotten house keys-his gaze taking in
an archaic life.
As
Giles is locked out and must wait before his niece is available
to bring the extra set of keys, he decides to go to the
cinema. He mistakenly walks into a matinee of "Hotpants
College II," instead of the latest E. M. Forster adaptation.
Rising to leave (main character symptom-reaction), he is
struck by the beauty of its dreamboat star, impact character
Ronnie Bostock (Jason Priestly), a screen heartthrob he
will later compare to a painting of the writer Chatterton
hanging in the Tate Gallery. At this point, emphasis in
the overall story throughline is placed upon the thematic
conflict of attraction vs. repulsion-the clash between obsolescence
and technology (overall story benchmark-progress) and high
art and popular culture.
Giddy
Giles begins the quest his own fictitious characters engage
in (main character domain-physics), to learn (main character
concern) all about the object of his desire. Hampered by
the ministrations of his nosy parker housekeeper, and well-intentioned
literary agent (main character problem-protection), he restricts
their possible interference (main character approach-do-er)
of his foray into "finding beauty where no-one (at
least in his milieu) seems to look": fan magazines,
situation comedy, B grade movies. While mooning over Ronnie,
Giles comes to terms with the present (outcome-success).
He is compelled to purchase and master the video player
and "goggle box," open an account at the video
store (to rent the Ronnie film festival, "Tex Mex"
and "Skid Marks"), hook up an answering machine
to take messages while cutting and pasting his Ronnie collage,
and finally, jetting to Long Island (main character response
of proaction), where he will strategize (main character
thematic issue) how to meet the actor.
Giles
holes up in the roadside motel of Ronnie's town, run by
yet another interfering and overprotective landlady. Inside
he scratches out tactics to determine his film idol's whereabouts:
"1. Hire detective 2. Bribe postman" (logical
problem solving style), but it is his painstaking investigation
(main vs. impact story catalyst) that pays off when he ascertains
Ronnie's exact location and trumps up a relationship with
the lovely Audrey, Ronnie's fiancée (overall story
dividend-learning). Like an infatuated schoolgirl, Giles
sits anxiously by the telephone for hours (main vs. impact
character inhibitor-need), until the beautiful couple rings
up with a dinner invitation.
Ronnie
represents the emotional manipulation (impact character
domain-psychology) of mass media, yet he repudiates (impact
character problem-non-acceptance) his teen beat status-despite
his photogenic "files of smiles" he wants to be
a serious actor (impact character benchmark). His initial
appraisal (main vs. impact character thematic issue) of
the old gentleman is based on Giles' fabrication and the
teen's own conviction that "British stuff is cool,"
yet this first impression (appraisal) is his critical flaw.
Giles flatters the boy with what he needs (impact character
thematic issue) to hear-he has "the look of a young
Olivier" and the potential (main vs. impact character
story problem) for Shakespeare. Astute Audrey understands,
however, that "something is rotten in the state of
Denmark" and arranges (impact character unique ability-permission)
to effectively remove Ronnie from Giles' advances (main
character growth-stop).
Giles
reacts (main vs. impact character story symptom) to Ronnie's
impending departure by confessing (main vs. impact character
response-proaction) his desperate love to the boy in the
local hamburger dive. That each has a different point of
view (main vs. impact character story domain-mind) is underscored
as they face each other from across the vinyl booth. It
is clear Giles is as steadfast (main character resolve)
in his disdain for the popular arts as he is in his devotion
to Ronnie, contemptuously dismissing Ronnie's adolescent
audience and American "contacts" and entreating
the actor to fall in with a traditional European relationship
of mentor and student-on the order of Rimbaud and Verlaine.
Rattled, Ronnie refuses to consider the offer (overall story
consequence-conscious), and the relationship, heretofore
certain (main vs. impact character story solution) to flourish-is
ended.
In
the erstwhile author's world, the quest is not a success
without sacrifice. Giles faxes a love letter to Ronnie that
includes a revised scene for "Hot Pants College III."
On the way to the airport he inquires of the cabby if faxes
can be retrieved. Shaking his head no, the cab driver asks
Giles if he would like to return to the motel anyway. Giles
knows there is no turning back (story limit-optionlock).
With a smile (judgment-good), he slips on the new wave sunglasses-a
gift from Ronnie-and waves the driver to continue on (main
character solution-inaction). Ronnie's change is depicted
on-screen in his new film as he delivers Giles' eulogy to
his character's mother-an indication he will now aspire
to something more than performing for the "rabble in
the pit."
In
the House of Yes, written and directed by Mark Waters,
the overall story concern is how the memory of the day JFK
died--the same day Daddy tried to leave:
"Everybody remembers that day. Exactly what they were
doing."
The overall story goal, in particular, is the memory twins,
(main vs. impact story domain-universe) Jackie-O (Parker
Posey), and Marty (Josh Hamilton), share of their illicit
affair-the day they attended an Ides of March party-Jackie
O costumed as Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy pirouetting:
. . . in a pink Chanel suit and pillbox hat and blood on
my dress. Well, ketchup actually and other stuff too, like
macaroni kind of glued on like brains. It was more tasteful
than it sounds."
Jackie-O
is another main character zealous (do-er) in her efforts
(main character domain-physics) to fulfill desires (main
character problem). When impact character Marty, comes home
to Washington D.C. Thanksgiving 1982-"20 years after
the Kennedy assassination"-and announces (story driver-action)
his engagement to Lesly (Tori Spelling), he has sealed his
fate (main vs. impact character issue).
The circumstances (main vs. impact character domain-universe)
of the twins' relationship are such that any plan for a
normal life Marty attempts to implement (impact character
concern-conceptualizing) is anarchy (main vs. impact character
problem-chaos).
Marriage is an act the unhinged Jackie-O will steadfastly
(main character resolve) not allow.
Mama
(Genevieve Bujold), very French Gothic, demands a private
word with her son:
Mama:
You,
a fiancée here, why?
Marty:
I
love her and I'm just trying to follow procedure (impact
character symptom-order).
Mama:
Marty,
your sister has been out of the hospital less than six months.
Last week she nearly lost it because the seltzer water was
flat and you bring a woman home! Not just a woman, a fiancée!
An anti-Jackie! Are you trying to push your sister over
the edge?
Marty:
No.
Mama:
Just
what, then, are you trying to do?
Marty:
Be
normal.
Family
secrets and lies (overall story thematic counterpoint-falsehood),
exposed or withheld, are the weapons used against artless
Lesly-the fiancée who smells like powdered sugar.
The family knows (overall story symptom) Marty is making
a mistake. Marty had loved a lizard; Jackie-O flushed it
down the toilet.
Lesly's perception overall story problem) of Marty's glamorous
twin is mistaken-she calls Jackie-O spoiled to which Jackie-O
replies-"Oh please. If people start telling the truth
(overall story thematic issue) around here, I'm going to
bed." What Lesly doesn't consider (overall story benchmark-conscious),
until almost too late, is that Jackie-O is insane (overall
story solution-actuality) and extravagantly dangerous.
An
unexpected hurricane extinguishes the electrical power and
all but Marty and Jackie-O retire for the evening. By candlelight,
the twins play their favorite game, the reenactment of Jack
Kennedy's assassination. This leads to a reenactment of
their own affaire d' amour, unaware Lesly is watching. Crushed,
Lesly allows the twins' younger brother, Anthony (Freddie
Prinze, Jr.), to make love to her, unaware Mama is watching.
Confronting the naïf with what she knows (overall story
symptom)-"A mother doesn't spy, a mother pays attention!"-she
thinks (overall story response) Lesly will now leave-alone.
Instead, Lesly persuades Marty to believe the man she fell
in love with is the man he truly is (impact character thematic
issue of state of being), not the image he has of himself
(impact character thematic counterpoint-sense of self).
She implores Marty to return with her to New York.
Destiny
(main vs. impact character catalyst), however, prevails.
Jackie-O cajoles her brother into one more dead Kennedy
charade, with the promise he may leave afterwards. He foolishly
does not suspect (impact character critical flaw) she may
fire the pistol they have used to pretend, despite the fact
Jackie-O has shot him in the past (main vs. impact character
concern). Marty is gunned down, and buried in the back yard
next to his father-the romantic memory of gallant men: Jack,
Daddy, and Marty, preserved intact (outcome-success).
In voice-over, Jackie-O reassures us: "Don't worry
about Marty. A close family like ours has to stick together.
We cleared out a nice place for him out back, next to Daddy
so he would stay right here with me, where he belongs"
(story judgment-good).
Love
and Death on Long Island and the House of Yes
approach obsessive, irrational love with humor and compassion
for its main characters, and a distant nod to their impact
characters. Emphasis in each is placed upon the main vs.
impact story-almost to the exclusion of the overall story
throughline-much like lovers heedless to the world around
them.
Please
note: An earlier version of this article is published on
www.dramatica.com