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	<title>Thomas Joseph King &#187; film</title>
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		<title>Leave Us Hanging</title>
		<link>http://www.thomasjosephking.com/2009/10/28/leave-us-hanging/</link>
		<comments>http://www.thomasjosephking.com/2009/10/28/leave-us-hanging/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Oct 2009 08:31:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Thomas</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[small opinions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.thomasjosephking.com/?p=173</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[About a year ago I went through a phase of reading anyting I could find from the writer David Mitchell, a phase that only ended when I&#8217;d run through all of his novels. My route looked, chronologically, something like this: Cloud Atlas, Black Swan Green, Ghostwritten, and number9dream, which is backward with regard to his [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>About a year ago I went through a phase of reading anyting I could find from the writer David Mitchell, a phase that only ended when I&#8217;d run through all of his novels. My route looked, chronologically, something like this: <i>Cloud Atlas</i>, <i>Black Swan Green</i>, <i>Ghostwritten</i>, and <i>number9dream</i>, which is backward with regard to his output vs. my input. And while I thought <i>Cloud Atlas</i> was the strangest, most complex, and probably most compelling, his most recent novel, the relatively quaint <i>Black Swan Green</i>, is the one I can&#8217;t get out of my mind.</p>
<p>I call the novel quaint because it doesn&#8217;t deal with the huge themes a reader might have expected following <i>Cloud Atlas</i>, which was frequently complimented by critics as &#8220;Nabokovian&#8221; because of its puzzle-like structure and its fancy wordplay. But instead of some grandiose, episodic &#8220;big book,&#8221; Mitchell went for a quiet story of a boy growing up in England in the 1980s, complete with a tacit divorce developing in the background, the minor dramas of young kids trying to figure out their place in the world, the first whispers of sex, and so on. A real bildungsroman, if you will.</p>
<p>Anyway, I didn&#8217;t start out to write a review of <i>Black Swan Green</i>. Instead, I wanted to talk about the film I saw last night and which, like Mitchell&#8217;s latest novel, I can&#8217;t stop thinking about. The movie was Jean-Luc Godard&#8217;s &#8220;Masculin, fÃ©minin,&#8221; which I saw alone at Portland State University&#8217;s 5th Avenue Cinemas (their <a href="http://www.5thavenuecinema.org/" target="_blank">current run</a> is chock full of really great films. [The alone part is only interesting because it might help explain why I need to explore my reactions here instead of with another person. But also I love watching movie by myself, for what that's worth]), and the &#8220;can&#8217;t stop thinking about&#8221; refers to Godard&#8217;s ending several scenes with 1) deadly, unceremonious violence 2) a quick cut to a new episode and 3) absolutely no reference back to the violence, which the sympathetic movie-goer could expect to have made a serious impact on the characters involved. It&#8217;s an offputting and exciting choice, and one that made me think of our friend David Mitchell. Allow me to explain.</p>
<p>As with &#8220;Masculin, fÃ©minin,&#8221; several chapters of Mitchell&#8217;s latest book end with a bit of violence or confusion or drama whose resolution I expected to read about on the coming pages. Yet the author never returns his narrative eye to the dropped event, effectively planting the seed of dischord in the readers mind. Take for example a chapter in which the young boy/narrator&#8217;s friend crashes through the roof of a nasty old man&#8217;s house while the boys are going through the initiation rites for a local &#8220;gang.&#8221; Mitchell ends the chapter with the boy, whom we&#8217;ve come to like, in deep trouble. My expectation is that the next chapter will open with some resolution. What happened to the boy? Did the old curmudgeon cause him some serious damage? Were there dogs? And to my mind is atwitter with anticipation. But nothing. In fact, that episode is never mentioned again.</p>
<p>I found the exclusion in &#8220;Masculin, fÃ©minin&#8221; equally disturbing. In one memorable scene Paul, the young man at the center of the film, rides the subway with his friend Robert while a dramatic scene unfolds across from them. The scene ends when the woman, who was being threatened, pulls out a pistol and fires two shots (not on camera) and presumably one or more people on the car die. The incident disappears from the narrative instantly and the next scene begins. Or first scene, in a cafe, which closes when a couple that had previously not figured in the film appears for half a minute in which the couple yells at each other, they fight over their kid, and the woman shoots the husband with a pistol. Again, the violence is part of the film&#8217;s overall texture, sound, energy, etc., but the dramatic event itself never comes back up.</p>
<p>Godard&#8217;s film is underlaid with violence throughout, and the easy acceptance of the abovementioned scenes almost certainly is related to the director&#8217;s &#8220;comment&#8221; on violence, particularly the American kind (Vietnam figures heavily on the minds of his young male characters). But that&#8217;s not what interests me here. It&#8217;s the nonsequitor, the dropped events and the ensuing effect of that event&#8217;s disappearance on my ability to enjoy the film, that I care about. Especially since the result is unexpected: both in the case of Mitchell and Godard, I enjoy the story/film all the more for the unease I feel.</p>
<p>I never intended for this post to turn into an essay, so I&#8217;m going to let myself off the hook for a moment and not chase the reasons for my enjoyment. Being that I won&#8217;t soon forget either of these pieces of art, I&#8217;m sure the ideas behind this post will continue to grow.</p>
<p>So here&#8217;s the question that this post won&#8217;t hope to answer: why is the seemingly frustrating act of leaving the reader/viewer &#8220;hanging&#8221; able to excite rather than depress the experience of coming into contact with the fiction/film?</p>
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