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ARE YOU TALKING TO ME?
A Life Through the Movies
JOHN WALSH
HarperCollinsPublishers 1 London Bridge Street London SE1 9GF
Published by HarperCollinsPublishers 2003
Copyright © John Walsh 2003
The Author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Source ISBN: 9780007139309
Ebook Edition © FEBRUARY 2013 ISBN 9780007441198
Version: 2016-03-23
Little Boxes Words and music by Malvina Reynolds © 1962 Schroder Music Co., (ASCAP) Renewed 1990 Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Jean Genie Words and music by David Bowie © 1973. Reproduced by permission of EMI Music Publishing Ltd/Moth Music; Chrysalis Music Ltd; and Tintorreto Music administered by RZO Music Inc for the USA and Canada and by RZO Music Ltd for the World excluding the USA and Canada.
There is Nothin’ Like a Dame Words Oscar Hammerstein II/music Richard Rodgers. © 1949 Williamson Music International. Reproduced by permission of EMI Music Publishing Ltd, London WC2H 0QY
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This book is dedicated, with fond affection,
to Giles Brody – nephew, godson, film buff,
crazed Tarantino fan, precociously talented script-writer
and future movie director – hoping it will demonstrate that
you don’t have to be Samuel L. Jackson all the time …
CONTENTS
Introduction: Straining Your Eyes to See
1 The Cat in the Crimson Sock Mutiny on the Bounty (1962)
2 Faces at the Window The Innocents (1961)
3 John Wayne’s Filthy Temper Red River (1947)
4 Girl in the Gazebo The Sound of Music (1965)
5 White Hat and Golden Shirt Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
6 Dancing with Decadence Cabaret (1972)
7 Far Away from Everything The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser (1974)
8 After the Red Raincoat ‘Don’t Look Now’ (1973)
INTRODUCTION STRAINING YOUR EYES TO SEE
‘From the movies we learn precisely how to hold a champagne flute, kiss a mistress, pull a trigger, turn a phrase … but the movies spoil us for life: nothing ever lives up to them’
– Edmund White
You are sitting in the three-and-nine seats at the Granada cinema, Clapham Junction in 1962, with an empty carton of Kia-Ora crushed in your hand, and you are gazing into the horizon of a hazy, golden desert. Your eyes are straining to see what you think you see – what you might be able to see if you craned forward just a bit.
You are oblivious to the other people around you in this cut-price Alhambra Palace in south London. But even if you could register that 300 other people are sitting beside you, staring at the screen, you couldn’t believe they can see what you’re seeing. The experience you’re going through is wholly individual. Your eyes are – surely? – the only eyes capable of picking out the tiny dot on the horizon.
The film is David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia. It’s not ideal entertainment for an eight-year-old. It’s full of men in military uniforms telling each other what’s what in the First World War, and talking about the Turks and a prince called Faisal. The hero is a pale, blue-eyed, extremely odd fellow called Lawrence whose party trick is to extinguish matches with his bare fingers without squealing with pain. He is cheeky to everyone, even to murderous-looking Arabs in black robes. He rides a camel like a ninny, though, stretching forward over the camel’s neck, waving a stick like someone trying to conduct an orchestra.
At this point in the film, he and fifty men in long skirts and head-shawls have crossed a huge desert called ‘The Sun’s Anvil’. Suddenly, Lawrence notices a riderless camel loping along the boiling sands, and decides they must go back for the fallen rider. The skirt-and-shawl brethren argue that the guy is probably dead by now, but Lawrence doesn’t listen. He sets off, bravely, suicidally, to rescue the man, while the others continue their journey