The Kolog


Can’t Help It
January 31, 2009, 4:13 pm
Filed under: Dissertation

Relegated to the couch for the weekend due to an infection on my elbow, I’ve been able to watch a few movies that I haven’t seen in some time but I can’t shake my dissertation when viewing them so it starts to feel like work.  Take The Big Lebowski, for instance, in which the trope of listening functions as a meditative process (when the dude listens to a bowling match on a walkman while laying on his floor, just before the trippy dream montage wonderfully accompanied by Bob Dylan’s “The Man in Me”).  Listening, or the refusal to do so, functions as a symbol of lost opportunity too.  For example, Walter refuses to listen to Donny during some of the early scenes (in fact, Walter listens to Donny only when the latter is referring to bowling), which he may very well regret later when Donny passes away two-thirds through the film.  Finally, not listening functions as a form of rebellion when the dude tells the police officer (towards the end of the film) that the former was not listening to the latter, an act of defiance for which the law officer pummels every dude out there.



Possibilities
January 31, 2009, 1:11 am
Filed under: Academic

Up late most nights, I often find myself catching some wonderful films on Turner Classic Movies (TCM).  For instance, right now, Lew Adler’s Ladies and Gentlemen the Fabulous Stains (1982) (perf. Diane Lane, Ray Winstone, Peter Donat) is on.

Since it’s late, I have the volume down, which helps me analyze the visuals.  I notice the movie is about a band on tour.  The tour bus and the stage performances remind me of Cameren Crowe’s  Almost Famous (2000), which leads me to thinking: This fall, I could teach a course on music and the road in post-World War II American film and lit.  A la Professor Charlie Bertsch, I could assign documentary as well as fictitious texts.

Tentative list of films:

  • A Hard Day’s Night
  • Don’t Look Back
  • Gimme Shelter
  • Last Waltz
  • Ladies and Gentleman the Stains
  • This Is Spinal Tap
  • Almost Famous

Possible literary texts:

  • ???????????????????



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