youshouldknow.gif
bblogo4.gif

Websters.gif

jkruthtolive.JPG
enginelogo.gif
eclectic_268.gif

sharkfunniesButton.gif

architrouve.gif

AlGoreButton.jpg

basbadge.gif



art

New Week, New Show
by Ursula Sokolowska

This Friday (1/11) @ Gallery 2
by Ursula Sokolowska


biz niz


comic art

Sharkforum Funnies 2
by Mark Staff Brandl

Sharkforum Funnies
by Mark Staff Brandl

Nu Pop Scape
by Mark Staff Brandl


film

Let's Rage
by Ursula Sokolowska


design

Horror Posters
by Simone Muench


humor

Your “New York Age”
by Mark Staff Brandl

Sharkforum Funnies 3
by Mark Staff Brandl


lit


local color


music

The Guitar Slinger
by The Shark


original fiction

Apathy
by Paul K


people


photo blogging

EELS
by KC Clarke

Dispatch From India
by John Kruth


photography

EELS
by KC Clarke

car repair
by Ursula Sokolowska


politics


sensible ideas

Chicago Art History
by Ursula Sokolowska

Calling All Sharks
by KC Clarke


social ills

Self-Reliance, A Thought
by Mark Staff Brandl


sport


the media


theatre


web gems


word of the day

ephebiphobia, n.
by Simone Muench

taphnophobia, n.
by Simone Muench

Dysphemism
by Simone Muench

lumen, n.
by Simone Muench

oleaginous, adj.
by Simone Muench

film

Altman essay part I

A Meditation On The Enduring Importance of "Nashville"upon the Occasion of Robert Altman's Lifetime Achievment Oscar (part I)

My friend Tim Welch (one of the best American drummers of the last 20 years) makes the claim that Robert Altman's "Nashville" is the finest American movie ever made. I believe he is correct. When he first expressed this opinion I admit I considered it another blustery partial truth typical of a percussionist. "Better than "Citizen Kane?" I asked, better than "The Godfather" or "Bonnie and Clyde" or "North by Northwest" or "The Bride of Frankenstein"?

His succinct answer was: "Definitely."

Over the years I have come to decide that he is correct.

In 2000, before 9/11 made America once again aware of its fragility, a man named Jan Stuart wrote a thoroughgoing essay on "Nashville" in the form of a book called "The Nashville Chronicles," published by Simon and Schuster. Stuart was prescient in the same way Altman was. He sees in the film a veritable Rosetta Stone of information regarding the entertainment and political solar systems that light American society. If the term "American Film" requires, by definition, that the film be not only made in America but also somehow ABOUT America, then Stuart seemingly agrees with Tim. He seems, in his book, to consider "Nashville" certainly the most EXEMPLARY American film ever. And, again, he is correct.

The important points I make here are largely the result of Stuart's research and Welch's love. My own observations on this phenomenal film add a minimal insight that pales in comparison to that of those whose work I've digested.

Let us start with the film's relevance to events of today. Let us start with the cynicism and disillusion that coats our modern politics like an oil-soaked blanket. Let us start with Hal Phillip Walker -- which is where "Nashville" starts. The droning, non-sequitorial voiceover by the invented candidate was actually written by a semi-politically-connected Southerner named Thomas Hal Phillips. Altman was pals with him. His "speech" is the film's frame.

"We have some problems," his deceptively folksy voice intones. "I know something about money because I never had any until I was 27." It's not to difficult to tell that this Altman depiction of Middle America ("the Red States" in today's parlance) is meant to be satirical and comedic; only the dumbest of dumb Americans can fail to see that the film is essentially a joke, a parody. And yet the charicature is so savage that it is easy to see why the good citizens of Nashville were horrified by the final cut and why they felt insulted. The great Wim Wenders (who at one time was married to ) has said that "Nashville" is a film about noise. It's noisy, certainly, but "Nashville" is actually a film about democracy; dysfunctional, messy, democracy.

| More Blogs by Paul K | Email Paul K

Post a comment

Notes on posting:
If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.

We appreciate dialogue and commentary, but we encourage you to use your full name, as we do. Please be advised that we're less likely to post your comment if you use only your first name or an alias.
Additionally, personal attacks and pointless flaming will not be tolerated. If you'd like to be a part of our conversation please make your points in an intelligent and respectful manner.
We don't insist on everyone agreeing, but we do insist on civility.
Have at it.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.sharkforum.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2583

« PREVIOUS | HOME | NEXT »


(c) and TM 2007 Sharkforum and the Sharkpack
All blog post texts are (c) 2007 the individual authors. World rights reserved.
betabottom.jpg
gimmemore.gif

by Ursula Sokolowska

by Mark Staff Brandl

by Ursula Sokolowska

by Ursula Sokolowska

by Ursula Sokolowska

by Ursula Sokolowska

by KC Clarke

by Ursula Sokolowska

by Mark Staff Brandl

by Mark Staff Brandl

by Mark Staff Brandl

by David Amram
Kristy Odelius and the Guild Complex
by Simone Muench





Biz


CONTACT SHARKFORUM





movabletype.gif
Powered by
Movable Type 3.2
movabletypeID.gif



link-cb.gif



apple.jpg

Made on a Mac





fin