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FADE OUT: On Hollywood’s Visionaries


There are certain things you try to find comfort in on this hideous world, one of which is that once in a while a unique vision shines through the sludge of sameness and finds a niche in the entertainment world. It gives you a ray of hope, that maybe the Orwellian nightmare we are living in might one day relent.

The modest yet remarkable success of a unique voice like Charlie Kaufman was one of those anomalies for me. Kaufman to me is like a synthesis of vintage Woody Allen and Philip K. Dick, a blending that seems so completely unlikely until you see it and realize it makes perfect sense. 

Longtime readers know of my admiration for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, the tour de force Kaufman created with French hotfoot Michel Gondry. Sunshine was that rare opportunity of harmonization of opposites, when a fizzy extrovert like Gondry syncs up with a dour pessimist like Kaufman. 

But there’s also the achingly beautiful soundtrack of Jon Brion and the natural charisma of the film’s all-star cast. Moments like that are rare in any medium and seem to be receding beyond the horizon in movies.

The PKD influence is startlingly obvious in Sunshine, since you clearly see that the film is an inverse pastiche of Total Recall, which boasted to create memories instead of erase them. It probably was birthed the day Kaufman saw that film and wished there were a company that would do the very opposite of the one in the movie, probably around the time of a painful breakup.

But Kaufman’s most remarkable PKD tribute has to be Adaptation, which wears its VALIS colors on its sleeve.

As in VALIS, Kaufman creates a rather unflattering caricature of himself in Adaptation and splits himself off into a cheery alter ego –in this case a twin brother who is burdened by none of the self-loathing and nagging doubts that plague the Charlie character (Kaufman went so far to credit the fictional brother with co-writing the script). As in VALIS  there is a metanarrative, another film existing within the film. 

As in VALIS  Kaufman wildly fictionalizes- if not scandalizes- real people (VALIS creates insane alter egos of David Bowie and Brian Eno, whose work Dick was entranced by, particularly the former’s Man Who Fell to Earth). As in VALIS  the only escape from an ugly, meaningless world is visionary experience.

The first Kaufman fim I saw was Being John Malkovich, starring onetime Secret Sun resonator John Cusack. At the time it just seemed like another 90s indie novelty, but one that stuck in my own head for some time. It seems slight in comparison to Kaufman’s later work but still head and shoulders above most of its class.

None of Kaufman’s films are blockbusters. They’re too cerebral and downbeat. But they are the kind of prestige projects that major stars fight to work on, in between the parade of generic bilge that pays the poolboy. Or rather were

Out of curiosity- and in the middle of a furious search for the Synedoche, New York DVD that seems to have vanished from my wife’s studio- I checked out Kaufman’s wiki page to see what he was up to. I felt a wave of depression hit me.

Kaufman was slated to write and direct a film with the working title Frank or Francis. Few details have been confirmed about the plot except that it is a musical comedy about internet anger culture.[18] In July 2012, Jack Black, who was to star in the film, revealed in an interview that funding for the project had fallen through, as the studio was unsure about its chances for success after the financial failure of Kaufman’s last directorial effort. The future of the project is uncertain. 

Dino Stamatopoulos, a former colleague of Kaufman’s from The Dana Carvey Show, became interested in adapting Kaufman’s Anomalisa play script into a stop motion animated film. With Kaufman’s permission, Stamatopoulos turned to the crowdfunding website Kickstarter in order to fund the film. The Kickstarter page for the film was set up in August 2012 and by the time funding had ended $406,237 was pledged.[19] It is premiering at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival in September of 2015. 

Trying to make a return to television, Kaufman directed and wrote a pilot for FX titled How and Why in 2014. The plot was described as being about a “man who can explain how and why a nuclear reactor works but is clueless about life”. FX decided to not pick up the pilot, but it has been shopped to other outlets.[20]

Ugh.

Now, I haven’t seen any of these projects. Maybe he’s hit a dry spell and isn’t producing the kind of work he once did. But the reviews for Anomalisa have been pretty stellar, so I doubt that. What’s changed is the business around him.

What we are seeing is the end of an age when studios would finance a Charlie Kaufman project, not for the wild profits but for the prestige. But knowing the kind of mercenary attitudes that rule corporate America these days it seems there’s no margin in prestige anymore.

But when I see the dreck that fills the local Redbox I wonder how did this get financed? Who thought this direct-to-video disaster would ever turn a profit? Was it produced simply for the writeoff?

I’m glad Twin Peaks is being revived and I’m glad David Lynch is involved. But the last we heard from him he was out of the picture business. In a better world, making The Elephant Man, Blue Velvet and Mulholland Dr would earn him some kind of emeritus status, and the same would go to Charlie Kaufman. 

I’m very happy Anomalisa got financing through Kickstarter but it should never have had to, in my estimation. A civilized society would recognize its gifts- in this case, its geniuses- and nurture them, not send them off begging for donations (for a crummy half million dollars, no less). 

What have we become?

Despite all of the lurid and deliberately misleading headlines you see these days I’m not worried about actual robots running around. What I am worried about is the robotization of human thinking, the radical reduction of human creativity. 

That worries me very much.
See also  The Mysterious Case of a Disappearing Town
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