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Citizen Jackson

Film, Music 2 Comments »

Omnipotence is a funny thing. An adjective normally bestowed upon human beings possessing transcendent and redefining talents, but also a gift that in the long run carries with it a terribly slow and socially acidic, terminal disease. The only cure of which is deconstruction of the self or physical death. – Random made up quote

I finally managed a few nights ago to sit down and properly watch Citizen Kane (1941). For a film scholar several years into the business this has been somewhat of an embarrassment (although only one amongst many) that I have been almost unwilling to admit. However, I am a firm believer in serendipity, that is the concept not the shitty John Cusack film and or that things occur at different times for different reasons. The pertinence of this particular fact deals with the recent death of a certain Michael Joseph Jackson, you might have heard of him. Not having seen Citizen Kane until now actually provided a different aspect or illumination upon the tragedy of Michel Jackson’s untimely death that I might otherwise not have come across. That is, two and two would not have been put together.

The parallel between Jackson and the film begins as follows: Charles Foster Kane, aka Citizen Cane, in the film begins as a young child who inherits an exorbitant amount of wealth that immediately has an impact upon his life, making it essentially impossible to grow up as a “normal” human being under “normal” circumstances, his world must be tailored made to fit him. We the viewer are then transported rather quickly to Kane as a young adult with an interest and extraordinary talent for running a newspaper, aided by his fortune, that quickly turns him into an even wealthier “media mogul”. This is all fine and dandy but eventually sees Kane, and his somewhat honest  attitude, attempt to run for public office. Here his honest character is quickly dispatched by dishonest competition, a sex scandal is created and suddenly Kane finds himself on a downward spiral to becoming a complete recluse. An enormous estate is built in Florida named Xanadu, an enormous estate that serves in the end as Kane’s sarcophagus.

Needless to say, it doesn’t take a genius to see the similarities here. Jackson started out as a very talented child in the group the Jackson 5. Instead of pure capital like Charles Foster Kane, he possessed a fairly large amount of what Pierre Bourdieu calls social capital, present and obtained by his ability to sing, dance and captivate a crowd. The story for me as a child of the 80’s, much like the one in Citizen Kane, quickly begins its next chapter with Jackson as the ultra popular entertainer that sees his records outsell anything that has come before them, his star power dwarfing anyone else existent in the entertainment industry, arguably making him the most famous individual to ever tread upon this planet. At this point, like Charles Foster Kane, Jackson seemingly tried to use his star power to enact social change differing from the movie in the fact that one has to say Jackson, unlike Kane, succeeded; bypassing the need for public office due to his immense popularity. The story of Jackson’s life though is not quite, as you well know, as simply defined as I have written above and definitely does not have its end or entirety summed up by the aforementioned facts.

Much more gruesome than Kane’s inability to obtain public office and his subsequent descent, we the public bore witness to what the tabloids dubbed him “Wacko Jacko” a sort of surgically enhanced liminal figure. As Dave Chappelle alluded to, a person who underwent countless enhancements to impress us. Perhaps not completely admitted nor seen from this perspective until after his death, we were witness to a child that never grew up, a self-admitted modern day Peter Pan, who attempted to rebuild a childhood that never existed, complete with his own “never never land” in the form of a ranch. Like Kane’s Xanadu, Neverland Ranch seemed to function as a socially constrictive sarcophagus that housed pop-culture artifacts of the times and allowed for what many believed to be weird and inappropriate social interaction with children that Jackson thought of as his peers.  Fast forward to two molestation cases later and Jackson ceased to be a liminal figure, for many becoming only a pedophile.

What makes the two stories so interesting, as I alluded to in the first few lines of this post, deals with ideas of omnipotence and its function in a capitalist society. Simply put, expanding markets are always in need of the next big star that opens and or bridges a gap and at certain points in time these stars become so big and burn so bright that they threaten the stability of the entire system. Instead of inspiring massive record sales, book sales or box office receipts they begin to inspire such things as social change and creative thought, dangerously unpredictable things. They also inspire fanaticism and massive amounts of interest into the banal personal details of the star’s life, eventually spinning everything out of control and into the realm of pure speculation. The point is that these stars begin to expand the market beyond what the checks and balances in the system can peacefully control or contain. I am not saying there is some sort of evil collective that decides the limits upon success. However, I do believe that it is simply a fact of capitalist nature that when someone rises and wins so big it is inevitable that they have to loose and fall; the system is predicated upon this fact.

The fall I speak of, from what I can tell during my studies and time spent dealing with the subject, can take place in few varying ways. Normally it is either a self deconstruction perpetrated in order to relieve oneself from the burden of omnipotence. In such a case I would use a figure like Bob Dylan as an example, who at his peak in the late 60’s changed the very popular way he preformed music and seemingly shunned any ideas that were attached to him as a spokesman for social change, something many thought to be the core of Dylan’s music and popularity. The second option here as I see it is the news media. In their frantic search for details and information pertaining to a given celebrity often times a certain amount of conflict is created between the media and an individual. At its core the media believes it provides a service to society in informing them if someone or something is dishonest. With omnipotent stars it really becomes a hunt to provide the public with a corrected picture of the individual to double check and inform idealizing fans of the blemishes and personal details that sometimes suggest that a star is simply put “just as fucked up as you or I”. With Dylan again as the example here we have the media’s attempts at providing his proper background, stripping away the mystery into his seemingly auspicious beginnings. Possibly, I could even state that the media functions as a limiting body for such aspiring individuals, begging the question would you really want to be exposed, putting people into an ever questioning position of am I worthy of praise, am I any good at what I do, can I really enact change?

It is here that the two stories I began this post with differ. Charles Foster Kane in the film gives up and retires as recluse to Xanadu with his wife. While Michel Jackson never seemingly by his own hand wanted to leave the spotlight (he was for all intensive purposes born, raised and ultimately laid to rest there) fluctuating in and out of the spot light. Citizen Kane is interesting on its own as showing a man’s deconstruction by a device that he himself builds and deploys, a tabloid, or speculation based newspaper. Michael Jackson I do not believe is really a victim of an establishment he willingly helped to create; it is however a similarity in his deconstruction that he shares with Kane. Like Kane, Jackson’s death has spurred a hunt for a MacGuffin, or I should say a whole slew of them. It’s as if the media is shocked and to some extent feeling guilty, appropriately trying to balance the scales or their prior verdict on Jackson, not so much for Jackson himself, but for their own future reputation and credibility, they must “get it right”.

I would like to think there is a great amount of honest truth to my sentiments described herein, albeit not based upon any kind of insider perspective into Michel Jackson unlike that which the media has been frantically, even to this day, searching for. It is more a set of observations that a movie like Citizen Kane, made long before Michael Jackson’s birth and rise to fame, has brought into perspective for me. The film even in 1941 was not just a fictional piece; it contains many meta-film aspects that deal with then contemporary figures of arguable omnipotence such as William Randolph Hearst and Howard Hughes, coupled with the controversies surrounding them. Sometimes knowledge and texts can provide a solid blueprint or filter through which we can better see the reality of a given situation. For me such is the case with Orson Welles‘ master piece Citizen Kane in conjunction with the death of Michael Jackson. It shows clearly for me the who and why of the event and much like the boys from the paper in Citizen Kane, the boys on CNN and other “reputable” news networks are still busy trying to find out just what rosebud means. I guess I still have my own concerns with it as well, but they only pertain to just how widely applicable the definition of a MacGuffin fits. Is rosebud in the case of Jackson’s death an honest interest, an admonishment of guilt, a cathartic experience for the networks and the fans who participated in the speculation or just an elaborate societal smoke screen so we don’t see the mechanism at work, sot of like a bourgeois escape lever if you will?

In the end I hope to have proved at the very least why one can debate Citizen Kane as being one of the greatest, if not “the” greatest film ever made, that there is some well based merit to such a discussion. To be so highly applicable to this day, pertaining to the life and circumstances surrounding such an enormous icon is an amazing achievement that shows the film and film maker’s mastery in capturing a pure essence beyond banal details, displaying in the process cinema’s timelessness. My thoughts pertaining to Michael Jackson are a much more complicated topic; it’s not fictional, although elements of it appear to be so. His is a tragic death and more so than that, a tragic life that borderlines in my opinion on persecution by the media and his fans. Not to mention that one of popular culture’s biggest icons and money maker dies at a time when the entire system has been rocked by enormous earthquakes of ethics and injustice. To a person who spends a fair amount of time in musty tombs of knowledge, who has intently studied as many aspects of the system I live in as I possibly can, it simply provides a great example about how real life is almost always more unbelievable and dramatic than fictional work. Or perhaps it all proves the fact that there simply is no difference; we are all pulled along by the same timeless narrative devices.


July 22nd, 2009  



The Future of Film, or Art in General part 4

Film, Music, The Future of Film, or Art in General 0 Comment »

Im sorry officer im to busy smoking to speculate

“I’m sorry officer I’m too busy smoking to hyper-speculate”

About a year ago, when it was decided that my wife and I would move back to the US, I began to devour healthily any and all information I could about the US economy; catching up on the state of affairs back home. I felt it important to know just what I was getting myself back into and moreover what in hell had gone so wrong in the first place to create such dire conditions. The main culprit, as I have grown to conceive of it by wading through small daily doses of economy and capitalist theory, seems to be the practice of speculation. The actual figures or quality of items and work are no longer the deciding factors in investment or success; prices are set and decisions are made based purely out of trust and what one possibly could dub a process of hyper-speculation. Just ask the governments who based their budgets this year on exorbitant oil price that subsequently fell through the floor. Bets of this nature are common place and if a bet is wrong then things go to hell for the players involved; funny enough I’ve come to see a similar tendency within this topical series I have been writing about over the course of the last few weeks.

What  the logic of speculation has to do with this series is simple; the same type of mentality and tendency has begun to rear its ugly head in a place where it definitively does not belong. A great deal of news and info pertaining to cultural items such as upcoming film releases consist mainly of a glut of speculation, information and rehashing of pictures and trailers that try and guess how the film will turn out even before its first screening. There exists hardly any patience or restraint to reserve judgment until after exhibiting the materials, and one can definitely not, as I have previously posted upon, exhibit semi-objectively with a clear mind.

It is perhaps one of the macabre sides of postmodernism; we are there before we get there. We go on vacation first through the travel brochure, and then follow someone else’s trip. Some of us think the Stature of Liberty is closer to Brooklyn Bridge then it actually is because it appeared that way in a film. Finally now through pure and utter hyper-speculation, minus even someone else’s walked path, interpretation of distance or well founded review, we formulate our opinions on music, films and art in general that no one has yet to actually feast upon.

This year when I sat down and made a list of the films I had missed from 2008, I realized that it’s a full-time job for a person truly interested in culture to keep up. To obtain the essences present in the varying works and to be able to fully appreciate something and learn all one can from it requires a great amount of concentration, attention to detail and comparison to what one has carried with himself into the process. With all the opportunity that surrounds us to learn from an already released piece of literature or art I find it funny that any one has the time to participate in speculation. Perhaps someday soon we will experience our own cultural recession caused by over speculating that forces us to make whole sale changes. To focus on what matters; what is already here bearing down upon us. It’s one thing to stand outside a burning building and frantically scream that it’s on fire, another to run in and save someone and finally to be part of the crew putting out the flames. One of the three positions does not belong; it has simply parasitically attached itself there feeding off from the body of the spectacle.


February 27th, 2009  
Tags: Art, Film, Hyper-speculation, postmodernism, Speculation, US economy



Monday morning needs a new kind of Pain reliever!

Film, Music 5 Comments »

Ah it’s Monday again and it’s back to worshipping the WordPress gods! Weekends for me now seem only to consist of what can be described as a frenetic search to find “digs”, coupled with researching any and all things job related in the San Francisco area. T-minus four weeks and I’m out of the frigid north and on my way to the Bay area, keeping a promise I made to myself long ago that the polar bears of Sweden would not have their way with my corpse like they did with Descartes!

In effort to create a soft opening for myself to this week of material I present to my readers the song I recently requested my wife promise to play at my funeral,

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Beyond being tempted to “lip” one’s own stockings after having a listen I found it interesting that Peaches cult hit has inspired more than just Sofia Coppola to incorporate it into a film. Here are two videos making fine use of the song, huh what right uh!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aGTNS13SDU[/youtube] [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GmFp0I8AZqw&feature=related[/youtube]


February 23rd, 2009  
Tags: Descartes, Fuck the Pain Away, Muppets, Peaches, Sofia Copola



Junior Boys – A more Burlesque Modern Day Version of Hall and Oats?

Music, News 0 Comment »

Lately I came across the Canadian duo Junior Boys that has been receiving quite a bit of play time at my house and the various musical channels I surf. As I indicated in the title of this post to some degree they hit me in the same zone as Hall and Oats does, you can be the decider upon if that’s a good thing or more if I seem to enjoy strikes to the groin. I think they really got me with the smoothness of the lyrics “I see you better when the lights go out“, it’s just far to “pimp” to resist not adding to my linguistic repertoire.

Here are a few samples for your assessment purposes:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.


February 16th, 2009  
Tags: Hall and Oats, Junior Boys, Music



The Future of Film, or Art in General Part 2

Film, Music, The Future of Film, or Art in General 4 Comments »

I recently read a very simple blog post, included in the newspapers “youth” section, describing in colorful summary the recent changes to the music industry. It got me to thinking, these changes are not only occurring in the music industry but in our entire culture, that this young man’s description on the music industry is applicable to a much larger, overarching change.

I remember in 2005 sitting at a university lecture about music appreciation, as part of an interdisciplinary communications course, thinking to myself how the future was going to look. I knew then that the mere fact of having access and or so many outlets to find new music was going to change the entire face of the industry, things were already in motion. The pure fact that I could download, illegally or legally, pretty much any album/track I wished caused my musical tastes to increase tenfold. I didn’t conceive of it then, as the aforementioned article in the local news does now in depicting the current state of affairs, that artists must now perform again. It is no longer acceptable to produce a studio album and have some talented producer “spruce” up the vocals/tracks; you have to sing for your supper, you have to be “talented”. Creating a much larger demand to see musicians live.

I have witnessed and continue to witness the benefit of these changes; qualitatively superior music that is cheaper, and my own willingness to attend concerts because the music is as it’s meant to be there. Everything is somehow more real or tangible. Top 40 radio, CDs and the predictability game have been slain; it is no longer possible to “push” music to the passive masses as they have become active. More so then losing profits on record sales (it’s been suggested this is a contemporary fallacy, now staunched) it is the loss of the power of predictability that angers and scares record company executives more so than anything else.

Sometimes ideas, like the ones presented on music in the paper, eerily coincide with information and debate found elsewhere in other adjacent areas of cultural life. The latest issue of Sight and Sound magazine addresses the film industry in a similar manner, the columnist Nick James suggests that UK based filmmakers might want to consider lobbying for lower ticket prices to combat the tide of illegal downloading of films in the country. To me his suggestion is all too familiar and widely applicable; it reminds me of precisely the same set of similar circumstances in 2005 pertaining to music. A quick educated guess is that film lags behind music simply because of broadband speeds, that if we hearken back to 2005 it took forever to get your hands on films you were looking for and then to download them, compared to now when it takes about 10-20 minutes (not to mention HD streaming), fast approaching the now instantaneous delivery of music, that was then precisely as film is now.

The film industry, just like the music industry, has suffered from qualitative problems from its product to its distribution methods. Both areas of interest I believe are now in their death throws. Living in Sweden where films are released months after their premiers elsewhere in the world provides illumination as to one reason for demand pertainting to downloading pirated films; it is of necessity in order to keep up with the global contemporary “lunch room” discussion that have migrated to the internet. This demand and activity shows that supply is not keeping up, distribution methods are far too archaic. There remains then the issue of availability of quality films; a scan of the local movie theatre, if you don’t live in a major metropolitan hub, will typically reveal limited choices that internet piracy does not suffer from. One can find the discussions online and then find the films just a few clicks away, removing the element of force feeding the “predictability complex” successfully acomplished when communication and mobility were a premium. In the end if the film industry is hemorrhaging money then I guess its acts and actors will simply have to begin performing once again, to sing for their supper, or improve upon the exhibiting experience.


February 13th, 2009  
Tags: Film, Music, Piracy, Sight and Sound, Top 40 radio



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