Bright Star

I felt ambivalent about the new, Jane Campion-directed film about John Keats and Fanny Brawne. Why? Biopics are always hit or miss, and I’m not a fan of Campion. When the film played for a week at a nearby theater and then disappeared before we had a chance to go, I figured I’d have to wait to watch it on DVD sometime next year.

But then Eileen Myles came to town, and it turned out that she wanted to see it, too, and Michael Kelleher discovered it was still showing way out in B.F.E., and, well — I couldn’t pass up a chance to go see it with the two of them, and Mike’s wife, Lori.

The verdict: decidedly mixed.

In Campion’s hands, the movie’s a nice enough love story, largely told from the point of view of Fanny Brawne. The actors are pleasant and unknown–thank God she didn’t plug in someone like Collin Farell and Reese Witherspoon. As Eileen pointed out, Keats’s accent was all wrong; we were talking on the way there about Tom Clark’s great book about Keats, Junkets on a Sad Planet, “Junkets” being a nickname that developed out of the way Keats pronounced his name. In the film the accent was way too properly British.

It’s a minor quibble, but symptomatic of the larger problem with the movie. In a nutshell, what’s missing is exactly the essence–the essential accuracy, the right details, the poetry.

Here’s an example: Campion seems to want to establish the idea that Brawne’s talent for sewing and embroidery puts her on equal footing with Keats and his poetry — as she has Brawne declare to Charles Brown and Keats in the opening scene (paraphrasing), “More people appreciate my sewing than your poetry — and I make money at it.” Zing! We’re reminded that she was “up all night” working on an embroidered pillow-slip for John’s brother Tom, who has just died of TB, and Brawne is shown literally bringing needlework into the drawing room where Brown and Keats work on poems. Fair enough point, but it misses the point of Keats struggling to make room for Fanny in his world of poetry, and her efforts to meet him there.

In one scene, Fanny storms into the drawing room looking for Keats, only to find Brown. (Needing a domestic villain, Campion–unfairly, I think–tries to make Brown a wet blanket in the flirtation between Fanny and Keats.) Desperate to impress Keats, she tells Brown she’s read all of Homer, Spenser, Milton, etc. etc., all in the past week. Brown quizzes her, quickly poking holes in this claim, and she storms off in a huff. The point seems to be that she has the native wit to understand Keats, and the fineness and importance of his poetry, without actually doing the homework.

But in fact, it’s not true. Quite by accident, I discovered evidence of this the very next morning after we saw the film. In an article I happen to be reading about Spenser for class, the author suddenly shifts gears to write about a stanza that was added to a canto in The Faerie Queen — by John Keats. Charles Brown claimed it was “the last stanza of any kind that he wrote before his lamented death.” Apparently, Keats was marking the text for Fanny Brawne at the time. There’s simply no way that Brawne could have understood the stanza, let alone the highly allegorical and difficult poem as a whole, unless she had undertaken a fairly serious study of it.

How do you depict this in a film? I don’t know. But Campion doesn’t even try. She instead substitutes scenes of Keats and Brawne quoting his poetry at one another, with bits from Keats’s letters sprinkled in. Obviously, she was worried about getting lost in the esoteric minutia of “the life of the mind” — but the struggle to carve out a space for himself in that life, even while dealing with the workaday grind of “real” life (sickness, poverty, issues of class, etc.) constitute the real drama of Keats. His ambivalent, troubled welcoming of Fanny into that life is the real mystery and miracle of their relationship. Campion doesn’t come close to capturing it.

But we had fun seeing it, and debating about it on the long, stormy ride home.

Some Things

Here are two sites I’ve been looking at for my printmaking class at UB this fall.

Printeresting

A Good Idea on Paper

On the weirder side, Paul Zukofsky loses it.

from The White Album (2)

There are people walking around with no souls. I don’t know. They just don’t have them. You just know. Like… they were born without them, or whether they’ve lost them, who can say. You can lose your soul. Fear. Laziness. Lack of love. Over-eating. Bad luck. Any of these things can make it break apart and gradually… I can even tell you where it goes.

Do you know where the perineum is? It’s this little spot between your asshole and your balls. If you’re a guy. If you’re a girl, it’s between your asshole and your pussy. You can feel it—it’s a little bulge, a little pocket of muscles.

At any rate, the soul, you know, is not this ghostly thing rattling around inside you. It’s actually outside you. And inside. That’s the one bible verse I read that I found myself nodding along to: “The kingdom of heaven is inside you, and it is outside you.” I can’t remember where it’s from.

The part of the soul I’m talking about rests on top of you like an extra layer above your skin. It’s very thin and very large. If it was spread out flat it would cover—I don’t know. A lot. You can see it if you want to, if you know what to look for.

On some people it’s very thin, very faint. On some people it’s begun breaking up, like piebald, you know? Patches of it are missing. If you lie down at night you can feel it seeping away, through the perineum. It happens in the middle of the night, very early, like between three and four a.m.

In fact, if you find yourself waking up a lot at that time, that’s probably what’s happening. You can feel it right there. It might itch a little. It’s a terrible feeling, for sure. You’ve just woken up from a nightmare, probably. That’s your body trying to warn you about your soul.

Okay, but the good news is there’s these people going around who can help you. I’m not talking about evangelists or preachers per se, but they could be that—they could be anybody. Really they are angels; they are people, really, but for a moment or two they are angels, they have the power of angels if you open yourself to them and listen.

I mean, it could be the person in line behind you at the grocery store. Most often, probably, it’s a bum or a street person like us, because we’re the most open and available for the angels to use. I can see that you’re not really following me.

Think of it like this: You must have had an encounter with someone where you thought, ‘There’s something weird going on here. This person seems to know me, without having to say a word.’ Maybe you start talking. Maybe you just look at each other and laugh. Maybe all you do is look—even for just a second or two—if you’re open to it, that’s all it takes.

You might even have been an angel for somebody else, sometime. You wouldn’t know. Only they’d know. It doesn’t sound like much, but that’s the type of thing that can keep you going. That’s how you can get your soul back, if you’ve lost it. Little by little, by degrees. Maybe it will never be as big as it once was, enough to cover your whole body. But it’ll be something.

The Most Depressing Year in Detroit Sports History?

You be the judge. Frankly, I was too depressed to look up exact dates, so the following is a rough timeline:

Jan-Feb.: The Detroit Lions complete the Most Depressing Year in NFL History, going 0-16 to cap off the horrific Matt Millen era, the absolute worst stretch of futility ever perpetrated on an NFL franchise. Note: this is really saying something, as the Lions have not had a good coach, quarterback, or truly outstanding defensive player during my lifetime.

March: The MSU Spartans make a magical run to the NCAA Final Four, which is played in Michigan. By itself, this is not depressing, as the Spartans really come out of nowhere and no one realistically expects them to win it all. However, I’m noting it here for two reasons: 1) The way they get so thoroughly trounced by UNC — a team I loathe above all others — in the championship game; 2) This is where the theme of “____ team doing it for the downtrodden city of Detroit” begins.

June: After a courageous run through the NHL playoffs, the defending champion Detroit Red Wings lose the Stanley Cup to the Pittsburg Penguins. Again, it’s the way they lose that’s depressing: after jumping out 2-0 and 3-2 in games, they lose a game 7 on home ice to the insufferable Crosby and co., showing almost no passion in the last few games. Also again, before and during the series there’s a storyline about how Detroit “needs” this title more than Pittsburg.

October: After leading the mediocre AL Central since early May, the Detroit Tigers stage a collapse of epic proportions to blow their lead to the Minnesota Twins. A 7-game lead in early September; a 3-game lead with four games to play — gone the way of the Dodo bird. Depressing. Again, the theme of the Tigers’ connection with the fans and city is invoked, and again the team fails to deliver. A modest winning streak in August or September would have put the division away — the Tigers can’t do it.

Also: The same weekend the Tigers are coughing up their lead, the Red Wings are in Sweden to begin the NHL season. What should be a triumphant home tour for many Wings, including captain Niklas Lidstrom — not to mention a healing process after Spring’s debacle — instead becomes a nightmarish lost weekend, as the Wings lose both games while displaying the same defensive breakdowns they did in the playoffs. Added to which, they can’t score. A very depressing start to the season.

Conclusion: It’s hard for me to say if this is the Most Depressing Year in Detroit Sports History — at least three teams were in contention for titles, playing meaningful games right up till the end, and some towns can’t say that for many years in a row. However, the way these seasons have ended has been depressing indeed (I didn’t even mention the depressing fall of the Pistons, the disastrous Iverson trade, etc.). Also, I feel that the whole “winning one for Detroit” campaign has been devastating to the pysche of the players. It’s too much pressure. If Jim Leyland has any hope of resurrecting the Tigers for this last game — perhaps games, if they force a playoff — he ought to tell the team “Forget playing for Detroit, go out and win this for yourselves.”

But what am I saying? The Tigers are a Dead Team Walking.

Depressing.