Tag Archives: tim-robbins

an american family – cinema verite – real life

this entry is about the birth of ‘reality television’ in the form of the pbs series an american family, albert brooks’ hilarious send up of the whole idea in his film real life, and the hbo film about the making of the pbs series, cinema verite.

the whole thread starts in 1971 with the loud family,  of santa barbara, california.

a pbs producer named craig gilbert approaches several families in affluent southern california, and hits upon the loud family.

it has a handsome patriarch in the form of bill loud.  he makes a ton of money selling equipment to mining companies.   the wife is a sweet, somewhat neurotic but very smart and pretty lady named pat.

they have five children, who run the whole gamut of personality types:  lance, kevin, grant, michele, delilah.

they were a picture-perfect family, from the outside.  but there were cracks in their family long before the intrusion (i use that word deliberately) of craig gilbert and the cameras.

bill traveled a lot for work.  he fooled around.  he was the type of womanizer who didn’t hide it well – even when cameras were rolling.  his wife was tolerant of it to an extent, but growing ever tired of it.

the children were aged 14-20 during the filming, so it was an already stressful time to begin with.

what did not help matters in the family was that the show-runner craig gilbert was instantly infatuated with the wife, pat.  instead of being a fly on the wall, which is really impossible when filming is involved, he became a part of the scenario and a part of the problem.

it’s been said that he counseled pat to leave her husband.  that perhaps, he told her things her husband told him in confidence.   and on and on.

what is evident with the loud family is that, if a camera crew is present (or even if cameras are planted and you know it), you will act differently.   you will alter your behavior and you will try to edit your words to appear in the best light possible, usually.

a film whose real-life characters run contrary to this idea is the great documentary capturing the friedmans, which i will review soon, having rewatched it recently.  in this film, the sons in the family run audio and sometimes video at family fights.   the honesty is both apparent and bewildering.

when an american family aired, the series got a lot of attention.  it had never been done before.  the family broke up during the filming.  pat decided to divorce while the cameras were rolling, actually rehearsing how she would confront bill.  the oldest son lance would come out as gay.

lance loud would become the most interesting and artistic of the family.   he heaed the band mumps and would become a gay activist and writer.  he died of aids in 2001.

the thing about an american family is that it’s on the order of 12 hours long.   i sat through all of it in the course of a week.  i don’t imagine most people would have the time or patience for it.  even edited, the shot-on-film footage is repetitive and boring.  i understand there’s a two hour version of ‘best of’ type scenes that probably is much more worth a look.

an american family was shot in the latter half of 1971 and aired a few months later.   seven years later, the legendary comic albert brooks was making his transition from stand-up and constant talk-show guest to film maker.  he chose the idea of the loud family for his first film, a fake documentary about the making of a simliar series.  he called it real life.

his film is satiric, ironic, insanely funny and amazingly prescient.

having read accounts of how the filming of an american family went, brooks went straight to the ideas that people will act differently when cameras are rolling, and that anyone filming anything wants a spectacular result – and in the absence of anything interesting or worthwhile happening, that observer will meddle, insert himself, and generally create havoc, disaster and invariably, a kind of comedy.

real life is one of the more important movies in movie history for me just for the bravery of ideas is represents.

but it’s also hilariously funny.  the film opens on a town meeting.   albert brooks plays… well, albert brooks.  but of course it is not albert brooks.  he is not playing himself.  he’s playing a parody of himself.

he’s a full of himself producer with big ideas for this small town.  he wraps up the town meeting by singing them a song he ‘wrote on the plane’, although he has the music department from a tv talk show to back him up and totally rehearsed.  he’s dressed like a lunatic and like any lunatic, he’s in love with the truth of his mad ideas.  he actually waltzes off screen.

from the opening day of filming where he introduces the crew to the family  (“here’s a teamster, this is a camera guy, here’s another teamster, it’s a union thing…”), he is not just filming the family but creating an often false narrative because his studio bosses need more story.

the film is wildly entertaining.   almost immediately, the presence of the camera is an issue.  the father is played by charles grodin who is playing the perfect role for charles grodin.  the wife makes a pass at the producer.  the kids are out of control.  it’s great fun and it’s good social commentary.  real life deserves it’s own dissection on this blog.   for a first film, it is remarkably rich with ideas.  it’s tremendously funny and so perfectly satirical that it is almost a capsule of all the great ideas he would come to manifest more articulately in his later, more popular films, like modern romance, defending your life and lost in america.

i think real life is a masterpiece that hasn’t gotten it’s due.

in 2011, hbo films produced cinema verite, a narrative film about the making of an american family.

it has a great cast.  james gandolfini plays craig gilbert.   the loud parents are artfully portrayed by diane lane and tim robbins.

the film is pretty much by the numbers, but gives a pretty good picture of what must have been happening behind the scenes.

the entire film belongs to diane lane, who proves how great an actress she really is when she gets to leave her top on and has good material to work with.    almost every scene belongs to her character and the film is based from her point of view.

this seems fitting.  the point of view of pat loud was the only real anchor for the original pbs series.  this has much to do with the principal concerns of craig gilbert rather than what might have actually been happening.   but i guess that’s what was wrong with an american family in the first place.   well, that and maybe the idea that people probably shouldn’t constantly be filmed and scrutinized….

now, if you’ve ever doubted the wit and genius of the great albert brooks, see his trailer for real life below.  it’s in 3-D, even.

and below, see a teaser trailer for cinema verite.

and below – a short collection of clips from the original series an american family:

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rick perry to the rescue. bob roberts for senate.

look at that stereotypical political imagery above.  doesn’t rick perry fill you with confidence?  soon he’ll be running for president.

the rumblings are happening now.  just like the rumblings about sarah palin and the self-manufactured rumblings of donald trump.   where do these rumblings come from?   i don’t personally know anyone who would be excited by a palin or trump presidential run, save for some comedians.  no one i know was rumbling about them, but the media sure was.

the rumblings don’t come from the people.  they come from the self appointed minitstry of truth and all necessary concerns:  the media and their non-stop chatterbox of experts and talking heads that help them fill the 24 hour news cycle.

they previously touted newt gingrich in the rumblings.  they spoke about him like some did chris christie.  they spoke about him with an aura of excited wonder.  ‘well, if newt gets in, now it’s a race.  that’d be a game changer’.  they really like to repeat the same phrases.  they all seem to be parroting each other, no matter which side they are on.

and then newt announced.  and immediately fell flat.  then his campaign staff all quit at once.  then he offended a lot on the right by not totally following whatever unprinted script they seem to have.  now, before it’s gotten started, his campaign is hugely in debt.  he looks dead in the water.  so much for the rumblings.  the same happened with trump.  a whole lotta nothing – but it gave them something to talk about for a couple of good weeks.  lots of nothing to fill peoples minds and hearts with.

so, who is rick perry?  he’s the governor of texas.  he is a true ‘white’ knight.  he’s a laser-gun-toting, god fearing poster child for republican values.   the idea of values as a plot point in political manuevering has always bothered me.    i’ve never seen the differences between people in this country to be that great.  i distrust anyone who seriously uses the word ‘values’ in public discourse.  the subtext is always that the other person isn’t as moral or as worthy as whoever is speaking.  like so many other tactics, it just appeals to people’s emotions and their inflated senses of who they are.   it also seems to work on a lot of people.

rick perry once bandied about the idea of texas seceding from the united states.  although, years ago he was head of al gore’s campaign in texas.  but that was long before the neo-conservative movement captured the zeitgeist.  now he seems like the comic book version of what a republican would be.  stan lee would draw this same guy.  gosh, you know who he reminds me of right now, rumblings and all?  bob roberts.

bob roberts is a movie written, directed by and starring tim robbins.  it’s done in the guise of fake documentary, but it might as well be downright prophecy, since that’s the language a lot of folks interested in rick perry like to use.  bob roberts has been in my top 10 film list since i first saw it in the theatre just after high school.  then, i wasn’t interested in movies as i am now, but i still thought it was a work of hilarious satire and startling truth.  and he really, really had the neo-conservatives number, almost 20 years ago.

in bob roberts, tim robbins is a wall street wizard and right wing folk singer who is running for senate.  he paradoxically puts forth the virtue of selfishness, the magic of the market, and the immutable power of prayer.  made in 1992, it’s remarkably prescient.

in this film, the media is hapless.  really only one conspriacy-minded reporter (played artfully by giancarlo esposito, who now plays the kingpin, gus, on breaking bad) tries to ask tough questions of him.  in the movie as now, the media doesn’t really do it’s job. they mostly just seem to repeat what they are told.  they fawn over the celebrity of the candidate, and don’t trouble themselves too much with the implications of his attaining office.

bob roberts sings a lot of songs.  his political rallies are part prayer vigils, part speech and part folk concert.  the songs were written by tim robbins and his brother, david.  david also did the score for a movie i reviewed recently, buck.  the songs in bob roberts are both musically interesting and wildly funny.  some lyrics from one of my favorite songs:

grandma felt guilty about being so rich
and it bothered her until the day she died
but i’ll take my inheretance
and invest it with pride, yes – invest it ….. with pride

his folk music works are all sly nods to bob dylan.  they even do a recreation of the pennebaker video for subterranean homesick blues.  bob roberts is a rock and roll rush limbaugh who knows it all, appears to be devoutly religious, and seems to have the world by the tail, thanks largely to that media and a lot of emotional event staging.  people get swept up.  it’s always the same.

even the name: bob roberts.  it reminds me of the simpsons episode where the aliens kang and kodos masquerade as political candidates.  they call themselves jack johnson and john jackson.  they are unmasked by homer.  the people see that they are aliens.  the aliens respond, ‘well, you have to vote for one of us’.  someone in the audience yells out ‘ill vote for a third party candidate’.  the aliens reply?  ‘go ahead, throw your vote away’.   and so one of the aliens wins.  their ultimate goal was to enslave all the earth’s people to build for them.  after marge gets whipped in the brave new alien controlled world, homer snidely chimes in, ‘don’t blame me, i voted for kodos’.  priceless.  i remind that satire is a form of activism.

rick perry’s name is just like bob roberts’ name to me.  they share looks, attitude, belief, ‘values’ and hair.  they are both non-threateningly handsome, but they are still nondescript, somehow.  they both embody a true everyman.  as long as every man is a white, christian, republican.  and they’re exciting, if that’s your thing.  they’re the real deal – if the real deal is a phony crooked bargain.

you should seek out bob roberts.  let me know what you think. i don’t know if netflix has it, but you can find bob roberts here if you use bittorrent.

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