Skip to main content

Wise Blood


I watched Wise Blood the other night.  I haven't read the book, which I plan to soon remedy, but here is an essay on the film as it related to Flannery O'Connor's novel.  It seemed John Huston took a less "grotesque" approach, although many of the symbolic references remained.  He updated the setting to the 70s.  Of course, not much had changed since the 50s except the cars in this Southern city.  Hazel chooses a 1950s behemoth to drive around in.  Huston took Hazel Motes' personal quest for salvation seriously, even if he appeared to lampoon it by the odd assortment of characters around him.  I thought Brad Dourif and the supporting cast, which included Harry Dean Stanton and Ned Beatty, were excellent.

Comments

  1. And at the other extreme, I watched the Ox Bow Incident last night. I had read the book -- I once was a big fan of Walter Van Tilburg Clark -- but I don't think I'd ever seen the movie.

    I just checked on the dates, because I was sure it had to have been a 1950s film because of the storyline. But it was made right after the book came out in the early 1940s. Seems like false accusations and mob justice were just out there waiting for a McCarthy to come forth.

    And this was yet another western featuring the Confederate officer after the Civil War. I guess I should look up the movie in Gunfighter Nation because I always find the South's appearance in these movies fascinating -- fighting another lost cause?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Oddly enough TCM had The Ox Bow Incident on just about a week ago so I was surprised to see it again there last night.Very dark film.The LA PBS station KCET now that they have given up first run PBS programming to another local PBS oulet in Orange County now has movies on Sunday night so I watched the original version of The Razors Edge with Tyrone Power instead.bosox

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm going with the Flannery O'Connor "omnibus" from Library of America,

    http://www.loa.org/volume.jsp?RequestID=105

    ReplyDelete
  4. Stumbled across another odd evangelical movie, The Apostle, with Robert Duvall. Very well done.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

  Welcome to this month's reading group selection.  David Von Drehle mentions The Melting Pot , a play by Israel Zangwill, that premiered on Broadway in 1908.  At that time theater was accessible to a broad section of the public, not the exclusive domain it has become over the decades.  Zangwill carried a hopeful message that America was a place where old hatreds and prejudices were pointless, and that in this new country immigrants would find a more open society.  I suppose the reference was more an ironic one for Von Drehle, as he notes the racial and ethnic hatreds were on display everywhere, and at best Zangwill's play helped persons forget for a moment how deep these divides ran.  Nevertheless, "the melting pot" made its way into the American lexicon, even if New York could best be describing as a boiling cauldron in the early twentieth century. Triangle: The Fire That Changed America takes a broad view of events that led up the notorious fire, not...

Team of Rivals Reading Group

''Team of Rivals" is also an America ''coming-of-age" saga. Lincoln, Seward, Chase et al. are sketched as being part of a ''restless generation," born when Founding Fathers occupied the White House and the Louisiana Purchase netted nearly 530 million new acres to be explored. The Western Expansion motto of this burgeoning generation, in fact, was cleverly captured in two lines of Stephen Vincent Benet's verse: ''The stream uncrossed, the promise still untried / The metal sleeping in the mountainside." None of the protagonists in ''Team of Rivals" hailed from the Deep South or Great Plains. _______________________________ From a review by Douglas Brinkley, 2005

The Age of Roosevelt: The Crisis of the Old Order

A quarter of a century, however, is time enough to dispel some of the myths that have accumulated around the crisis of the early Thirties and the emergence of the New Deal. There is, for example, the myth that world conditions rather than domestic errors and extravagances were entirely responsible for the depression. There is the myth that the depression was already over, as a consequence of the ministrations of the Hoover Administration, and that it was the loss of confidence resulting from the election of Roosevelt that gave it new life. There is the myth that the roots of what was good in the New Deal were in the Hoover Administration - that Hoover had actually inaugurated the era of government responsibility for the health of the economy and the society. There is the contrasting myth (for myths do not require inner consistency) that the New Deal was alien in origins and in philosophy; that - as Mr. Hoover put it - its philosophy was "the same philosophy of government which...