Mad Genius | ||
The Films of Christopher MaclaineRating* * * * A Masterpiece |
||
By Fred Camper |
Christopher Maclaine, a beat poet of the 1940s and '50s living in San Francisco, made only four films in his lifetime; the first and longest two — The End (1953), which is 35 minutes, and the 14-minute The Man Who Invented Gold (1957) — present the profoundest challenge to viewer identification I know of. Avoiding the extreme (though brilliant) conceptual anticinema of such filmmakers as Maurice Lemaître, Maclaine tells stories based in social reality but in a manner so profoundly fragmented, so unnerving, as to give even viewers who've seen the works many times a series of perceptual shocks. Among the greatest films I've ever seen, these twin fables of doom and redemption are also unlike any others I know. After perhaps 20 viewings of The End over the past 30 years, I feel as if I'm only beginning to understand its greatness.
Yet Maclaine and his films have received scant recognition. According to the films' sole distributor, in the past decade The End has been rented twice for Chicago screenings and the other three haven't been rented for showings at all. Chicago Filmmakers' screening of Maclaine's complete works (Friday night only) could include some Chicago premieres. Maclaine isn't discussed in most standard film histories — no surprise, given their scant treatment of experimental work — but he doesn't even come up in most histories of avant-garde filmmaking. And of the two books on beat filmmaking that I know, one doesn't mention him at all and the other gives him less than half a page, mostly quoting the filmmaker Stan Brakhage and styling his name incorrectly, as Brakhage does, as "MacLaine."
Perhaps it's the extremely crude look of his films that puts people off. At first glance it doesn't seem Maclaine has given much thought to the framing, lighting, composition, or camera movement. And his editing — arguably his greatest talent — can seem sloppy, with its jittery rhythms, mismatched cuts, and sudden tangents. An impatient viewer might attribute these films to a careless, naive speed freak — which, sad to say, Maclaine also was.
***
I know of five treatments of Maclaine in print that go beyond a few sentences. Jonas Mekas wrote a very short rave review in 1963, and Brakhage offered enthusiastic appreciation in his 1989 book Film at Wit's End. The End is treated in P. Adams Sitney's Visionary Film, and filmmaker J. J. Murphy has published two articles, one in Film Quarterly (Winter 1979-80) and the other in Film Culture (1983). Most of what little is known about Maclaine's life is the result of Murphy's research. Born in Oklahoma in 1923, Maclaine graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1946 and soon founded a small literary magazine; he also published his poetry in other small magazines and in several small-press books, the last in 1960. Frequently broke and dependent on friends, he cultivated the image of the mad artist; both Brakhage and Murphy compare him to Antonin Artaud. He became a drug casualty when Methedrine was introduced into the Bay Area in the late 50s; much stronger than the amphetamines he'd previously taken, it caused permanent brain damage. When Brakhage describes visiting him in the early 60s, Maclaine sounds like the classic speed freak; at about that time he also made at least one suicide attempt. By the mid-60s he no longer recognized his friends, and in 1969, unable to care for himself, he was placed in a state institution, where he died in 1975.
Perhaps it's Methedrine that accounts for the decline in his films. The wonderful Scotch Hop (1959) is something of a letdown only after seeing his first two staggering, shattering masterpieces. In that film Maclaine intercuts a small band of bagpipers with other scenes, making some costumed young women appear to dance to the bagpipes' rhythms. Scotch Hop is animated by a tension between synchronicity and asynchronicity — the rhythms of the images and the music converge, then diverge. Each image feels as if it were perched on a knife-edge between a world of smooth, lyrical dance and a world about to be torn apart. Beat (1958) is weaker, an odd if sometimes powerful essay on alienation whose lack of emotional focus seems to prove that Maclaine's films need some sort of center, if only for their fragments to fly away from.
***
The End certainly has a center: six stories of people on the
last day of their lives. Most are about to commit suicide, or some metaphorical
equivalent, but the mushroom cloud with which the film begins and ends
reminds us that, as Maclaine's voice intones on the sound track, we await
"the grand suicide of the human race" — his conceit is that his characters
have reached the end of their personal ropes the day before a nuclear holocaust.Throughout
the film he compares the dehumanizing effects of mass culture to the dehumanizing
effects of personal despair, weaving these two threads together until the The film's stories are told in six numbered sections, with Maclaine
serving as narrator. Much of the editing is radically disjunctive, subverting
the usual mode of narrative filmmaking in which characters inhabit continuous
spaces we're encouraged to enter, a universe disrupted only by the occasional
dream sequence or other cutaway. The End constantly pulls the rug
out from under us, but the editing is less intended to alienate the viewer
than to reinforce the film's push-pull dynamic. A shot may establish some
empathy as the narrator tells us the character's pathetic story, yet time
and again a cut to a seemingly unrelated object breaks whatever connection
Maclaine has established. Going beyond mere toying with the viewer, the
film at once plays on our human sympathies and shatters the very possibility
of such involvement. This formal effect is echoed in the narratives themselves:
as we're constantly reminded, these characters — among whom we're encouraged
to find ourselves — are all about to die.
Maclaine's first story revolves around Walter, "our little friend,"
who mooches off his pals until they dump him; like all the stories in The
End, this one seems somewhat autobiographical. Shots of Walter running
around San Francisco emphasize its hilly, spatially unsettling topography,
a motif throughout the film. Years before Hitchcock took San Francisco's
verticality as a metaphor for inner turmoil in the great Vertigo,
Maclaine made even more radical use of the city, tilting his camera to
rotate a steep street into a vertical line, then going beyond it until
it seems people and cars should topple off.
Still more disruptive is Maclaine's editing. Film history offers
many models of what a cut can do. In a conventional narrative, cuts between
shots often represent sequential accretion, the visual equivalent of "this
happened, then this happened." In more poetic films editing can be additive
in a different way, piling image on image as if weaving a tapestry — a
metaphor made explicit in some of Brakhage's films. In Eisenstein's films,
editing is often syncretic, fusing two shots into a new entity in the viewer's
mind: in October (1927), he cuts between Kerensky and a statue of
Napoleon, fusing them into a single idea of a tyrant who would rule Russia.
The editing of Eisenstein's more radical colleague Dziga Vertov calls attention
to the differences between shots, differences he called "intervals," and
what they tell us about each image.
Maclaine offers a style of editing unanticipated by previous filmmakers
and rarely pursued since: a kind of "destructive" cutting in which the
cut pulls two shots away from each other and pulls the viewer away from
both. A cut from the first section, for example, shifts from black and
white to color, from far to near, from the geometrical to the organic.
In the middle of a black-and-white shot of a tiny silhouetted figure atop
a huge mass of steps whose lines fill the frame, Maclaine cuts to a color
close-up of pink flowers, then back to a black-and-white shot of the steps.
A later cut in the same section juxtaposes two shots with more movement:
a color shot shows one of Walter's friends doing a handstand — seen close,
her figure is sensual, but the shot also parodies the idea that Walter's
friends are adults. Maclaine then cuts to a black-and-white shot of Walter
running away from us down a narrow street; the buildings that frame the
street provide a geometrical contrast to the shot of the woman, a disjunction
that underlines Maclaine's editing constitutes neither accretion nor fusion but
a kind of visceral tearing, questioning not only the unity of our culture
but the possibility of a unified consciousness, anticipating many postmodern
theorists who seem unaware of his work. For Maclaine, each character's
existence is a discontinuous flood of often unrelated thoughts. (Murphy
quotes a psychiatrist who knew Maclaine on the effects of speed: "All the
ideas come out" in a rush, he said, "like putting tomatoes through a strainer.")
But The End is a powerful, even ecstatic experience not because
it's disjunctive but because it establishes a tension between emotionally
engaged and alienated modes of thinking, a tension that pervades the imagery,
editing, and sound track. Just as the pink flowers pull us away from the
concrete steps, so the first section ends not with Walter's suicide but
with his murder: the narrator tells us that the murderer, "for reasons
we know nothing about, .... decided to blow the head off the next person
he saw." And just as the pink flowers are The viewer is also divided by Maclaine's often crude, sometimes
hilarious, ultimately deeply affecting narration. Sometimes he explains
the imagery, increasing our involvement by telling us stories that the
images seem to illustrate; just as often his narration pulls us away
from the imagery and makes us aware of our presence in the theater. Some
long sections of narration are accompanied only by a black screen; denied
any imagery, the viewer is stuck in an uncomfortable self-consciousness
made even worse by such lines as "The person next to you is a leper." In
what is perhaps the film's most ecstatic moment, at the beginning of the
fifth section, Maclaine asks us to "write this story" as he shows us an
especially disjunctive group of images — the protagonist (Maclaine himself)
with a knife, a woman's feet walking over a street grate, a group of pigeons
— accompanied by the "Ode to Joy" section of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.
"Here is a character," the narrator says. "Here is the most beautiful music
on earth. Here are some pictures. What is happening?" In a characteristic
shift, Maclaine then tells the story himself, explaining how this protagonist
was "a good boy *** The Man Who Invented Gold, very different from The End,
is fully as masterful. It focuses on a modern-day alchemist whose zombielike
neighbors think of him as "madman" while he aspires to become "goldman."
Again Maclaine narrates, likening the quest to create gold to a quest for
the "world of light"; the editing is as disjunctive as in The End
but arguably has a much more optimistic meaning, bringing to the forefront
the Gnostic longing to escape substance and recover light that underlies
parts of The End (a theme of which I was first made aware by filmmaker Brian Frye in an unpublished article).
The filmmaker Jordan Belson, who shot The End, shot part of The
Man Who Invented Gold before he tired of Maclaine's antics and quit.
Forced to operate the camera himself, Maclaine could no longer play the
alchemist. His "solution" — fully worthy of the maker of The End
— was to have not one but two other actors play the lead. Further, while
Belson filmed Maclaine in color, Maclaine filmed his actors in black and
white, later intercutting color, black-and-white, and black-and-white negative
images of the "madman." He also cut from one actor to the other as if they
were the same man, even appearing to match motions across the cuts. Of
course all these techniques undercut viewer identification with the alchemist,
though they're entirely appropriate to a film by and about a madman. The
narrator's references to alchemy are accompanied by cuts to abstract images,
scratches made directly on the film or colored powders dropped on the floor
in what look like abstract expressionist patterns — images that make it
clear that destructive cutting can also transform. Maclaine realizes the
alchemist's gnostic goal not in the film's story — the protagonist ultimately
turns only eyeballs into gold — but in the film itself: abstract bursts
of color, light streaming in through a window, or the tiny yo-yo a character
carries near the end represent the brief moments of visual magic that lift
us out of imprisonment in the material world.
This idea is most vivid in the final image of The Man Who Invented
Gold. A "poet" who suddenly appears near the end holds up a sign saying
"it's hard to believe," a phrase the narrator repeats, and then we see
a piece of dark clothing hanging on a line, shot from below and perfectly
aligned with a rainbow. A rapid camera movement makes the dark form seem
to rise along the rainbow, quickly reaching the top of the frame. It's
as if the rainbow were emerging from the garment, as if the cloth — or,
more to the point, the movement of Maclaine's camera — were "writing" the
rainbow.
Brakhage, and many other avant-garde filmmakers after Maclaine,
have celebrated simple acts of perception that can reframe the world —
our potential to transform the mundane into the magical. Maclaine does
it here in a shot no one seems to have noticed, a little throwaway image
that not only sums up his idea but anticipates a whole era of filmmaking.
Even as he discovers this magic, however, he pulls away from it: this miraculous
shot is undercut by the "hard to believe" line that precedes it and by
the fact that it lasts a scant 21 frames — less than a second.
Subscription
and general information about the Reader.
Copyright © Fred Camper 1999
On Film Main
Screen | Now
Showing | Showtimes
| Brief Reviews |
Critic's
Choice | Archive
of Long Reviews
Here's also a short blurb I wrote
on Maclaine's films for the film
listings in the same issue of the Reader that the above review appeared
in:
San Francisco beat poet Christopher Maclaine made only
four films, but the longer two are among the greatest and most original
I've ever seen. Rarely screened, perhaps because of their crude, homemade
look, they have an emotional and spiritual authenticity few mainstream
films can match.
The End (1953), running 35 minutes, tells the stories
of seven people on the last day of their lives (most of them are preparing
to kill themselves, but the world is also about to be annihilated by the
Bomb) with a mix of black humor and bizarre twists. The editing and Maclaine's
narration are constantly veering off in unexpected directions, replicating
the disordered thoughts of a person on the brink; during one particularly
jumbled sequence of images, he invites us to make up the story. In The
Man Who Invented Gold (1957) a "madman" loner emulates the medieval
alchemists, and the rapidly changing colors of the film's opening titles
provide a clue to its gnostic theme: like an alchemist, the filmmaker can
use cinematic techniques to turn darkness into light. On the same program:
Beat (1958) and Scotch Hop (1959).
Christopher Maclaine's films are available for rental from the Film-Makers' Cooperative.
Links on this page:
Chicago Filmmakers
Chicago Reader
Chicago
Reader verson of Maclaine review
Film at Wit's End
Film Culture
Film Quarterly
Brian Frye
Gnosticism
The
Journal of Film Preservation.
Maurice Lemaître
J. J. Murphy