Sunday, July 16, 2017

Dreaming On Our Dimes


What, exactly, is the work of Ed Cachianes? Every now and again, he puts forth a short film. These might reductively be called mashups, as they’re composed primarily of clips and bits and bobs that obviously result from decades of voracious immersion in American pop culture (and beyond). But that’s like saying, possibly, that early Cubism was obsessed with headlines because its artists used scraps of newspapers.

No; I think he’s up to something more, and while the overall effect is occasionally antic (as in this small gem from earlier this year), heartache and even tragedy are never all that distant in the wings. His Follies @ theRoxy, which I’ve plugged a number of times and may well do again, is the most elegant, pitiless distillation of the Hollywood Dream Factory of which I know, encapsulating in its few minutes the birth, brief life, and cruel death of the illusion of stardom.

Now he’s brought us something different. Set to Joni Mitchell’s “Chinese Café,” which is also the film’s title (and set as evocatively as was Roxy to the music of Sondheim), this new one blends several strands, in much the way that the song itself weaves in haunting lines from “Unchained Melody” as it tells a tale of suburban anomie. In one sense, Cachianes is creating a sort of middle-aged man’s reflection on the lives of our mothers as they themselves entered middle age: the kitchens, the housework, the steady stream of TV kitsch, and the even-more endless stream of cigarettes (in a way, it’s astonishing that anyone raised in the ‘sixties still has lungs, our parents smoked so relentlessly). In another – and in a deeper way, I think – he’s also telling the story (as the song does, to a point) of how the times in which they lived shaped those women’s dreams and regrets, and more than that: how those dreams and regrets have shaped our own.

As he often does, he uses a mix of images familiar and less so, stocking his threnody with just enough leavening of known faces that help tell the story without ever sidetracking it, and ending, in a way that’s deeply moving, with an extended reaction shot in which a remarkable gamut of expressions play across the exposed, vulnerable face of Cloris Leachman, an underappreciated artist, from The Last Picture Show.

That is something, in regard to Mr. Cachianes, that one very much hopes this is not. Each new work seems to get deeper, richer, and (in the Shakespearian sense) stranger. I’m not, alas, deeply familiar with the works of Joni Mitchell, so I don’t quite know what place “Chinese Café” has in the minds of people who are so. I do know that it’s now a song I’ll listen to always with a memory, created here, of a half-resigned, half-still aching woman singing to her friend Carol, probably in a smoky kitchen as the TV plays some advertiser’s fantasy. They’re the women who raised us, Carol and her friend, and they’re gallant souls. It’s not all bleak, I realize; after all, it blazes forth, Oz-like, into flaming color for a few bright moments, and there’s something in Cloris’s eyes that says that somehow, against all odds, perhaps we’ll make it through. After all, time can do so much…

7 comments:

  1. It not only ends but also starts out with Cloris Leachman. That's her running toward the headlights in 1955's Kiss Me Deadly.

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    1. Thank you! In some areas, I'm shocking ignorant. Cachianes, clearly, isn't.

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    2. Including, it would seem, in my ability to type adverbs correctly: shockingly.

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  2. He has excellent taste in actresses. Jeannie Berlin & Barbara Harris!

    And as for under appreciated Cloris, you did see in her "American Gods," right? Still getting roles at 91? That ain't chopped liver honey.

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    1. Haven't seen it, but did note with approbation her appearance. I have something of a Chenoweth allergy, though...

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    2. No, no, it's really well worth watching, and I say that as someone who went in rather doubtfully, being a huge fan of Gaiman and American Gods in particular. But Cloris is good in it and they use Chenowith very effectively, working her odd tics into the story.

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  3. Also, what a charming little film.

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