My top 10 films of 2008

These are the ten films I rate highest from 2008 – but it’s from everything I watched, not from the release date. I haven’t included films I re-watched though, otherwise I’d be obliged to have The Big Lebowski etc clogging up the list every year.

I have had a glorious year of cinema. So many wonderful nights spent engrossed in these and other films.

1. I’m Not There (2007) – Bob Dylan’s life retold as an ensemble of intercut myths; film doesn’t get much better than this.

2. Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead (2008 ) – a nasty thriller which unravels from a seemingly simple opening robbery scene into something more and more complicated until you finally realise the significance of what you first saw.

3. The Dark Knight (2008 ) – as good as the hype, an epic vision, satisfyingly complex.

4. The Apostle – a decade old now, but I couldn’t take my eyes off Robert Duvall as a fundamentalist preacher full of hypocrisy and violence and yet earnest and charming with all the language of the fundamentalist world down pat.

5. Charlie Wilson’s War (2008 ) – a political drama with brilliant dialogue and moral ambiguity.

6. The Counterfeiters (2008 ) – set in a German concentration camp, it made me realise how hard it is to be heroic, made me think in all likelihood I wouldn’t be defying Nazis in that situation.

7. The Darjeeling Limited (2007) – at times quirkily poignant as three brothers set out across India to find their mother.

8. Hey Hey It’s Esther Blueberger (2008 ) – charming Australian coming of age film as a Jewish girl finds herself.

9. Be Kind, Rewind (2008 ) – not the masterpiece I hoped for, but a silly, funny film as some video store clerks set out to reshoot all the videos in their store.

10. The Assassination of Richard Nixon (2005) – captures the 1970s very well in tracing the deterioration of a lonely man into madness as he finds himself at odds with the world and decides to get rid of the man behind it all – Nixon.

Honourable mentions: The Bothersome Man; King of Kong; The Italian; Bonnie and Clyde; There Will Be Blood.

Best Christmas novel

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The best Christmas novel I’ve ever read is Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections. Christmas is the impetus for the plot, the telling of each family member’s life put in motion by Enid, the matriarch, attempting to have ‘one last Christmas’ at St Louis before Alfred (the father) slips further into Parkinson’s.

One of the funniest parts is where Chip, the cultural studies academic, realises it is the last day to send presents and picks the newest looking books off his shelf to send. He wraps them in aluminium foil; when the corners poke through he patches them up with abortion rights stickers he had in his desk drawer.

What’s the best Christmas novel you’ve read?

Prose too plain even for me.

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I Know What I’m Doing / Hans Koning[sberger] (1964)

I am a fan of Koning’s unfairly neglected work and I was excited to find a first edition hardback of this book at Gould’s Book Arcade in Sydney on the weekend. But this is the weakest novel of his I’ve read yet.

I usually like Koning’s sparse prose. At its best – such as in The Revolutionary – it is poignant and evocative. Yet in this work, the sparse plainness is all. It is a simple novel of an ordinary girl’s hesitation between two men. It didn’t feel like there were hidden depths: there was only surface.

He  explored similar themes much better in the earlier American Romance.

Most of the novel is in first person with occasional chapters in third person. I don’t know what it would take to make this work, but it doesn’t work here. I think the voices would need to be differentiated enough for it to matter, for there to seem to be a reason to be doing it. As it was, it only interrupted the flow.

The truth about Burke and Wills

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The Dig Tree / Sarah Murgatroyd (2002)

Sarah Murgatroyd wrote this brilliant book about Burke and Wills while dying of cancer in her thirties. She insisted the publisher not publicise her illness at all in the promotion of the book and she died the same year it was published. This brave refusal of self-pity comes through in the book; despite the adventures she must have had researching it, she stays on task, never consciously intruding as an author into her story.

And what a story. Her picture of the incompetent Royal Club’s decision to mount an expedition is a bizarre, fascinating one. The Burke expedition is full of the strangest details. On the first day, they only got as far as Richmond and Burke rode back to Melbourne that night to see the teenage singer who he was obsessed with perform.

I couldn’t put it down as mistake after mistake piles up. The picture of the small party reaching the north of Australia, but not quite seeing the ocean, stopping by estuary a few kilometres short, before heading back is a poignant one.

Burke and Wills’ bodies were retrieved months after their deaths and put on exhibition in Melbourne. Spectators took souvenirs from their bodies – teeth and hair.

This is the kind of book that makes me want to write non-fiction.

Status anxiety in writers

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Writers are generally an anxious lot. Status anxious. (I’ve been guiltier than any.)

Look at the perverse way writers are taught to write their bios : ‘John Smith has been published in Scribblers Monthly, Writers’ Bellybutton, etc and was highly commended in the Collie Shire Writer’s Competition.’ What sort of bio is that? It doesn’t tell us anything about a person. Does the writer expect his or her audience will go look up these obscure journals and be wowed? Not really. I think the writer wants the audience to respect him or her. ‘I’m a real writer’.

Then look at the way writers stress about how much they’ve written, how much others have written. And so many writers trying to intimidate other writers: ‘I’m doing better than you’. (Watch me do it next time some success comes my way.)

I don’t know what to make of this. It’s probably good to celebrate success. After all, writers work so hard for so little reward. But status anxiety is not good.

The real skull

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I was disturbed  after reading how musician Andre Tchaikowsky’s skull was used in the latest production of Hamlet. Perhaps more than anything it is seeing a photo of the skull as well as a photo of Andre himself on his website. And pondering the terrible process whereby one becomes the other. Remembering what lies ahead for all of us. The terrible fact, the terrible remainder of bones. And what did they do with his head as they waited for it to become just a skull? One shouldn’t ponder these things.

‘To work and yet not pay life’s price for working’: a review of Herman Hesse’s Narziss and Goldmund

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Narziss and Goldmund is set in a timeless medieval Europe. It is a dreamy, episodic novel with a kind of beauty that reminds me of The Bridge of San Luis Rey. It deals with similar questions to Wilder’s novel: the deepest questions of what life is for, of what type of life we should lead.

The monk Narziss sends his student Goldmund out into the world to experience it and live it to the full because he senses in Goldmund something Narziss – a cold scholar – can never have: passionate intensity. So, for the bulk of the novel, we follow Goldmund on his life as an adventurer or a vagrant as he goes from bed to bed and house to house, this shining youth who all women fall for. He puts down no roots until he sees a beautiful carving, decides he must become a sculptor and works for a couple of years as an apprentice, carving a magnificent statue of Goldmund.

Yet his old itchy feet return; he cannot settle (the theme is similar to Alain-Fournier’s Le Grande Mealunes) and he goes travelling again. Things take a dark turn as plague descends on the country and the death around him ages him and leaves him wiser.

The pattern continues, though, until finally he is aged enough that eternal youth is no longer an option and he returns to the monastery, finally settled, but deathly ill.

There are pages of densely beautiful, insightful writing. Perhaps this extract sums up the theme better than any other:

Oh, it was high time to accomplish something, carve out some figures to leave behind him; something with longer life in it than he. Small fruit was born of all these wanderings, these years since he escaped into the world. He had saved so little from time; a few figures, carved and left in a workshop, the best of them all his Johannes – and now this unreal picture-book in his head, his fair and agonized image-world of memories. Could he ever manage to rescue some of them, setting them forth for all to see? Or would his life go on like this to the end, always with new cities, new country, new women, fresh experiences, other pictures, one piled up over the other, from which at last he would have nothing, save the restless, painful beauty in his heart? Life tricked so shamelessly. It was enough to make men laugh or weep. A man could live, letting his senses have free rein, sucking his fill at the breasts of Eve, his mother – and then, though he might revel and enjoy, there was no protection against her transience, and so, like a toadstool in the woods, he shimmered today in the fairest colours, tomorrow rotted, and fell to dust.

Or he could set up his defences against life, lock himself into a workshop, and seek to build a monument beyond time. And then life herself must be renounced; the man was nothing but her instrument : though he might serve eternity he withered, he lost his freedom, fullness, and joy of days. Such had been the fate of Master Nicholas.

And yet our days had only a meaning if both these goods could be achieved, and life herself had not been cleft by the barren division of alternatives. To work and yet not pay life’s price for working: to live yet not renounce the work of creation. Could it ever be done?

Some men could do it, perhaps. There might be husbands, and honest fathers of families in the world, whose senses had not been blunted by their fidelity. There might be industrious burghers whose hearts had not been tamed and rendered barren, by their lack of danger and its freedom. Perhaps. He had met none yet.

– pp. 237-238

I thought for a while it was a perfect novel. But the ending feels rushed. The greatest shift in Goldmund – his wearying and rootedness, the end of his youth – seems to accelerate dramatically in the last chapters. But perhaps that’s not a flaw, perhaps it’s even true to how life is sometimes.

Indeed, there is a sense of Hesse knowing he can’t show some of this transition. There is a gap as Goldmund sets out one last time at the end of the penultimate chapter and then returns at the beginning of the next. We only ever learn fragments of what finally broke him or matured him as he feverishly relates it to Narziss while dying.

A beautiful, important novel – as you will either think or not from the extract.

Always it was as though something would happen

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Oh, it was all hard to understand, and all sad, although it was so beautiful. Nobody really knew anything. People lived; they went here and there about the earth and rode through forests; so much seemed to challenge or to promise and so many sights to stir our longing : an evening star, a blue harebell, a lake half-covered in green reeds, the eyes of beasts and human eyes; and always it was as though something would happen, something never seen and yet sighed for, as though a veil would be pulled back off the world; till the feeling passed, and there had been nothing. The riddle was still unsolved, the hidden magic unrevealed, so that, in the end, people grew old and looked comic…

– Herman Hesse Narziss and Goldmund, pp. 71-72.

One of the greatest pleasures of reading is to find described an experience I previously thought private or indescribable. And here Hesse does it. What he describes is the feeling that objects of beauty or enchantment are about to open the door to something else, to some revelation.

I’m reading Hesse because my brother (who is so highly selective one might say) told me I had to, and thrust this coverless copy of Narziss and Goldmund in my hands. I’m so glad I’m persisting; Hesse is an insightful, precise writer, at once innocent and yet deeply wise.

Neglected Books

A blog I’ve started following is the superb Neglected Books. Its tagline says it perfectly – ‘where forgotten books are remembered’.

I find forgotten books so poignant. My wife thinks it’s because of my own fear of being forgotten. Maybe she’s right. But it’s so sad to see books which authors have poured their soul into lie unread and unloved in library stacks or dusty book exchanges, and even then only the sentimental kind that don’t throw out books which haven’t sold in a year.

A book seems such a declaration of hope, a pleading to be remembered. At the time of its publication, it is the newest thing; as far as it – the object, the text, the cover, the advertisements for other books in the back – are concerned, nothing has come after it. And this is how old books have a poignancy for me – as a snapshot of their date of publication, as an object that has come down through those years and into my hands.

I hate the way authors are so quickly forgotten in the cult of the new. One of my favourite writers, John Christopher, wrote on a discussion board how when you’re not in, you’re not in. His last novel, published at age 81 in 2003, sold badly. Where are all the people who grew up on his brilliant books? Why are they neglecting him now?

We can only remember so many, I guess. But I’ll keep devoting time to remembering some, at least. I want to discover the hidden treasures of neglected authors, and the Forgotten Books blog is an ally. (There is nothing quite like the smug aloneness of loving an author no-one else knows about. You become the author’s champion and friend.)