With season 2 of Mindhunter barreling down the pike at me ... wanted to re-up this old thread, where I tried to put into words the tone of the book ... which is very hard to pin down ... since it feels inadvertent on the part of the author. Fincher felt it too.
Looking through that old thread and remembering having a good conversation with @meganeabbott about it. It's difficult to put into words - the feel of that original book - and how well Fincher translated it (imo) into the adaptation.
@meganeabbott Here's the book. It's excellent! I read it long before this series came along. This and Robert Ressler's work - long-time fascinations of mine: amazon.com/Mindhunter-Ins…
@meganeabbott This past year has been really weird for us long-time true crime buffs. The Ted Bundy movie, the QT movie, all these people tut-tutting with horror over "why are you interested in this stuff?" Uhm, b/c True Crime is a bazillion $ biz, I don't know where YOU'VE been.
@meganeabbott and the Chris Watts case too was this past year and it gripped a vast portion of the True Crime community for a good 6 months, esp. when the FBI interrogators went back to the prison to question him - mainly b/c they too were like "WTF makes this monster tick...."
@meganeabbott and all of it was recorded by the interrogators and then released onto Youtube. A matter of public record. The Mindhunter quality of all of it - how those interrogators drew him out - flattering him - etc. - my True Crime peeps and I were RIVETED.
It's so weird to get irritated at other peoples' enthusiasm. I've been dealing w/it since I was 5 - one of my 1st memories is being told to calm tf down - so I'm a hardened veteran. I just don't experience other peoples' enthusiasms w/anything other than appreciation. Weirdos.
Imagine being like: "wow, you are posting a lot about a thing I have no interest in. How dare you." Imagine being a person like that. Soooo many people post all the time a/b things I have no interest in. I'm happy enthusiasm exists for them.
and sometimes someone's frenzied passion turns me onto something that wasn't on my radar. WIN WIN, ya freakin self-centered weirdos. In the meantime and related: I love this carefully constructed bit of blocking in LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT.
Speaking of these two: here they are in Henry Jaglom's TRACKS, which you should see if you haven't. If I were in charge of the world, I would have organized a production of KING LEAR, where these two alternated the role of Lear and Lear's Fool.
I spend my time dreaming up fictional theatre productions that I personally want to see. Send help.
The big one, which is now not possible (sob), was a prod. of Jesus Christ Superstar, starring "grunge" icons. This was mainly because I wanted to hear Chris Cornell sing "Too Much Heaven On Their Minds" and "Damned For All Time". I was like "who do I need to talk to about this."
It's the birthday of the father of the power-chord and all-around rock 'n roll icon, Link Wray. A little thread. #LinkWray#BOTD
First, we have to talk about "Rumble." "Rumble" (1958) was considered so dangerous that radio stations refused to play it. **"Rumble" is an instrumental**. In Twitter-ese: Let that sink in.
And you know what? The people who were afraid of it weren’t wrong. Those who were afraid of “Rumble” sensed correctly that the song was part of what was shattering society's status quo. Step aside, grown-ups. The kids are in charge now. And they're all on motorcycles.
“I’m not offended by all the dumb blonde jokes because I know I’m not dumb… and I also know I’m not blonde.” – Dolly Parton. #BOTD ready for a thread. #DollyParton
One of Dolly Parton's earliest singles (which she didn't write) was "Dumb Blonde." She knew going in who she was, what she wanted to look like, how she was perceived, and she was never anybody's fool about it. #DollyParton
I love Dolly Parton's stuff with Porter Wagoner. (I love her in duets, in general - but these, in particular, have an intensity and sincerity you can feel.) Here they are performing "We Found It". Heart-piercing. #DollyParton
I link to this on Archie Leach's b-day every year: an essay for a Film Preservation Blogathon back in 2011 - about Grant's character in NOTORIOUS - a character study, really - and how he plays it. "A fat-headed guy full of pain." sheilaomalley.com/?p=54702
My friend Mitchell and I had a lengthy conversation once about Grant - and I recorded it (see next Tweet). But here's Mitchell, to give you a taste:
Just a little thread of some of the things I wrote on my own site in 2020. Yes, the site is a monster. I can't help it. I've been writing over there for 18 years. It's an oasis. For me anyway and hopefully for others!
I interviewed Jennifer McCabe, Associate Professor at Lehman College in the Theatre Department (she also teaches at NYU) a/b the fascinating exercises she's developed to help solve common problems she saw w/her acting students. DEEP DIVE into PROCESS. sheilaomalley.com/?p=154648
I didn't start OUT wanting my blog to be a veritable birthday-calendar, but that's what's happened. It's an offshoot of writing over there for 18 years. They're fun to do. Here's one on Anita Loos: sheilaomalley.com/?p=157207