Before “The Last Picture
Show” Was The “Last Picture Show” With The Larry McMurtry Book In Mind
Book Review
By Jack Callahan
The Last Picture Show,
by Larry Mc Murtry,
It is time to rally
around the troops. Time for me to put my two cents worth in defending my
old-time friends who write for this blog (and the on-line editions of American Folk Gazette, American Film Gazette
and Progressive Nation among others).
Time to honor one old pal, Phil Larkin, known in the old days as Foul-mouth
Phil who others have written about in this space and mainly have gotten right
about the origin of the name. About the weird twist too of how the girls,
including my wife of over forty years Chrissie McNamara, even good go to
church, Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church, every Sunday and who had rosary
beads always present in their hands and a Bible between their knees like her,
secretly liked his constant swearing so that he among us all never lacked for
dates, at least one date anyway with them. But that is not why I am honoring
Phil today since I have much more important business to attend to before I get
to a short review of this excellent book by Larry McMurtry, The Last Picture Show, which I saw as a
movie (with Chrissie) long before I first read his book (and a number of other
related one about the fictional town of Thalia back in the 1950s) which Seth
Garth, a longtime writer for this blog mentioned to me has come out recently in
a trilogy according to what he had read in the New York Review of Books).
That other fish to fry
deals with Phil’s portentous statements which were taken by most of the older
staff here, including me, as the usual rantings of Phil when he doesn’t get
exactly what he wants, what he considers his due. This time it is centered on a
number of statements which he has made as part of his film reviews about the
older writers who had been close to the previous site manager being purged, a
word at least one of the younger writers has used freely in his reviews so he,
they, those now victorious younger writers, must be feeling the wind in their
sails. I will not mention his name since the current site manager Greg Green
well known for red-penciling, not blue like most editors, copy has “warned”
people off doing so under the pretext that “we have to move on” from that
pernicious influence) backed up by the newly installed Editorial Board ( a
board handpicked by Green and loaded, overloaded, with younger writers who
supported him in the internal struggle against that previous site manager and
who are really nothing but toadies and rubber-stampers for him).
Readers familiar with
this site, and perhaps with the internal dispute which wound up with the
departure and “exile” of that previous manager, know that I have been neither a
leading contributor to the writings posted here although I have been the
subject of many reminiscences by the older writers including the old gang
famous, maybe infamous, one since more than one old fogy has gotten parts
wrong, of how Chrissie and I met, nor very vocal in the fight between the
younger and older writers which led to that previous manager’s “purge.” (Like I
said previously I best put any possible controversial words in quotes to avoid
that sweeping Green red pencil despite all the claptrap about the new regime
being more democratic, more open to broadening the scope of what is being
written about and by whom than previously.) The reason I grabbed this book
assignment was that the older writers believed that I would be the only one who
had “not burned his bridges” to the new regime which is the way one wag put the
matter and could expect to get my piece posted.
Moreover they believed
that it would “grease the rails” (I forgot who said that) if I as a big
financial backer of the enterprise did the talking about what appears to be
coming down the road for the older writers, and who knows maybe some younger
recalcitrant writers too (remember the fraught with danger “p” word). That
financial backing based on my very successful business as a Toyota car dealer,
Mr. Toyota in Eastern Massachusetts with Chrissie as Ms. Toyota so I do not
depend on paychecks and fears of lack of paychecks like the others who moreover
are closing in on retirement. They don’t want to wind up following the example
of the previous manager who with one exception, one important exception, Sam
Lowell, who is the only one from the old gang who was placed on that suddenly
emergent “democratic” Ed Board, supported him. Don’t want to wind up as the
rumors have it hustling newspapers out in Utah for the Mormons with no
retirement pension income (I don’t know about his Social Security status), no
health plan (if he didn’t have adequate S.S. quarters), and no source for
getting steady postings against the dark and wild savage nights going forward
(not my expression but one of the older guy’s). I have committed to rallying
around the troops and this is the first shot. But enough of this for now.
*********
As I mentioned in my
defense declaration above my first connection with Larry McMurtry’s The Last Picture Show was viewing the
film adaptation by Peter Bogdanovich starring Jeff Bridges as Duane the roughneck’s roughneck, Timothy Bottoms as
the gentile roughneck, as Sonny, and Cybil Shepard as the alluring and sexually
predatory poor little oil money boomtown rich girl Jacy who has Duane and all
the boys in heat, especially Duane and in his dreams Sonny. I should also
mentioned that I saw this one the first time at the Hingham, Massachusetts,
Plaza Theater when it first opened (a nice counter-position to the “last” in
the film title) with Chrissie. That was when we were first living together
before we got did get married a couple of years later and well after she had
abandoned those rosary bead hands and squeezed Bible knees. Needless to say
coming up as an urban, maybe better, suburban roughneck from a hard-struck
declining North Adamsville a town like Thalia, with a ton of roughneck friends
some of who turned out okay and have written for a long time in places like
this blog (although for how much longer is anybody’s guess) and some who didn’t
fare so well the film struck a deep chord, “spoke” to me. Spoke to me as well
since sports, football in particular, was a subtext for the friendship between
Duane and Sonny just like it had been for me and guys like Phil Larkin. (I had
been a star football player who led the Blue Warriors to two division state
high school Super Bowls which had a lot to do with how Chrissie and I met
initially although not how we have stayed together pretty happily for so long.)
One thing that Seth
Garth, a serious writer and a man who has written many well-received articles
in this space, who was perhaps my closest friend in high school after we had a
fight over Chrissie’s affections and reconciled, has always mentioned to me
when writing about films based on novels is how closely they adhere to the
storyline of the book. I remember once when we were having a couple of drinks
at the old watering hole The Sagamore Grille in Hingham in the days when he
could drink unlike now when he has sworn off the stuff we got to talking about
fidelity to the book of certain films. This was when I was first interested in
writing some reviews for posting here when the previous site manager was more
than happy to have an old friend (and serious financial contributor I know helped
as well) write up a little something. Seth mentioned that he was appalled when
a film screenplay, script, was nothing like the plotline of the book and
seemingly the only reason for keeping the title and author’s name was to draw
the crowds in based on that cache.
Seth always would bring
up two classic cases both by Ernest Hemingway. One, To Have And Have Not, where in the book the Captain Harry Morgan is
a rogue, has-been sea captain running crap to Cuba for the highest bidder with
a wife who had seen better days and a parcel of kids. Against the film version where
Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall sizzle up the screen with what Seth called
some of the sexiest hottest scenes of two people with their clothes on he had
ever seen while doing yeoman’s service to the French Resistance in the
Caribbean during World War II. The other The
Killers, a short story which starts and ends with two professional killers
acting as hitmen for somebody who wanted an ex-pug out of the way and leaving
the narrator wondering why he did not put up any resistance. Against the film
starring Burt Lancaster as the ex-pug and fall guy and Ava Gardner as a femme
fatale who has him going through the hoops for her as the reason that he went
gentle into that good night. A dame in short like has happened to a million
other guys except this time old Burt paid with his life for shacking up with
her.
In Last Picture Show the film there is no such problem since the film
adheres in the basic plotline and better in the spirit of two young roughneck
Texas boys coming of age in the early 1950s. I first read the book in the 1990s
I think when I was on a Larry McMurtry tear after viewing Texasville which is about this same grouping and town about twenty
years later once they have gotten over their teenage angst and alienation. I
was struck then as now by how closely the key episodes match up. The only added
statement I would make at this time is that the book draws many more explicit
sexual scenes, more graphically written than the shyer film does including
references to homosexually, male and female orgasms, the sexual frustration
aspect of the teen angst and alienation component, and the problems as well as
good points of growing up in a small if declining town out in what was then
considered the Texas countryside.
Finally, I have changed my opinion as I told Seth one of those nights
when we were having those few permitted whiskeys at the Sagamore Grille I think
everybody should read the classic book first and then the classic film. Now I
wish I had done so.
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