A Writer’s Tale-A Blocked
Writer’s Tale-When Writers Wrote For Keeps About Soldiers’ Trials And Tribulations-Vincente
Minnelli’s Film Adaptation Of James Jones’ “Some Came Running” (1958)-A Film
Review
DVD Review
By Josh Breslin
Some Came Running,
starring Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Shirley MacLaine, Martha Hyer, directed by
Vincente Minelli, adapted from the novel by James Jones, 1958
No question I was first
drawn to Some Came Running, a film
based on the novel of the same name by James Jones whose more famous novel Here To Eternity also was adapted to the
screen and stands as one of the great classic films of the modern cinema, by
the ex-soldier’s story and then by his plight as a blocked writer. The draw of
the ex-soldier’s story reflected something that had been in my own experience
about coming back to the “real” world after the military, after Vietnam. That seems to be the character played by Frank
Sinatra Dave Hirsh’s situation. That inability to go to the nine to five
routine, to settle down after military service had shaken him out of his
routine rang a bell. In my own military service generation, in my own service,
I ran across plenty of guys who couldn’t deal with the “real” world coming back
from Vietnam and who tried to hide from that fact as “brothers under the
bridges” alternate communities out in places like Southern California.
The late Pete Markin and
I actually at one point lived out along a railroad track near Westminster south
of LA with a group of similarly estranged Vietnam veterans for a while and
Markin did an award-winning series on the subject. To show you how close things
could get that writing done just before he succumbed to his own hubris and wanting
habits getting himself killed when to satisfy his cocaine habit he tried to do
an end around big ass drug deal down in Mexico with the wrong hermanos and wound
up with two slugs to the heart for his troubles. I see and hear about young
Iraq and Afghanistan War service personnel having the same woes and worse,
having incredibly high suicide rates. So yeah, I was drawn to Dave’s sulky,
moody, misshapen view of the world.
The story line is a
beauty. Dave, after a drunken spree, finds he was shipped by bus back in that
state by some guys in Chicago to his Podunk hometown in Parkman, Indiana, a
town he had fled with all deliberate speed when he was a kid orphaned out by
his social-climbing older brother Frank because, well, because he was in the
way of that social-climber after their parents die. Dave was not alone in his
travels though since he had picked up, or had been attached to, a floozy named
Ginny, played by Shirley MacLaine, who will make life hell for him in the end.
As he became accustomed to his old hometown and while deciding whether to stay
or pick up stakes (the preferred fate of his brother and his also
social-climbing wife) he was introduced to a local school teacher Gwen, played
by Martha Hyer, who will also make hell for him in the end since he was quickly
and madly in love with her. In response she was seriously stand-offish almost
old maid stand-offish since she had had a few tastes of his rough-hewn low life
doings. Doings which were encouraged by a gambler, Bama, played by Dean Martin
who became his sidekick.
But here is the hook
that almost saved Dave and almost lit a spark under dear Gwen. Dave was a
blocked writer, had some time before written a couple of books that were
published and had gathered some acclaim, were well written. Gwen attempted to
act as his muse and did prove instrumental in getting a work of his published.
To no avail since Dave was not looking for a muse, well, not a muse who wasn’t
thinking about getting under the silky sheets. No go, no go despite Dave’s
ardent efforts. Frustrated Dave turned to Ginny and whatever charms she had-and
the fact that she loved him unconditionally despite their social and
intellectual differences. In the end Dave in a fit of hubris decided to marry
Ginny after being rebuffed by Gwen enough times. The problem though was that
Ginny had a hang on gangster guy trailing her who was making threatening noises
about putting Dave, and or Ginny underground.
In the end they were not
just threatening noises as he wounded Dave and killed poor bedraggled Ginny.
Watch this one-more than once and read James Jones’ book too which includes
additional chapters about those soldiers who could not relate to the “real”
world after their military experiences. This guy, this James Jones, could sure
write about that milieu based on his own military service. (There is a famous
photograph of Jones, Norman Mailer, and William Styron, the three great soldier-
boy American literary lights of the immediate post-World War II period with
Jones in uniform if I recall.) Grab book
and film of Here to Eternity too if
you want to know what it was like when men, and it was mainly men before Afghanistan
and Iraq II wrote about the fate of civilian- soldiers for keeps.
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