Saturday, August 31, 2013

AUG - The Club Dumas

August review for the Eclectic Reader's Book Challenge 2013: The Club Dumas by Arturo Pérez-Reverte, 1996. [Historical Mystery category]

The Club Dumas by Arturo Pérez-Reverte is a an interesting novel. The main players all have shadows from great literature wound into their characters, and the main plot line hinges on the authentication of an old chapter of a Dumas manuscript, the line between reality and fiction ever blurring. Our protagonist--though not our narrator--is middle-aged cynic Lucas Corso, book detective, and we follow him on two seemingly intertwined errands: one for a fellow mercenary of the book industry in authenticating a lost manuscript chapter from The Three Musketeers; the other a mysterious side project for which he is being paid handsomely, researching a satanic book called The Book of the Nine Doors of the Kingdom of Shadows, a book that only has three known copies. As he follows the trails of clues from Spain to Sintra to Paris, his life becomes dangerously entwined with fiction in a way that he cannot get ahead of. The narrative power lies with a seemingly inconsequential character who fades into the background after a few acknowledgements, Boris Balkan, and this subtle omniscience helps to set the stage for the way the book is going to deal with its themes. His presence in the background almost causes the reader to not realize that Pérez-Reverte is constantly changing the rules of the story, leaving us as much in the dark as our dispassionate "hero" is. There are always characters around Corso that know more than he does, and as hard as he tries to gain their knowledge, he can never quite get there. Case in point is the mysterious girl Corso falls into line with, the girl with the striking green eyes who introduces herself as Irene Adler and gives no explanation to her part in the narrative. All the women especially have this one-step-ahead quality.

Speaking of young Irene, allow to indulge my favorite intellectual pastime and look at the lady characters! The three major players are Liana Taillefer, the Girl, and Baroness Frieda Ungern, each compared to an incredibly competent fictional figures: Milady de Winter from Alexandre Dumas' The Three Musketeers, Irene Adler from the Sherlock Holmes stories, and Miss Marple of Agatha Christie's mystery novels, respectively. These characters are surprising in all their respective stories, always self-confident and knowledgeable and ultimately capable of fulfilling their own agendas. It translates nicely to the three women in Corso's new whirlwind adventure.

The first one we meet is Liana Taillefer, widow of the publisher whose untimely death snarled all this business up. Liana is very obviously sexualized from the start, from our distant narrator taking advantage of her while she thought she was making a trade, to her apparent seduction of Corso's friend La Ponte (who hired Corso for the Dumas project in the first place). And then she is increasingly compared to Milady, a character from the very story she is trying to authenticate. Toward the end of the tale, the narrator brings up an interesting debate about the character of Milady,

Second is the Girl, the one with the striking green eyes who keeps showing up in Corso's line of sight, the one who unsmilingly deems herself Irene Adler. She is the young one, she represents youth, dispassionate knowledge, some sort of baffling protection. Corso ends up sleeping with her as well, but it isn't as easy as taking Liana Taillefer. The Girl speaks to Corso on a level that is lower than consciousness, than logical thought, but all the same a level that he needs as much as his constant imbibing of Bols gin.

Third but possibly most important is Baroness Frieda Ungern, the last stop on Corso's Nine Doors treasure hunt. Linked to brilliant and crafty Miss Marple, f all the owners of The Nine Doors, the Baroness is the most forthcoming, the most knowledgeable, most down-to-earth. She engages Corso more than any of the other owners of the Nine Doors, and her cult status as a witch intrigues him. She got the book from Madame de Montespan--another powerful, outspoken woman. There is history here out in the open, and Corso doesn't have to equivocate or break back in at night to absorb it. It was a meeting of the minds on an equal plane, and even though Corso held some things back, Baroness is no fool. She helped him more than the other two owners combined, and her wisdom helped Corso to solve the case eventually.

Not only did Pérez-Reverte take historical characters and events for his literary thriller, but he also mimicked the style of the very stories he used as his backdrop. I say this in terms of the format and tone Pérez-Reverte employs: The Club Dumas looks at serials like that of Dumas, including some substantial historical information about the rise of serials and the tendencies of Alexandre Dumas, père, and each chapter sort of feels like a chapter in a serial, ending with the sword looming ominously above the neck, an untold secret just come to light, a near-death experience. Sure it is a little disconnected, and you have to wait until the next page to realize what the characters have already pieced together, but I think it adds to the playfulness with which Pérez-Reverte deals with the idea of a serial. It's sort of a tongue-in-cheek appropriation of the style that lends itself nicely to the "historical mystery" category.

As for my overall opinion of the book? I enjoyed it, it was a nice change of pace. The last third of the book hit me almost at a jumble, with the coalescence of two different stories, and I was as confused as Corso when they didn't all fit together, but somehow it worked better for me. It reinforced the line between reality and fiction that had become so blurred throughout the novel. Apparently Roman Polanski fudged up that ending in his lifted The Ninth Gate (1999) starring Johnny Depp, but that's a different story.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Passive-aggressive post-its

There's nothing quite like coming into work--after steeling yourself for a shift you didn't want anyway--and the first thing you find is a scathing note about how bad a job you did at work last night. Why is my workplace the Mecca of passive aggressive post it notes? It makes everyone edgy and insinuates an undercurrent of defensiveness into all of your interactions; is she the one that thinks I do a terrible job sweeping? Does he have a problem with the way I put out cupcakes? Why are these such huge issues? Why can't people stop and think about what night the person you are writing this note to was having and be a little compassionate? I am more and more feeling anxiety-ridden by this basic, boring job. I need a change. Preferably one that doesn't know about post-it notes. 

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Terrors from festivals past!

HEY EVERYBODY! The small film festival I work for, The Three Corpse Circus, is coming back for its fourth annual extravaganza on September 28, 2013! One of my brilliant co-conspirators whipped up this beauty as a little reminder of how awesome we've been before. Take a look at our past terrors!

The shorts featured are as follows (in order):

  • Opstandelsen
    3CC Audience Choice Award Winner 2010
    Jawbreaker Productions
    Denmark
    Directed by Casper Haugegaard
    “Opstandelsen” brings the zombie apocalypse into the house of God.
  • Green Glass Door
    Festival Choice Runner Up 2012
    Eye Candy Films
    Kentucky, USA
    Directed by Antonio Pantoja
    Will you solve the riddle? 6 strangers wake up to find themselves bound to their chairs by a sadistic killer. Each have a lone opportunity to solve the riddle. If they answer incorrectly, their fate is decided by their unique hint.
  • Nursery Crimes
    Festival Choice Award Winner 2011
    United Kingdom
    Produced by Janice Aitken
    Little Bo Peep has slaughtered her sheep, and doesn’t know where to hide them.
  • I was a Tranny Werewolf
    Directed by Lola Rock’N’Rolla
    New York, USA
    Vow to wax! as a young girl is teased for her excessive-body hair problem.
  • Familiar
    Festival Choice Award Winner 2012
    Fatal Pictures
    Canada
    Written and directed by Richard Powell
    John is a simple man, he lives a simple life- in a mediocre house with his teenage daughter and his even simpler wife. If only contentment was equally as simple. John has an anger inside of him that has been growing for quite some time. His simple life and inner rage have become all too familiar and something is about to change.
  • Blood Bunny
    Directed by Molly Madfis
    When they tried to write him out of his own holiday, one bunny went hopping mad!
  • Revenge
    Out of Hand Films
    Michigan, USA
    Directed by Tim Malik
    Montel Stewart will find a tortuous end because of one man’s revenge.
  • Refuge 115
    Best Scare Award Winner 2012
    Directed by Ivan Villamel Sanchez
    El Dedo en el Ojo S.L.
    Spain
    Directed by Ivan Villamel Sanchez
    March 18, 1938, the population of Barcelona is devastated by the continued indiscriminate bombing of fascist aviation. Jordi and Aina are a young couple in love who has not lost faith in salvation and freedom, and safeguard one of the many bomb refuges throughout the city of Barcelona. Something unknown is hidden in the darkness of the refuge, hidden and waiting to take one by one people are hidden from external danger. Aina and Jordi try to find a loophole for all those people, before the outputs are closed.
  • The Zombie Factor
    Best of Fest Award Winner 2012
    Audience Choice Award Winner 2012
    Michigan, USA
    Directed by Matt Cantu
    The zombie apocalypse becomes REALITY on The Zombie Factor, the most dangerous show on television. Every episode, someone dies. The Zombie Factor puts contestants head-to-head against flesh-eating zombies. And on this reality show, as the people are eliminated, they become part of the stable of zombies and used against their fellow competitors.
  • Predator/Prey
    Can of Chili Productions LLC
    New York, USA
    Directed by Kent Kitzman
    Eva (MARISA PIERINI) is away from home for the first time at a summer sleepaway camp. But, when violence erupts between the people in charge of her protection, she must perform a shocking act to ensure her survival.
  • Backwater Gospel
    Best Scare Award Winner 2011
    The Animation Workshop
    Denmark
    Directed by Bo Mathorne
    As long as anyone can remember, the coming of The Undertaker has meant the coming of death. Until one day the grim promise fails and tension builds as the God fearing townsfolk of Backwater wait for someone to die.