
Monday, January 25, 2010
Eternal Youth Only (aka "The Dreamer's Disease")

Monday, January 18, 2010
Not Where You Take It From, But Where You Take It To...
Hey Flip-philes. Back again with another installment of The Weekly Flippo. Though I usually prefer not to explain the title of each posting (doing so would somehow lessen the impact), I decided to make an exception for this week's outing. The masterful Jean-Luc Godard, when asked how he felt about artists using material from other sources, responsed with this quote. It's an important one, and a wholly satisfying response to criticisms of Tarantino and some others, who seem to specialize in these sort of pop culture collages.
I like to think that good art doesn't take place in a vaccuum, but is apart of a larger conversation. Sometimes, doesn't copyright law just get in the way? If you put out a song and enter it into the cultural fray, it should absolutely be within my rights to place it in a new, ironic context if I so choose. And I say "should" in only the most idealistic sense. Unfortunately, for our day-to-day, this would only mean artistic anarchy.
This all has been on my mind recently for many reasons, all of which are not quite as interesting as the central argument it inspires. What do you think? Please! Use the comment section below!
Since I am a master of the segway, here's the short story I wrote last week in full. It is called "The Bridge and The Rabbit Head."I, on the other hand, was lucky enough to not know mine. One day, while on the way home from the library, I saw a pedestrian hit by a long black car, the kind that coughs up ugly wisps of smoke as it creeps down the road. This man flew back, his head hitting the curb with an audible crack. While on the ground, his body began coiling and uncoiling in the most unnatural way, as if possessed. I remember the distinct design the blood made on the pavement, like a perverse Rorschach test. I remember seeing a rabbit head.
All of which brings us to the bridge and the habit we developed over the course of our tenth summer. Behind my house, there was a thin, dusty trail that wound its way down to an embankment and gave way to a creaky old wooden bridge, held together only by luck and leftover lumber. I was the one who came up with the idea to leap off of it, though it was Mackie who had the heart to make that initial jump and see it all come into fruition.
“See you on the other side!” he yelled as he made the inaugural leap. I couldn’t allow myself to look because, for a brief moment, I fully expected to never see little Mackie Rohmer alive again. When he landed on the embankment, his legs gave out and he slipped into a nice cushion of mud, negating the impact. Nobody could’ve been more relieved than me when his screams turned out to be nothing more than uncontrollable bouts of laughter.
It took another week of Mackie’s relentless convincing for me to make the jump. The embankment didn’t look so far away atop the bridge. However, as I jumped, the two seconds it must of taken seemed to stretch on for what seemed to be an eternity. I remember having enough time to wonder how much farther I had to fall.
The impact was first felt in my knees. It seemed to echo throughout my body, and I thought I heard my rib cage rattle a little bit. Mackie must have said something after that first jump, but, if he did, I sure as hell don‘t remember it. The world itself had gone quiet, as if underwater. Without any prompt, I climbed out of the embankment and made the jump again. I wanted to do this until my hesitation had left me. It never did. Not fully.
Over the course of our tenth, eleventh, and twelfth summers, we developed what could be categorized as an obsession to the bridge. Every year, the bridge grew older and more dangerous. Since we grew up alongside it, we appreciated the new challenges it presented. During this time, we spoke to one another on a wild variety of subjects, including (but not limited to) girls, the future, Saturday morning cartoons, and which teachers made for the easiest A. We never spoke about the bridge, though. Never the bridge. That would’ve seemed ridiculous. Have often do you talk about breathing?
Mackie was once a boy made up of infinite detail, quirks like the bricks of a house. I remember the Chaplin-esque glasses and the scabby knees. Most of all, I remember his crooked nose, the unfortunate aftermath of his summer spent as little league shortstop. Time has flattened those details and rendered him just another old man, too much like myself. All old men look like flightless birds. We’re too angular at the top and too fat in the middle.
Our hearts give out too often as well. There is no better reminder of this than the minute hand on a clock in the Erlanger Hospital waiting room. It took a couple of minutes to gather myself before going to try to talk to Mackie. When I got to him, he wasn’t much able to talk back, though I can only imagine what we would have said with time so scarce.
I’d imagine we’d finally talk about the intense feeling that resided in our stomachs when we jumped, and the deep-seeded longing we had on those sweltering summer nights, a feeling not unlike being in love. I remember how it feels to have it all in front of you and how overwhelming that can be. I sometimes still feel like this and I knew, in his final hours, Mackie did as well.
"See… you… on… the other…” he whispered.
He didn’t get to finish, though I knew what he meant entirely.
I may finally finish Down and Yonder next week, before the end of January. I want to immediately go into my next one. I am trying to adhere to a two script a year regiment (one for the spring, one for the fall). It's a schedule I feel pushes me, but doesn't rush me. Stephen King and Michael Chabon believe in a 1,000 word a day schedule. I believe Hemingway did a 700 word a day schedule. It's all about finding what works and sticking with it, even on the lousy days.
The look for long-term employment continues. One of the great drawbacks to freelance work is that you are always hunting, which is exhausting. But, then again, Dad says I have the rest of my life to have a 9-5 job. Might as well to do this while my system can still withstand shocks to it.
So far, 2010 is a good year. Fun year to say, an even better year to be apart of.
Flippo
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Smilin' Strange, Always Lookin' Happily Deranged
A couple of weeks ago I made a list of my favorite films of 2009 and forgot to include Star Trek and Fantastic Mr. Fox. I'm not sure why I forgot them as both were awesome and fresh on my mind. I don't know where I'd place them either, but I doubt I'm going to take the time to do it. I'm kind of over the whole list thing anyway. Ranking movies is like ranking your favorite relatives. Sure, you'd know what the order would be, but it is rather rude.
On the writing front, I took a break from the implosion that is Down and Yonder and wrote a simple short story. It is called "The Bridge and The Rabbit Head," and I'm rather proud of it. It's solid but slight (though most short stories are). I hope to write more of these this year. It's a good exercise.
The move is going well. We found a cheap couch and will hopefully have cable before the end of the week. Having to talk to one another has been simply unbearable! We also don't yet have Internet so I'm forced to go to a coffee shop and use their wi-fi (on a related note, did you know they steam milk these days?). I just need a corduroy jacket and maybe my Georgia caterpillar can finally transform into that beautiful hipster butterfly. Does anyone know a place in Sherman Oaks that sells vintage tees?
Until next time.
Flippo
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Poor Players, Wa(l)king Shadows
Yet.
First up, I regret to inform you that I didn't finish Down and Yonder before the end of the year. I'm more than a little frustrated with myself. Writers are only worth a damn with real concrete deadlines, even if they're just ones placed on the writer by his or herself. Too many writers have sat around waiting for inspiration that never comes. You don't wait for it. You work until it arrives, sharpening your tools.
I'm having a little trouble with the second half of the story (the "Yonder" section). It is difficult writing about characters without goals. The story has to eventually have an internal energy, but it all just feels too stop-and-go at the moment. Though the characters don't have any forward momentum, the story sure has to have it, and I pray this is a speed bump and not a coffin nail.
(Yes, I realize that nobody is interested in the plight of the writer except for a writer. Thanks for not saying anything though. You're sweet.)
In other news, my trip home to Georgia was great and surely the quickest two and a half weeks of my life. It was dense with friends, family, and good times, which is just as it should be. Here are some random pictures from my time home.
This is me firing a Roman candle.
This is me and my old roommate Alex Dimitropoulos. We're pointing at our old apartment (the legendary "Flipopoulos") on a map.
This is me and my buddy, Adam Speas, celebrating the New Year in Athens. We studied abroad in Cannes together.
This is my buddy Craig. I like this photo a lot. It's like a still from a Ramin Bahrani film.
This is my good friend Tulsi. She sciences at Columbia.
This is my friend Matt. He lives up in Brooklyn.
As you can probably tell, I received a camera for Christmas. It's a Coolpix camera (yes, just like Ashton Kutcher). One of my goals in 2010 is to take more pictures. I've developed this fear that I'm not really documenting my life well enough and my children and and my children's children will have no idea who I was a young man. In 2010, I'm going to correct this.
It's a new year folks. All the joys, troubles, and surprises of 2010 are still ahead of us. Take pleasure in that.
Flippo
Saturday, January 2, 2010
My Favorite Films of 2009

I know lists are a little silly, but I felt compelled to do it. It forces me to think about the films I loved and reevaluate them. First, a few honorable mentions:
Away We Go- A perfect example of a 2009 film. This one really divided audiences when it debuted in July. I thought it was a perfect remedy for an increasingly bombastic summer. A real charmer.
Watchmen- Again, another film that isn't quite for everybody. Yes, it turned out it was impossible to translate the great Alan Moore comic to the big screen. Watchmen, as a film, is something else entirely, but if you're able to separate yourself from the book, you'll find it has its own wonders.
The Hangover- I'd call this a guilty pleasure, but I really think this is a legitimately good film. Great casting and surprisingly nuanced writing make this an exceptional boys-will-be-boys comedy. This is one of those films that you will revisit over and over again.
Avatar- Yes, this is Dances With Wolves in space. You know what? I'm perfectly fine with that. Sci-fi has always been about archetypes and pathos anyway, so I can't fault this genre hybrid for that. It's a great film, dense with wild imagery and dazzling visual effects.
#10- A Serious Man- I still haven't figured this film out, and I doubt I ever will. Is it a 20th century retelling of the book of Job, or is something even more sinister? This is one to talk (or argue) about with friends.
#9- The Damned United- If Invictus is about overcoming the odds, The Damned United is about succumbing to them. Filmed with meticulous detail and great visual flair, I enjoyed every moment of director Tom Hooper's directing debut.
#8- (500) Days Of Summer- This one is, in turns, funny, charming, frustrating, and deeply moving. A surprisingly intelligent film that, for a change, manages to find beauty in Los Angeles.
#7- Moon- One of the most haunting films of 2009, the one most likely to either sneak into your dreams or creep into your nightmares. Sam Rockwell is exceptional in what is essentially a one-man show (kinda). If Avatar is a sci-fi film for the heart, Moon is a sci-fi film for the mind.
#6- Up In The Air- A heavy-hearted film that comes across with a great sense of buoyancy. See it, and you'll know what I mean.
#5- The Messenger- This one stuck with me. The Messenger is about two soldiers with one of the most unenviable jobs imaginable: giving notice to the families of fallen soldiers. It's heartbreaking to watch and all the victories are small ones. However, it features some of the best writing and acting I've seen this year, and I'd be glad to return to this film.
#4- District 9- 2009 was a return to the Thinking Man's sci-fi. Yes, there's action and neat special effects, but it's all there to serve the story. It does what great sci-fi should do: show us another world to help us see this one better.
#3- The Hurt Locker- This was the most intense movie-going experience of 2009. No other film this year felt so immediate, so real. The film follows Sergeant First Class William James on a tour with the Explosive Ordnance Disposal unit. Those scenes with William disarming the explosives are brilliantly filmed and, for a moment, you feel you're watching what is perhaps the best documentary of the year.
#2- Inglourious Basterds- The Hurt Locker is a movie about war. Inglorious Basterds is a movie about war movies. It's rude, playful, and not afraid of the occasional flight of fancy. I hate dutiful movies, the kind that's overtested, overcooked, and generally afraid to offend. Inglourious Basterds is not a film like that. It's sheer punk rock.
#1- Up- Not many films can make you cry. Even fewer can make you cry within the first ten minutes. This is a family film about the passage of time and the decisions we make versus the decisions life makes for us. Up just may be aimed more at the adults in the audience than the kids, though there is plenty there for them, too. Squirrel!
2009 was a great year, full of great change and forward momentum. I'm glad it's over, but glad it happened. Throughout it all, I was relieved the movies were there to help. It's the cheapest form of psychiatry I know.
Flippo