Bookwars
Directed by Jason Rosette
In BookWars, a superb nonfiction film by first-time feature
director Jason Rosette, books are more than sources of
knowledge. They are merchandise that’Äôs appraised, bought
and sold. They’Äôre also artifacts, sometimes clean and
intact but more often damaged, whose condition at the point
of sale says plenty about the conscientiousness of the
seller. Most of all, they’Äôre an addictive substance.
Rosette, a former street bookseller, makes the point that
while his brethren tend to be more educated than the
average Joe, and much more aggressive in extolling the
virtues of reading, when you get down to it, they’Äôre
basically junkies chasing a rush. The specific type of rush
varies from bookseller to bookseller: some of Rosette’Äôs
subjects get off on the idea of spreading self-empowering
knowledge, or belief systems that terrify the
establishment; others seem to get a charge out of
interacting with customers, whose eccentric ranks include a
surprisingly high number of repeat clients; still others
sell books because they’Äôve been doing it for years and
can’Äôt imagine any other life. They’Äôre dealers who are
hooked on their own merchandise. "When (people) get hold of
a good book, they get intoxicated, they get high," one
bookseller tells Rosette.
BookWars has its world premiere March 11, 7:30, at the New
York Underground Film Festival, which runs March 8-14 at
Anthology Film Archives. It occurs to me that when you
check out this festival, the experience is not unlike
perusing a street bookseller’Äôs wares. In both cases you get
a mix of old and new themes, titles and styles, and the
quality of presentation varies wildly from work to work. On
the street, some books are shrink-wrapped and new, freshly
purchased at some used bookstore or plucked from a
remainder bin or a warehouse garbage pile, while others are
dog-eared, broken-spined, underlined, highlighted. At the
New York Underground Film Festival, you see the same
discrepancy in artistry and production values. Some stuff
seems utterly polished and accessible, even lushly
produced; other stuff is well-done, but made in a
stridently kooky or uncompromisingly obtuse style that’Äôs
meant to repel casual moviegoers.
Other stuff is pure film geek b.s., hewing so close to the
cliche of underground filmmaking that it’Äôs tough to watch
without snickering. (Remember that incomprehensible
experimental movie directed by Shelley Long’Äôs Mensa barmaid
on Cheers, which ended with stock footage of a mushroom
cloud and the credit, "Un Film de Diane Chambers"? The
NYUFF usually has at least three equivalents on the
schedule.) But no matter what the quality of the individual
items, the event has a pleasing gestalt. So much of
moviegoing life is bound up in advertising, media hype and
other forms of prepackaging; even most arthouses and film
festivals succumb to these forces, showing movies that have
played a hundred fests already (or are about to). At NYUFF,
you can be reasonably sure that you’Äôre going to see a lot
of stuff you’Äôve never heard of before, much less seen, and
that this will probably be your only chance to see it, for
better or worse. Like items on a street bookseller’Äôs table,
you can probably ignore a lot of it without worrying that
you’Äôve impoverished your spirit. But you also want to be
alert and open to possibilities’Äìotherwise you might miss
something that will make your day, even change your life.
BookWars is an example of the latter: a real find. It’Äôd fit
nicely on a double bill with Wonder Boys. Both films are
about people with a hopeless, perhaps self-destructive love
of books and words and both exude an unmistakable aura of
authority. The filmmakers clearly know what they’Äôre talking
about’Äìyou sense they’Äôre emotionally committed participants,
not tourists’Äìand they manage to make a peculiar literary
subculture accessible to casual viewers without
condescending to the people involved or dumbing anything
down. Most significantly, both films convey the sense of a
fragile, fascinating world endangered by shifting cultural
values. The chatty literati of Wonder Boys are creatures of
the university system, which until recently shielded them
from the hard truths of declining American literacy and the
rise of mass-market values in the publishing industry.
They’Äôre finding out the hard way that they can run but they
can’Äôt hide, and that very soon, serious literary fiction
will be as relevant to the general public as blacksmithing.
In BookWars, Giuliani’Äôs quality-of-life campaign’Äìwhich
sometimes seems to stem more from a desire to protect big
business and control or destroy oddball fringe New Yorkers
than to legitimately enhance public safety’Äìdecimates the
ranks of street booksellers, whose interaction with
citizens in America’Äôs most literate city once was evidence
of a thriving urban life of the mind. Rosette, who started
selling books on the street in the mid-90s, is aware that
he came in at the end of an era, but he doesn’Äôt let that
awareness poison the story with bitterness; nor does he
lionize himself for having known interesting people and
chronicling the beginning of the end of their world. He’Äôs
just a guy selling books, and he happens to have a camera,
a point of view and the storytelling chops to explain what
happened and what it means.
The action unfolds mainly in two bookselling hotspots, the
Washington Square Park area and on 6th Ave. near the
Jefferson Market library. The diverse cast of characters
includes Pete, an artist with a loft in downtown Newark who
started buying used books to gather collage material and
ended up selling them; Thomas from California, a slender,
bearded fellow who unexpectedly becomes a fierce community
organizer when Giuliani’Äôs minions begin their crackdown;
and Rick, a young, droll, part-time street magician and
friend of Rosette who came into the bookselling game even
later than the filmmaker. There are guys from Russia and
Poland and Jamaica, young slacker types and men who look
old enough to have actually hung out with the Beats. The
customer base is just as varied; as is the case with any
business, the booksellers make a sizable chunk of revenue
off repeat customers, some of whom are charming, others
aloof and even belligerent.
Like a good, long, thorough magazine article, BookWars has
a controlled, mesmerizing tone and an eye for small,
telling details. Contrary to irresponsible stories
published in various New York newspapers and magazines,
Rosette informs us that most street booksellers don’Äôt steal
their books; they get most of their wares from yard and
estate sales in the city and surrounding suburbs, as well
as from remainder bins and trash heaps. They fix up the
more battered volumes using the standard bookseller’Äôs tool
kit (tape, Elmer’Äôs Glue, rubbing alcohol, razor blades) and
add little psychologically effective touches to make
certain books seem more special (plastic slipcovers, for
example). The books are stored in the sellers’Äô homes or in
storage lockers (very few booksellers are homeless), and
the storage unit of choice is a cardboard banana box,
usually Del Monte (nobody knows why; it’Äôs just tradition).
The booksellers are fascinating underground
characters’Äìlittle Joe Goulds’Äìbut Rosette doesn’Äôt suggest
that they’Äôre all wonderful, highly functioning people who’Äôd
fit in any place if given the chance. On the contrary, some
of them seem cranky, unreasonable, even mentally disturbed;
at the very least, we sense that most of them would never
be as driven and together in another profession as they are
in this one. Where books are concerned, they seem to feel
criticisms and slights more deeply than most citizens.
Because we’Äôre given a bit of time to know the booksellers,
the encroachment on their lifestyle by cops, bureaucrats
and college administrators (NYU installed huge sidewalk
planters to make it harder to set up tables) seems an
outrageous overreaction to people who, in the greater
scheme of social ills, could not rationally be considered a
serious problem. Rosette astutely shows us how Giuliani’Äôs
forces gradually turned up the heat, ticketing the sellers
for not having proper documentation, instituting curfews,
even subtly drawing and redrawing lines on the curb so that
the space booksellers could occupy was reduced over time.
The film metaphorically links Giuliani’Äôs meticulous
persecution of street booksellers to the fate of a toad in
one of Pete the artist’Äôs terrariums. The puny amphibian
mysteriously took ill and died, and Pete later discovered
from reading a natural history book that the animal
probably cacked from infestation after a fly laid maggot
eggs in its stomach. Late in the film, as the city closes
in, Rosette’Äôs narration brings this chilling image home.
"What is this thing that seeks to regiment, control,
organize and commodify everything in its path, this thing
that cleans the streets, this devouring worm that eats
cities from the inside out?" he asks.
Though Rosette is the main character in BookWars and our
guide through its world, he doesn’Äôt aggrandize himself or
put his own feelings front and center. He’Äôs content to
serve as an engaged yet slightly distanced narrator. His
pitch-perfect sense of what shots to show us and how long
to fix them onscreen, coupled with his sharp choice of
music and his relaxed yet elegant narration (his
Ohio-accented tenor speaking voice suggests Lou Reed’Äôs
vocals) hints at a potentially fearsome combination of
literary ambition and film sense. In its own laid-back,
no-big-deal way, this is a wonderful movie.
Though BookWars made the biggest impression of the NYUFF
titles I previewed, there’Äôs other stuff on the bill that’Äôs
interesting for one reason or another.
Slava Tsukerman’Äôs 1982 punk-heroin-alien favorite Liquid
Sky gets a screening March 10 at 11 p.m., with the director
in attendance; if you haven’Äôt seen it and you’Äôre a fan of
incomprehensible New York cult classics, check it out, and
don’Äôt be afraid to get bombed first.
Chris Wilcha’Äôs The Target Shoots First (March 9, 7:30
p.m.), a first-person documentary feature about life at
mail-order juggernaut Columbia House during the grunge era,
is entertaining for general audiences and probably
indispensable for anyone who’Äôs interested in nutzoid
indulgences of the music industry’Äìthough Wilcha, unlike
Rosette, sometimes presumes too much interest in what he’Äôs
thinking and feeling and not enough in the specific
mechanics of his world. Untitled #29.95, a documentary
about the history of experimental video that precedes The
Target Shoots First, won’Äôt tell video aficionados anything
they didn’Äôt already know, and the pretentious style
(dissonant soundtrack noise, pixilated closeups of video
screens that are supposed to emphasize the tv-ness of tv)
will bore the crap out of newbies.
James Fotopoulos’Äô Migrating Forms (March 11, 4 p.m.) is
billed in the program as "the downbeat, stripped-down tale
of a worn-out man and a slatternly woman engaging in a
tense, tawdry affair beneath the all-seeing gaze of the
man’Äôs silent cat." But the film I saw looked a lot like a
rather dull film-school variant of David Lynch’Äôs Eraserhead
with static compositions, a nearly silent soundtrack,
unsubtle intimations of disease and decay and supposedly
mesmerizing shots that go on about 10 times as long as they
should and contain a 10th as much expressive energy as
their creator seems to think.
Deborah Stratman’Äôs The Blvd (March 12, 6:15 p.m.) isn’Äôt as
rich, subtle or varied a look at a subculture as BookWars,
but it’Äôs just as much fun and much more conventionally
exciting. It’Äôs a portrait of street drag racing in Chicago,
choked with detail and chock-full of anecdotes by veteran
racers (and family members, and bettors). Stratman’Äôs film
mythologizes the hot-rod obsession even as it recalls some
of the saddest early Springsteen songs, about guys who race
to get away from straight society but end up spinning their
wheels in eternal adolescence.
Among notable shorts: Jeff Krulik’Äôs Obsessed with Jews
(shown as part of "That’Äôs Undertainment," a short-film
compilation that screens March 11 at 9:15 p.m.) is an
amusing and alarming look at a Washington, DC, accountant
who has allowed ethnic pride to become a self-feeding
obsession, amassing a collection of more than 7000 items
bearing images of famous Jews. Swingers’Äô Serenade (shown as
part of "Fist of the Monkey Gods" on March 11 at 4:30 p.m.)
sounds hilarious on paper’Äìit’Äôs a modern reconstruction of a
sex film script first published in a do-it-yourself 1960s
moviemaking magazine’Äìbut the filmmakers kill the joke by
camping things up too much. Stan Brakhage meets Bruce Weber
in Recital (show in "Vision Quest" on March 11 at 6:15
p.m.), an incomprehensible yet mesmerizing film: a young,
beautiful boy in a blond wig fights with his buddies and
picks apart a blood-juicy pomegranate while an adult man’Äôs
voice drones on about trusting instincts and taking
chances, suggesting either a chickenhawk fantasy or the
kid’Äôs inevitable maturation and loss of innocence.
The film most likely to inspire helpless, baffled laughter
is Frozen Hot, which is either the most original feature
film comedy since Being John Malkovich or the most
hopelessly fucked-up (perhaps both). Writer-director
Charles Brosseau/Fisher stars in this Hollywood satire as
St. John the Baptist (yes, really), a low-rent Hollywood
film producer who dresses like Billy Jack and maybe thinks
he is Billy Jack.
St. John, an obscure actor-filmmaker from the 70s, is
undergoing a deposition in a lawsuit to prevent the looting
of a "Hindu/Gay/Nazi" millionaire’Äôs estate. The lawyer is a
charismatic black woman named Miss Ross (brilliantly played
by Ella Joyce of the Fox comedy Roc). As she discusses the
case with St. John, "Frozen Hot" randomly intercuts footage
from a real-life exploitation documentary called The Great
Hollywood Rape/Slaughter (directed by Brosseau/Fisher in
1971) with St. John’Äôs fantasies of enjoying a supercool
vanilla-chocolate 70s fling with the attorney, who has
inexplicably transformed herself into "Cocoa Mubutu Fox," a
hot-to-trot blaxploitation heroine who’Äôs part empowered
ass-kicker, part fantasy whore. Both the archival footage
and the current stuff is shot in 70s exploitation style,
with distanced medium shots and muffled sound, and backed
by an exquisite coke-lines-on-a-glass-tabletop jazz-pop
soundtrack. You could call it a stunning work of playful,
postmodern synthesis’Äìif it were possible to tell which
effects are intentional and which are the by-product of an
obscure 70s moviemaker doing things the only way he knows
how. It’Äôs not possible, and that’Äôs what makes it fun.
The obvious invocation here is Quentin Tarantino, who
turned the white Gen-X film nerd’Äôs worship of drive-in fare
into critically lauded blockbuster pop art. But let’Äôs be
honest: Pulp Fiction, as much as I adore it, is essentially
playacting’Äìa filmmaker and his actors playing mix-and-match
with disreputable film genres and acting styles. Frozen Hot
isn’Äôt as voluptuously directed and gracefully written, but
it’Äôs the real deal’Äìa movie-out-of-time, created by a guy
who’Äôs actually of the era and still feels its woozy,
wide-lapeled vibes. In a fantasy sequence where St. John
"auditions" Miss Ross for a movie, she fakes tarty
seductiveness and then oozes contempt for the white man,
which only turns both of them on all the more. "I bet you
want Cocoa Mubutu Fox’Äôs thick chocolate lips around your
little pink dick, don’Äôt you, Mister Charlie?" she demands.
"I bet you want to dive right into Cocoa’Äôs big fuckable
ass, don’Äôt you, Mister Charlie, y’Äôold white honky
motherfucker?" Somehow she makes it sound endearing. Their
passionate, unexpectedly intellectualized affair suggests
Last Tango in Paris starring Billy Jack and Foxy Brown.
Tarantino should see this film, but I halfway hope he
won’Äôt; he might end up masturbating joyously in the aisle.