Harmony Korine, writer-director
of Kids, Gummo, Julian Donkey-Boy |
THE BEST FILM BOOK
EVER WRITTEN. |
The
opinion of Xan Cassavetes, John Cassavetes' daughter and the
director of Z Channel and other works, about Ray Carney's Cassavetes
on Cassavetes, as relayed to Carney by a friend in Los
Angeles (stars indicate omitted personal material): |
"I am still in LA,
working on *** , which is coming along. Real progress. This evening
saw Z CHANNEL, a new documentary by Xan Cassavetes. ***
I spoke with her after the screening. I thought you might like
to know that she absolutely loves CASS ON CASS. Says she
sleeps with it. Says it's enabled her to have conversations with
her father she never had." |
Roger Ebert |
[Cassavetes
on Cassavetes] is a labor of love, scholarship, and detective
work. From a chaotic mountain of primary and secondary sources,
Ray Carney has shaped the story of John Cassavetes' life and
work – using the words of the great director himself, and
also calling on his colleagues and friends to supply their memories
and revelations. 'This is the autobiography he never lived to
write,' Carney says, but it is more: Not only the life story,
but history, criticism, homage, lore. Like a Cassavetes film,
it bursts with life and humor, and then reveals fundamental truths. |
Tom Dawson, Total
Film (London), in a four star review, selecting Cassavetes
on Cassavetes as Book of the Month |
A mammoth undertaking
which clocks in at more than 500 pages, [Cassavetes on Cassavetes ]
draws on an array of interviews, both with Cassavetes and with
his regular 'family' of collaborators, who include his wife Gena
Rowlands, Peter Falk, and Ben Gazzara. Carney has shaped this
mass of material into a compelling narrative of an indefatigable
outsider who constantly battled to get his films financed, shot
and released. Cassavetes himself emerges as a contradictory,
bloody-minded figure, driving those he worked with to distraction
in his quest to explore human feelings on celluloid. This was,
after all, a man who recut a film because it was too popular
in a preview screening. But there's something heroic about his
refusal to compromise his vision, and his insistence that an
artist 'must try different things – but above all must
dare to fail.'
|
Stephen Rees, Library
Journal |
Cassavetes was
a self-described 'bigmouth' and 'troublemaker' as well as a prolific
writer and talker. In Cassavetes on Cassavetes, he discusses
his actor's beginnings, honing his craft in the golden age of live
television drama, and his growing disenchantment with the studio
system. He expounds on improvisation, shaping a film performance,
favorite themes of love and marriage, and the eternal problems
of independent film distribution. Reading this book is like attending
an extended master class at the Actors Studio, a reminder of a
rebellious spirit sadly missed. |
Ben Raworth, HotDog
Magazine (London), in a four-star review, selecting Cassavetes
on Cassavetes as the HotDog Pick |
Drawing on extensive
interviews with the director, Carney has written the definitive
John Cassavetes tome. You get the real low-down, colored by candid
conversations with those who knew him best.... Fascinating and
instructive. |
Kirkus Reviews |
Film historian
Carney (Film and American Studies/Boston University) explores the
cinematic philosophy and practices of maverick actor and director
John Cassavetes (1929-89). Carney did a prodigious amount of research
to prepare this thorough, admiring, and even affectionate examination
of Cassavetes' films. He interviewed Cassavetes many times, spoke
with virtually everyone who had ever worked with him, viewed every
inch of relevant footage he could acquire, studied every interview
ever granted by the loquacious filmmaker, and read the multiple
versions of Cassavetes' screenplays. A compulsive reviser, Cassavetes
does not deserve, in the author's view, his reputation as a director
of improvised productions. Instead, he was a ferocious, tireless
worker, a man who would do just about anything to complete a film
(or find a booking for it), a director who would manipulate cast
and crew to achieve an effect he felt he could achieve no other
way. Carney is less interested in the ordinary biographical facts
of Cassavetes' life than he is in his artistic temperament and
credo.... In most cases, Carney devotes an entire chapter to each
film, beginning with Shadows (screened in 1958) and ending
with Love Streams (1984). The author's technique is to let
Cassavetes speak for himself whenever possible, so the text is
largely an anthology of the filmmaker's published and previously
unpublished comments on his life and work, intercut with Carney's
transitions, explanations, and revisions. Fascinating footage of
the mind and heart of an American original. |
Jason Wood, Kamera.co.UK |
Described as the
autobiography Cassavetes never lived to write, [Cassavetes on
Cassavetes is] a lovingly crafted, elegiac affair and a fitting
epitaph to a man of ferocious integrity, determined to dictate
the conditions in which he creatively toiled with scant regard
for the conventions of Hollywood studio feature production....
Eschewing the narrative ellipticism for which Cassavetes was famed,
the result of these labors is an exhaustive and thrillingly comprehensive
peek into the life and work of the man. |
Eugene Hernandez, ifcRant |
In this definitive
work, author Ray Carney captures the director's life and craft
in his own words.... Conversations with many of the most important
figures in his life – his wife and frequent collaborator,
Gena Rowlands, and actors Seymour Cassel and Peter Falk, among
others – flesh out the narrative and offer insight into a
complex artist. 'He could be both maddening and inspiring, both
brilliant and exasperating, childish and saintly,' Carney told
us. 'That was the man I knew – the crazy, demonic Jerry Lewis
the press releases covered up.' |
Tom Charity, Film
Editor, Time Out magazine (London) |
I got my hands
on a proof copy of your book on Friday, and have been poring over
it all weekend. What can I say? It seems [in my own writing about
Cassavetes] I have innocently perpetuated more than a few myths.
I feel like having submitted an exam paper I've just been given
all the answers to. I'm staggered by the depth and detail of your
research. The book is a tremendous achievement. It absolutely
justifies your comment in the Introduction, that even a Cassavetes
buff will find something new and surprising, probably on every
page. Not only is your research in another dimension to mine, but
the portrait of the man himself has a complexity I only had glimpses
of. I think you do him justice. I can't offer higher praise than
that. |
Alistair Owen, The
Independent (London) |
A friend, on hearing
that I was writing this article, mused aloud: 'John Cassavetes.
Wasn't he in an episode of Columbo?' Well, yes, but before
his death from cirrhosis of the liver in 1989 at the age of just
59, he also wrote and directed a dozen movies, boasted the rare
distinction of Oscar nominations as actor, writer, and director,
and influenced several generations of independent filmmakers the
world over. Yet most audiences, if they know him at all, still
know him as the face from Columbo or Rosemary's Baby or The
Dirty Dozen, roles he only took to finance his own work. Cassavetes
on Cassavetes
paints a fascinating picture of the artist,
whose challenging work provides an essential alternative to the
mainstream. 'Now the big question is: can a picture make $100 million?' – Cassavetes
once complained to an interviewer. 'If you're thinking that way,
you're not making films, you're making money. If that's what it's
come to, let the audience look at pictures of money, put money
on the screen, and then rape it, shoot it, defecate on it – because
that's basically what everyone is doing.' That was in 1974, and
he would find even less to cheer about now. |
Gordon Flagg, Booklist |
John Cassavetes'
gritty, personal, albeit commercially unsuccessful films, such
as Faces, Husbands, and A Woman under the Influence, presaged
today's American independent film movement, though Cassavetes was
arguably more daring and uncompromising than, say, Tarantino or
Sayles. Editor Carney shaped more than 400 hours of conversations
with Cassavetes and extracts from previously published interviews
into a narrative of the filmmaker's early days as a New York actor
in the 1950s and his later struggles to finance and distribute
his films. Probably best known for his intense acting in other
directors' films (The Dirty Dozen, Rosemary's Baby, etc.), Cassavetes'
frustrations as an actor originally led him to direct. Thereafter,
he took most of his later roles to finance his own projects. Drawing
on interviews with dozens of Cassavetes' friends and coworkers,
Carney's extensive commentary augments the subject's remarks and
fills in details. As complete a picture of the maverick moviemaker
as we are ever likely to see. |
Lynden Barber, The
Weekend Australian |
Cassavetes scholar
and Boston University professor of film and American studies Ray
Carney has spent 11 years compiling this exhaustive, deeply fascinating
and frequently inspiring volume on the maverick filmmaker's life
and career from interviews and conversations with the subject (he
calls it the biography that Cassavetes never lived to write). His
subject was a tireless and compelling talker, barely capable of
uttering a sentence that didn't offer a challenge. Carney has also
spoken to many of the director's collaborators, family members
and friends and summarized their anecdotes, opinions and insights. |
Publishers Weekly |
'Cassavetes' films
were quarried from his most private feelings and experiences,'
writes editor Ray Carney in his introduction to Cassavetes on
Cassavetes, and then illustrates his point with the writings,
interviews, and recorded conversations of a beloved cult figure....
Fans and film buffs will delight in this rare look inside the mind
of this talented, innovative and influential filmmaker. |
Gerald Peary, The
Boston Phoenix |
There are two fabulous
reasons to devour the huge book cover-to-cover, as I did: for the
unordinary things that Cassavetes says, some totally nuts, some
self-deceived, many wise and inspiring; and for the extraordinary
insights into his production methods, which are beyond unorthodox,
certainly off the charts for any other director who has ever made
a film. Finishing this splendid read, I only wanted more. |
Sheila Benson, Seattle
Weekly |
The voice of John
Cassavetes ... rings clear in Cassavetes on Cassavetes, as
the groundbreaking filmmaker discusses his philosophy and the tumultuous
struggles required to sustain a 'marginal' vision over a thirty-year
career. Editor Ray Carney shaped this massive, after-the-fact Q & A,
a work he calls 'the autobiography Cassavetes never lived to write.'
Out of 5,000-some pages of source material, primary and secondary.
Cassavetes has his perfect filter in film professor Carney ....
It's an enthralling, inspiring, enlightening book. |
John Gianvito, Associate
Curator, the Harvard Film Archive, Harvard University |
While of course
I've known how long you've labored over Cassavetes on Cassavetes, seen
amazing versions come and go (tossed aside altogether), and thought
I knew pretty much even what the final version might be comprised
of, to finally see it in its finished form, in all its chunky beauty,
well – as Amos Vogel once said to me – if I wore a
hat I'd take it off to you. God willing this book will outlive
us all and continue year after year to find its well-worn pages
in the grip of an endless succession of film makers and writers
and enthusiasts eager to glean not just the wealth of insights
delivered by John throughout the book but even more to glean some
of John's infectious energy, his seemingly indefatigable spark
and curiosity, his crazy love pouring out on every page. Worth
every ounce of energy you expended (which goes far beyond anyone's
idea of commitment to a writing project), every gray hair and ulcer.
No one else out there could have done it, nor done it with a view
as close to the inside of the man as I imagine is obtainable. Your
commentaries are critical to the scope of the book. I thank God
Faber and Faber who, if I recall, long ago passed on this idea,
have finally seen the light. And what great pictures, Ray, fascinating
all. It will rest assured sit alongside Sculpting In Time (sit
when it's not in my lap) as one of the key books of my life. Thank
you! |
Gadfly Online |
Ray Carney, the
world's leading authority on Cassavetes' life and work, plumbs
the depths of Cassavetes' soul, presenting both a spiritual portrait
of the artist and a soul-searching meditation on Cassavetes' more
than half-doomed attempt to create works of art in a commercial
medium like film. Carney says his goal was to 'get beyond the press
release version' of Cassavetes' life: 'I wanted to tell the real
story of the predicament of the American film artist.... to show
what it really is like to be an artist in a business-oriented
culture like the one we live in. You read the film magazines and
watch the TV talk-shows, and they make being an 'indie' sound exotic
and glamorous and exciting, but the truth is that anyone who attempts
to make films that are more than entertainment in America is almost
certainly doomed to be neglected or reviled by newspaper and magazine
reviewers, who are almost all under the sway of Hollywood entertainment
values. Every generation fools itself and thinks that it is wiser
than its predecessors, but the next Cassavetes, the young artist
trying to do interesting things today, is in exactly the same situation
Cassavetes was. Cassavetes still has a lot to teach us.' |
Marc Savlov, The
Austin Chronicle |
As the compiler
of Cassavetes' odd-job notes and scribblings, Carney does an amazing
job; he knows when to stick his nose in and clarify, or correct,
his subject's often meandering tone. (Cassavetes was an inveterate
leg-puller, too, never averse to hyperbole and garnishing the truth
when he felt it was necessary.) Carney, the dust jacket notes,
spent a decade pulling together the various sources that eventually
made up this book. Both Cassavetes and Carney are obsessive-compulsives
in their own, unique way: twin maniacs seeking that same old elusive
truth-thing. |
Michael R. Farkash, The
Hollywood Reporter |
Cassavetes on
Cassavetes is a must-read for anyone interested in learning
more about an American original, a filmmaker who insisted on
truth in performance and how 'ruthlessly' to get the most out
of actors. It's a primer on getting your way on a film (assuming
you're prepared to walk out). Additionally, the book amounts
to a source of inspiration for filmmakers and provides many 'don'ts'
if you want to get along with industry people. |
Dave Luhrssen, Shepherd
Express |
With Cassavetes
on Cassavetes, film professor Ray Carney assembles the story
of his subject's life and career from the many interviews the
director conducted from the '50s through his untimely death in
1989, and from Cassavetes' own scattered writings. It's as if
Carney collected the notes for an autobiography Cassavetes never
intended to write. What's helpful is Carney's cross-checking
of facts, which places the filmmaker's statements in context. Cassavetes
on Cassavetes is an interesting journey through the director's
life, from his formative Greek-American childhood through his
final films. |
Michael Koresky, Film
Comment |
Compiled from more
than ten years of research, Cassavetes on Cassavetes is
as exhaustive as Cassavetes' films are exhausting. With professional
Cassavetes enthusiast Ray Carney filling in the blanks, this (mostly)
first-person account chronicles the development of a filmmaker
determined to transcend what he deemed trendy cynicism by placing
emotions center stage.... Cassavetes reveals here why he rejected
irony and how he pushed his films to emotional extremes and devastating
catharses. There are plenty of anecdotal gems, including run-ins
with inquisitive Faces PA Steven Spielberg and the director's
vengeful theft of Pauline Kael's coat following a particularly
acerbic review. Fiercely independent in spirit, belief, and work
ethic, Cassavetes finally comes across as less a tyrannical maverick
than as an artist simply trying to get noticed. |
Jim McKay, director
of Girls Town and Our Song, in Filmmaker Magazine |
[As I directed
my own film] Ray Carney's Cassavetes on Cassavetes sat by
my bedside like a bible. Late at night, while obsessing over some
concern about tomorrow's shoot, or the next day's credit-card bill,
or an upcoming meeting with a distributor, I'd open up the book
to a random page and read. Just a passage or a page, it never took
much. In those pages, I found the strength, support and spirit
to go on.... In its pages I found some of the most inspiring thoughts
about film, art and life that I'd ever read. It quickly became
the most important book on my shelf.... Sound a bit over-dramatic?
Well, if you're a filmmaker or a film fan interested in cinema
outside the Hollywood system, pick up the book for yourself and
start reading. You'll see. |
Christos Tsiolkas, Senses
of Cinema |
Ray Carney's work
on Cassavetes is ... an exemplary case of what the best criticism
can do: He has ensured that work too long ignored and marginalized
has been given renewed life. It is due to people like Carney, to
their personal and intellectual commitment to championing
Cassavetes' work that the director is finally receiving his due.
His is a labor of love and it shows in the writing and in the incredible
care that he has taken to record Cassavetes himself, to allow us
access to the man and his thoughts. |
Scott Wannberg, The
Road Less Traveled/Independent Review Site |
Ray Carney is a
man alone in the wilderness singing the good song, well, in this
case, the song of John Cassavetes, actor, but foremost, writer
and director. Once upon a time in the world of film, John Cassavetes
checked his rhythm, found it unable to be played in the stereo
equipment of commercial Hollywood, and embarked on film project
after film project direct from his heart/soul/nakedness. For the
most part, could not buy five seconds of light and air from distributors
and money people. That was then, as he lived, fought, sung, dreamed,
and danced. Now, that he has been gone for some years, his films
appear regularly on Independent Film Channel, and they make the
rounds [at theaters].
Whether you
dig Cassavetes, dig him and don't dig him, Ray Carney's large
collection of John's own direct words will take you into yourself.
It will take you deep into the ongoing moment of love, for
his films, finally, are about love, the loss of it, the gaining
of it, self love, love of other, and the process that gets
us there. The process that is and was Cassavetes, and his family,
and his friends, for he always sought to work in the process
with family and friends. For him, the shoot was an active participatory
exploration. He would write his films (people erroneously think
his work is based in improvisation)and then constantly rewrite
on the set, after feeling his actors in their characters, for
him his characters were not locked on the page, he would let
the actors explore, take him into their search, and from that
search would come even new insight into the characters and
rewrite he would. He would also do it in the editing.
There is the
great story where the Columbia moguls were so happy with the
first cut screening of Husbands he showed them, so ecstatic
about this comedy that would garner Ben Gazzara an Oscar nod.
Then Cassavetes turned to Gazzara, and Peter Falk, after that
screening, and said, 'Remember what you just saw. You will
never see it that way again.' To him, Husbands was not
a comedy, and he took it into the editing room and reshaped
the entire thing, and when Columbia looked at it again some
time hence they were aghast.
There is the
great Shadows Charlie Mingus riff. Cassavetes wanted
Mingus to write the score for Shadows. Mingus needed
somebody to help clean up the cat shit in his apartment. Cassavetes
sent over people to clean Mingus' place. Afterward, Mingus
was very depressed and said, 'I miss the cat shit.' As Cassavetes
sums it up...he finally did write the score...two years after
the film was released.
If anything,
Cassavetes is a director who attempted to take us into the
moment of his characters. He would have constant wars with
his crews. No masking tape, no specific 'Hey Actor Move Over
Into This Light.' He wanted to give the actors and their exploring
first billing in the process. He would expect his camera crew
to delve into their own particular exploring rooms and be ready
to go where the actors of the piece they were photographing
began to flow toward. Technical rehearsals would only deprive
the actor from his ongoing search.
His process
does show in the immediacy of the behavior of the people in
his films. And acting is nothing more than human behavior on
film. Cassavetes on Cassavetes is a resonant gift for
anyone you know who loves film. It is a must for anyone who
believes in the creative process.
Ray Carney is
at Boston University is fighting the long and good fight. Like
Cassavetes, he has trouble finding distributors for his material.
He tells me that the various publishers of film books have
an A list of directors that they turn to, but if the subject
of your film book is not on that list.... He did try to pitch
a book on FACES, Cassavetes' first actual film away from the
studio system after SHADOWS, but the publishers felt it wasn't
worth the effort, though they did grace him with an okay on
SHADOWS, as SHADOWS had jazz and Afro-Americans as a subject
matter....
|
Patricia Bosworth,
the author of Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift: A Biography,
Ruth Orkin, and other works |
What a great, great
book you've written on John! It's just fantastic. Truly wonderful. |
JASON GARGANO in City
Beat at www.citybeat.com |
Director/provocateur
Harmony Korine calls it the best film book ever written. Remarkably,
that's dangerously close to the truth. Cassavetes on Cassavetes exhaustively
examines the dilemma of moviemaking: How can an art form that relies
on so many people and so much money remain true to its creator's
original intent without ending up a compromised, watered-down piece
of studio product? This is how. Carney spent more than a decade
researching Cassavetes on Cassavetes, interviewing the
filmmaker several times and talking to virtually everyone associated
with his dozen, little-seen films. The result is a penetrating
first-person account of a man and his endless pursuit of emotional
truth. John Cassavetes believed in movies as an art form. After
reading Carney's Cassavetes on Cassavetes, you will too." |
A scholarly book
review by Todd Berliner, Professor of Film, the University of
North Carolina at Wilmington, printed in The Quarterly Review
of Film and Video. Vol. 20, Issue 4 (Oct./Dec. 2003), pp.
292-295. |
When film scholar
Ray Carney asked filmmaker John Cassavetes why he turned down
a deal from Sony in the mid-1980s to release
his films on video, the filmmaker said to his future biographer
and most tireless critical champion, “You think I want to
be popular? You think I want them out on video? I want millions of
people to see my movies? Why would I?” (510). The statement,
reported in Carney’s new book, Cassavetes on Cassavetes,
reflects the unorthodox values of this elusive filmmaker, who regarded
commercial success as a sign of artistic failure, the death of
creative freedom and personal integrity.
A crash course on the
fiercely independent filmmaker, Cassavetes on Cassavetes describes,
largely through Cassavetes’ own words, his ventures into
personal, passionate, and commercially self-destructive filmmaking.
Carney calls his book “the autobiography John Cassavetes
never lived to write” (ix), but the book is a better autobiography
than Cassavetes would have written himself. Always fascinated
by the roughness of the creative process, Cassavetes would have
written an autobiography as disorganized and out-of-focus as
one of his films. Carney, however, has shaped a compendium of
quotations into something that reads like the story of a man’s
life.
Until recently, critics
have mostly considered Cassavetes a minor filmmaker, and, except
for Faces (1968) and A Woman Under the Influence (1974),
his films never made any money in his lifetime. But he created
some of the most original movies in American cinema and greatly
influenced many of his contemporaries (Martin Scorsese, Peter
Bogdanovich, and Elaine May, to name a few), ever since his first
film, Shadows (1959), helped to burst open the independent-filmmaking
scene.
While a lot of viewers
find Cassavetes’s movies unwatchable, he has nonetheless
gathered a loyal following and some critical praise, especially
since his death in 1989. The past decade has seen more Cassavetes
film festivals than in the filmmaker’s entire 30-year career
as a director and writer of artistically uncompromising independent
films. Despite Cassavetes’s refusal of Sony’s offer
to bring out his movies on video, since his death all his films
(except for Too Late Blues [1962] and Love Streams [1984])
have become available on videotape and most are also on DVD.
Those who like his movies consider him a genius, a maverick filmmaker
who did things with the cinema that no one else has had the talent
or audacity to do. The people who do not like his movies call
him self-indulgent. Most people know him only as an actor, if
they know him at all. Carney’s book attempts to bring Cassavetes
out of obscurity and into the mainstream that eluded the filmmaker,
partly by his own design, while he lived. Unlike some of the
other books in this Faber and Faber series, Carney’s feels
comprehensive as a biography, an autobiography, and a collection
of the filmmaker’s statements about his life and art.
Cassavetes on Cassavetes describes
in detail the circumstances surrounding each of Cassavetes’s
films – from their conception, to their creation, to their
distribution (or failure to obtain distribution), to their critical
and commercial reception – and it does so mostly through
quotations from Cassavetes that Carney culled from published
sources and his own personal interviews with the filmmaker. About
the “realistic” sound in his groundbreaking Shadows,
for example, Cassavetes has this to say: “We recorded most
of Shadows in a dance studio with Bob Fosse and his
group dancing above our heads. . . . So when we came out, we
had Sinatra singing upstairs, and all kinds of boom,
dancing feet above us. And that was the sound of the
picture. So we spent hours, days, weeks, months, years trying
to straighten out this sound. Finally, it was impossible and
we just went with it. Well, the picture opened in London, they
said, ‘This is an innovation!’ You know? Innovation!
We killed ourselves to try to ruin that innovation!” (97).
We learn that some of the most interesting effects in Cassavetes’s
films emerged as happy accidents, a consequence of his loose
shooting style, which, unlike the rigorously premeditate Hollywood
productions that the filmmaker spurned, encouraged creativity
and innovation on the set.
***
At a time
when it was fashionable for films to make bold political statements,
Cassavetes fashioned his own intensely personal dramas that dealt
less with social issues than with relationship between particular,
idiosyncratic individuals. Both Faces and Husbands (1970)
could have satirized male machismo and middle-class values, and
both received criticism for not doing so. More interested in
understanding his characters than condemning their faults, Cassavetes
always respected his creations and gave them a chance to justify
themselves. Shadows presents a scenario that could potentially
address the politics of mixed-race relationships, and A Woman
Under the Influence seems primed to condemn the institution
of marriage as oppressive to women. However, the relationships
in Cassavetes’s movies always seem too individualized to
represent any institution, his characters too singular and human
to stand for their race, their gender or their class. “I’m
sure we could have had a much more successful film,” Cassavetes
said about A Woman Under the Influence, “if the
picture were rougher, more brutal, if it made statements so that
people could definitely take sides. But along the way I’d
have to look at myself and say, ‘Yes, we were successful
in creating another horror in the world’ “ (367).
Whereas many of today’s
independent filmmakers want to expose the depravity, simplicity
or ridiculousness of their characters, Cassavetes sought to understand
his characters’ complexities. Today’s independents
make mostly sardonic films – Flirting with Disaster (1996), Happiness (1998), Your
Friends and Neighbors (1998), Election (1999), American
Movie (1999), American Psycho (2000, Best in
Show (2000), Bully (2001) or anything by the Cohen
brothers – that stand so far above their characters that
audiences have little chance to feel affection or empathy for
them. Cassavetes, however, didn’t allow us the smug pleasure
of feeling superior to characters designed so that we could feel
superior to them. “I absolutely refuse to judge the characters
in my films,” he tells us. “I refrain from leading
people by their noses by imposing a stereotyped moral vision
in my work” (158).
The book shows the under-appreciated
artist failing to reach even a modestly respectable audience
for some of his quixotic productions. For instance, in its entire
first run, only about 500 people saw Opening Night (1978),
perhaps Cassavetes’s best movie and his most disastrous
commercial failure. Cassavetes pronounced the film dead. “I
will never play it for an audience. I will not humiliate myself
and the film by begging anyone to attend it” (432). But
rarely do we see Cassavetes give in to the disappointment that
would have stymied a less passionate or self-assured artist.
His saddest statement comes after the commercial failure of Opening
Night and after his inability to find an American distributor
for his re-edited version of The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (originally
released in 1976, re-edited in 1978): “I’m prepared
to go on making pictures in my own way and hoping they’ll
relate to other people’s experience. It gets harder every
time, I can tell you. Harder to go through all the shit of setting
them up, then making them, and then, maybe, having them ignored.
. . . Anyway, I’m glad I’m not a success, because
then, though you think you have greater freedom, you in fact
have a great deal less . . . I guess I’ll stick to being
a well-appreciated failure” (435).
Although clearly written
by an affectionate fan, the book does not refrain from revealing
some of the filmmaker’s unattractive qualities. For instance,
after insisting to the principal actors and crew of Shadows that
the film belonged to them and not to him. Cassavetes made a distribution
deal with British Lion that reduced their shares by almost 90
percent. Carney writes, “It was a classic bait-and-switch.
Cassavetes promised them the moon, told them that he would fight
anyone to the death to defend their ownership of the film – and,
once he got what he wanted from them, made a deal that vitually
cut them out” (99). The book reveals Cassavetes’s
lies to those who could help him with his career, and the difficulty
his actors had working with him as a director, because of his
manipulative treatment of them. However, Cassavetes also emerges
as an unexpectedly generous man, one who would gladly risk his
career and money for an artistically brave project – acting
in student films, helping his protégé Martin Scorsese,
giving jobs or money to friends in need.
***
Cassavetes scholars
will happily mine the book for quotations and Cassavetes
on Cassavetes will become the starting point for anyone
who wants to read or write about the filmmaker.Cassavetes
on Cassavetes is a portrait of a man whose artistic integrity
and whose pleasure in the creative process condemned him to a
life of professional frustration. But the book shows us that,
time after time, Cassavetes willingly chose to lead exactly the
life he led. Indeed, reading Cassavetes’s own descriptions
of his “personal madness” as a filmmakers makes it
seem perfectly sensible to risk everything one owns and devote
oneself to a life of creative expression in order to become a
largely underappreciated artist and a commercial failure.
© Todd Berliner
and The Quarterly Review of Film and Video. Copyright
2003. All rights reserved by the copyright holders.
|
María Moreno El
amante perfecto |
"Hay seres a quienes
es mejor leer que encontrar. Hay otros a quienes es mejor encontrar
que leer. Hay autores muertos que parecen tan vivos como nuestros
amigos y hay autores vivos que parecen tan muertos como el que “escribió” con
pinturas en las cavernas de Lascaux.Pero cuando el autor es realizador
cinematográfico siempre puede hacerse presente.
Entre mi escueta colección
de admirables, John Cassavetes es el único
hombre al que me hubiera gustado conocer. Alguien que, habitante inaccesible
de un país lejano, y cuya lengua desconozco, me hizo amarlo
en ausencia y esfinge. Pero amarlo es un sentido más preciso
que el de erotizar su rostro estilo El Cerebro Mágico –una
imagen que decoraba un juego de ingenio de los años cincuenta–,
sus cejas en forma de acento circunflejo y sus labios cuya carne parece
oponerse al ascetismo
de un esqueleto que simula estar a flor de piel. Quizá lo que
amo de él es su forma de amar a una mujer –haciéndome
identificar con ella–, a la suya propia, Gena Rowlands, a quien
dirigió en
varias de sus películas (Gloria, Torrentes de amor, Minnie y
Moscowitz, Una mujer bajo influencia, por citar las que más
se sostuvieron en la carteleras de Buenos Aires). Sobre todo en Torrentes
de amor, adonde él
la acompaña como actor en un vínculo lo suficientemente
ambiguo como para que el espectador ignore si los protagonistas son
dos hermanos
o dos ex amantes. ¿Un chiste privado entre los integrantes de
un matrimonio de larga data? En esa película, John parece decir:
el enamorado es animista a su modo; el dolor de amar se materializa
allí,
en el interior del cuerpo, en el océano de la sangre, de sus
ríos
adonde –según la filosofía hematológica– cada
ser es único a pesar de sentirse intoxicado totalmente por el
otro. El amor no podría alojarse en las vísceras (continentes
bajos), ni siquiera en el cerebro y en el corazón, que deben
estar regados por la sangre para conservar su función mítica.
El amor es un torrente... sanguíneo. Las metáforas son
precisas y vienen de lejos: “lo escribiré con sangre”, “me
has herido”, “quisiera
abrir lentamente mis venas”, “El torrente para”,
le dice el psiquiatra a Sarah Lawson (Torrentes de amor). Ella le dice
que no,
que no es posible. Si el torrente pasa, ya no queda aire en los pulmones,
ni pensamiento en la mente, el cauce está seco. John suele filmar
a Gena como una loca de amor, pero no desde el lugar de la ilegítima
o de la amante sino de la esposa, de alguien que sostiene el amor al
extremo, el derecho a vivir como desollada viva o enhebrando uno tras
otro momentos
supremos en el interior de la familia: Sarah Lawson y Mabel Longhetti
(Una mujer bajo influencia) oscilan entre el hogar y el manicomio.
John sugiere
que la pasión no se opone a la familia, y además filma
con parientes propios y de su esposa. Gena a veces trabaja en compañía
de su madre Lady Rowlands y de su hermano David. Lady Rowlands es la
madre de Minnie en Minnie y Moscowitz y de la de Mabel Longhetti en
Una mujer
bajo influencia; su hijo, el psiquiatra de Sarah interpretado por Gena
en Torrentes de amor, donde Alejandra Cassavetes es la corista del
bar nocturno. Otros nombres familiares insisten en los créditos
de las películas de Cassavetes, sus primos (los Papamichael),
Diana y Margaret Abbot, los Gazzara, los Cassel. Katherine Cassavetes
es la madre de Nick
(Peter Falk) en Una mujer bajo influencia. John trabaja con los de
su sangre en una mezcla de tragedia griega y magia italiana. También
ha dicho a menudo –y sus personajes– que toda mujer tiene
un secreto y que lo interesante es que ella lo entregue voluntariamente.
“ Yo no dirijo a los actores”, se jactaba. Es cierto: era un amo
más feroz, quería enfrentarlos con quienes son, hacer emerger sus
deseos más ocultos. Quizá porque difícilmente las mujeres
reales entreguen su secreto o mientan, esto le sirvió para seguir filmando.
Para el común de la gente, la mujer con más secretos es la que
pasea por la ciudad con todos sus despojos hogareños en un changuito,
envuelta en una frazada, sin lugar a donde volver. Poco antes de morir, John
Cassavetes escribió una obra de teatro titulada A Woman of Mistery. Es
sobre una de esas mujeres sin techo. Lleva dos valijas con sus cosas, camina.
Le dio el papel a Gena como si le anticipara: “Muerto el jefe de familia
y con una casa inestable, ¿qué te queda sino la calle?”.
Una muchacha llamada Georgi conoce a la mujer misteriosa y afirma que ésta
es su madre, quien la habría abandonado al nacer. La ama y como si el
amor fuera contagioso (y lo es): un hombre y luego otro se enamoran de la homeless.
Al igual que en los cuentos de hadas, ésta pasa de la calle y los andrajos
a una velada de gala en donde luce un vestido de satén negro. A la larga,
Georgi probará que su certeza no es una ilusión. Pero esta mujer,
la mujer misteriosa, no puede retribuirle su amor. En la última escena
vuelve a estar sola con sus valijas. En la calle, John le ofrece así a
Gena la profecía de una resurrección, a la manera de la familia,
por el reencuentro con un lazo de sangre. También le profetiza que, muerto él,
ya no sabrá amar. Pero, mediante una transacción, la libera: en
realidad, la última escena no prescribe la soledad sino la continuidad
del misterio. Como si dijera: “Si se nos ha amado, se nos volverá a
amar”.
É se es mi tipo. |
Comments
from actors:
Steve Buscemi, actor
in Fargo, Trees Lounge, and Pulp
Fiction, and other films |
Thanks so much
for the Cassavetes on Cassavetes book. I'm really enjoying
it and getting a fuller picture and a less romanticized notion
of who he was. It's fascinating stuff. You deserve the highest
praise for keeping the flame going. |
Peter Falk, the star
of Husbands and A Woman Under
the Influence |
Thank God for Ray
Carney's Cassavetes on Cassavetes. It captures the man I
knew – the most vivid, colorful, intriguing, infuriating,
fertile, man, child, artist, actor, friend. It's all there. The
passion, the craziness, the complexity, the mystery. There'll never
be another like him. It's a terrific book. |
Ben Gazzara, the star
of Husbands and The Killing of
a Chinese Bookie |
What a great gift
you've given to young filmmakers everywhere. Your book, Cassavetes
on Cassavetes, made me miss him even more. I didn't think it
possible. |
Gena Rowlands, Cassavetes'
wife and the star of Faces, Minnie and Moskowitz, A
Woman Under the Influence, Opening Night, Gloria, and Love
Streams |
It's wonderful
to know this book exists. Many thanks for your devotion to John. |
And from
ordinary (and not so ordinary) people – reviews posted on
Amazon.com:
Arch-i: My Way |
"Ray Carney's
done a great service to film fans by bringing Cassavetes' scattered
talks and interviews together into a coherent statement on art.
Carney shows how Cassavetes' whole process of filmmaking was
tied to his outlook on life. Combative, spontaneous and deliberately
amateur, he aimed for situations where writer, actor and viewer
are all left without direction, forced to respond to the story
as individuals rather than reach for pre-approved 'social codes'.
He savagely edited his films to defy audience expectations, usually
rejecting versions that the studios, his collaborators and even
his wife liked best. Some of Cassavetes' statements made me wonder
if he did this to edit some part of himself – the Greek
immigrant son made good, with the blonde wife and kids and Hollywood
home. In some ways he was an insider desperate to stay on the
outside. Conflict was fun for him, he thought America needed
more of it, and the messy collaborative 'families' he built around
each film were his alternative to the button-down corporate society
he fought against all his life.
"As Carney presents
him, Cassavetes wasn't out for the money, the glory, the ego
or ultimately maybe even the art. He wanted fun, he wanted
friends and he wanted people to really live as individuals.
Are there folks like this around anymore? We need them more
than ever."
|
Go man van Gogh: Possibly
the best book about any director |
"My half-hearted
browser's interest in Cassavetes needed a kick in the seat of the
pants, I now realize, and reading this book shows me how much I
failed to appreciate him while we were lucky enough to have him
around. The format is eye-opening. Cassavetes speaks, and then
the author. The constantly shifting P.O.V., and the frisson between
the truth Cassavetes himself presented, and the unvarnished truth
as discovered by the author, makes this book constantly stimulating
and endlessly arguable.
"Cassavetes life and films are worth a serious look-see – and
this book is an EXCELLENT place to begin that – if only
because he is that rare individual who absolutely refused to
accept mediocrity in himself and others, both as an artist
and a committed liver of life. He went for the burn every time
out, and could often be an ornery s.o.b. when he detected that
people were simply going through the motions in their life
or art. (The book is rife with anecdotes that literally make
you wince and leave you wondering 'Could I have long tolerated
this behavior in a friend or family member?') He seems never
to have thought 'I'd better not burn my bridges here', or practiced
any of the other forms of incremental, over-thought cowardice
that most of us do.
"Cassavetes was driven like no one else; he never made
a lazy, easy commercial film. He let his life and films commingle,
letting the cameras roll for hours, shooting thousands of feet
more film than he could use, afterward sculpting it into a
shape that could be released. (He said film stock was the one
part of his film making on which he would never scrimp.) His
films were, probably more than any other director's, explorations
of life.
"Cassavetes lived
life so completely that it might be truthful to say he did
something the average person would call foolhardy nearly every
day of his life, in some way or other. But in spite of this,
or because of it, it's impossible to come away from this book
without an awakened admiration for him."
|
Tom Stamper, Orlando,
Florida |
A Great Interview
Book! If you're intrigued at all by the work of John Cassavetes, this
book is well worth your time. The book itself is a collection of interviews
Cassavetes gave through his entire life, edited into chapters that
correspond to the movies he talked about. The excerpts themselves
are pretty interesting, but it is author Ray Carney's commentary in
between quotes that really makes this book worthwhile. Carney gives
us the back story, and fills in the missing parts, but he also sets
things straight when John rambles into fiction. It's easy to see that
Cassavetes liked to talk about his work. There are over 500 pages
on roughly a dozen films. ... John Cassavetes' passion for making
movies shines through in this volume. Ray Carney's insight tells the
rest of the story. If you are interested in independent film making,
this book is a must. |
Matt Reed |
Truly inspirational! Ray
Carney's "Cassavetes on Cassavetes" is a wonderful introduction
to Cassavetes' work. I found it to be a great read - amazingly free
of academic jargon or fancy terminology. It was hard to put down!
And with incredible photos of the wild-man at work. A must for every
fan of indie film as well as aspiring directors and artists - and
also for students of life! If you want to know even more, I'd also
recommend Ray Carney's massive web site devoted to Cassavetes and
indie film. Any search engine will take you there. It has wonderful
behind-the-scenes information about the making of Cassavetes' work.
If you want a volume to provide ongoing daily inspiration and encouragement
regarding the artistic process, buy this book. It is a book you will
go back to again and again and again... |
A reader from New
York, NY |
A fascinating look
at America's most advanced filmmaker. A superb autobiography pieced
together from spoken interviews. Carney neither fawns over Cassavetes,
nor does he paint an unqualified portrait of a dark, tortured soul
(as most artist biographies tend to do). Instead, Carney gives
us insight into a new type of artistic genius, one whose life may
not have been rife with passionate love affairs and bouts of madness,
but was nevertheless rich and intense. A man whose artistic goal
was not to tap the furthest depths of his soul, but instead to
revel in the sheer awkwardness, goofiness, and comedy of lived
experience. An eye-opening experience. |
Scott Berman, Los
Angeles, CA |
A consciousness-shifting
treasure. Ray Carney has done it again: years of research have
culminated in a wonderful examination of Cassavetes, by Cassavetes:
his life and work. Carney's take on the important independent filmmaker – his
mischief, guts, growth, and ups and downs – are to me, an
inspiration. You get a deep look here at a way of living, working,
and risking that is not about ambition, power, or money, as is
so overwhelmingly the case in the American film industry and other
walks of life. Carney carefully lets Cassavetes tell the story
in his own words, chronologically following the director's experiences
from his childhood to his early career struggles to his groundbreaking
independent films. There is much new information.
Throughout,
family and love are front and center: these were so deeply
important to Cassavetes and were primary themes in his films.
I also take away from this experience – because that
is what this book is to me – a new inspiration to try
to find a way to live and work that places things like security,
conformity, and even acceptance in a more healthy perspective.
Anyone contemplating
the arts, film theory or technique, criticism, or just personal
or professional growth should read this book. It is a delightful,
consciousness-shifting walk through another way to be creative
and just to be.
|
Ray Carney, CASSAVETES
on CASSAVETES Farrar, Straus and Giroux / Faber and Faber (ISBN 0-57120-157-1)
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German, Spanish, and Japanese language-editions already sold.
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