Showing posts with label a farewell to arms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label a farewell to arms. Show all posts

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Movie Review: Hemingway, a documentary Directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick (2021)

 

Poster for Hemingway, directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick, 2021.

Ernest Hemingway! Papa! The beard! The wives! The drinking! Key West! Cuba! Spain! The bullfights! Cocktails in Paris with Scott and Zelda! Oh, and in between all of that, I think he wrote some books, too, didn’t he? Something about an old man and a fish, right?

Ernest Hemingway’s enormous fame and celebrity have long overshadowed his actual accomplishments as a writer. His very name became synonymous with “writer,” the same way that Picasso was shorthand for “painter,” or “artist.” It isn’t Hemingway’s fault that he became such an icon. He didn’t ask to become one. But for whatever reason, he became the default “Great American Writer.”

Even now, as we approach the 60th anniversary of Hemingway’s death, it’s difficult to separate the myth from the man, and the work that he left behind. Directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick, Hemingway is a 6-hour documentary that aired on PBS earlier in April and attempts to get past the myth of Hemingway. It’s a fascinating look at a gifted artist and a deeply troubled man.

I explored some of my mixed feelings towards Ernest Hemingway in a 2017 essay. To sum it up, I understand Hemingway’s importance as a major American writer of the 20th century, but he’s certainly not my favorite American writer of the 20th century. I prefer F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tom Wolfe (white suit Tom Wolfe, not You Can’t Go Home Again Tom Wolfe) John Updike, and Truman Capote, to name a few of my favorites.

Unlike most other authors whose work I admire, should I acquire a time machine, I would have no desire to meet Ernest Hemingway. Sure, I suppose it might be entertaining to be in his company to observe the effect he had on people, tossing back cocktails at the Ritz bar or whatever. (I’ll pass on the bullfight, thanks.) While I admire Hemingway’s gifts as a writer, his personality is totally unappealing to me. 

It’s always a challenge to bring the creative arts to life on film, since so often, especially with writers, the real work of the art happens alone, with a writer hunched over a typewriter or a notepad, pounding the sentences into shape. Obviously, this is not the stuff that riveting documentaries are made of. But Hemingway does an excellent job of letting us in, through seeing drafts of Hemingway’s work, and through Jeff Daniels’ excellent narration of Hemingway’s writing.

Speaking of narration, Hemingway features an all-star cast as Ernest’s four wives: Keri Russell as Hadley Richardson, Patricia Clarkson as Pauline Pfeiffer, Meryl Streep as Martha Gellhorn, and Mary-Louise Parker as Mary Walsh. Personally, I found Meryl Streep’s mid-Atlantic accent a bit distracting and over the top, but that’s just me.

Like every Ken Burns documentary I’ve seen, Hemingway is a superbly crafted film, with a mixture of archival photographs, talking heads, and footage of places important in Hemingway’s life. Burns and Lynn Novick know how to capture and hold an audience’s attention. There’s never a time when you’re like, “Oh man, not this same Hemingway expert again,” or where you’re thinking, “Ah, geez, not more footage of Hemingway’s house in Cuba.”

Hemingway is okay with experts disagreeing about his writing. While the late Senator John McCain waxes rhapsodic about For Whom the Bell Tolls, Nobel Prize-winning author Mario Vargas Llosa says it’s “probably his worst novel.” Llosa even gets the giggles when he’s describing the passage where Maria feels the earth move as she makes love with Robert Jordan. In a similar vein, Llosa has lots of praise for The Old Man and the Sea, while Edna O’Brien dismisses it as “schoolboy writing.”

It’s difficult sometimes to show how artists are different from those who have come before them. Hemingway might have benefited from a specific stylistic comparison between Hemingway and acclaimed American authors who came before him. I can’t think of a perfect example to compare Hemingway with, but generally speaking, 19th century writing was just more florid and descriptive, whereas Hemingway wrote like he was at a Western Union office, conscious of not wasting a word.

Hemingway’s sentences can make his fiction seem so artless. Let me explain what I mean. He’s most famous for writing choppy, blocky short sentences. And you want to buy him that sentence combining workbook I had in high school. Or else he’s running the sentences on and on and on, combining them in a seemingly artless way of just using and—like the famous passage at the beginning of A Farewell to Arms. Both styles were deliberate, but it can be hard to see the artistry in them. It’s easy to assume he just wrote it that way in 10 minutes and then went to a bullfight. Of course, he didn’t. Hemingway worked hard on his craft, but his style can certainly fool you into thinking it was easy.

I wish Hemingway had spent a little more time on The Sun Also Rises. The film makes a much bigger deal out of A Farewell to Arms, and clearly pushes it as being Hemingway’s masterpiece. It’s been a very long time since I’ve read both those novels, so I can’t offer much of a comparison, but The Sun Also Rises was the book that made Hemingway a big name, so I was surprised it didn’t receive more attention in the film.

Ernest Hemingway is just the poster boy for toxic masculinity, isn’t he? The four wives, always having to prove how big his dick was, constantly playing the expert on every subject. To me, it seems so clear that Hemingway must have been incredibly insecure about every aspect of his life. What else could possibly explain the constant masculine, macho pursuits? All the hunting, fishing, bullfighting, boxing, searching for Nazi submarines off the coast of Cuba. I have no doubt that Hemingway did enjoy these pursuits, but at some point, it just became part of the myth, part of how he was supposed to behave. As Mary Karr says in the film, “It does seem a little wearying.” Amen.

Hemingway also had this dumb, competitive relationship with other authors. The film highlights this by quoting from an extremely obscene letter Hemingway wrote to his own publisher in 1951 about James Jones’ debut novel, From Here to Eternity. I’ll spare you all of the grim detail, but in the letter, Hemingway completely trashes the novel and expresses his hope that Jones will commit suicide. Here’s the most famous writer in America writing a letter excoriating an unknown writer publishing his first novel. What was the point in being so toxic? Why did Hemingway feel the need to be so competitive with Jones? Insecurity. Ego. Whatever you want to call it, this negative quality tarnishes Hemingway, as he seemed unable to admit that other authors might actually be talented too.

Hemingway’s relationship with F. Scott Fitzgerald fell prey to this same competitiveness as well. As Scott Donaldson shows in his excellent 1999 book Hemingway vs. Fitzgerald, every time Fitzgerald’s posthumous reputation rose, Hemingway felt the need to attack and belittle his former friend. These episodes reflect poorly on Hemingway’s character.

Fame did not help Hemingway, or the demons he was battling. John Updike warned of the dangers of fame for an author in his 1989 memoir Self-Consciousness:

“Celebrity is a mask that eats into the face. As soon as one is aware of being ‘somebody,’ to be watched and listened to with extra interest, input ceases, and the performer goes blind and deaf in his overanimation. One can either see or be seen. Most of the best fiction is written out of early impressions, taken in before the writer became conscious of himself as a writer.” (Self-Consciousness, p.266)

That’s certainly the trajectory of Hemingway’s career, and indeed, of many American writers.

Hemingway makes it seem as though the writer’s creative drive left him after his experiences during the Spanish Civil War, which provided the inspiration for his 1940 novel For Whom the Bell Tolls. That certainly fits with my own thoughts about Hemingway. I remember as a teenager reading Hemingway’s preface to The First Forty-Nine Stories. It begins: “The first four stories are the last ones I have written.” What? The last ones? You’re not writing any more short stories, ever? Did you retire? No, he just means “latest.” Hemingway closes the preface with, “I would like to live long enough to write three more novels and twenty-five more stories. I know some pretty good ones.” And you think, is this guy sick, does he have some disease that might shorten his life? And then you look over at the date underneath the preface, which reads “1938.” And you figure out he was only 39 years old, and he was seriously worried that he might not live another ten years? Yikes, that’s some serious fatalism. And how many more novels did Hemingway publish from 1938 until his death in 1961? Three: For Whom the Bell Tolls, Across and River and into the Trees, and The Old Man and the Sea. And how many more short stories did Hemingway write from 1938 until 1961? He only published 9. Of course, since Hemingway’s death, his estate has flooded bookstores with numerous posthumously released works that were in varying stages of completion at the time of Hemingway’s death.

One of the most interesting commentators in Hemingway is Patrick Hemingway, Ernest’s son that he had with Pauline Pfeiffer. I had seen Patrick Hemingway on screen before, in the excellent 2013 documentary Cooper and Hemingway: The True Gen, which documents Hemingway’s friendship with the screen icon Gary Cooper. But since Cooper and Hemingway features interviews with lots of people who died before the documentary was released, I didn’t really think much of Patrick Hemingway’s participation. But when I saw him in Hemingway, I Googled Patrick Hemingway and discovered that he’s still alive! He’s 92 years old! It’s just kind of crazy to think of someone that closely related to Ernest Hemingway still being alive. And Patrick Hemingway proves to be an insightful commentator on his father. Whatever bad blood had passed between them has long since been forgotten, and it’s Patrick who provides us with one of the few examples of Ernest Hemingway acting unselfishly. In 1947, Patrick had a mental breakdown, and it was his father who slept outside of Patrick’s room and helped get him back to a healthy mental state.

At the very end of Hemingway, we get to see one of the original Hemingway experts: A.E. Hotchner, who died in 2020 at the age of 102. Hotchner hung out with Hemingway a lot in the 1950’s, and his 1966 biography Papa Hemingway was one of the first books about Hemingway. (Hotchner also was a co-founder of Newman’s Own, with his good friend, the brilliant actor and all-time hunk Paul Newman.) Hotchner sheds some light on Hemingway’s sad last days.

Hemingway doesn’t interview Andrew Farah, author of the 2017 book Hemingway’s Brain, in which he puts forth the theory that Hemingway suffered from CTE, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a brain disease usually associated with NFL players and others who have suffered numerous concussions and major head trauma. However, the film makes much of the many head and brain injuries that Hemingway suffered throughout his life—including accidentally pulling a skylight down on his own head and battering his head against an airplane door in order to escape from his second airplane crash. The film doesn’t mention this, but in 1944, during Hemingway’s only meeting with John Steinbeck, Hemingway broke John O’Hara’s walking stick over his own (Hemingway’s) head. Hiroshima author John Hersey was also present during that evening. That’s a lot of literary talent around one table.

Suicide casts a pall over the life of the victim in a way that few other forms of death do. It’s hard not to read every work of art through the lens of knowing that the creator ultimately took their own life. We don’t do that for people who die in other ways. No one reads John Steinbeck and looks for premonitions of heart disease. We don’t scour John Updike’s writing and search for hints of lung cancer. With Hemingway, there’s much to read through the lens of his suicide. The discussion about suicide between a doctor and his son at the end of the short story “Indian Camp,” is made more poignant by the heartbreaking knowledge that both real people that these characters are based on, Ernest and his father, Clarence Edmonds Hemingway, known by his nickname Ed, will both commit suicide. Then there’s the ending of For Whom the Bell Tolls, with Robert Jordan’s inner dialogue about whether to commit suicide or not.

The film doesn’t talk about how Hemingway’s widow Mary claimed his death was accidental rather than a suicide. In an interview to Associated Press reporters on July 8, 1961, a week after Ernest’s suicide, Mary was still insisting that Ernest had been in such good spirits that he couldn’t possibly have committed suicide. The story that Mary had first put out was that Hemingway had been cleaning his gun when it accidentally discharged. Since no gun cleaning equipment had been found nearby, Mary backpedaled and said that he was just looking at the gun when it had gone off. Mary deferred questions about Ernest’s health to Dr. Hugh Butt of the Mayo Clinic. I’m sure she was serious, but that really sounds like a joke.

Hemingway is a powerful documentary, and you can’t help but have sympathy and empathy for this great artist who was obviously in pain so much of his life. Hemingway has done what all good works of biography and criticism should do—it’s sent me back to the source material, as I finally started reading A Moveable Feast, which has been on my list of books to read for a long time.

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Movie Review: Cooper and Hemingway: The True Gen, a Documentary Directed by John Mulholland (2013)


Banner for Cooper and Hemingway: The True Gen, a documentary directed by John Mulholland, 2013.


Gary Cooper and Ernest Hemingway in Sun Valley, Idaho, 1940.

Gary Cooper and Ernest Hemingway.
Gary Cooper and Ernest Hemingway were two men who achieved massive success in their professions. Even today, nearly sixty years after their deaths, they are legendary figures in American culture. The 2013 documentary, Cooper and Hemingway: The True Gen, written and directed by John Mulholland, examines their twenty-year friendship.

Mulholland makes clear the parallels between the two men’s lives, and they are fascinating. Cooper and Hemingway died just six weeks apart in 1961, and both men have become examples of rugged, outdoorsy American men. The film does a nice job of showing how Cooper and Hemingway were different from their media personas, and how they astutely kept their media images intact. Cooper once said that he had only read half a dozen books, thus preserving his image as a simple “yup” and “nope” fella. The truth was, he had studied art at Grinnell College, and was a very intelligent person, with deep knowledge about surprising subjects. And of course, there was more to Hemingway than the blustering macho man who went on bullfights and safaris and hunted for Nazi submarines off the coast of Cuba. 

When Cooper and Hemingway met in 1940, they were both at career peaks. Hemingway was about to publish For Whom the Bell Tolls, a resounding success. (It’s not my favorite Hemingway bookI agree with F. Scott Fitzgerald’s take on it: “It is a thoroughly superficial book which has all the profundity of Rebecca.” The Notebooks of F. Scott Fitzgerald, p.335) Cooper was about to make Sergeant York, the film that would win him his first Oscar. Cooper and Hemingway hit it off immediately. Hemingway had based Robert Jordan, the hero of For Whom the Bell Tolls, partially on Cooper’s screen persona. Cooper ended up playing Robert Jordan in the 1943 movie of For Whom the Bell Tolls. Cooper had earlier played Frederic Henry in the 1932 film of Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms, but the two men did not meet then. Hemingway disliked the movie, but admired Cooper’s performance. 

The film follows Cooper and Hemingway over the next twenty years. We see how both men were besotted with much younger women in the late 1940’s and early 1950’s. Cooper had a long affair with 23-year-old Patricia Neal, his co-star in 1949’s The Fountainhead, which eventually led to a separation from his wife Veronica, known to all by her nickname, “Rocky.” Hemingway was trying to have an affair with 19-year-old Adriana Ivancich, who became the inspiration for the character of Renata in Across the River and into the Trees. (The film notes that when Adriana met Gary Cooper, she was quite besotted with him, which no doubt infuriated Hemingway.) 

However, both men came roaring back in 1952, as Cooper starred in what is probably his best-known role, as Sherriff Will Kane in High Noon, and Hemingway won praise and acclaim for his novella The Old Man and the Sea. But as the 1950’s went on, Hemingway found it harder and harder to finish any of his writing. Although he lived for nine more years, The Old Man and the Sea would be the last book Hemingway published during his lifetime. Both men were struggling as the 1960’s dawned: Cooper with the cancer that would take his life, and Hemingway with drinking, depression, writer’s block, and numerous physical ailments. Cooper died on May 13, 1961, just a week after his 60th birthday. Hemingway, who felt that he could not write any more, took his own life on July 2, 1961. And so, both men passed into the realm of legends. 

Several people note the fact that Cooper was one of the few people who could kid Hemingway. I wonder if part of the reason for this was because Hemingway wasn’t competing with Cooper. Hemingway had poor relationships with other authors, as he saw everything as a competition.
Just read the 1950 New Yorker piece that Lillian Ross wrote about Hemingway, where he compares himself to other authors, using boxing as a metaphor: “I started out very quiet, and I beat Mr. Turgenev. Then I trained hard, and I beat Mr. deMaupassant. I’ve fought two draws with Mr. Stendahl, and I think I had an edge in the last one. But nobody’s going to get me in any ring with Mr. Tolstoy unless I’m crazy or I keep getting better.”

Cooper and Hemingway made me recall just how much I like Gary Cooper, and how effortlessly cool he was. Cooper was a strikingly handsome man, one of the few actors who could look at ease in both a tuxedo and Western clothes. On the screen, Cooper had an easy charisma that drew the viewer in. No matter what he was doing on screen, you couldn’t take your eyes off of Gary Cooper. Everything Cooper did onscreen looked effortless, which led some to conclude that he wasn’t really acting at all. One of my favorite stories about Cooper comes from the making of Vera Cruz, his 1954 western with Burt Lancaster. Lancaster was an intense performer, and when filming started he felt he had to compensate for Cooper’s low-key energy. But when Lancaster saw the rushes from the first few days of shooting, he realized exactly what Cooper was doing: “There I was, acting my ass off. I looked like an idiot, and Coop was absolutely marvelous.”

Cooper and Hemingway is filled with interviews from people who knew both men very well, and it’s quite a star-studded cast, including many people who are longer with us: George Plimpton, Patricia Neal, Charlton Heston, Budd Schulberg, Robert Stack, and Elmore Leonard. There’s also a great scene at the end with a centenarian who is still with us: Kirk Douglas, who reads the letter he wrote Cooper just before Cooper’s death. Douglas, who was then filming Lonely Are the Brave, which became one of his signature performances, wrote to Cooper that the director’s only advice to him was: “Play it like Gary Cooper would.” 

Also interviewed is Maria Cooper Janis, the only child of Gary Cooper. She has great stories about her father, and she does an excellent job of keeping his legacy alive by sharing stories through the official Gary Cooper Instagram account. (Her husband Byron Janis composed the score for Cooper and Hemingway.

With a running time in excess of two hours, Cooper and Hemingway is probably too long, but the stories it tells are fascinating. (Confession: I did not watch the film in one sitting.) It’s narrated by Sam Waterston and features the always excellent Len Cariou as the voice of Hemingway. (Fun fact: Len Cariou originated the role of Sweeney Todd on Broadway. He’s also a crossword puzzle favorite, thanks to his short, unusual first name.) 

If you’re a fan of either Gary Cooper or Ernest Hemingway, you’ll find much to enjoy in Cooper and Hemingway.