Che: The Roadshow Edition

I’m glad I got to see Parts 1 and 2 of Steven Soderbergh’s ambitious Che biopic back-to-back in a marathon (257 minutes!) movie experience to truly appreciate Soderbergh’s cinematic flair, Benicio Del Toro’s fine acting, and a portrayal of El Che that fleshes out the hype and, more importantly, the crash in the life of the Revolutionary Icon.

Do you really need a spoiler alert? I didn’t think so. We all know the classic image of Che, all war-weary but proudly peering out into the distance. We even know the basics of his story, even if we haven’t read the books or seen the documentaries. Soderbergh taps into this casual knowledge and drops us right into the story at two key junctures the life of Che with minimal exposition.

Part 1: The Argentine
This is the better movie of the two if all you want is a feel good (cue the Beatles) You say you want a revolution (end Beatles) be all and end all to Che’s T-Shirt story. This isn’t to say Part 1 is bad, it’s actually very layered and beautifully shot with a strong ensemble cast that all shine in their roles.

We start at the height of Che’s vatic powers, his 1964 interview in New York with Lisa Howard right before his address to the United Nations Council. Soderbergh’s cuts in and out of this brief part of Che’s life with stark high contrast documentary style black and white footage, an emphasis on the New York winter (everyone is bundled up), and access to NYC’s socially elite and the halls of the UN’s General Assembly. We get very little access to the lives of everyday New Yorkers and Americans except for shouts from protesters from afar and brief interactions Che has with the local proletariat (cops assigned to protect him, an overeager interpreter and a chit chat with the Cuban Embassy cook).

A whole different movie takes place when Soderberg’s brings us back to the scenes of the Cuban Revolution. Here the colors are lusher, the shots wider in scope (often out of focus), the sounds of the Sierra Masetra dominate, and we are introduced to a myriad of allies in the Revolución (I honestly started to lose count of who was who and their roles). Here we witness the transformation of Ernesto Guevara, M.D., into Che, the guerrilla comandante, as he leads a myriad of troops through internal strife, government opposition and the mountains themselves to victory. Heroic speeches and macho gunfights are abound but so is some unexpected and well-timed comedy as well as the sense that Che, the warrior poet, believes you should only pick up a gun if you are literate and educated about your cause.

The film rolls along at a steady but patient pace as we witness the various Revoluciónistas’ ideologies and reasons for fighting as well as the lives and conditions of the Cubanos they seek to serve battle by battle as we build to Che’s victory at Santa Clara. The celebration after so much strife and loss leads to Part 1’s most cliché line as the victorious guerrillas claim final victory for the revolution and Che reminds them: “We have only won a war, the Revolution begins now!” Corny? Yes. But it works because Soderbergh has given us so much to rally around and the theater collectively loses its historical memory and breaks into applause as Part 1 ends.

Part 2: Guerilla
This is the grittier of the two films and if seen by itself would probably be an awful experience as the sexiness of a victorious uprising is replaced with the blight of an impossible war. This is the part of the Che myth people don’t want to talk about, how he died on the losing end of an insurgence that was doomed from the start. Soderbergh creates a more straightforward linear narrative here with Che insistently pushing the story along against just about everyone’s wishes.

We skip from the victory of Santa Clara right to Che’s departure from Cuba and arrival in Bolivia. By doing so, we also skip over his time as the second in command of the Cuban Communist Government, his travels to China and the USSR, and, more importantly, completely skip over his other failed efforts in the Congo (a precursor to his doomed Bolivian campaign) but we know have Guevara elevated to the unofficial position of El Che, the fabled comanadante.

At first, the Bolivian Highlands seem very much like the Sierra Maestras (although now Soderbergh’s wide shots are more in focus) and the elements seem in place for another successful Américan Revolution but things go downhill fast for Che. The Comunistas of Bolivia are against him, his own agents are defying his orders, the locals aren’t receptive to his call for literacy and better living conditions, and his own troops are fighting more to be with Che than to win a war. The slide gets progressively worse as the Bolivians have joined up with the CIA who see a great opportunity to do eliminate an opposition player without getting their own hands dirty. Can it get worse? It does and through it all Che keeps fighting on in an almost complete reversal from the heights Part 1 brought us to. By the end of Part 2, Che is really no longer Che (his men are under orders to call him Ramon) and is back to being the company medic for a group of undisciplined insurgents who are hopelessly outnumbered and outgunned. The finale comes quickly for his troops and for Che himself as he dies as valiantly as possible with one last flashback to Fidel and the start of his trip to Cuba.

In retrospect, Soderbergh does a fine job of portraying the construction then deconstruction of Che with the attention such a mythic figure deserves. Benicio Del Toro’s portrayal of Che is dead on with moments of levity, tenderness and uncertainty effortlessly mixed in with a true sense of purpose. The rest of the acting is for the most part top notch with some forgettable roles from some of the guerrilla fighters who either don’t stay on the screen very long or who have too short a back story.

And this is where Part 2 really falls short for me. Part 1 gave us so many stories and angles to view the Revoluciónistas and their sympathizers that we can live with the fact that The Argentine is viewing Che’s life from the side of his comrades. Part 2 is loaded with people who hate or love Che for no other reason than he is El Che. With only his past glory to ride on and very little to add to it, the Che in Guerilla becomes hollow and unsympathetic, we keep hoping the Che from Part 1 to come back and he doesn’t until the very end.

Luckily, Soderbergh gave me enough fuel in Part 1 to get through Part 2 and appreciate the message that the truths behind our myths, the reality and hardships our heroes (or villains) live through is very real and not always the fodder for uplifting Hollywood storytelling and that not every tale—especially the propaganda fables—has a good ending.

Che, both Part 1 and 2, offers a broad canvas to see the story of one of the 20th centuries most mythic figures and should be viewed side-by-side (maybe with a good lunch break between) and enjoyed on the big screen where it belongs.

I Speak of the City: Amiri Baraka

[When did pedestrian become a bad thing? When did it become synonymous with dull and unremarkable?

I ask because it seems to be the adjective of choice for a lot of negative commentary about Elizabeth Alexander’s “Praise Song for the Day.” Well, if by pedestrian they also mean that Alexander is commenting on the realities she sees while walking through Town, then I don’t see what’s wrong with being pedestrian.

Take for example the images and commentary from Amiri Baraka’s “Something In The Way Of Things (In Town).” Baraka’s poem reminds the reader that what is dismissed as pedestrian is the same thing that can save your Town, if you are open to seeing the decay in Town and around Town as symptomatic evidence of a deeper problem. Then again, you can be as pedestrian as you want to be misreading all the signs if your “spirit is illiterate.”]

Something In The Way Of Things (In Town)

In town

Something in the way of things
Something that will quit and won’t start
Something you know but can’t stand
Can’t know get along with
Like death
Riding on top of the car peering through the windshield for his cue
Something entirely fictitious and true
That creeps across your path hallowing your evil ways
Like they were yourself passing yourself not smiling
The dead guy you saw me talking to is your boss
I tried to put a spell on him but his spirit is illiterate

I know things you know and nothing you don’t know
‘cept I saw something in the way of things
Something grinning at me and I wanted to know, was it funny?
Was it so funny it followed me down the street
Greeting everybody like the good humor man
But an they got the taste of good humor but no ice cream
It was like dat
Me talking across people into the houses
And not seeing the beings crowding around me with ice picks
You could see them
But they looked like important Negroes on the way to your funeral
Looked like important jiggaboos on the way to your auction
And let them chant the number and use an ivory pointer to count your teeth
Remember Steppen Fetchit
Remember Steppen Fetchit how we laughed
An all your Sunday school images giving flesh and giggling
With the ice pick high off his head
Made ya laugh anyway

I can see something in the way of our selves
I can see something in the way of our selves
That’s why I say the things I do, you know it
But its something else to you
Like that job
This morning when you got there and it was quiet
And the machines were yearning soft behind you
Yearning for that nigga to come and give up his life
Standin’ there bein’ dissed and broke and troubled

My mistake is I kept sayin’ “that was proof that God didn’t exist”
And you told me, “nah, it was proof that the devil do”
But still, its like I see something I hear things
I saw words in the white boy’s lying rag
said he was gonna die poor and frustrated
That them dreams walk which you ‘cross town
S’gonna die from over work
There’s garbage on the street that’s tellin’ you you ain’t shit
And you almost believe it
Broke and mistaken all the time
You know some of the words but they ain’t the right ones
Your cable back on but ain’t nothin’ you can see
But I see something in the way of things
Something to make us stumble
Something get us drunk from noise and addicted to sadness
I see something and feel something stalking us
Like and ugly thing floating at our back calling us names
You see it and hear it too
But you say it got a right to exist just like you and if God made it
But then we got to argue
And the light gon’ come down around us
Even though we remember where the (light or mic) is
Remember the Negro squinting at us through the cage
You seen what I see too?
The smile that ain’t a smile but teeth flying against our necks
You see something too but can’t call its name

Ain’t it too bad y’all said
Ain’t it too bad, such a nice boy always kind to his motha
Always say good morning to everybody on his way to work
But that last time before he got locked up and hurt, real bad
I seen him walkin’ toward his house and he wasn’t smiling
And he didn’t even say hello
But I knew he’d seen something
Something in the way of things that it worked on him like it do in will
And he kept marching faster and faster away from us
And never even muttered a word
Then the next day he was gone
You wanna know what
You wanna know what I’m talkin’ about
Sayin’ “I seen something in the way of things”
And how the boys face looked that day just before they took him away
The is? in that face and remember now, remember all them other faces
And all the many places you’ve seen him or the sister with his child
Wandering up the street
Remember what you seen in your own mirror and didn’t for a second recognize
The face, your own face
Straining to get out from behind the glass
Open your mouth like you was gon’ say somethin’
Close your eyes and remember what you saw and what it made you feel like
Now, don’t you see something else
Something cold and ugly
Not invisible but blended with the shadow criss-crossing the old man
Squatting by the drug store at the corner
With is head resting uneasily on his folded arms
And the boy that smiled and the girl he went with

And in my eyes too
A waving craziness splitting them into the jet stream of a black bird
Wit his ass on fire
Or the solomNOTness of where we go to know we gonna be happy

I seen something
I SEEN something
And you seen it too
You seen it too
You just can’t call it’s name

© Amiri Baraka


“Something In The Way Of Things (In Town)” by Amiri Baraka with music by The Roots

This little song that I’m singin’ about

The hype, the spectacle, the crowds, the celebrities, the moment, the poem… this is what an inauguration should be like. I honestly don’t remember a thing about any past inaugurations so I guess this is my first real “transfer of power.” Not bad.

And I had no idea that the inaugural poet isn’t a defacto part of the proceedings. I always assumed there’s been one from the jump. But my poet education continues and I find out how rare it is to have a poet drop some verse at a big event. Who knew?

So as the whole world is watching and waiting for Obama to take the reigns—kinda ceremoniously at that, hasn’t he been running the show since the day after the election? If Wall St buys on the rumor and sells on the news, more rumor & news has come from change.gov then the White House—and usher in the next phase of American Politics, I’m counting the minutes till Elizabeth Alexander ends the age of 9/11 Poetry and moves us forward into a new age of American Poetries.

My ringside seat is at an assembly of K-6 graders who have been ravenously pro-Obama since he got the Democratic Party nod. This same enthusiasm has them eager to see history happen in front of them and cheer when Barack Hussein Obama took the Oath of Office. (Yo, John Roberts, read the text right next time. And how come everybody is *still* so afraid to use the Prez’s middle name?)

Obama’s subsequent speech was short and straight to the point. No longer speaking the language of possibility but shifting to a sense of patriotic pragmatism, the President’s rhetoric still puts others to shame and he came across poised and ready to attack the mountain of trouble he’s inherited.

At this point, the students were pleased to have seen their main man rise to the top and talk the good talk. Months of campaigning and a tense Election Day (you know you didn’t dare to believe it till CNN/MSNBC/FOX NEWS told you it was true) have delivered the One and now the Kingdom can live happily ever after or somethin’ like that. Anyways, everyone was ready to move on get the show rolling as the Inaugural Poet is set to take the mic.

I, of course, was horrified. “Wait, wait, there is more. Poetry is about to take the stage. C’mon, guys! Guys?” Nah, I was pretty ready for it and, truth to tell, the upper grade kids stuck around and kept their eye on the TV waiting to see what would happen next. And why was I ready for the majority of indifference? Because just as sure as I know poetry can save a life, I know that I am well in the minority. It’ll be a long hard minute before poetry can rise up with Politics, Music, and Movies in the American Consciousness. And that’s the real deal in my book. Am I gonna stop trying to get to that minute? Hell no. But back to Elizabeth Alexander and The Poem.

My gut reaction after the poem and the general indifference was, “I wished they had put Ms Alexander up before the Oath of Office and she could have gotten some more shine.” Right here, right now, I’m glad she came on directly after Obama. Let history stand, the first poet to read a poem in the Age of the 44th President is Elizabeth Alexander. If the last eight years have been marked with blight and aggression, if they go down in Literary History as the “Era of 9/11 Poetry,” if we really believed we have turned a corner in the way we think, act and respond as a Nation, then the first words belong to a poet— Elizabeth Alexander.

Just as she said in the NY Times, Alexander went with a poem that has “integrity and life that goes beyond the moment.” In fact, she went even deeper and present a song that spoke to (shock!) her experience and (gasp!) what the election means to her. When Alexander says “us” she is invoking the deepest “I” she can, the one she can share with everyone who cried a little when Obama won the Election and who took time off of their busy first-day-back-at-work to see the moment happen. Alexander delivered her poem with as much grace as possible considering the poem is the epitome of the Newness. (All you haters out there: Try composing a commissioned poem you only have a couple of weeks to write and then deliver before thousands live and millions on the air, a poem you know will be scrutinized by every hater out there, and see how you would do.) Was is the best poem ever? Will it be the poem that puts poetry first in line in American Arts? Will it erase the Bush Years? Will it end war and hunger?

Probably not. And that’s OK because the measure of a good political poem is not in the second after it was uttered but its effects over time. Right now, just a little bit after its birth, this poem has people talking about poetry. Some say this poem didn’t speak to them, it didn’t live up to what they thought it should be, that Rev Joseph Lowery simple rhymes was the “real” poetry. (Lowery best give Big Bill Broonzy props for riffing from his lyrics of “Black, Brown and White,” jus sayin.) I hope all those folks seek out that poetry they feel does best speak to them. If even a few do then poetry, for everyone, will benefit. If that does happen, you can thank Elizabeth Alexander for stepping up and delivering.

I’m just catching the replays of Alexander’s poem and reading the text. I’m feeling it. More and more I’m feeling my America in it as she speaks of City, boomboxes, kids in school with pencils in hand. I’m feeling her invocation for the invisible workforce that drives this country. I’m feeling her call for more than rhetoric, for more than poems, but for hope. Word.

Like any good poem, there will be more praise and there will be more critique. I look forward to reading it. I hope to even write some of it as I am going with my straight gut on this one and living in the joy of poetry. Others will decry it as propaganda or substandard or unmemorable (even as they write about it). For them, and for every poet whose anchor is rooted in the muck of gripes, complaint and envy, I’ll refer to the words of President Barack Hussein Obama:

What the cynics fail to understand is that the ground has shifted beneath them – that the stale political arguments that have consumed us for so long no longer apply…

(Props to Reginald Harris for pointing this quote out)


Elizabeth Alexander recites “Praise Song for the Day” at President Obama’s Inauguration

I Speak of the City: Julia Vinograd

Berkeley Poetry Walk:  Make Art - Listen
Berkeley Poetry Walk: Make Art – Listen

I found this poem while going through the used Poetry section at Pegasus Books and finding the anthology City of Buds & Flowers: A Poet’s Eye View of Berkeley. The first thing that caught my eye was that it was a collection of City poems, the second thing was its editor, John Oliver Simon—a great teacher of poetry, fine poet & translator, and true gentleman.

Simon’s anthology speaks to all of Berkeley’s complexities by drawing a group of poets whose work speaks of their citizenry giving us more than just the standard hippie-go-lucky take. Of course, you will find hippie poetry here, written by proud card carrying hippies, as well as poems from the lower sections of San Pablo Avenue and other less touristy corners.

This book also gave me a chance to read some Berkeley poems from Telegraph Avenue’s own Julia Vinograd aka the Bubblelady (Vinograd’s bio in City of Buds & Flowers mentions that she is known as the Bubblelady but no one calls her that to her face). Vinograd’s contributions to the collection are great, a true reflection of what Berkeley means to those who remember why People’s Park came to be, the sense of responsibility that was an answer to frustration and how that responsibility to an ideal, an artform, a place never has to fade.

Fire

I warm my hands
where the rocks are thrown,
where religion whirls at the feet of unruly crowds,
where minds melt down a face without the compass of tears,
because my hands are cold.
My pulse beats slowly so I drink the beating drums.
I have no nerves in myself, but the flute, the heckler, the siren
supply me. I follow a skinny smack-dealing girl
in a mink coat and bare feet,
and I follow a Jesus freak lady,
tall, white-haired, aristocrat born in Russia
as I would come to fire,
for my eyes see only in the light of the fire.
I refuse what they offer
and take the fire instead.
I am the golem of Berkeley
and Berkeley carved its name upon me,
but it doesn’t always work.
And then the city sinks under older cities
and finally the ocean where I swim among the sharks
and the ruins of Atlantis, until I change again.

© Julia Vinograd