1.12.2015

From Novel to Film pt. 9: The Man Who Fell to Earth


THE NOVEL

I am sometimes taken aback by the sheer number of novels that, bells and whistles removed, are really just about drinking. 


Says writer and critic James Sallis: "The Man Who Fell to Earth, on its surface, is the tale of an alien who comes to earth to save his own civilization and, through adversity, through inaction (and through) loss of faith, fails. Just beneath the surface it might be read as a parable of the Fifties and of the Cold War. Beneath that as an evocation of existential loneliness, a Christian fable, a parable of the artist. Above all, perhaps, as the wisest, truest representation of alcoholism ever written."

I mean, not that I think it's all that esoteric of a theme in the book, just was happy to see him explicitly stating it so.

"The second martini did not burn his throat so much. He ordered a third. After all, the chemical warfare man was paying. Or was it the taxpayers? It depended on how you looked at it. He shrugged. Everybody would pay for all of it anyway - Massachusetts and Mars; everybody everywhere would pay."

Novel (1963) Film (1976)
The Plot: Set in the near-future, Newton is an alien from the planet Anthea, which is the native term for an unidentified planet in our solar system. (Probably Mars.) He arrives on Earth with the secret mission to establish himself and construct a space vehicle to ferry the rest of his people (whose numbers have dwindled to 300) to Earth. With his alien aptitude for science, he enlists the aid of a patent lawyer (Farnsworth) and (eventually) a disgruntled science professor (Bryce) and amasses a great fortune. 

This attracts the attention of the feds.
Newton meets a young woman named Betty Jo.
Their relationship is never romantic, but she ends up becoming his constant companion.
along with:
Gin.
She also introduces him to church, which he doesn't take to quite as enthusiastically. He is at first more sympathetic to religious belief - which "Antheans, in their ancient visits to the planet, were probably to blame for" - than he is to gin:

"The humans seemed to be building loose constructions of half-belief and sentiment to replace their religion, and he did not know what to make of it. He could not really fathom why Betty Jo was so much concerned over the supposed strength she received in weekly doses from her synthetic church, a form of strength that seemed less certain and more troublesome than what she received from her gin."

But that changes the more time he spends amongst the company of humans. ("A man surrounded by animals who takes on their nature; shares their madness and confusion and isolation, but felt even more acutely.")

Eventually, the CIA captures Newton. Newton endures his captivity with indifference, as he has become increasingly convinced his mission is ultimately futile. By the time he can get all Antheans to Earth, humans will likely have made the planet uninhabitable through their own savagery.

"'(At times) you seem to us like apes loose in a museum, carrying knives, slashing the canvasses, breaking the statuary with hammers.'
'But it was human beings who painted the pictures, made the statues.'
'Only a few human beings,' Newton said. 'Only a few.'"

Just before discharging him, the FBI (who bristled at the CIA's taking control of the interrogation of Newton) takes an x-ray of his skull and, disbelieving of his protestations that his eyes are different than other people's, blinds him. 

"Nobody's eyes can see X-rays." The man pursed his lips, obviously in irritation. "Nobody sees at those frequencies."

Some time later, at novel's end, Bryce discovers an album in a record shop called 'The Visitor' and recognizes his old friend's voice, reading poetry over strange music.


He tracks Newton down and pleads with him to continue his mission; maybe the Antheans can prevent humanity from destroying itself. Newton refuses, not without pity. (And not without writing him a check for a million dollars.) Bryce - who has taken up with Betty Jo - leaves Newton to drink by himself in the bar. The end.

Walter Tevis, as might be surmised from some of these plot details, was no stranger to alcoholic despair. Two of his other books (The Hustler and its sequel The Color of Money) were made into films. TMWFTE is the only work of his I've read, but I will happily read more based on my enjoyment of it.

If I've made it sound like a complete buzzkill, it's not, I apologize - while it certainly is a somewhat pessimistic outlook, the characters are easy to care about, the writing and atmosphere are crisp, and the alien-in-human-body theme is explored exceptionally well.

THE FILM

I first saw this in the 90s while studying film at Wright State University. The friends I'd made there had taken a Nicolas Roeg / John Carpenter course the semester prior to my own matriculation, and The Man Who Fell to Earth had a certain conversational currency at the parties I went to. 

I've seen the film many times since then but only once since reading the novel a couple of months ago. What struck me on this last re-watch was how closely the film follows the novel's structure and themes. It embellishes certain things, sure, and wholly invents others, but for the most part, the story and characters of the novel are faithfully transposed to screen.

Newton's captivity.
The stereo of the near-future. You drop your ball in the (Newton-created) crockpot-looking thing, and beautiful sounds emanate from the walls.
From the Criterion film essay by Graham Fuller:

"With its fragmented narrative, its genre hopping, its strategic crosscutting, and its dense tapestry of disassociative visual and musical allusions, the film was an enigma for many of the British critics who warily reviewed it in April 1976, and no less so for their American counterparts when it was released in the United States, minus twenty crucial minutes, two months later.
 
Prompted by an effort to sanitize the movie, Rugoff cut the sequences of Bryce fooling around in bed with his students; the shot of Mary-Lou urinating from the shock of seeing Newton in his alien state; the crucial sex-and-guns sequence in which Newton, in captivity, destroys his relationship with Mary-Lou * ; and the scene of Bryce dressed absurdly as Santa Claus."

* I'm convinced this is the only reason why the character's name was changed from Betty Jo to Mary-Lou, so David Bowie could sing "Hello, Mary-Lou" over this sequence. (EDIT: Apparently it's John Phillips who performs this, not Bowie.)

I've only ever seen the restored version, so I never had to view the film with the cuts mentioned above. All the sequences mentioned are inventions of the film rather than the novel. Bryce in this regard is the opposite of how he's portrayed in the movie. When he's introduced in the book, he skips grading papers to go see a film and thinks of the frolicking women onscreen as "painful as well as absurd distraction for a middle-aged widower."

When he's introduced in the movie, on the other hand, he's having aggressive and kinky sex with one of his students, who films it all for post-performance review, while the soundtrack is filled with animal roars and other weirdness.
And it's all cross-cut with Newton hearing them (it seems) in his distorted extrasensory perception while trying to eat at a restaurant showing this angry kabuki theater.

These inventions and expansions make sense and enhance the disorientation of the novel.

i.e. this, among the first things Newton sees upon falling to Earth.

The eye-as-window-to-the-soul motif of the novel is likewise enhanced. In some unexpected ways. Farnsworth (the patent lawyer) is given comically exaggerated near-sightedness:


And Newton's expanded range of vision is relayed in a brief (and - wonderfully, from where I'm sitting - random) sequence when he and Betty Jo Mary-Lou are driving through the countryside.

He is disturbed by events beyond the frame -
- and sees through some kind of mutual rift in time to frontier Americana days.

and these folks staring back at him, speeding along.

Close to the end, Mary-Lou removes a splinter from her eye:

 

And so on. The recurring eye motif helps to anchor some of the film's wilder leaps.

Bernie Casey plays Peters, a character not in the book, but who is a compartmentalization of the various State Department officials who question Newton. 


In a somewhat indulgent sequence, we get a glimpse not just into Peters' wealthy home life but also scenes from his and his family's future. Whether or not we see this as another demonstration of Newton's time-bending vision is not clear to me. It comes across, though, as if Nic Roeg just had this other storyline in mind and left it in the movie.

The film (quite unlike the novel) lives or dies with David Bowie and Candy Clark as Mary-Lou.


Their chemistry is quite good on-screen; both seem to latch on to the other's vulnerability. Bowie's first reaction to the script (and his perspective throughout filming) was that the film was a love story. (Candy speaks a bit about her time filming here, for those who are interested.)

And when it turns gin-soaked and self-destructive -

- it remains interesting, never cliched.
Candy Clark deserves special kudos for her performance.

Newton's mission is kept vague in the film, but we get some intriguing glimpses of life on Anthea.

Here, when Newton is looking out the limousine window at green fields, he recalls life with his family.
and slowly the green (his projection) disappears.
Anthean trains. Homes? Train-homes?

Again, from the Criterion film essay: "One of the first things he sees on Earth is a decrepit locomotive that triggers a memory of the futuristic little engine he boarded as he set out on his journey to the “present.” It’s a train to now but ultimately to nowhere—the one, Roeg’s glittering film implies, we’re all on. And it’s already left the station."

Salud!

"Stuck on Earth, unable to save his people, unable even to age, Newton becomes a passive receptacle for everything that everyone in the film, and everyone watching, wants to bring to him—as well as a vehicle for the Englishman Roeg’s scathing critic of America’s materialistic culture.  (...) when Bryce apologizes to Newton for the way he has been betrayed and corrupted on Earth, Newton says a visitor to his planet could have expected the same treatment. The idea that human nature is the same the universe over, even when it’s nonhuman, is a bitter cosmic joke. But the joke doubles back on itself, because Newton’s planet is our own."


"I think Mr. Newton has had enough, don't you?"


Sheesh - I'm really making both film and novel seem like depressing experiences, aren't I? And while there's certainly more than an element of tragedy to both, there's much to admire in terms of artful construction. I'm hit or miss (and mostly miss) with Nic Roeg's catalog, but The Man Who Fell to Earth is definitely a rewarding experience, especially if you're not opposed to doing a little of the work yourself.

FINAL VERDICT: Great movie, great book, intelligent and creative (and pretty out there) adaptation.

1.06.2015

Friday Night Film Noir


Here is a table of contents for all Film Noir posts here on the Omnibus. Just click on the title and be taken to the post of your choice.


This is not meant to be a Best or Most Essential Film Noir Ever Made list; you'll see that plenty of big ones (The Big Sleep, Sweet Smell of Success, The Third Man, Touch of Evil, Double Indemnity and more) are missing, as well as any/all neo-noirs and anything made after 1965 or - with one exception - overseas. The internet is a vast and glorious place, and many such lists abound. Here are a few noirs that have held up under questioning (i.e. multiple viewings) for yours truly.

Presented in chronological order:

~
I Wake Up Screaming (1941)
Directed by H. Bruce Humberstone. Written by Dwight Taylor and Steve Fisher. Starring Betty Grable, Victor Mature, and Carole Landis. Cinematography by Edward Cronjager.

~
The Seventh Victim (1943)
Directed by Mark Robson. Written by DeWitt Bodeen and Charles O'Neal. Starring Kim Hunter, Isabell Jewell, Tom Conway, and Jean Brooks. Cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca.

~
Directed by Edward Dmytryk. Written by John Paxton. Cinematography by Harry J. Wild.

~
Detour (1945)
Directed by Edgar Ulmer. Written by Martin Goldsmith and Martin Mooney. Starring Tom Neal, Ann Savage, and Claudia Drake. Cinematography by Benjamin Kline.

~
Railroaded! (1947)
Directed by Anthony Mann. Written by John C. Higgins. Starring John Ireland, Hugh Beaumont, Sheila Ryan, and Jane Randolph. Cinematography by Guy Roe.

~
T-Men (1947)
Directed by Anthony Mann. Written by John C. Higgins and Virginia Kellogg. Starring Dennis O'Keefe, Mary Meade, and Charles McGraw. Cinematography by John Alton.

~
Out of the Past (1947)
Directed by Jacques Tourneur. Written by Daniel Mainwaring, James M. Cain, and Frank Fenton. Starring Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, Kirk Douglas, and Rhonda Fleming. Cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca.

~
Act of Violence (1948)
Directed by Fred Zinnemann. Written by Robert Richards and Collier Young. Starring Van Helfin, Robert Ryan, Janet Leigh, and Mary Astor. Cinematography by Robert Surtees.

~
The Killer That Stalked New York (1950)
Directed by Earl McEvoy. Written by Harry Essex and Milton Lehman. Starring Evelyn Keyes, Charles Korvin, William Bishop, and Dorothy Malone. Cinematography by Joseph Biroc.

~
The Asphalt Jungle (1950)
Directed by John Huston. Written by Ben Maddow and John Huston. Cinematography by Harold Rosson.

~
D.O.A. (1950)
Directed by Rudolph Mate. Written by Russell Rouse and Clarence Greene. Starring Edmond O'Brien and Pamela Britton. Cinematography by Ernest Laszlo.

~
Gun Crazy (1950)
Directed by Joseph H. Lewis. Written by MacKinlay Kantor and Dalton Trumbo. Starring Peggy Cummins and John Dall. Cinematography by Russell Harlan.


~
His Kind of Woman (1951)
Directed by John Farrow. Written by Frank Fenton and Jack Leonard. Starring Jane Russell and Robert Mitchum. Cinematography by Harry J. Wild.

~
The Sniper (1952)
Directed by Edward Dmytryk. Written by Harry Brown, Edna Anhalt, and Edward Anhalt. Starring Adolphe Menjou, Arthur Franz, and Marie Windsor.

~
Women's Prison (1955)
Directed by Lewis Seiler. Written by Crane Wilbur and Jack DeWitt. Starring Ida Lupino, Jan Sterling, Cleo Moore, and Audrey Totter. Cinematography by Lester White.

~
Kiss Me Deadly (1955)
Directed by Robert Aldrich. Written by Mickey Spillane and A.I. Bezzerides. Starring Ralph Meeker and Marian Carr. Cinematography by Ernest Laszlo.

~
Shoot the Piano Player (1960)
Directed by François Truffaut. Written be François Truffaut and Marcel Moussy. Starring Charles Aznavour and Marie Dubois. Cinematography by Raoul Coutard.

~
The Girl Hunters (1963)
Directed by Roy Rowland and written by Mickey Spillane.

~
 Bunny Lake is Missing (1965) 
Directed by Otto Preminger. Written by John Mortimer, Penelope Mortimer, and Ira Levin.

~
Last Edited: 3/11/2015