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Pulp Fiction: The Films of Jim Thompson, Now Disc. ?Pop. 1280? PLOT SPOILERS

Discussion in 'Archive: The Amphitheatre' started by Zaz, Jun 12, 2010.

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  1. Zaz

    Zaz Jedi Knight star 9

    Registered:
    Oct 11, 1998
    From the New York Times

    Filmed to a Pulp:

    "STEPHEN KING once said of the novelist Jim Thompson: ?He was crazy. He went running into the American subconscious with a blowtorch in one hand and a pistol in the other, screaming his goddamn head off. No one else came close.?

    The same qualities that made his books so arresting ? Thompson?s wildness and originality and dark, violent sexiness ? also made him immensely appealing to filmmakers. Stanley Kubrick signed up Thompson in the 1950s, the author?s heyday, and Sam Peckinpah hired him in the ?70s, near the end of his life. Both arrangements ended badly, however, and not just because Thompson was alcoholic and quarrelsome.

    Thompson?s vision, though it seems made for Hollywood, is so singular that over the years it has proved remarkably resistant to movie adaptation. The two versions of his novel ?The Getaway? ? Peckinpah?s in 1972 and Roger Donaldson?s 1994 remake ? are notoriously watered down and leave out the book?s most interesting feature: an ending in which the two central characters, a bank robber and his wife, descend into a physical and spiritual hell."


    Odd when you consider that these are both gifted directors...
     
  2. Mastadge

    Mastadge Manager Emeritus star 7 VIP - Former Mod/RSA

    Registered:
    Jun 4, 1999
    The new version of The Killer Inside Me is supposed to be brutal. Anyway, I'm not surprised his books have proven difficult to film. They're dark and violent even by Hollywood noir standards.
     
  3. Zaz

    Zaz Jedi Knight star 9

    Registered:
    Oct 11, 1998
    I have seen good Thompson adaptations, though.
     
  4. Zaz

    Zaz Jedi Knight star 9

    Registered:
    Oct 11, 1998
    "Oddly, the best movie versions of Thompson so far have been by directors who are European: ?The Grifters,? directed in 1990 by Stephen Frears, an Englishman, and the Frenchman Bertrand Tavernier?s 1981 film ?Coup de Torchon,? an adaptation of the novel ?Pop. 1280,? which many people, including Donald Westlake (who wrote the screenplay for ?The Grifters?), consider by far the greatest of the Thompson movies."


    Haven't seen the French film, but I did see "The Grifters" and it's really a black-hearted film, very dark, with a great cast. Angelica Huston is really strange actress; physically imposing, with a rather light, inadequate voice. She is very believable in this. I will say no more. Also Annette Benning when she first started, and John Cusack, also very good.
     
  5. soitscometothis

    soitscometothis Chosen One star 6

    Registered:
    Jul 11, 2003
    The Grifters is terrific.
     
  6. Zaz

    Zaz Jedi Knight star 9

    Registered:
    Oct 11, 1998
    PLOT SPOILERS IN THIS POST


    "Now Michael Winterbottom, another Englishman, hopes to join the list with his new version of ?The Killer Inside Me,? which stars Casey Affleck, Jessica Alba and Kate Hudson and opens in theaters on June 18, as well as on video on demand.

    Kubrick called ?The Killer Inside Me,? which came out in 1952, ?probably the most chilling and believable first-person story of a criminally warped mind I have ever encountered.? The book is arguably Thompson?s best and embodies many of the difficulties entailed in translating his work to the screen.

    It?s the story of Lou Ford, a deputy sheriff in a small Texas town, seemingly bland and ineffectual, who turns out to be a compulsive and heartless killer. So, to begin with, there are scenes of creepy violence, including a famous passage, describing the murder of a prostitute, that begins: ?I backed her against the wall, slugging, and it was like pounding a pumpkin. Hard, then everything giving away at once.?

    Like many Thompson novels ?The Killer Inside Me? is told in the first person, and the reader eventually discovers that Lou is himself dead: he?s speaking to the reader from beyond the grave, as it were, and his narrative voice is as seductive and elusive as the one he uses to sweet-talk his victims. How can we believe a word he says? Robert Polito, Thompson?s biographer, explained in an interview: ?Thompson isn?t like the writers he?s often compared to. He?s not like Hammett, Chandler, Cain. The books aren?t realistic. They?re much closer to phantasmagoria.?


    This sounds very good, but I wonder about the casting. Casey Affleck is particularly physical imposing.
     
  7. Nevermind

    Nevermind Jedi Knight star 6

    Registered:
    Oct 14, 2001
    "In France, Mr. Tavernier recalled, ?Pop. 1280? was published not in a cheesy paperback but in the highbrow journal Le Novel Observateur, where for some reason the population was reduced to 1275. ?Whole novels have been written here about what happened to those five people,? he said, laughing.

    ?Pop. 1280,? like ?The Killer Inside Me,? is set in Texas and is about a bumbling sheriff who sets about murdering some of the townspeople. Mr. Tavernier?s version, ?Coup de Torchon,? began to take shape, he went on to say, only when he gave up trying to transpose the story to contemporary Paris and instead moved it to West Africa ? a landscape with the proper degree of Thompsonian strangeness. He got the idea, he said, from rereading Celine?s ?Journey to the End of the Night? and realizing the book?s descriptions of colonial West Africa were ?exactly, exactly the world described by Thompson.?
     
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