A productive three days, but not without the frustrations travel can bring.
The trial has consumed days of television and the themes of this science fiction film about a fictional future where anything goes for 24 hours of each year, in an effort to “release the beast” resonated. The year is 2022 and the night is March 21st—which, coincidentally, happens to be my husband’s birthday.
“The purge” is upon the populace (actual filming took place in Chatsworth, California) and all the well-to-do people have invested heavily in security systems to protect themselves during this one night of complete and utter lawlessness. Even murder is condoned the night of the purge, so it is best to be under lock and key.
Ethan Hawke has made a pretty penny selling security systems to all of his neighbors in the gated community.
Ethan and his wife and two children—a teen-aged daughter Zoe and a younger son Charlie—will be safely ensconced behind thick metal walls. “Blessed be America, a nation reborn.” Unemployment is 1% and this country-wide act of catharsis is supported by the populace, who place blue flowers outside to show their patriotic involvement with the sanctioned chaos going on outside their locked doors.
It is noted that “The poor can’t afford to protect themselves,” but who really cares about the poor? As the plot has it, “The purge allows people a release. This night saved our country, unburdening the economy. It is the eradication of the poor and those unable to defend themselves.”
Certainly the “fine, young, very educated guys and gals” who come calling at the Sandens’ house, demanding that the “dirty homeless pig” who has been given safe haven inside the Sandens’ home hold the poor to be fair game. They gather outside Ethan Hawke’s home and give him a deadline to turn over the African American homeless person compassionate son Charlie has taken pity on and allowed into the sanctuary the Sandens’ home provides.
Give him up, is the message, “It’s fight night. We don’t want to kill our >own,” says the psychotic leader of this demented Manson-like gang. But if the Sandens don’t turn over “the piece of flesh that you are protecting,” which the gang says “exists only to serve our needs of the purge,” then the mob will kill them all.
What to do! What to do? The message to Ethan Hawke is “It’s time for you to quiet down and let us do our duties as Americans.” Otherwise, say the psychos gathered outside the house waiting for reinforcements that will allow them to breach the fortified walls, “Was his life really worth yours?”
As security system salesman James Sanden says to his wife (Lena Headey) as they huddle helplessly inside, “Things like this are not supposed to happen in our neighborhood.” She responds, “But they’re happening, James. They’re happening right now.”
It comes down to a simple restatement of the issue: “It’s him or us.”
James Sanden votes for “him” and attempts to duct tape the poor, bloody, wounded homeless man to a chair on rollers, planning to sacrifice him to the hungry crowd, even though, as he is overpowering the helpless man he says, “We didn’t do anything to deserve this and you don’t deserve it.”
Shades of Trayvon Martin/George Zimmerman.
Synopsis: Sixteen-year-old Tad McGreevy has a power that he has never revealed, not even to his life-long best friend, Stevie Scranton. When Tad looks at others, he sees colors. These auras tell Tad whether a person is good or evil. At night, Tad dreams about the evil-doers, reliving their crimes in horrifyingly vivid detail.
But Tad doesn’t know if the evil acts he witnesses in his nightmares are happening now, are already over, or are going to occur in the future. And he can’t control this extraordinary power. All Tad knows is that he wants to protect those he loves. And he wants the bad dreams that have haunted him since age 8 to stop.
This is a terrifying, intense story of the dark people and places that lurk just beneath the surface of seemingly normal small-town life.
Bio: Connie (Corcoran) Wilson has one million “hits” on Yahoo and was named their Featured Contibutor of 2008. She has been writing for pay since age 10. She is a graduate of the University of Iowa (and 4 other schools) and has taught writing at 6 IA/IL colleges. Connie has written 10 books via 6 small publishers and been named Writer of the Year (Midwest Writing Center, 2010) and IWPA (Illinois Women’s Press Association, Chicago chapter) Silver Feather recipient (June 6, 2012). Her E-books have won E-Lit gold medals, Pinnacle awards, Stoker consideration, and risen as high as #8 in genre fiction (Oct. 28, 2012 @ 1 p.m.) and #232 overall.
She has two ongoing series: THE COLOR OF EVIL, with its second book RED IS FOR RAGE and the third KHAKI = KILLER and the short story series HELLFIRE & DAMNATION, organized around Dante’s INFERNO and the crimes or sins punished at each of the 9 Circles of Hell. She taught students aged 12 and up for three decades, covered the DNC and RNC conventions inside in 2008, and has been CEO of 3 companies. She also has been honored by a sitting First Lady for her most-active-in-the-chain scholarship program to teach reading to poor kids (Sylvan Learning Center #3301), had her Sylvan Learning Center named Best Business of the Year. At least 5 ex-students reside on Illinois’ former Death Row. She has also interviewed such writers as Kurt Vonnegut, Anne Perry, David Morrell, William F. Nolan, Frederik Pohl, Jon Land, Adrian McGinty and r. Barri Flowers.
Check her out on Twitter (Connie Wilson Author) and Facebook (Connie Corcoran Wilson) and at the websites & trailers for her works: TheColorOfEvil.com, RedIsforRage.com, HellfireAndDamnationTheBook.com, ItCamefromTheSeventies.com, GhostlyTalesofRoute66.com.
Contact Information:
E-mail: [email protected]
Facebook: Connie Corcoran Wilson
Twitter: Connie Wilson Author
Mailing address: 1250 S. Indiana, #703, Chicago, IL 60605
Home Phone: 312-362-0350 & 309-755-4350
Cellphone: 309-737-2225
Today, the name on everyone’s lips for such roles—especially after the release of “Superman,” in which he plays the evil General Zod—is Michael Shannon. Michael Shannon’s first stage work began at age 15. Born in Lexington, Kentucky at Good Samaritan Hospital on August 7, 1974, his parents divorced and remarried five times. His mother, Geraldine Hine, is a social worker who stayed in Kentucky (reported by some other sources as “a lawyer.”)
His father, Donald Sutherland Shannon, who died November 19, 2008, took a position teaching economics at DePaul University in Chicago where he was much-honored during his 25 year tenure. Michael moved to be with his father, attending New Trier Township in Winnetka for two years. He moved back to Kentucky for his junior year. Then he attended Evanston Township High School for one semester before dropping out of school entirely.
It is ironic that Michael Shannon’s grandfather was famed entomologist Raymond Corbett Shannon, because one of the first stage roles Shannon inhabited was as the lead in 1996’s “Bug.” Shannon was cast in the stage version of the Tracy Letts play and then reprised the role in the film version in 2006, playing unhinged war veteran Peter Evans. In the film, directed by William Friedkin (“The Exorcist”), Shannon and Ashley Judd hole up in a spooky hotel room in Oklahoma and begin to hallucinate about a bug infestation. They definitely reach tin-foil hat levels of insanity. Shannon and playwright Letts played opposite one another in a pair of one-act plays, “Fun” and “Nobody,” at Evanston’s Next Lab when Letts was twenty-five.
Shannon’s acting teacher in Chicago, Jane Brody, commented in a Chicago Tribune article (June 30, 2013), “Mike once told me being onstage was the only place where he could be as angry as he felt and it was still acceptable.” As Shannon himself explained to interviewer Christopher Borrelli regarding his return to Chicago from Kentucky, “I’ve been an only child, a middle child, and an oldest child. I felt guilty because I wanted to help out, but at that age? My mother was dealing with other people’s problems all day, and then came home to a house of children. I had to leave.”
Shannon has become typecast as the intense, brooding guy steeped in pain. His role on “Boardwalk Empire” as Agent Nelson Van Alden catapulted him into viewers’ consciousness as a weird, freaked-out agent who becomes a bootlegger. He was equally riveting in a small part as a dinner guest (an outpatient from a mental institute) in “Revolutionary Road” in 2009.
In fact, Shannon received an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actor, but did not win. He says of the experience, pointing to a certificate that confirms he was an Academy Award nominee, “Which is what I have to show for that experience. That, and a sweatshirt saying ‘Academy Award nominee,’ which I do wear.”
Just as with the Kings of Intensity, Penn and Rourke, co-stars give telling insights into the actors by relating their interaction(s) with Shannon. Chicago actress Shannon Cochran remembers the New York run of “Bug” onstage: “I was standing over Mike (in the scene) and he was hunched down. Then, suddenly, he stood up and screamed into my face at the top of his lungs.” Adds Cochran: “OK, so, do I react? I ignored it, then spent the rest of the show assuming he was mad at me. Later, I got this note apologizing, saying he shouldn’t lose control like that, but he gets so mad when audiences don’t concentrate. We never really talked much offstage, but eventually I did end up with a little pile of notes.”
Zack Snyder, who directed Shannon in the summer blockbuster “Superman,” relates that when General Zod is sentenced to eternal prison and is vowing to destroy Superman, he is to shout, “I will find him!” once. Said Snyder, “In the script, it’s once, but Michael hemorrhaged the line.”
Co-star Paul Rudd, who appeared with Shannon in “Grace” on Broadway and is a longtime friend, says of him: “He is extremely kind, with a completely unique sense of humor. Yet other times, you realize how guarded he is…that you have no idea what he is thinking. He always leaves you guessing a bit.” His acting teacher Jane Brody would agree with Rudd. Her take? “He liked to be a mystery.”
Liatt Kornowski at the Huffington Post wrote an article entitled “15 Reasons Why Michael Shannon is the Coolest Effing Person Around.” (June 14, 2013). Not so much an article as a video tribute to the intensity of Shannon’s eyes and the eccentricity of his onscreen characters and his offscreen persona, as well. She also mentioned his intense reading of an inane sorority girl’s letter that has garnered millions of hits on YouTube, done as a favor for a Columbia College (Chicago) graduate.
When Christopher Borrelli of the Chicago Tribune interviewed Shannon , prior to the start of his star turn opposite his best friend, actor Guy Van Swearingen, in Sam Shepard’s “Simpatico” (which runs through August 25 at the Red Orchid Theater in Chicago), the duo strolled around Shannon’s Red Hook Brooklyn neighborhood with Shannon clad only in socks. Shannon helped co-found the Old Town-based Red Orchid Theater 20 years ago.
Kate Arrington, who lives with Shannon and with whom Shannon has a 5-year-old daughter, Sylvia, says of him: “Mike has a high level of anxiety. He might seem chill, but he is anxious, as anyone would be who grew up as he did, always worried about others, angry. He hates that view of himself as a guy just a bit off, playing guys a bit off. But the thing is, Mike is off. He is not a normal person! He sees the word differently.”
Two of the best films this year, so far, were “Mud,” in which Shannon had a small part as the Uncle who is raising “Neckbone,” one of the young boys who helps the stranded Matthew McConaughey and “The Iceman,” a film about Mafia hitman Michael Kuklinski. Shannon’s performance as the cold-blooded killer was spot-on. One scene in which he merely sits at the top of a flight of stairs as his secret life is about to collide with his private family life is masterful. The entire film is one of the best films of the year, so far, with such co-stars as Wynona Ryder, Ray Liotta, Stephen Dorff, Robert Davi, David Schwimmer, and Chris Evans.
Like Christopher Walken before him, Shannon has mastered the art of conveying a certain humanity to even the most depraved of men. It’s clearly his forte. Does he like that? As Shannon told Borrelli, “And so now you’ve seen that I’m a normal person. I clean the house. I take care of my family. I’m exhausted by this perception that I’m a lunatic.” But, later, when asked about the many projects he has on the docket, including “Boardwalk Empire,” “Simpatico” on stage in Chicago, maybe a small film in Chicago in the fall, he adds, very gravely, “But overall, I find myself uncertain about the future.”
What’s not uncertain about Michael Shannon’s future as an actor is that he will continue to garner much-deserved accolades for his intense portrayals. Next time, maybe he’ll get more for his pains than a sweatshirt and a certificate.
I scurried to my Prius just ahead of a torrential downpour and, to my horror, could not get my car started. Why? It was already “on.” In my frantic haste to get the vehicle started and drive the approximately one to two miles to 22nd Avenue Court up Kennedy Drive, I was panicking.
Finally, I realized that the entire time I was inside the UPS store, my car had been idling (as Priuses do). I turned it off and on again and began driving the sub-road towards Kennedy Drive, to the west. While passing the elderly high rise on my right, a man walking a dog in the downpour was nearly swept into the ditch by the high winds, which were at least 70 to 80 miles per hour. The radio was now reporting that two semi-trailer trucks had overturned on I80.When I reached the intersection of the sub-road and Kennedy Drive by Midwest Bank and the Blackhawk College building, intending to turn north towards the river, two cars had pulled over and stopped. Why? We could barely see, even with our windshield wipers on high.
I was just about to pull around the two stopped vehicles when they finally began to move. I turned right onto Kennedy and was driving home, but branches from trees were hitting my windshield. My small car was difficult to drive in the heavy rain. Visibility: awful. Hydroplaning: a distinct possibility.
It was then that I noticed a tree on my left that was bent nearly to the ground. It was not a huge tree—more of a sapling, but probably at least ten feet tall—and I quickly calculated that I could move to the far right on the road and, if it fell in the road, it would miss my car. Which is exactly what happened just as I reached the spot (midway up Kennedy Drive from Jewel/Osco): the tree crashed to the pavement right in front of my car, but I was able to drive around it safely.
I reached 3rd St. B (or 22nd Avenue Court) and the garage door was up. I was surprised, but grateful, as I thought electricity would be out (which it was for 22,029 customers late Monday night), in which case the garage door opener would not have worked.
As I entered the house after putting the garage door down, I went immediately to the basement. I remember being in a tornado in Independence, Iowa, when I was a little girl. We went to the storm cellar. It dropped the roof of St. John’s Church, only 2 blocks away, into my back yard. My father built me a playhouse with the wood and debris. (We called it “the Hookey”).
We did not lose our electricity Monday night, but we did lose MediaCom until after 10 p.m., which meant no final winning game of the Chicago BlackHawks/Boston series and no premiere of “Under the Dome.” No computer or phone, either.
Tornado funnels were reported in Atkinson and Van Orin in Illinois, as well as near Mechanicsville, Solon and Muscatine in Iowa.(4 counties in Iowa were declared to be disaster areas). Tornado sirens never sounded in Muscatine, supposedly because the storm moved too fast for the radar to pick up. Wind speed was said to be 100 mph within the Muscatine tornado, which ripped the roof off the Calvary Church with 4 people inside. By the time the radar picked up the storm, it had moved past Muscatine. Muscatine mayor Dewayne Hopkins is holding a special meeting on Friday regarding the failure to warn residents about the tornado.
Heavy rains Sunday and Monday lifted the Green River in Geneseo more than 11 feet in just 24 hours. The National Weather Service reported that 4.42 inches of rain fell at the Quad City International Airport on Monday, which topped the previous record set in 1993 of 3.65 inches.The Mississippi River, at 6 p.m. on Monday, was at 14 feet. Flood stage is 15 feet. It is expected to rise to 17.9 feet to 19 feet by Sunday. The Blues Festival is being moved inside to 3rd St. and the Adler Theater and River Drive is being closed for the fourth time this year, a record. A crest of 12.4 feet is expected in LeClaire on June 30th.
The Rock River, which reached record highs earlier this year, was at 11.4 feet in Moline at 7 p.m. and will cross the 12-foot flood stage and reach 12.8 feet on Thursday. At Joslin, the Rock River was at 11.6 feet at 7 p.m. Monday and expected to crest on Thursday at 13.5 feet.
One of the hardest hit areas in the metropolitan area was Short Hills Country Club, which reported that, of the 835 total trees at Short Hills, 30 were down and there was damage to at least 100 others ,which I have pictured here. Most of the damage was limited to trees on the course, although one tree fell on the bridge on hole 15. Another tree fell on the restroom shack next to the Number One green.
I hope that my book signing at SouthPark’s BookWorld on Saturday, June 29th, from 1 to 4 p.m. experiences calmer weather! Come see me as I launch the second book in “The Color of Evil” trilogy, winner of 3 national awards. No admission, and I’ll give away a book of the winner’s choice at 2, 3 and 4 p.m.“World War Z,” a zombie film written by the son of Mel Brooks and Anne Bancroft (Max Brooks) and starring Brad Pitt opened in theaters today after a tumultuous series of filming experiences. First, there was a bidding war with Leonardo DeCaprio’s production company. Pitt’s 11-year-old Plan B company won the book rights in 2006 for $1 million. In the book, survivors of a zombie Apocalypse give first-person accounts of their experiences. That idea quickly went out the window, as did several screenwriters and production people.
Marc Forster, the Director of the film, was quoted in Vanity Fair June, 2013 issue saying, “We started shooting the thing before we locked down how it was going to end up, and it didn’t turn out the way we wanted it to.” [That’s a little like your 10-year-old, having just burned down the house, saying, “We wanted to light a candle to have a little bit of light, but it set fire to the curtains and burned the house down.”]
Since 2006, when Paramount optioned the book, four writers have been hired, an experienced producer and Oscar-winning visual effects artist (“Gladiator” helmsman John Nelson ) left, and an expensive 12-minute climactic Russian battle scene was rewritten, scaled down and reshot, moving the budget ever upward. (Sources say it probably cost at least $250 million to make and will need to make $400 million, worldwide, to break even). All this in the name of creating a new franchise for the studio, since Paramount lost its business partnerships with DreamWorks and DreamWorks Animation when Walt Disney bought Marvel in 2009.
Marc Forster, the 43-year-old German/Swiss director, seemed like an unlikely choice to helm a big budget over-the-top film. His previous credits were smaller films like “Finding Neverland,” and “Stranger than Fiction,” although he did have the dubious distinction of directing “Quantum of Solace,” a Bond film not held in high esteem.
First script submitted (by J. Michael Straczynski, well-regarded screenwriter of horror and science fiction scripts, known for TV’s “Babylon 5”) was rejected. Straczynski was quoted this way in the Vanity Fair article: “Marc wanted to make a big, huge action movie that wasn’t terribly smart and had big, huge action pieces in it. If all you wanted to do was an empty-headed Rambo-versus-the-zombies action film, why option this really elegant, smart book?”
A good question.
The ending was eventually reshot to make the main thrust of the film focus on Brad Pitt’s desire to reunite with his family. Personally, the Russian ending originally planned sounded interesting. It was filmed in Red Square with the undead fighting an army of thousands of soldier slaves forced by the Russians to lop off the heads of the zombies with shovel-like weapons called lobos (short for “lobotomizers.”) I’m not giving anything away with that grim bit, because those scenes (12 minutes) ended up on the cutting room floor.
Shooting began on June 20, 2011 in Malta (an island south of Sicily) and V.F. informs us that over 45 tons of equipment and props were brought in in 25 full shipping containers for the three-week shoot. As many as 1,500 people were on set some days. All sorts of logistical headaches followed with the person in charge eventually quoted this way, “The movie started out small, then grew into a monster,” and “We were feeding half the city.” (You will notice that the scenes shot AFTER the Israel sequence, set in the World Health Organization lab, are considerably scaled down in terms of how many people are involved and special effects costs.)The first big action sequence of the plot begins with a Philadelphia scene (actually shot in Glasgow, Scotland, because it was cheaper) in which Pitt and family are caught in a car amongst a crowd menaced by zombies. Gerry Lane (Brad Pitt’s character) is a hot-shot ex-troubleshooter for the U.N. who is lured back into service to help fight the plague of the undead by promises of safety for his family (Brad’s wife is played by “The Killing’s” female cop, Mereille Enos.)
First, Brad is off to North Korea taking along a 23-year-old specialist in epidemics who turns out to be particularly hapless. He accidentally offs himself early in the film, but not before pontificating about epidemics: “Mother Nature is a serial killer. No one’s better. Like all serial killers, she wants to get caught.” North Korea has met the challenge of the zombie invaders quite creatively, by pulling all the teeth out of 23 million people within 24 hours. (“Otherwise, they’re bitin’ everything like fat kids love Twix,” says a soldier who seems immune to the hordes.)
Israel recognized the zombie problem, becoming the first to know and the first to act. They built a Salvation Wall, but then fail to properly supervise the wall after it is built. Says the Israeli hot-shot Brad has come to consult, “The trouble with most people is that they don’t believe something can happen till it does.” It’s not long after making that prophetic statement that the wall defense develops major issues. (Ironic.)
The globe-trotting hero carries on, heading for the WHO (World Health Organization). This destination was added after the Israel sequences instead of the film‘s original Red Square Russian sequences, which were scrapped so that a more character-driven ending could be developed. Some of the scenes of Brad en route to WHO you’ve probably seen in trailers as an airplane sequence. Pitt does so much traveling that the movie almost becomes a giant game of “Where’s Waldo?” It was an exciting action-packed, suspense-filled game, for the most part, so carry on, Brad. Maybe plug a few plot holes (Salvation Wall supervision being one) and aim for the noggins of those fast-moving creatures. Plus, don’t forget to carry your weapon at all times. (Fireman’s axe: don’t leave home without it.)
The Balkans were not “berry, berry” good to Brad and company. The Hungarian Anti-Terrorist organization seized weapons meant for filming with claims that a crucial pin needed to be removed to render them harmless. Dede Gardner (Pitt production partner) said, “It is a very normal hiccup on a big production. Things like that happen every day.” The Hungarian Counter-terrorism unit did drop the case after four months, but, as Paramount spokesman Adam Goodman said of the Budapest finances, “When you are that deep in production and your budget has taken hits along the way, you put it back on the filmmakers and say, ‘You’ve got to absorb those hits and figure out how to make the best with what you have here.’” Therefore, underground prison factory scene (escape sequence for Pitt): out the window. Likewise, water gag with cold water dumped on zombies: ultimately not in film. It was cold enough filming, as it began at night about nine o’clock and the temperatures sank below freezing, with hundreds of extras pretending to fight with zombies that were added later via computer. As second-unit director Simon Crane is quoted in the Vanity Fair article, “We had 750 extras not used to being on a film set, fighting an imaginary opponent.”
The talk is that the first film was to be Number One in a trilogy. Hopefully, it hasn’t run out of steam right out of the gate. “World War Z” was suspenseful, scary, and exciting in 3D, and I’d still like to see those twelve minutes of Red Square film. I find the back-story regarding filming problems as interesting as the actual film. But any time they send Brad Pitt to my theater, in person, to hand out tee shirts (this actually happened in Chicago and elsewhere), count me in.
It’s an exciting film throughout, although it is interesting to watch the numbers (of extras) shrink as the film progresses, which does not in any way detract from the suspense the fairly predictable solution to the world’s zombie plague problem provides by film’s finale.
Kudos to the tooth-clacking zombie in the World Health Organization lab and let’s get this bad boy trilogy back on the road with better supervision/leadership in the future. Quote from Director Marc Forster (Vanity Fair, June issue), “You are having a meltdown while you are
working. So, I don’t usually know what is going on.” Then he added, “For me, it’s like, I had a good time on this film. I didn’t feel like it was a big drama. I feel like, yes, the ending didn’t work. Yes, we all thought it was going to work. Yes, we decided it’s not the right ending. Yes, we decided to change it and spend more money. Yes, it never happened to me before on any of my other movies. But I think this movie is more original and bigger and more special than I have ever done before.”
RED IS FOR RAGE is the second book in what will be a trilogy or a series. The third book is done and will be released shortly. First book in the series is “The Color of Evil,” which won an E-Lit award and the Illinois Women’s Press Association Silver Feather award.
Additionally, there will be copies of many of my other books, including the first book in the series (“The Color of Evil”), my collection of humorous essays (“Laughing through Life”), the non-fiction collection of movie reviews from the Quad City Times, with 50 films and 76 photos, It Came from the 70s: From The Godfather to Apocalypse Now.
The signing will begin at 1 p.m. and end at 4 p.m. and at 2, 3 and 4 p.m. a drawing will be held to award a FREE book of the winner’s choice (from books on site). Must be present to win.
Since nearly everyone else in my immediate family is taking off for St. Louis that day (HA! Like they’d come anyway!), I would sincerely appreciate seeing anyone I know at South Park Mall’s BookWorld book store on Saturday, June 29th, from 1 to 4 p.m.
(This has been a public service announcement).
The group were originally not called “Chicago,” at all, but “The Big Thing.” Then, the band changed its name to “The Chicago Transit Authority,” about the time they moved to Los Angeles in June of 1968 and signed with Columbia Records, with James William Guercio, their manager and friend taking the band where the action was.
Soon, the REAL Chicago Transit Authority threatened to sue if the group didn’t change its name. So the group became simply “Chicago” and it remains so today, one of the longest-running bands never to have broken up or taken a long hiatus, second only to the Beach Boys in terms of singles, albums and longevity.
Wikipedia lists “Chicago’s” number of albums as 120 million albums sold, 22 gold albums, 18 platinum albums and 8 multi-platinum albums. Of those, five were Number One albums and there were 21 Top Ten Hits from the rock, jazz, fusion, progressive rock, soft rock musicians. It is surprising that the group has won only one Grammy, awarded in 1977 for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group. In 1976, “Chicago X” contained Cetera’s composition “If You Leave Me Now,” which became the group’s first Number One single. The band has had hits like “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It is?”, “Saturday in the Park,” “If You Leave Me Now,” “Glory of Love” (the theme song for Karate Kid II) and “You’re the Inspiration”, written by Robert Lamm for Kenny Rogers in a 3 hour period before Lamm was to fly to Italy, but a song which Rogers never recorded. [Cetera calls Robert Lamm, in a January 15, 2007 interview before “Live at Lake City” with Orchestra Concert, “One of the great songwriters of that generation.”]“Chicago” is credited with being the leading U.S. singles-charting group in the 1970s and their breakthrough album,”Chicago II,” began the band’s tradition of the iconic numbering of each subsequent album. How many albums have there been? Somewhere around 30, with promises that there will be a new one come fall of 2010.
“Chicago” is unique in that it is a relatively faceless band. Its members are replaceable and interchangeable, although the death of founding member Terry Kath in 1978 from an accidental gunshot wound, as described in a VH1 “Behind the Music” special was a low point. (Supposedly, Kath was horsing around with a firearm and had just said, “Don’t worry, guys. It isn’t even loaded. See?”)Also in that VH1 special, original band member Pankow said, in 2000, “One record company said to us, ‘˜Man, if you get rid of the horn section, we’ll sign you.” With incredulity, Pankow continues, “That’s like telling Elton John to get rid of the piano!” [One original member of the group, Danny Seraphine—who was fired by the group in the 1990’s for not getting along with some of the replacement musicians—was so incensed by the focus of the VH-1 special on Kath’s death that he demanded that all references to his participation be removed. Seraphine has since formed the California Transit Authority and, in 2006, the group played the CD USA’s New Year’s Eve party on Fremont Street in Las Vegas.]
Despite Terry Kath’s tragic accidental death, the group soldiered on, bringing in Donnie Dacus to assume lead singer duties in April of 1978. He left the group after “Chicago 13” in 1979, as the band began to move away from jazz and rock and more towards pop ballads.
In 1981, Columbia Records dropped the band, but Warner Brothers picked them up. Bill Champlin left in August of 2009, to be replaced by Lou Pardini. Tris Imbodden, originally the drummer for Kenny Loggins, replaced Seraphine. In 2009, sometimes the only “original” member of the group onstage would be Robert Lamm. Lately, when I’ve seen them, trombonist James “Jimmy” Pankow, with his rolled up sleeves and plunging neckline shirts, has given good horn and good show. I can’t help but smile. In his sixties (66, said the local newspaper), he is still going strong, as are the other “original” members.
My favorite band member from the past four shows remains guitarist Keith Howard, who shreds his solos with flair. For that matter, there was a lengthy percussion piece that allowed other band members to take a breather and, with at least two percussionists and two keyboard artists at all times, the ten members on stage were keyboards (2), percussion (up to 3 on any song), woodwind (usually sax, but sometimes flute, 1), cornet (1), guitar (2) and the irrepressible trombone (1).
In an interview at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Florida (the band was playing there and was also singing the national anthem at the Florida Marlins game of April 10, 2009), Robert Lamm was interviewed and appears in a YouTube interview saying, of the group’s longevity, “I think it’s as simple as we enjoy each others company and we’ve all grown as musicians.” When asked how they got together initially, he answers, “By Providence.”
When asked about how the music business has changed since “Chicago” formed in 1967 and began churning out its hits in the 70s, Lamm becomes more serious on the video: “How changed? Technology. As human beings we’ve changed, but a ‘˜Chicago’ concert is always memorable and always maintains a high level of quality.” He noted that the group had 70 singles that were played on the radio back in the day and says, “If we were trying to break now, I have no idea where we’d go. I find it very puzzling.” He also said that he did not, at first, follow “American Idol,” which asked to use some of his songs. “I was sort of looking down my nose at it, but now I’m kind of in to it. I like the idea of it.”
The group appeared on Season 9’s Finale of “American Idol” on May 26, 2010, with eventual winner Lee DeWyze singing along to a medley of some of their hits.
A characteristically over-the-top give-it-all-you’ve-got performance on June 17th in Moline, with a twenty-minute intermission and, hopefully, a break for a young local musician who has been making it in Chicago and across the Midwest for years, but deserves wider recognition of his talent.
Sources: www.chicagosuntimes article by Bill Zwecker for RedCarpet on 5/27/2010; Fox-WFLD, Channel 32 on May 27, 2010; Youtube video of April 10, 2009 Florida Marlins game with “Chicago” performing the national anthem; April 10, 2009 interview with Robert Lamm at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino; Interview with Peter Cetera on Jan. 15, 2007 YouTube video prior to “Live at Lake City” with Orchestra concert; www.wikipedia.com; “Chicago” and “Earth, Wind and Fire” concert at Northerly Isle Pavilion in Chicago; “Chicago” and “America” concert at Northerly Isle Pavilion in Chicago and June 17, 2013 concert at IWireless Center in Moline, IL.
Zack Snyder, the director of the new “Superman,”(2007’s “300”) teamed up with Christopher Nolan (“Memento,” “The Dark Knight Rises”) and screenwriter David S. Goyer to film (yet another—the 9th ) version of the Man of Steel, ‘Superman” with British actor Henry Cavell (“The Tudors,” “The Immortal”) in the title role. Jon Peters—(long-ago love of Barbra Streisand—executive produced.
Snyder, talking with Carson Daley on Daley’s show, predicted that this would be “a Superman you haven’t seen” saying that, “You don’t have to work too hard to get the subtext.” He laid out the symbolism: Biblical allusions, the adoption motif, the immigrant “stranger-in-a-strange-land” theme, which fits because the original creators, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, were first-generation children of immigrants. In real life, the British-born Cavell is only thirty years old, but it is specifically stated that Clark Kent is thirty-three as Superman, the supposed age at death of Jesus Christ in Christian theology.
Des Moines-born Brandon Routh of the 2006 film is gone from this reboot. In all fairness, I thought they were both fine at filling the suit, but Routh was soundly criticized as being too meek and mild in his 2006 appearance.
I did not expect much, after seeing the “Superman” trailers. But anything Michael Shannon does, I want to see. He is one of the most talented actors working today…a young Sean Penn. (See “The Iceman” for a superb tour de force performance this year).
Here are my impressions of the film.
Russell Crowe in the role Marlon Brando once portrayed as Jor-El, Superman’s real father, channels Richard Burton and gives the role, complete with holograph flashback appearances, some gravitas. There’s a semi-amusing conversation between bad guy General Zod (Michael Shannon) and Kal-El (Russell Crowe) where Crowe says, to Shannon, “You’re talking about genocide” (in claiming Earth for Kryptonians) and Shannon sarcastically responds, “Yes, and I’m debating its merits with a ghost.”Clark Kent’s earthly parents are well-played by Kevin Costner and Diane Lane. His love interest, Lois Lane, is Amy Adams. The “bad guy” is General Zod, played by today’s version of Bruce Dern,Michael Shannon (“Take Shelter,” “Mud,” “The Iceman,” Oscar-nominee for “Revolutionary Road”). Laurence Fishbourne is Perry White, Lois’ boss at the Daily Planet in Metropolis. Christopher Melloni (“Law and Order”) is the military hot-shot who eventually comes to accept the fact that Superman is there to help, not hurt, mankind.
The idea that the inhabitants of Krypton have abused and, therefore, destroyed their own planet is paramount, with a nod to Earth’s global warming and our own abuse and misuse of Earth’s non-renewable core minerals. Krypton’s core has been plundered. This has led to a dying planet. (Relocation to other planets as a solution isn’t as far-out as it sounds; physicist Stephen Hawkins has suggested it may be the answer to Earth’s problems.)Comments on the current state of our democracy:
“These lawmakers with their endless debates will be our end,” says General Zod. (Agreed). We can also sign on to the line, directed at the rulers, “You’re a pack of fools. Every last one of you.” Kal-El, Superman’s father (Russell Crowe), just before sending his baby boy off to Earth (a la Marlon Brando in the 1978 version), before Krypton self-destructs says, “Make a better world than ours.” Later, Kevin Costner as Clark Kent’s Earthly father tells his young son, “You just have to decide what kind of man you want to grow up to be. Whoever that man is—good character or bad—that man is going to change the world.” There is a “fundamental belief in the power of each person to be a force for good.” Even General Zod’s statement (“I have a duty to my people and I will not allow anyone to prevent me from carrying it out.”) has to be pondered in the wake of eight years of the second Bush administration. (Rumsfeld and Cheney with more hair and a better physique?)The over-riding idea is “Can you imagine how people on this planet would react if they knew there was someone like this out there?” Followed by the comment,” People are afraid of what they don’t understand.” We do get the message, loud and clear, that “You are not alone. [At one point, it even is beamed onto television sets by the evil General Zod.]
Another theme touched upon by the screenplay is that freedom of choice is too precious to be taken out of the hands of individuals and decided for them by others in power. Children on Krypton are born in a large Genesis Chamber and destined to be worker bees or leaders from birth. Choosing your own future is not an option. This concept of free choice disappearing is not unique in science fiction. It was touched upon in last year’s “Cloud Atlas.” It’s been in circulation as long ago as George Orwell, and on film in Ethan Hawke’s 1997 film “Gattaca” and twenty years prior in “Logan’s Run” (1976). It’s certainly surfaced in politics and, most recently, in the spirited debate about the Patriot Act and how it has led to an invasion of citizens’ civil rights.
Observations: 1) All the Krypton planes are modeled on insects. They resemble dragonflies or regular house flies. There is a scene straight out of “Avatar” where Russell Crowe hops aboard a dragonfly and flies around.
2) There is a “gunfight at the OK Corral” mood in a face-off that star Henry Cavell has with the seemingly unstoppable gang from his home planet of Krypton. The Krypton Crew reminded me of Arnold Schwarzenegger in “The Terminator.” They take a licking but keep on ticking. (Credit to Timex)
3) The movie was filmed in Plano, Illinois, and also in California (Edwards Air Force Base), with Vancouver (water tank) and Wellington, New Zealand (special effects) mentioned prominently in the credits. I was just in Wellington, New Zealand. The town is so small that, from the looks of the numbers of people who worked on the film, (presumably technical hold-overs from “The Hobbit” films), it must have provided employment for around 2/3 of the town’s population.
4) Amy Adams knows that Clark Kent IS Superman from the get-go.
5) Zack Snyder went for “energy, realism and speed” in the flight sequences involving Superman. He wanted it to seem as though it was difficult to capture modern-day Superman in flight, whereas in the previous films, he was on wires. Hand-held camera, shaky composition. Whatever that effect required. My companion found this offputting. I admit I was not particularly impressed with close-up scenes of the Man of Steel holding his arms out and grinning as he flew. However, it is different from previous Superman filmed versions, whether they were television shows or movies. (“Superman” has, after all, been filmed in ’52, ’78, ’80, ’83, ’87, ’93, ’96, and ’06, which is nine different filmed versions of the old comic book—original copies of which, in mint condition, would now go for more than $2 million!)
During an interview on Carson Daley’s late-night show, Snyder admitted that they made star Henry Cavell put on the original, 40-year-old Christopher Reeves “crusty old suit” for his try-out, and nobody laughed when he suited up. Cavell added the information that he trained for ten months to get in shape: two hours a day for four months, followed by six months of non-stop training while shooting.
Director Snyder declared that Superman is “the first Superhero and the most elemental…He’s basically a god on Earth.” But Snyder also emphasized that, “like all of us, he’s trying to find his place in the world.”
That, for me, was one of the more difficult tasks in following the story. When the film opens on a boat fishing in deep water with Cavell aboard, I was scratching my head and saying, “I guess we’re not in Kansas any more.” I also enjoyed the line, uttered by Superman, when he says, “I grew up in Kansas. That’s about as American as it gets.” (Nod to President Obama’s great great-grandmother, who had Wichita, Kansas ties).
Clark is shown in a variety of job settings, including his stint as a fisherman (which leads to a Deep Water Horizon-type rescue), a job in a bar, and a final scene where he comes aboard as a reporter at the Daily Planet, which leads me to believe that the film-makers had already decided this was to be a franchise that would have sequels. (Apparently, nine is not the magic number of film remakes of the source material.) All the jumping around was sometimes difficult to follow, but it did add to the theme of Superman trying to find himself in life and in our world.
There are some lines that made me laugh. “You know they say it’s all downhill after the first kiss” was one (after Lois and Clark finally kiss). I also enjoyed the star-struck female highway patrol officer who tells her commanding officer, “I just think he’s kinda’ hot.”
I was also struck by Henry Cavell’s (“Tudors,” “Immortals”) facial resemblance to a young John Travolta once he suits up. (Prior to that, not so much.) His vocal timbre was good as the Superhero. Eye candy in his “S”suit for sure. (We learn that the “S” means “hope” on his planet of birth.)
I wondered about the “suiting up for the big fight” sequence with General Zod. Michael Shannon seems to have a vastly superior suit, with the equivalent of armored metal studs, facemask, etc. Superman has—well, you know what Superman has: a red cape and tights. Zod reminded me of a Stealth bomber while Superman is piloting a small puddle-jumper.
I said to my companion, “Superman needs to get a better suit.” It was at that point that General Zod, for reasons that are not clear (and certainly not in character), divests of his superior armored array and helmet and decides to battle Superman mano-a-mano, (i.e., wearing only tights) which leads to a computer-generated fight that would fit well into films like “Fast & Furious 6.”
Some purists decried the violent battle between good and evil (as represented by Superman and General Zod). They didn’t like the extent of the fight (it’s quite over-the-top) nor the way it finally ends. I thought it was inevitable that the duo have this face-off. The end (which I won’t reveal) did not seem uncharacteristic or “wrong,” to me. I admit I am not a comic book purist, although I think I probably threw away one of those $2 million plus comic books at some point. Typical.
To me, the climax and denouement just seemed like the natural progression of an increasingly violent society with more blood and more violence at every cinematic turn, whether on television or at the movies. (Hasn’t anybody but me noticed how “The Following,” “Hannibal,” “Dexter” and “The Walking Dead” have helped turn the dial up about twelve notches on the amount of gore, violence and brutality that will be tolerated on television in 2013? I’m beginning to feel like Tipper Gore in her album-labeling days. Please don’t make me have to square off against the likes of Frank Zappa in a Senate hearing, because this is obviously the kind of game-box violence, gore and mayhem that today’s audiences not only enjoy but DEMAND for a commercially viable venture.)
Just as some say that the Republicans of old could never get elected today (let alone nominated) by the Republican party, I would point out that the violence levels, especially on television, of yesteryear, are gone forever as “the times, they are a’changin.’”
So why criticize the production team for recognizing this reality of modern audiences? Didn’t anybody pay attention to the violence level in “The Dark Knight Rises?” And we all know where THAT led.)
So, my take is this: it’s not as good as this summer’s “Star Trek” movie, but I liked it better than “Ironman.” It is NOT the “C” that Entertainment Weekly critic Chris Nashawaty gave it. Perhaps Nashawaty was just having a bad day at the office.
The show continued for an entertaining 150 minutes with hits like “Honky Tonk Woman, “Brown Sugar,” “Midnight Rambler,” “Miss You,” “Paint it Black,” “Sympathy for the Devil” (with Mick wearing a boa feather decorated cape), “Start Me Up,” and “I Can’t Get No Satisfaction.”
I’ve seen the Rolling Stones at least 13 times; the lack of camaraderie between Mick and Keith was never more apparent than at this show. Still, name another band still going this strong after 50 years.
See them while you can, because nobody lives forever.