Mickey Z. -- World News Trust
The terrorists want to kill us. Our government wants to tap our phones.
The CIA wants to haul us away to secret prisons. Corporations want to
poison our water, our air, and our food. You've got hurricanes, moody
loners, e. coli, undocumented immigrants, drug dealers, shoe bombers,
Mad Cow Disease, child molesters, welfare cheats, reality show
contestants; if we were to believe the hype, there is much to fear in
our daily lives. Here's the rub: Distinguishing the genuine threats
from the fabrications is often difficult in a society so dependent on
media imagery. It's no wonder so few people went to see "Snakes on a
Plane" this summer. We already have liquids on a plane to deal with.
Who needs cinematic frights and shocks when reality -- or at least our
perception of reality -- is enough to leave us quivering in the fetal
position?
And
speaking of convenient segues, does anyone remember director Peter
Bogdanovich's auspicious celluloid debut? It was a low-budget 1968 film
called "Targets," starring none other than Boris Karloff as Byron
Orlok, a veteran horror film actor. Orlok has retired from acting
because real life has become so terrifying that audiences are no longer
frightened by the type of horror movies that made him famous. In the
film's riveting climax, a sniper named Bobby chooses as his targets the
patrons of a drive-in theater showing the real life Karloff in "The
Terror."
"Bogdanovich
attempts to show us just how lethal weapons are," writes film critic
Danny Peary in his book, "Cult Movies." "He forces us to look through
the gun sights with Bobby and help him line up his victim. It is
frustrating -- we want Bobby to miss but each time we see his aim is true.
It is bad enough when unidentified people fall dead, but often
Bogdanovich will have Bobby take aim at someone and pull the trigger
only to find himself out of bullets. While he reloads we have time to
get to know and suffer with the intended prey."
After
picking off the projectionist, Bobby climbs down from his sniper perch
only to be confronted by the aforementioned Byron Orlok (Karloff).
Although Orlok is unarmed, Bobby is perplexed by the image of the real
Boris Karloff who seems to be also walking towards him on the immense
drive-in movie screen. The confused Bobby, no longer able to recognize
the real threat, shoots at the screen -- the "fake" Orlok -- and is promptly
disarmed by the "real" Orlok before being arrested.
"The
scenes in which Orlok complains that real life is so horrifying that
horror films have lost their ability to scare anyone remind us that we
are watching a movie," Peary writes. "While Bogdanovich places the
sniper in a screen where 'The Terror' (1963), a not-very-scary Roger
Corman horror film starring the real Boris Karloff, is being projected,
to prove that Orlok is correct in thinking 'real' life more frightening
than horror films, he is also reminding us that no matter how
terrifying we find Bobby's actions in 'Targets,' it is only a movie we
are watching and doesn't compare to the real real thing."
Unfortunately, discerning "the real real thing" from imagined evils is not just the stuff of ambitious directorial debuts.
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Mickey Z. can be found on the Web at http://www.mickeyz.net.