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Wednesday, September 30, 2020

JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL

My official VHS videocassette of the 1973 movie version of Jonathan Livingston Seagull (© Hall Bartlett/Paramount Pictures - reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)


The book of the film, as they say, took Bach eight years to complete.

He maintains that the story came to him in a vision.

"I was walking home one night in 1959. I heard a voice say 'Jonathan Livingston Seagull.' I was scared to death and ran home, locking the door behind me," said Bach.

"As I sat on the bed a bright vision of a seagull flying alone suddenly appeared. The bird started talking about his life.

"I wrote down every word he told me. Then he disappeared.

"I thought I had a great story to write. But I realised I only had half of it. I could not finish it.

"It was eight years before the seagull returned and talked to me again. I got the rest of the story, dug out the old manuscript and finished the book."

          Interview with Richard Bach, in Daily Mail (London), 17 January 1973


It was during the late 1970s as a university undergraduate zoology student when I first read Richard Bach's bestselling short novella Jonathan Livingston Seagull, originally published in 1970, followed three years later by a movie version. The novella was truly magical and inspirational, greatly influencing my outlook on life ever afterwards, and I have re-read it many times since then.

My original copy of Richard Bach's bestselling novel Jonathan Livingston Seagull (Pan paperback edition, 12th printing, 1976) (© Richard Bach/Pan Books - reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Yet until 1 May 2020, I had never seen the movie version, also entitled Jonathan Livingston Seagull, due not only to it being released several years before I'd read the book but also to it being neither a box-office nor a critical success and consequently sinking without trace afterwards. Many years later, I happened upon this long-forgotten film's official VHS videocassette format release, which I duly purchased, but although I fully intended to watch it, somehow I never did - probably put off by the negative reviews that it had received when released - until 1 May, and what a revelation it proved to be.

On wings of inspiration and life (© José Moutinho/Wikipedia – CC BY 2.0 licence)

Directed by Hall Bartlett, released in 1973, and live-action throughout, the movie stays close both in content and in style to the book, telling the story of a gull named Jonathan Livingston Seagull (voiced by James Franciscus) who is not content simply to be one of the flock, to be satisfied with mediocrity, suppressed by conformity, and never to exhibit any trace of individuality. Instead, fascinated with flight, he pushes himself both physically and spiritually to fly ever faster and soar ever higher, to see the whole world, not just the very limited portion of it occupied by his flock. Unfortunately, however, this does not endear him to the flock's Elders, who initially issue him with stern warnings to conform, not to stand out from his fellow gulls, but, when Jonathan chooses to ignore them in his Olympianesque quest to be faster, higher, without equal, they formally banish him from the flock forever, an outcast alone and unprotected thereafter - yet also free at last to pursue his goals, his dreams, his ambitions, unhindered and unsuppressed.

After travelling to parts of the globe never visited by other seagulls, such as deserts and snowy forests, and surpassing all of his previous speed and altitude records, in the movie's second half Jonathan is visited by some radiant, shimmering-white gulls from a higher plane of existence, semi-divine and capable of flying feats far exceeding even his own awesome abilities, but who are nonetheless very impressed by what he has achieved and by his refusal to allow his individuality to be denied by the flock. So they become his teachers, his mentors, enabling Jonathan to achieve ever greater successes in his quest for perfection, until eventually he in turn becomes a teacher, and with a small flock of acolytes, including one particular protégé named Fletcher, he returns to his old flock and tries to teach them what he has learnt. However, the repressive Elders are outraged and command the flock to kill him and his followers. So they fly away, but not before their words have incited in a few members of the flock a passion to discover their own unique selves and uncover their own unique abilities.

Semi-divine and shimmering (© Новинская Г.А/Wikipedia – CC BY-SA 4.0 licence)

The cinematography of this very unusual yet truly evangelical movie, entirely bereft of humans but featuring breathtaking footage of gulls both in flight individually and gathering together in cacophonous bickering flocks to seize fishes drawn up in trawlers' nets, is absolutely stunning even today, almost 50 years after this movie was first released, so just how incredibly spectacular it must have looked on the big screen in its cinema release back in 1973 can scarcely be imagined. And on top of all of this is an extremely evocative, melodic soundtrack whose music and songs were written and performed by none other than Neil Diamond, and which achieved commercial success worldwide following its release in 1974.

The soundtrack album from the movie version of Jonathan Livingston Seagull, with all music and songs composed and performed by Neil Diamond (© Neil Diamond/Columbia – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

With so much going for it, what went wrong - why did this marvellous movie flop? To my mind, the only tenable answer is that not a great deal happens in it - as can be seen from my above précis of its plot, a plot that is as much metaphorical as it is literal, just as it is in the book. Also, whereas the book is very short (just 93 pages in total, and which include many full-page illustrations), there are rumours that the movie was originally 120 minutes long, later cut to 90 minutes as in the video version that I watched, but I have also read comments challenging these rumours, stating instead that it was only 90 minutes long in the preview version, which was then released to cinemas. Yet regardless of this film's length, whereas I absolutely loved its beautiful panoramic shots, exquisite scenery, and extremely tranquil ambience throughout, not to mention its plot's inspirational theme and stirring music, to audiences more accustomed to action and adventure movies it may conceivably have come across as uneventful to the point of being dull. (Indeed, presumably fearing such an outcome, the movie's makers insisted upon inserting a scene in which Jonathan is attacked by an aggressively territorial hawk for invading what the hawk considers to be its very own section of sky - a scene that does not appear in the book and which Bach reputedly hated after seeing it.)

Yet if this opinion of mine is indeed correct, it means that such audiences entirely misunderstood what this magical film (and book) is all about. It is NOT in any way, shape, or form a conventional animal movie, simply portraying the adventures or life story of some cute creature. Instead, it is a glorious pictorial paean to individuality – to be yourself, not subdued or repressed by the strictures of society to conform, but instead to pursue your own dreams, to create and follow your own pathway through life, ever striving to achieve your own goals, neither hindered nor lured by mediocrity or mundanity. Dare to be different, dare to be daring and uncaring of criticism or jealousy from those who cannot or will not accept anything that challenges their rigid, inflexible status quo, their blinkered worldview, their comfortable conservatism.

A lesser black-backed gull Larus fuscus, the species that Jonathan is portrayed as in the movie (Having said that, there is one scene in which he briefly, inexplicably, changes between consecutive shots from a lesser black-backed gull into a herring gull L. argentatus and then back into a lesser black-backed again – but hey, what's a little interspecific interchange among friends!) (© Marek Szczepanek-Wikipedia – CC BY-SA 4.0 licence)

Watching this wonderful, life-affirming movie, I recalled so vividly how my mother Mary Shuker had always encouraged me to embrace these very same ideals - to be myself, to pursue what interested me, to dismiss those who sought to discredit or denigrate my passions, possessions, and passage through life on my own terms in my own way, and above all else, just as this movie and book also exhort, to dare to be different. This probably explains why instead of spending a life of tedium ticking boxes of conventionality and filling in the forms of conformity, I can look back upon what for me has been an unconventional, non-conformist, but thoroughly fascinating career in cryptozoology, with side-helpings of poetry, world travel, and quizzing.

I urge you to watch this movie if you can find it (sadly, it's not readily accessible either in DVD or videocassette format nowadays, but maybe it can be streamed?), and above all else to read the original book. It might just change your life - it certainly changed mine. And here is a superb trailer to this wonderful film, accompanied Neil Diamond's song 'Be' as it appeared in it. In addition, click here to access free of charge on YouTube an audio version of the original book, read beautifully and upliftingly by none other than the late great actor Richard Harris.

Alongside my Jonathan Livingston Seagull video and book, here is an article concerning this movie, published on 17 January 1973 by London's Daily Mail newspaper in one of the scrapbooks that I used to compile as a youngster and which were the predecessors of what became my ever-expanding archive of cryptozoology and (un)natural history (© Daily Mail – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only) – please click on image to enlarge for reading purposes.

A version of this review also appears on my ShukerNature blog - so please click here to access it.

POSTSCRIPT
The original novel consisted of three parts, each one concerned with a different stage in Jonathan's personal voyage of discovery, but in 2014 it was republished with a new, fourth part added, set 600 years after the previous events and portraying a further dimension in the never-ending odyssey of his sublime, immortal life. So I definitely need to read this now-complete edition, and once again enable my soul to soar heavenward on the bright wings of a seabird who dared.

Quotes from Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach (© Richard Bach / image found online, © unknown to me – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

To view a complete listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE!



Tuesday, September 29, 2020

A NIGHT AT THE MAGIC CASTLE

My official big box ex-rental VHS videocassette of A Night at the Magic Castle (© Icek Teenbaum/Genesis Entertainment/CBS Distribution/Castle Home Video – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

On 13 May 2020, I posted on my Facebook timeline a link to a fascinating article by Atlas Obscura concerning the Magic Castle. Hitherto unknown to me, this is an exclusive hotel and nightclub for magicians, based in the Hollywood region of Los Angeles, in California, USA, and also serving as the clubhouse for the Academy of Magical Arts, containing an extensive research library of books on magic, plus a small magic-themed museum. Moreover, back in 1988 it was the real-life setting for a nowadays-obscure children's fantasy movie entitled A Night at the Magic Castle.

Directed by Icek Teenbaum, and based upon a story written by him and Roger Stone (Stone also wrote the screenplay), this movie does not appear to have ever been released on DVD in the UK or USA. Happily, however, I was lucky enough to obtain it earlier this year in its official ex-rental big box VHS videocassette format, which includes a beautiful shimmering tinfoil-effect front cover that instantly sparked vivid recollections of seeing it 30-odd years ago in video rental shops, but I never actually rented it out to watch. So on 10 June 2020, I made up for much lost time, by duly watching my own lately-purchased videocassette.

A Night at the Magic Castle is definitely aimed at children, with its "curses, foiled again"-type pantomime villain of an evil conjuror named Blackstar (played by Blackie Dammett) and his hapless but harmless, not-really-wicked-at-all assistant aptly named Twit, or Reggie to his friends (John Franklin), plus in the goodie roles a child named Max Finch (Matt Shakman), the friendly ghost of real-life magician/escapologist Harry Houdini (Arte Johnson), and his invisible female assistant Irma (Sally Julian). Nevertheless, it was still enjoyable and, in particular, it afforded all manner of fascinating interior shots of the Magic Castle, which would otherwise not be readily seen by non-members.

The very exotic exterior of The Magic Castle Hotel and Club in Hollywood, Los Angeles, in California, USA, where this movie was filmed (public domain)

The movie's story sees Max being told by his parents to give up his imaginary friend Ruggles (Carl Steven), on what is not only Hallowe'en but also the eve of Max's 8th birthday. Later that same fateful evening, however, Max is whisked off to the Magic Castle by Houdini's ghost for a night of adventure, thrills, spills, and – obviously – magic, before waking up back home in bed the following morning, on his birthday. Naturally, Max assumes that last night's hair-raising happenings were all just a fantastical dream, until, during his birthday party later that day, a magic show is unveiled by his parents as a birthday surprise for him – and guess who is the friendly magician with a female assistant named Irma and a hapless but harmless sub-assistant?? Interestingly, just as in such famous movies and stage productions as The Wizard of Oz and Peter Pan, some of the actors and actresses play dual roles – a character in Max's real world, and also a different but generally comparable character in his Magic Castle visit.

No famous film stars appear in it, but A Night at the Magic Castle is all good fun and very charming. So it seems most surprising to me that, as noted earlier, this very family-friendly movie has never been released on DVD for the UK or USA markets. Having said that, I have lately seen a Dutch DVD release of the original English-language movie, but with Dutch text on its cover – the front of which sports an all-new matt illustration, not the spectacular shimmering version famously gracing the VHS videocassette, sadly.

Happily, at least at the time of my posting this review today on Shuker In MovieLand, the entire movie can be viewed here free of charge on YouTube. So, catch it while you can, and prepared to be spellbound!

And to view a complete listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE!

The full cover of my official big box ex-rental VHS videocassette of A Night at the Magic Castle (© Icek Teenbaum/Genesis Entertainment/CBS Distribution/Castle Home Video – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)




Monday, September 28, 2020

JUDY AND PUNCH

Publicity poster for Judy and Punch (© Mirrah Foulkes/Blue-Tongue Films/Vice Media/Pariah Productions/Screen Australia/Film Victoria/Madman Entertainment/Sam Goldwyn Films – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

On 17 May 2020, I watched the 2019 Australian black comedy movie Judy and Punch, starring Mia Wasikowska and Damon Herriman in the title roles. Directed by Mirrah Foulkes, it re-imagines two of the centuries-old Italian Commedia Dell'Arte's most familiar puppet characters amidst a miasma of murder, mayhem, and madness - I love it already!!

In other words, Judy and Punch presents a novel retelling of the traditional Punch and Judy show – namely, as a real-life story (and with all the main P&J characters featured, including even a brief cameo for the crocodile in a dream sequence). Here, Punch and Judy are a 16th-Century married couple of puppeteers, of whom Judy is the more talented but is constantly overshadowed by her pompous, egotistical husband who thinks that he is the star. Their show was once very popular, but Punch's alcoholism causes its audiences to dwindle until they are reduced to touring in backwater towns rather than the major cities where they once entertained.

This dark and occasionally even somewhat sinister movie (imho) has become notorious for Punch's killing of their baby, but when you actually watch it you discover that this tragic event is entirely accidental. Punch inadvertently trips over the real-life dog Toby, causing the baby to fly out of his hands and through a window. However, his subsequent drunken and extremely violent clubbing of enraged Judy after she forces him to confess what has happened to their baby is done with totally malicious intent(*).

I won't give anything else away, as this is still a fairly recent film (less than a year since its cinema release) that many people won't have seen yet, but let's just say that Judy is hell bent on seeking revenge (it's not called Judy and Punch, rather than Punch and Judy, for nothing!). And Punch's handiness as a puppeteer doesn't end well...

A brief gif from 'The Safety Dance' by Men Without Hats - please click it if it does not play automatically (© Ivan Doroschuk/Men Without Hats/Mark Durand/GMC/Virgin - reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Although Judy and Punch does not contain any actual fantasy elements, this exotic-looking movie always seems on the brink of revealing some, and the photography and costumes are extravagantly gorgeous. Imagine an adult feature-length version of the classic video for the 1980s song 'The Safety Dance' by the Canadian new wave/synth-pop band Men Without Hats (click here to view it, at least at the time of my posting this review), and you should get an idea of what to expect from this bewitching movie. Happy Stoning Day, everyone!

And be sure to click here for a tantalising taster of what to expect from this most unexpected movie, courtesy of an official trailer on YouTube.

Speaking of 'The Safety Dance' by Men Without Hats: whenever I watch this song's video, I am always half-expecting to see a scene where they all dance around a corner and the singer (Ivan Doroschuk) is abruptly confronted by a giant Wicker Man… (but pay no attention, that's probably just me!).

(* = when I was a small child, if I did something naughty - not seriously naughty, more mischievous - Mom would look at me with a mock-grave face and say: "Karl, you did that with malicious intent!", and then we'd both laugh. Happy memories.)

Finally: to view a complete listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE!

Two photographs (the left-hand one snapped in natural light, the right-hand one by flash) of my Punchinello-like jester figurine (© Dr Karl Shuker)