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---TOTALLY.TENDERLY.TRAGICALLY
PHILLIP LOPATE ANCHOR BOOKS NONFICTION 384 PAGES BY JONATHAN LETHEM | For a writer like Phillip Lopate, with his deep commitment to the essay as a literary form, any piece of journalism -- a film review, a profile of a director or another critic, even a summary-style "film festival roundup" -- is a chance to practice the higher calling of his art. And for an essayist as committed to personal disclosure as Lopate is, every gathering of essays into a book is an opportunity to smuggle another chapter of his own autobiography into the hands of readers. In "Totally, Tenderly, Tragically," we see Lopate occasionally stumble at the task of making art in the form of journalistic assignments, while succeeding spectacularly at making the collection more, much more, than the sum of its parts. Lopate is right to call his filmgoing a lifelong love affair. He's a passionate advocate for the films and directors he adores, foreign directors such as Visconti, Mizoguchi, Ozu and Godard in particular. In "Memories," the first section of the book, he shares with the reader the development of his tastes, evoking the early highs and spectacular disappointments of his dawning infatuation with film. What's most striking, however, is how tireless and devoted a lover he remains. Lopate in his 50s is still devouring new films with the same intensity he did his earliest discoveries, a fact that struck this younger, more fickle reviewer first as chastening, then inspiring. (On Lopate's recommendation I've already watched three of the contemporary Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami's films -- they're wonderful.)
A handful of the pieces here seem time-bound or incidental; a few are made
lopsided by Lopate's friendship with their subjects or by a relative lack
of critical rigor. A long defense of a minor Jerry Lewis film, written when
Lopate was 23, seems comically disproportionate, if only because no one is
arguing much about Lewis anymore. Blandly earnest directors like Sidney
Lumet and John Sayles are perhaps treated too generously. And a rant about
the "dumbing-down" of American movies descends too much into crotchety
generalities. Yet in almost every case Lopate knows these failings
full well, as he makes clear in a series of reflective postscripts to the
essays -- which themselves become a key element in the book. The result is
a kind of turning of time's prism to shed new light, and the filtering of
that light through and between the essays collected here has a magical
effect. And paradoxically, it's precisely the fallibility
of a few of these essays on their own that makes the book such a tour
de force of Lopate's art. In gathering apparently disparate and
occasional writings into a kind of sly autobiographical whole, "Totally,
Tenderly, Tragically" is a typically Lopatian success.
Jonathan Lethem's most recent novel is "Girl in Landscape." He writes regularly for Salon. |
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