Showing posts with label Kane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kane. Show all posts

Sunday 25 July 2021

Robin Cries, Forlorn.











Robin the Boy Wonder first appeared in Detective Comics in 1940. Introduced as “THE LAUGHING YOUNG DAREDEVIL .…” and “THE CHARACTER FIND OF 1940,” he burst through a circus ringmaster’s hoop held by a grinning Batman. It was an explosion of exuberance that signaled the arrival of a plucky can-do spirit to comics born of the Depression.

  Dick Grayson was introduced to readers as a typical Boys Town character; a feisty urchin scrapper; the orphaned son of murdered circus aerialists. Robin was a carny kid, as far from Batman’s class and social milieu as one could get, but he had a stout heart and was as brave as any boy Batman had ever met. So it made sense to team up and share the crime-fighting life.

  Robin’s upbeat, enthusiastic charisma obliged the uptight, millionaire Protestant Wayne to loosen up a little. The kid brought a big-top splash of joie de vivre to the mean streets of the urban avenger. The introduction of Robin turned Batman’s story from a shady crime-and-revenge narrative into the thrilling adventures of two swashbuckling friends who were so rich that they could do anything.

  After 1940, the formerly dour Batman rarely lost his smile. The Batcave filled with trophies, as outlandish mementoes of his adventures with Robin began to accumulate; there was a Lincoln penny as big as a Ferris wheel, a robot tyrannosaur, several deadly umbrellas from the arsenal of the Penguin, and a collection of remarkable Bat vehicles. The cave became part museum, part mega toy box, part theme park. Seen through Robin’s eyes, the Batman’s harsh, lawless world of shadows, blood, and poisonous chemicals became a Disneyland of crime. Even the attitude of the law changed toward the crime fighters: The Bat-Man of 1939 was a fearsome vigilante, hunted across rooftops by the Gotham City Police Department, but Batman and Robin were proud citizens and sworn GCPD deputies who worked alongside their uniformed, sanctioned counterparts to protect the city they loved.

  There was the sense that the young Bruce Wayne, who died emotionally along with his parents in Crime Alley, had finally met a friend with whom to share his strange, exciting secret life. The emotionally stunted Batman found a perfect pal in the ten-year-old orphaned acrobat. Batman was forced to grow up and develop responsibility as soon as Robin came on the scene, and the savage young Dark Knight of the original pulp-tinged adventures was replaced by a very different kind of hero: a dashing big brother, the best friend any kid could have. The outlaw gangbuster became a detective, a man we could trust, even with our children.

  Then came the insinuations of Wertham in an atmosphere of paranoia and self-analysis. Only a few superheroes remained in the darkness that had fallen over the face of DC Comics during the era of congressional hearings and public denunciations, turning freakish with the lights out. And it was as if their skeletons had begun to glow sickly green right through their flesh, as radioactive nightside selves came out to play. Not even Robin was immune to the scalding return of the repressed. All the creepiness, the curdled ink, the whispered innuendo floated to the surface as the Boy Wonder gave in, emasculated by the judgment of the sinister Doctor W.

  Robin began to show evidence of a fundamental lack of confidence about his permanent role in Batman’s life. In stories such as “Batman’s New Partner,” the Boy Wonder skulked, sulked, and sweated nervously as suspicions grew that he was being phased out in favor of Wingman, an adult who dressed like a pigeon spray-painted by hippies. As this primary threat of being relegated to the sidelines became more frequent, Robin’s reactions became increasingly flustered and teary.

  Lacking music and sound effects to punch up emotional scenes, comic books relied on pouring tears and melodrama. Characters really had to blubber to get the point that they were quite upset across to young readers.

  Expecting these masklike, often masked faces to convey understatement was like expecting stained glass to act. Emotions were broadcast at maximum volume. With a ban on crime, no room for good old-fashioned brawling, and a desperate need to survive, the superheroes surrendered their dignity to the zeitgeist and began to talk about their needs, their fears, and their [choke!] hopes.

  And so, in the fifties, the Boy Wonder transformed from a bounding paragon of vigilante boy justice to a weeping, petulant nervous wreck who lived in fear of losing his beloved Batman to fresher, more accomplished boy partners — or, worse, to the charms of Batwoman

With lower lip set in a permanent sullen pout courtesy of artist Sheldon Moldoff, his world became a schizoid cold war hell where Batman was secretly conniving to betray and dump him any time his guard was down. 

If he found the Caped Crusader drinking tea, Robin would instantly assume the flask was next in line to replace him at Batman’s side, then burst into tears

Covers show the boy reaching the church only to find Batman and Batwoman exchanging vows at the altar, in full costume, with the dreamlike touch of veil and tux to intensify the surreal indecency of the image. He was shown over and over opening a door only to find Batman and Batwoman with patronizing looks on their faces that suggested he was interrupting something only grown-ups could hope to understand.

  Choke!” was usually all he could manage before hanging on for dear life until the story resolved itself in the usual welter of misconceptions and misread scenarios.

  This new image of The Crying Boy haunted the fascinating and demented stories of this period. Wertham had made innocent comic superheroes aware of their own sexual potential, and like Adam and Eve blinking in the garden, there was embarrassment, denial, and overwhelming eruptions of feelings so new they could only be represented by outlandish monstrosities of a kind that were entirely original. 

Space aliens, with designs and planetary environments inspired by the spiky murals on the walls of futurist jazz clubs or Village beatnik cellars, began to outnumber the criminals in Gotham City. Robin was besieged by a delirium of fractured shapes and grotesque creatures. The code ruled out realistic depictions of crime, so Batman was maneuvered awkwardly into ever more outlandish confrontations with monsters, spacemen, and … women. 

With Doc Wertham’s seedy denunciations still ringing in their ears, DC’s editors were keen to validate Batman’s hetero credentials with an injection of estrogen into the book; elderly Aunt Harriet soon replaced the ever-attentive Alfred, but the biggest feminine intrusion came with the arrival of the shapely Batwoman and her partner, Batgirl.

  Kathy Kane, Batwoman, made her debut as a plainly obvious beard for a Batman who had (let’s remind ourselves) no real need to prove his heterosexuality, on the grounds that he was a creation of pen and ink made to entertain children and had no sex life on the page or off it. 

What made this era of kissy-kissy Batman-and-Batwoman-at-the-altar story lines even more bizarre than the alien worlds and jagged modernist design aesthetic was Kathy Kane’s mannish civilian identity as a circus-owning daredevil who wore jodhpurs and rode a motorcycle. 

Kathy Kane was Marlon Brando in drag, Honor Blackman’s Pussy Galore from Goldfinger ten years before the movie. And just like Pussy with James Bond, Kathy had fallen head over heels for Batman.

  Smitten or not, Kathy was hard as nails. Batwoman detourned the image of the atom age housewife by packing her handbag with laser lipsticks and dainty cologne sprays that could chemically castrate you there on the spot. Kathy Kane was the weaponization of the Stepford Wife, the Avon lady as a Special Forces commando: pixie boots, fringed leather gloves, high-gloss lipstick so red it was jet black and reflective. If Bettie Page were the scourge of the underworld, she would look a little like this. No wonder Batman fell in love and the Boy Wonder’s stuttering tongue kept snagging on the same expletive:

  [Choke!]

  Kathy’s niece was a fluffy blonde named Betty Kane, who later gave up crime fighting to become a tennis pro, and yes, it’s easy to imagine Wertham’s inventive neurons hastily reconfiguring to provide this new and potentially more perverse tangle of relationships with a thrilling porno twist. Far from replacing the troubling Bruce-Dick-Alfred bachelor three-way with a respectable family unit, including Mom, Dad, Sis, Junior, and Dog (a resourceful and masked German shepherd named Ace joined the cast around this time), the Wayne-Kane era comes across in a welter of mind-warping, emotionally charged psychosexual hysteria. 

The two adults’ cruel treatment and emotional manipulation of a clearly distressed Robin in stories like “Bat-Mite Meets Bat-Girl” motivated Les Daniels to observe in his book Batman: The Complete History: “If a comic book could actually turn people gay as Doctor Wertham had suggested … this one might have had the power to do it.

  If rebellion against the Comics Code took the form of these devastating, coded analyses of America’s psychosexual temperature, it was only to be expected. Squeezed down and controlled by conformity cops, comic-book creators chose the Hermetic route. Transforming their insights and rage into fables for children, the debts to the queer underground and the echoes of the narcotic, psychedelic visions of Ginsberg and Burroughs are still hard to miss.

  Imagine the tight-lipped, plausible Batman played by Christian Bale in Christopher Nolan’s twenty-first-century movie series facing some of the adversaries encountered by fifties Batman: a Rainbow Batman, a Zebra Batman, a Creature from Dimension X that resembled a one-eyed testicle on stalk-like legs. With titles including “The Jungle Batman,” “The Merman Batman” (“YES, ROBIN. I’VE BECOME A HUMAN FISH”), “The Valley of Giant Bees” (“ROBIN! HE’S BEEN CAPTURED AND MADE A JESTER IN THE COURT OF THE QUEEN BEE!”), and “Batman Becomes Bat-Baby,” it was an anything-goes atmosphere. And there’s more where they came from: a whole decade’s worth of unfiltered madness as DC writers used every trick in the book to keep Batman away from the crime-haunted streets where he belonged.

  Weisinger’s fluid bodies, his foregrounding of intense emotions, laid the groundwork for the Silver Age of comics and the arrival of a jet-powered, supersonic LSD consciousness that would turn the world’s largest-ever collection of young people into self-proclaimed superhumans overnight.

 

Wednesday 14 July 2021

Freeze Cain



The X Files (1/5) Movie CLIP - Underground Poison (1998) HD

"Harry Dean Stanton and Yaphet Koto are The Two Most Working-Class Guys on The Ship.

And they -- unwittingly, maybe, but maybe intuitively -- KNOW, 
That if They can Just FREEZE CAIN : 

Everything's going to be okay."

And NOBODY Listens to Them.


The Boss :
My God.
What The Hell is that?


Parker :
Jesus Christ.
What is that, man?
Hey, how the hell is he breathing?

Is he still alive or what?

Why don't you guys freeze him?
How come they don't freeze him?
What's going on in there?
What the fuck is going on?

How come they don't freeze him?
Hey, how come you guys don't freeze him?


The Robot :
All right, you can 
Take Your Mask off.

The Crew Boss :
What's it got down his throat?

The Robot :
I would suggest it's feeding him oxygen.

The Crew Boss :
Paralyses him 
Puts him in a coma
Then keeps him alive.

Now what The Hell is that?
We gotta get it off him.

The Robot :
Just a minute.
Just a minute.

I mean, let's not be too hasty.
We don't know anything about...
it.

Now, we're assuming 
it's feeding him oxygen -- 
If we remove it --
It could kill him --

The Crew Boss :
-- I'm willing to take that chance.
Let's cut it off him now.

The Robot :
You'll Take Responsibility?

The Crew Boss :
Yes, yes, yes, 
I'll Take Responsibility.
Get him out of there.



Parker :
She's great. Beautiful.
Walk in The Park! 
When We Fix Something, We Stay Fixed.
Don't we, Brett baby?

Brett :
Right.

Parker :
What I think we should do is just freeze 'im.

He's got A Disease, 
why don't we Stop it Where It Is?

He can always get to A Doctor
when we get back Home.

Brett :
Right.

The (Only) One Who Will Survive This :
Whenever He Says anything
You Say "Right.", Brett. You know that?

Brett :
Right.

The (Only) One Who Will Survive This :
Parker, what do you think? 
Your Staff just follows you
around, and Says "Right."

Just like a regular parrot.

Parker :
Yeah. Shape up.
What are you, some kind of parrot?

Brett :
Right.

The Crew Boss :
Come on. Knock it off. 
Kane's gonna have to go into Quarantine.


That's it.


Yes, and so will we.





Doc : 
Damn! It blew the fuel injection manifold. Strong stuff all right. 
(holds up the broken part to show Marty.
It'll take me a month to rebuild it.

Horus : 
A month?! 
Doc, you're gonna get shot on Monday!

Doc: 
(moves over to his desk by the window
I know, I know, I know! 
I wish...wait. I've got it! 

We can simply roll it down a steep hill!
No, we'd never find a smooth enough surface. 
Unless...of course..!
Ice! We'll wait until Winter...
When The Lake freezes over...

Horus : 
Winter?! Doc, what're you talking about? 
Monday! It's three days away!


WMM: 
What is A Virus, but a colonizing force that cannot be defeated? 
Living in a cave, underground, until it mutates ... and attacks.
 
 
MULDER: 
This is what you've been conspiring to conceal? 
A Disease?
 
WMM: 
No! For God's sake, 
you've got it all backwards! 
 
AIDS, the Ebola virus, on an evolutionary scale they are newborns
This Virus Walked The Planet long before The dinosaurs.
 
MULDER: 
(smiling in disbelief
What do you mean “walked"?
 
WMM: 
Your aliens, Agent Mulder. 
Your little green men arrived here millions of years ago. 
 
Those that didn't leave have been lying dormant 
underground since the last ice age
in the form of an evolved pathogen
waiting to be reconstituted by the alien race
when it comes to colonize the planet -- using us as hosts.
 
 Against this we have 
no defense
nothing but a weak vaccine. 
 
Do you see why it was kept secret
 
Why even The Best Men, 
Men like Your Father, 
could not let The Truth be known. 
 
Until Dallas we believed The Virus would simply controlus, 
that mass infection would make us a slave race
 
Imagine our surprise when They began to gestate
 
My group has been working cooperatively with the alien colonists, 
facilitating programs like the one you saw, 
to give us access to the virus
in The Hope that we might be able to secretly develop A Cure.
 
MULDER: 
To save your own asses.
 
WMM: 
"Survival is The Ultimate Ideology" 
Your Father wisely refused to believe this.
 
MULDER: 
But he sacrificed My Sister. 
He let them take Samantha.
 
WMM: 
Without a vaccination, the only true survivors of the viral holocaust 
will be those immune to it - human-alien clones. 
 
He allowed your sister to be abducted, 
to be taken to a cloning program, for one reason...
 
MULDER: 
So she would survive
As a genetic hybrid.
 
WMM: 
Your Father chose Hope over Selfishness
Hope in the only future he had, his children.
 
His Hope for you was that you would uncover 
The Truth about The Project
 
That you would stop it, 
that you would 
Fight The Future.

Saturday 24 April 2021

And Let’s Get All The Children out of The building.





The character of Marshall Will Kane in High Noon is autobiographical, based on screenwriter 
Carl Foreman. 

Foreman was in the process of being blacklisted by Hollywood due to his previous Communist sympathies 
and his refusal to "name names" 
of others he knew who were also Communists . 

When he sought help from colleagues 
in the hope that they would vouch for him, 
most refused or had a long list of conditions

Foreman based many of the conversations that Will Kane has in the movie on his own experiences of being 
turned down for help.


Malachi 

Chapter 4 :


1

For, behold, the day cometh, that shall burn as an oven; and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be stubble : 

and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the LORD of hosts, that it shall leave them neither root nor branch.


2

But unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings; and ye shall go forth, and grow up as calves of the stall.


3

And ye shall tread down the wicked; for they shall be ashes under the soles of your feet in the day that I shall do this, saith the LORD of hosts.


4

Remember ye the law of Moses my servant, which I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel, with the statutes and judgments.


5

Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the LORD :


6

And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers, lest I come and smite the earth with a curse.



The Parson :

Our text today is from Malachi,

Chapter Four.


"For, behold, the day cometh, that shall burn as an oven, and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be..."



Yes?


Cain :

I'm sorry, Parson.

I don't want to disturb the services.


You already have.

You don't come to this church very often, Marshal.

And when you got married today, you didn't see fit to be married here.

What could be so important to bring you here now?


Cain :


I need help.


It's True, I haven't been a church-going man.

And maybe that's a bad thing.

And I didn't get married here today because my wife's a Quaker.


But I came here for help 

because there are people here.


I'm sorry, Marshal.

Say what you have to say.


Cain :


Maybe some of you already know it, but if you don't, it looks like Frank Miller's coming back on The Noon Train.


I need all the special deputies I can get.


Well, what are we waiting for? Let's go.


Hold it a minute. Hold it.

Before we go rushing out into something that ain't gonna be so pleasant, 

let's be sure we know what this is all about.


What I want to know is this :

Ain't it True that Kane ain't no longer Marshal?


And ain't it True there's Personal Trouble between him and Miller?


All right, all right. 

Quiet, everybody!


If there's a difference of opinion, let everybody have a say.

But let's do it like grown-up people.


And let's get all the kids out of the building.





I say it don't really matter if there's anything personal between Miller and The Marshal here.


We all know Who Miller Is 

and what Miller is.

What's more, we're wasting time.


All right. Coy.


Mr. COY :

Yes, we all know who Miller is.

But we put him away once.

And who saved him from hanging?


The politicians up north.

I say this is their mess.

Let them take care of it.


Sawyer.


Mr. SAWYER :

Well, I say this.


We've been paying good money right along for a marshal and deputies.


Now the first time there's any Trouble,

we're supposed to take care of it ourselves.


Well, what have we been paying for all this time?


I say we're not peace officers.

This ain't our job.


I've been saying right along, we ought to have more deputies.

If we did, we wouldn't be facing this thing now.


Just a minute. Just a minute.

Everybody, quiet!

Keep it orderly.

You had your hand up, Ezra.


I can't believe I've heard some of the things that have been said here --

You all ought to be ashamed of yourselves.


Sure, we paid this man 

and he wasthe best marshal this town ever had.


It ain't his Trouble, it's ours.


I tell you, if we don't Do What's Right,

we're gonna have plenty more Trouble.


So there ain't but one thing to do now.

And you all know what that is.


Go ahead, Kibbee.


This whole thing's been handled wrong.

Here's those three killers walking the streets bold as brass.


Why didn't you arrest them, Marshal?

Why didn't you put them in jail where they ought to be?


Then we'd only have Miller to worry about instead of the four of them.


I haven't anything to arrest them forMr Trumbull.

They haven't done anything.


There's no law against them sitting on a bench at the depot.


I can't listen to any more of this.

What's the matter with you people?


Don't you remember when a decent woman couldn't walk down the street in broad daylight?


Don't you remember when this wasn't a fit place to bring up a child?


How can you sit here and talk and talk and talk like this?


What are we all getting so excited about?

How do we know Miller's on that train, anyway?


Well, we can be pretty sure he's on it.

Time's getting short.


Parson, you got anything to say?


I don't know. The Commandments say,

"Thou shalt not kill."

But we hire men to go out and do it for us.


The right and the wrong seem pretty clear here.


But if you're asking me to tell my people to go out and kill and maybe get themselves killed, I'm sorry, I don't know what to say.

I'm sorry.


All right. I'll say this, what this town owes Will Kane here,

it can never pay with money.


And don't ever forget it.


He's the best marshal we ever had,

maybe the best marshal we'll ever have.


So if Miller comes back here today,

it's Our Problem, not his.


It's Our Problem 

because This is Our Town.


We made it with our own hands out of nothing.


And if we want to keep it decent,

keep it growing,


we've got to think mighty clear

here today.


And we've got to have the courage to do what we think is right, no matter how hard it is. All right.


There's gonna be fighting when Kane and Miller meet.


And somebody's going to get hurt, that's for sure. 


Now, people up North are thinking about this town.

Thinking mighty hard, thinking about sending money down here to put up stores and to build factories.


It'll mean a lot to this town. An awful lot.


But if they're gonna read about shooting and killing 

in the streets, what are they gonna think then?


I'll tell you. They're gonna think this is just another wide-open town, and everything we worked for will be wiped out.


In one day, this town will be set back five years.

And I don't think we can let that happen.


Mind you, you all know how I feel about this man.


He's a mighty brave man. 

A Good Man.


He didn't have to come back here today.

And for his sake and the sake of this town, I wish he hadn't.


Because if he's not here when Miller comes, my hunch is there won't be any trouble.

Not one bit.


Tomorrow we'll have a new marshal, and if we can all agree here to offer him our services,


I think we can handle anything that comes along.


Now, to me, that makes sense.


To me, that's the only way out of this.

Will, I think you better go while there's still time.


It's better for you, 

and it's better for us.


Thanks.

Thursday 22 April 2021

No Time for a Lesson in Civics, My Boy











The Judge :
Have you forgotten that I'm the man who passed sentence on Frank Miller? 
You shouldn't have come back, Will. It was stupid

Cain :
I figured I had to. 
I figured I had to stay. 


The Judge :
You figured wrong. 

Cain :
I can deputise a posse. 
Ten, 12 guns is all I need. 

The Judge :
Yeah, My Intuition tells me otherwise. 

Cain :
Why? 

The Judge :
No time for a lesson in civics, my boy — 
In the fifth century B.C., The Citizens of Athens, 
having suffered grievously under A Tyrant, 
managed to Depose and Banish him. 

However, when he returned some years later 
with an army of mercenaries, 
those same citizens not only 
opened The Gates for him, 
but stood by while he executed members of The Legal Government. 

A similar thing happened about eight years ago 
in a town called Indian Falls. 

I escaped Death only through the intercession of A Lady 
of somewhat dubious reputation, 
and at the cost of a very handsome ring 
which once belonged to My Mother. 

Unfortunately, I have no more rings. 

Cain :
You're A Judge

The Judge :
I've been A Judge many times in many towns. 
And I hope to live 
to be A Judge again. 

Cain :
I can't tell you What to Do. 

The Judge :
Why must you be so stupid, Will? 

Have you forgotten 
What He Is

Have you forgotten 
What He's Done to People? 

Have you forgotten 
that He's Crazy

Don't you remember 
when he sat in that chair 
and said,

"You'll never hang me. 
I'll come back. 

You'll never hang me. 
I'll come back. 

I'll kill you, Will Kane. 
I swear it, I'll kill you"

 Think I'm letting you down, don't you? 

Cain :
No. 


The Judge :
Look, this is just 
A Dirty Little Village 
in The Middle of Nowhere. 

Nothing that happens here 
is really important. 

Now get out. 


Cain :
There isn't time. 

The Judge :
What a waste. 
Good luck. 



“On December 16, 1961
The World turned upside down 
and inside out
and I was Born, 
Screaming, in America.

It was The End of The American Dream, 
just before We Lost Our Innocence irrevocably, 
and The TV Eye brought 
The Horror of Our Lives 
into Our Homes for all to see.

I was told when I grew up, 
I could be anything I wanted – 
A Fireman, A Policeman, A Doctor. 
Even President, it seemed. 

And for the first time 
in The History of Mankind, 
something new called 
An 'Astronaut.'

But like many kids growing up 
on a steady diet of Westerns, 
I always wanted to be 
The Cowboy Hero :– 

That Lone Voice 
in The Wilderness 
fighting Corruption and Evil wherever I found it, 
and standing for 
Freedom, Truth and Justice.

And in My Heart of Hearts
I still track the remnants 
of That Dreamwherever I go —
on My Never-ending Ride 
into The Setting Sun.