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Showing posts with the label Leys (Simon)

1996, the best year in movie history, pt. 93: Il postino (The postman)

Quintessential small “prestige” picture. Italian-French-Belgian adaptation of a Chilean novel, set on a small Mediterranean island. Scored by an Argentinian (Luis Bacalov); directed by an Englishman (Michael Radford); co-starring a Frenchman (Philippe Noiret) as history’s most revered Chilean: Pablo Neruda.

Released in 1994. Released in the United States in 1995.

Nominated for five 1996 Oscars: Picture, Director, Adapted Screenplay, Actor (Massimo Troisi, who’d died), and Score (Bacalov won).

(Not unusual for Miramax thirty years ago.)

But the movie’s success is due to Troisi’s tricky performance.

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Troisi is Mario, the (fictitious) part-time postman to Neruda, who is in political exile. Mario and Neruda become friends. This is very much at Mario’s instigation. He intrudes at all hours, with or without mail.

Victor Hugo remarked about his Channel Island years:
What a pity I was not exiled earlier! I could have achieved so many things which I fear I shall not have the time to complete.
Or as Simon Leys (ibid.) puts it:
The poet [Hugo] found himself left with only two interlocutors – but with these at least, he felt on the same footing: God and the ocean. … No wonder these years of solitude and contemplation were the most productive of his life.
Neruda seems determined to follow Hugo’s example. He devotes himself to beauty, politics, and his female companion. He is only pulled away from these things at the insistence of his tactless regular visitor.

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Roger Ebert:
The first time we see Mario … we think perhaps he is retarded. He is having a conversation with his father, who seems to be retarded, too, or perhaps just engrossed in his soup.

We realize in the next scene or two that Mario is of normal intelligence, but has been raised in a place that provided him with almost nothing to talk about.
I don’t think it’s the place that makes Mario inarticulate. It’s that what he seeks isn’t easily describable.

The island’s other postal worker (Renato Scarpa) has plenty to say. He has political opinions. He admires Neruda as a famous fellow Communist. Of Neruda’s poetry, he knows almost nothing; he’s utterly mundane. Similarly, Mario’s father thinks only of fishing; and there’s an old widow, an innkeeper, who’s downright suspicious of whatever is purported to transcend daily concreteness.

Mario couldn’t care less about fishing. He doesn’t really care about politics, either. The island must import water; its provision is irregular; the authorities really ought to intervene. Mario understands this problem but shrugs it off.

Practicalities – earning a decent wage, having water to drink – have no grip on his imagination.

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What does?

Not the wider world.

Not whatever must be read about. Mario is more literate than most islanders but deciphers sentences haltingly. He’ll never devour pages of prose.

What, then?

If he knew the term, he might say: Blessedness.

A kind of holiness or beauty. Saintly beauty, but not of deeds. Beauty of being.

And not just any beauty of being – not at first. There’s plenty of natural beauty all around Mario, but scenery leaves him unaffected.

No, it’s supernatural beauty that he’s groping after, although it doesn’t occur to him to say as much, or even to try to formulate the concept. (His priest is useless.)

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The closest thing to Blessedness that Mario knows about – the most exalted thing he can imagine – is Woman. Granted, he knows little of actual women. There are few on the island. His mother is long-dead.

Mario does go to the pictures. But this isn’t the story of a man’s love affair with the screen. There is another famous romance co-starring Philippe Noiret – Cinema Paradiso – in which an older man initiates a younger into the practice of using art to reach out to what is longed for. Mario doesn’t seem much affected by screen beauties, however. Just as he’s indifferent to mountains and seas, he doesn’t pine after actresses. He’s after something more transcendent.

What Mario notices, sorting Neruda’s mail, is that women adore the poet. Not just a woman. Women. He badgers Neruda: first, for autographs that he might show to women; then, for advice on wooing.

You have to talk to women, Neruda tells him. Neruda is deft with metaphor and rhythm. Mario takes note. Together they walk the hills and beaches, discussing the elements of figurative speech. Mario learns to attend to nature, and to use language to evoke feelings and happenings that have no names.

He listens to a recorded message from Neruda’s Chilean comrades. He acquires a sense of duty to his fellows.

He sees the world through his friend’s eyes.


Then Mario meets the prettiest girl on the island: the old innkeeper’s niece (Maria Grazia Cucinotta), fittingly named Beatrice. Here, at last, is Woman. Blessedness. He woos her with words. Some are Neruda’s; some are his own. This is the movie’s most conventional passage.

There is a wedding. Neruda signs the document as a witness. He wishes his friend well. Then, he returns to Chile.

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It’s at this point, in its last half-hour, that the movie reveals its ingenuity. Mario is drawn into politics, and into the daily running of the inn. He recites Neruda’s poetry while slicing onions and tomatoes. The mundane chores, more sensuous to him now that he has learned the language of poetry, recall Neruda to him.

He waits, in vain, to hear from his friend.

The story, hitherto so conventionally sweet, turns bitter.

This is an extraordinary development, and this is where Troisi’s anguished acting is extraordinary. Troisi, in fact, was near death. He put off a heart operation to make the movie and died one day after its completion.


There is a parallel with Mario’s story. The actor and the character both sacrifice themselves doing their respective labors of love.

This isn’t one of my favorite movies, but it has one of my favorite endings. It is very wise and very true. There is the friend who concerns himself with Great Causes, Great Sayings, and Great Deeds, who inadvertently or perhaps deliberately elevates those around him; and then there is the Great Friend, the one who loves his friend not for what he stands for or accomplishes but for who he is.

A religion of losers

It’s in the 40s (F) again – a most welcome change. There’s still too much snow everywhere to take Samuel strolling. But a lot has melted.

As I said, I welcome the change; but I also feel blue about it. Apparently, there’s a kind of seasonal affective disorder that is triggered when the weather improves. Maybe that’s what is bothering me. Or maybe it’s that I like having the snow around while I read Smilla’s Sense of Snow.

And, of course, C.P. Snow.

This month’s Strangers and Brothers novel, Corridors of Power, is about Whitehall – the world of British politicians and civil servants. What an awful, soul-sucking scene that is. One’s every word (deed, gesture) is assessed in terms of whether it will cause one to go up or down the ladder – and climbing the ladder is pretty much zero-sum. Of course, there are parallels to this in every government, in every company. As I read, I recall the two or three ladders I’m personally acquainted with. That is plenty depressing, too.

Two things bring comfort. One is the Bible. Simon Leys writes:
The famous multi-billionaire Ted Turner made a remarkable statement some years ago. He said he disliked Christianity, as he felt it was “a religion of losers.” How very true! What an accurate definition indeed!
The other is Winesburg, Ohio – “The Book of the Grotesques” – which I’m rereading after twenty-odd years. That is another book in which losers are treated with compassion.

R.I.P. Rick

Karin’s stepdad, Rick, died today. He was fifty-five. His body housed many illnesses: among them, pneumonia; we’re not sure which one killed him. When we saw him a few weeks ago, he looked frail, shriveled up. He needs to go to the doctor, we said. But with typical stubbornness he refused to go to the doctor. Karin’s mom told us he seemed tired of living: he would barely eat, and he’d talk about dying. Last weekend, he collapsed and lost consciousness. The medics almost took him to the hospital, but he awoke in time to dismiss them.

The following Monday, he went back to his job. Then he stopped working.

He was employed as a chef. Some weeks, he’d work ninety hours. His body was always sore.

A gruff, irreligious man, he was reconciled with God some two weeks ago, Karin’s mom said. It was the first time she’d seen him at peace.

Karin & I are very sad. We would’ve especially liked for Samuel to know him longer. He was very kind to his grandchildren. He put up with a great deal of nonsense from the rest of his family. He had a piquant, rather absurdist sense of humor. He was an ardent Vikings fan; the Vikings, of course, never won any Super Bowls, and I don’t think Rick ever won anything, either. That’s all right: a wise man once noted that ours is a religion for losers.

Rick left it late, but I think that at the end, he was prepared – he had the requisite humility. He was small enough, as another wise man once put it, to crawl through the eye of a needle.

Here he is with his dog, George, whom he lovingly called the “Swine.”

Illness; my mom’s birthday; libraries; Norman Podhoretz; Napoleon; the famous Danish book about traveling to Yemen

Jasper is over his gingivitis (but not the disease that caused it). He’s also past the sneezing and eye-running that plagued him last week. Now Ziva has both of those ailments. To my knowledge, this is her first illness.

Yesterday, she huddled miserably in remote corners of the apartment. Tonight, she’s more active – but no less afflicted.

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My mom’s birthday was today. I gave her some leftover pork that Karin cooked awhile ago. Then my mom asked for the recipe, and so I typed it up on LaTeX and sent it to her as a PDF.

Later, we held a supper for my mom, and Mary asked: “Mother, how does it feel to have all your children with you?” (In fact, David wasn’t there.) After the supper, we had a dessert, and after the dessert, Karin & I went to Walmart to buy medicine for the kitties.

It appears that Walmart sells The Oxford Handbook of Value Theory:


“Only 1 left!”

Even reduced by thirty dollars, the price isn’t nearly in reach. Nor does the Indiana University library system own a printed copy of the book. Nor can the e-book be accessed at my campus.

This leaves Interlibrary Loan. Thankfully, ILL is a marvel, a privilege that exceeds what any person could deserve, a manifestation of the grace of God and Caesar.

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I’m also using the library system to haul in old copies of three books recently re-released by NYRB. The first is Making It by Norman Podhoretz. A comprehensive review by Louis Menand is here.

The book itself is naturally witty, but also incorrigibly grasping. However, the author faces up to this problem rather well:
A critic with a very good pair of ears once wrote that he could hear in some of my essays “the tones of a young man who expects others to be just a little too pleased with his early eminence.”
Indeed. Podhoretz also observes shrewdly the guiding myths of Brooklyn Judaism, of the universities of Columbia and Cambridge (England), and – I haven’t quite got to it yet – of the New York magazine scene.

Still to come from the library: The Death of Napoleon, a short novel by Simon Leys, whose essays collected in The Hall of Uselessness are elegant, empathetic, and astute; and Thorkild Hansen’s Arabia Felix, about an eighteenth-century expedition of Danes to what is now Yemen. The Danes did not get on with one another. I hope to read about the details at this year’s church camp, to which, on Thursday, Karin & I will travel.