Books

2015 Post 8: Roberto Saviano’s Gomorrah

Pal Pablo had been telling me about a TV series called Gomorrah. I had seen the movie listed on Netflix and after adding it to my list, obviously, I never went back to it again. “Breaking Bad crossed with The Sopranos, but even better” was his pitch. I wanted to ask him how it rated against The Wire, but I was too afraid to hear the answer so the question remained unasked.

It did not come as a surprise to see that Gomorrah was based on a book; what was surprising was that Roberto Saviano had not written a novel, as I had thought earlier, but an eyewitness account of sorts. It is a book about crime; more specifically, it is about how the dealings of the Italian crime syndicate, the Camorra have seeped into nearly every pore of Neapolitan society. Saviano’s writing describes the criminal empire in words that awaken goose-flesh, beginning with an explosive visual description.

They looked like mannequins, but when they hit the ground, their heads split open, as if their skulls were real. And they were. Men, women and even a few children, came tumbling out of the container. All dead. Frozen, stacked one on top of another, packed like sardines.

The book slithers through history and geography in a very unassuming manner. Saviano talks about the many fingers of the Camorra and the various pies they are dipped into – fashion, drugs, weapons, cement, even garbage disposal. There is a broad cast of characters, almost overwhelmingly so, with names of different Camorristas across time periods, their nicknames, and the acts that brought them notoriety. Sometimes accompanied by the whys of it all.

Carmine Schiavone recounts that they had Salzillo sit at the head of the table, in honor of his uncle. All of a sudden, Sandokan started to strangle him while his cousin and his cohorts held him by the legs and arms. Sandokan could have killed him with a gun or a knife to the stomach, the way the old bosses used to. But no. He had to do it with his hands: that’s the way the new sovereign kills the old one when he usurps the throne. Ever since 1345 when Andrew of Hungary was strangled in Aversa, the result of a conspiracy orchestrated by his wife, Queen Joan I, and the Neapolitan nobles loyal to Charles, Duke of Durazzo, who aspired to the throne, strangulation around here has been a symbol of succession, of the violent turnover of sovereignty. Sandokan had to show all the bosses that he was the heir, that, by right of viciousness, he was the new leader.

My favorite part of the book deals with a Camorrista’s obsession with Mikhail Kalashnikov – he finally did get to see the man and gave him a box of mozzarella from Naples. By that time, Kalashnikov a retired general who sort of lived off the glory of creating the most efficient killing machine of all time. How efficient?

Nothing in the world—organic or synthetic, metal or chemical—has produced more deaths than the AK-47. It has killed more than the atom bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, more than HIV, more than the bubonic plague, more than malaria, more than all the attacks by Islamic fundamentalists, more than the total of all the earthquakes that have shaken the globe. An exponential amount of human flesh, impossible to even imagine. Only one image came anywhere close to a convincing description, an advertisement at a convention: fill a bottle with sugar by pouring the grains from a small hole in the corner of the bag. Each grain of sugar is someone killed by a Kalashnikov….To calculate the state of human rights, the analysts consider the price of an AK-47. The less it costs, the more human rights violations there are, an indication that civil rights are gangrening and the social structure is falling to pieces. In western Africa, an AK-47 can cost as little as $50. And in Yemen it is possible to find second-or thirdhand weapons for as low as six dollars.

Of course, there is an ample amount of black humor throughout the book, despite the matter-of-fact telling. It does make me wonder how much nuance is lost in translation.

Mariano spent the entire morning at Kalashnikov’s house. The Russian who introduced him must have been quite influential for the general to treat him so warmly. The video camera was running as they sat at the table and a tiny, elderly lady opened the Styrofoam box of mozzarella. They ate with relish. Vodka and mozzarella. Mariano wanted to record it all, so he set the camera at the head of the table. He wanted proof that General Kalashnikov ate the mozzarella from his boss’s dairy. In the background the lens also captured a piece of furniture covered with framed photos of children.

“Mariano, Kalashnikov has that many children and grandchildren?”

“They’re not his children! They’re all photos people send him of children named after him, people whose lives were saved by a Kalashnikov or who simply admire him.”

Like doctors who put pictures of children they have treated on their office shelves as mementos of their professional success, General Kalashnikov had photographs of children named after his creature in his living room. A well-known guerrilla fighter with the Popular Liberation Movement in Angola once told an Italian reporter, “I named my son Kalash because it is synonymous with liberty.”

Speaking of mozzarella, this segment in the section on the Camorra’s methods of waste disposal in Italy made me want to avoid milk for the rest of my life.

Near Villaricca the carabinieri identified a piece of land where paper towels from hundreds of dairy farms in the Veneto, Emilia-Romagna, and Lombardy had been dumped: towels used for cleaning cow udders. Farmhands have to clean the udders constantly—two, three, four times a day—every time they attach the suction cups of the automatic milker. As a result the cows often develop mastitis and similar diseases and begin to secrete pus and blood. They’re not allowed to rest, however. Their udders are simply cleaned every half hour so that the pus and blood do not get into the milk and ruin an entire can. Maybe it was just my imagination, or perhaps the heaps of yellowish udder paper distorted my senses, but they smelled like sour milk. The fact is that the trash, accumulated over decades, has reconfigured the horizons, created previously nonexistent hills, invented new odors, and suddenly restored lost mass to mountains devoured by quarries.

Through the facts and the hearsay, there is Saviano’s cynical observations on the human condition in his homeland.

In Naples cruelty is the most complex and affordable strategy for becoming a successful businessman. The air of the city smells like war, you can breathe it through every pore; it has the rancid odor of sweat, and the streets have become open-air gyms for training to ransack, plunder, and steal, for exercising the gymnastics of power, and the spinning of economic growth.

The economic power of the Camorra System lies exactly in its continual turnover of leaders and criminal choices. One man’s dictatorship is always brief; if the power of a boss were long-lasting, he would raise prices, create a monopoly, making rigid markets, and keep investing in the same sectors rather than exploring new ones. Instead of adding value in the criminal economy, he would become an obstacle to business. And so, as soon as a boss takes over, others ready to take his place start to emerge, figures eager to expand, to stand on the shoulders of the giants they helped create. Something that the journalist Riccardo Orioles, one of the most astute observers of power dynamics, always remembered: “Criminality is not power pure and simple, but one kind of power.” There will never be a boss who wants a seat in government. If the Camorra had all the power, its business, which is essential to the workings of the legal and illegal scale, would not exist. In this sense every arrest and maxi-trial seems more like a way of replacing capos and breaking business cycles than something capable of destroying a system.

There are nuggets of history revealed throughout the book, like this mention of the other book about Italian crime families that also starts with a “G”.

Mario Puzo’s inspiration was not a Sicilian but Alfonso Tieri, boss of Pignasecca in downtown Naples, who became the head of the leading Italian Mafia families in the United States after the death of Charles Gambino. In an interview for an American newspaper, Antonio Spavone ‘o malommo, or “bad man,” the Neapolitan boss linked to Tieri, stated, “If the Sicilians showed how to keep their mouths shut, the Neapolitans showed the world how to behave when you’re in command. To convey with a gesture that commanding is better than fucking.” Most of the criminal archetypes, the acme of Mafia charisma, were from a few square miles of Campania. Even Al Capone was originally from here; his family came from Castellammare di Stabia. Capone was the first boss to measure himself against the movies. His nickname, Scarface, from a scar on his cheek, was used by Brian De Palma for his 1983 film about Tony Montana, but Howard Hawks had used it previously for his 1932 movie about Capone. Capone and his escort would show up on the set every time there was an action scene or location shot he could watch. The boss wanted to make sure that Tony Camonte, the Scarface character he inspired, did not become trite. But he also wanted to make sure he was as much like Tony Camonte as possible; he knew that after the film’s release, Camonte would become the emblem of Capone, rather than the other way around.

Overall, a fantastic read. I will check out the movie and TV series soon, just to see how they storify the book’s non-linear, informational narrative.

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Myself

2015 Post 7: The Benefits of Batgirling

It begins with a bathroom selfie. But of course.One of the words that might just make into popular lexicon this year would be “Batgirling”. Though the usage and origin is confined to a narrow subset of people: comic book fans. More specifically, comic book fans that read ongoing mainstream titles. I am not one of them. That may soon be changing, thanks to the aforementioned word.

What happened was this: about a year ago, an editor named Mark Strong got artist Cameron Stewart to take on writer-duties on the ongoing DC series Batgirl.  This was a series that had recently been rebooted in the New 52 event, one that made Barbara Gordon Batgirl again. The only thing I noticed or cared about the original reboot (as opposed to this new reboot of that reboot) was that the covers were by Adam Hughes and Gail Simone wrote the series – the writer was well-known for her definitive run on Birds of Prey, the 90s series that featured Barbara Gordon in her wheelchair-ridden Oracle avatar, teaming up with Black Canary and later, Huntress. But as I have mentioned to various people who still care to listen – mainstream DC and Marvel are both too obsessed with shoving their readers’ heads up the dark cavities of continuity hell (My favorite way of proving this is to ask someone “Who is Robin right now?” and “what is the difference between Uncanny Avengers, New Avengers and Mighty Avengers?”). Add to it my basic gripe that Superman has never been used well and Batman is a self-obsessed asshole that gets a free pass from everyone just because he is “cool”, and there you have it – I walked away from DC/Marvel without looking back. With a foot in the door, to be fair, because I was still interested in the loony titles. Hawkeye by Dave Aja and Matt Fraction, Loki Agent of Asgard, and Ms Marvel, to name a few. 

But back to Batgirl. What really happened with Cam Stewart getting on board with co-writer Brenden Fletcher and Babs Tarr on art duties is a distinct change in tone. Mind you, I haven’t read the actual comics yet (read last part of paragraph above), but the sassiness of the cover and the online discussion about the change got me interested enough to check out a few sample interiors of Batgirl #35. I liked ’em quite a bit, the focus seemed to be on a distinctive teenage personality, not a cookie-cutter heroine subservient to the needs of whatever overarching plot-stuffing that DC editorial mandated. I decided to keep an eye out for the trade when it came out; but my default setting was still set to “skepticism – high”.

Until I read recently about how the success of the Batgirl relaunch, and that of other series like Harley Quinn and Gotham Academy – which is a school story set in our favorite crazy city illustrated by Becky Cloonan, she who has successfully straddled the indie scene with just as much elan as her forays into DC/Marvel territory – has led to a change in company policy. A lot of DC series are being relaunched with new creative teams in June. Which does not say much by itself, but when I hear of editorial call for pitches with “blue sky treatment” where continuity is given less preference over content. And the relaunches look good. Batgirl‘s Brenden Fletcher takes over Black Canary with artists Annie Wu and Irene Koh. Bryan Hitch, known for his widescreen action in The Authority and The Ultimates works on the Justice League of America. I get a comeuppance of sorts through a series called We Are Robin.

The city is overrun by Jokerized victims, but a small band of teenagers unites to take a stand. Their secret knowledge of Gotham City’s streets helps them survive, but will Batman take help from this young group of upstarts?

I don’t know where this may lead just yet, but if this works, it may be a great way to make these comics less cumbersome and more joyful. Because as much as one loves the grittiness of a Dark Knight Returns or a Watchmen, we do not deserve mutated fetuses of these story-lines churned out every year, dripping in blood, deaths, fake reverence that stands in for “heroism”. The need of the hour is less schlock, more aww. And yes, and a whole lot of diversity in comics. DC seems to have risen to that particular challenge, as Bleeding Cool says:

We have a black man (Dave Walker) writing one of DC’s most prominent black comic characters, Cyborg. We have a woman (Amanda Conner) writing and drawing (Emanuela Lupacchino) Starfire, often criticized for the character’s sexist portrayals of late. And a comic book creator (Steve Orlando) who already brought us a critically acclaimed gay graphic novel (Virgil), writing DC’s gay male comic, Midnighter. Criticism that despite attempts at diversity in character, it’s still a bunch of straight white men working on the comics, is a little harder to justify today.

(I probably shouldn’t even mention how worried and happy I am at the same time for the return of Garth Ennis and John McCrea’s Section Eight, one of the most deranged groups of people ever willed into existence. They appeared in the cult Hitman, and I have fond memories – and high hopes – of Messrs Ennis and McCrea)

Barbara Gordon getting shot in the spine arguably started this slow, morbid tailspin that DC fell into since the eighties. It would be fitting if Ms Gordon’s return to form – in a pair of yellow Doc Martens, no less – brings this company out of its storytelling slump.

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Dear DC

 

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Books

Twenty Fifteen, Post 6: Why ads matter

This one goes out to everyone who has Ad Blocker on their browsers.

I don’t do it. I let the ads come. I click on skip for the ones that have the skip button enabled after 4 seconds. It’s fine, I can deal with the creeping tension; after all, I have lived in a time when loading a 7-minute YouTube video would take 45 minutes. And even if I cannot skip through the ad, that’s okay too. I go get myself a coffee, or check Twitter. I mean – really, people? With all the time on our hands nowadays, the least you can do is to surrender to serendipity every now and then, okay?

Because that’s how I found out about Simon Rich. All of you who already know him, you can walk away now, nothing for you here. Thanks for dropping in, guys. We will talk more next time.

The rest of you, we need to talk about Simon Rich. So this guy, right? He writes for the New Yorker, has a bunch of published stuff. Short stories, a few novels.

Uh, no, they do not show ads for books on the ol’ videorama – it was a trailer for a TV series called Man Seeking Woman. It premieres tomorrow, apparently. I watched it because Jay Baruchel was in it, and my Undeclared cred demanded that I give my man Steven Karp my undivided attention as he waltzed through hailstorms, torture, and blind-dating a troll, all in the quest for love. The TV show looked like an over-the-top examination of 21st century romantic cliches, the kind of laugh-out-loud absurdity that Silicon Valley brought to the table last year.

Digging into details about the show, I found out that the show-runner, creator and exec producer was this gentleman mentioned above, and apparently the show was based on one of his short story collections called The Last Girlfriend on Earth and Other Stories. Which I finished reading just now. It’s a short book that can be finished in under an hour, and it was funny funny. I laughed out loud at nearly every other page; some are politically incorrect, others not as funny overall, but they are all distinctive – and weird. I plan to go read his other books now, and I hope the show lives up to its zany premise.

Here are some of his New Yorker stories available for free online.

Unprotected. (The first story in The Last Girlfriend, very Toy Story-esque)

Sell Out. (a four part serialization, and is supposed to be a Seth Rogen movie soon)

I Love Girl. (also from The Last Girlfriend)

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As I had mentioned before, it makes sense for me to keep playlists on YouTube. It makes for a great set to cast on the TV when there are guests around, helps me keep track of interesting music videos and also serves as an answer to the perennial “What are you listening to right now”-question. Here’s my playlist for January.

Also, COMMENTARY!

  • George Ezra’s glorious Ledbelly-inspired vocals jumped out at me during a Spotify Discover session. It also turned up in my a playlist that Spotify generated for me, and is probably the most played-song in that list.
  • Meiko’s new album is less sunny than The Bright Side, but still so good! The video is shot around DTLA, and parts of it in Hotel Cafe, one of my favorite music venues in Hollywood. I have been to 9 Meiko shows so far, and have heard this album evolve over the last year or two.
  • I don’t remember who linked to James’ new album – maybe it was Amanda Palmer? Love the quirkiness of the video and his voice.
  • I believe it was pal Delia who pointed me to Azure Ray a few months ago, and this is one of my favorite songs by the duo.
  • Pal Sarika had a friend who said “I heard this new artist named Fallulah, and she sounds like your kind of music.” She told me the same thing. I have been love with this Danish-Romanian songstress since, and it’s a pity she hasn’t released her album Escapism officially in the US yet.
  • MØ is another Scandinavian musician who released an album last year, and this DIY music video is just nuts.
  • Neulore was a band I heard on a random evening at the Hotel Cafe. I had no idea what band was playing that night – and they blew my mind.
  • I played Early Winters’ ‘Vanishing Act‘ to pal Suparn. He played ‘Young’ by the Paper Kites for me. That is a perfect example of music karma.
  • I was due to see Crash Kings live (at the Hotel Cafe again) but got stuck at work. Much sadness. Love their sound.
  • Yelle was The Act I Regret Missing last year. She played at the Fonda theater on Halloween night, and I did not want to brave the WeHo parade traffic.
  • Faul and Wad Ad’s song turned up on a dance playlist, and I was fascinated by the children’s chorus, the saxophone solo, and of course the fun video.
  • Pal Amos recommended Fatoumata Diawara because he heard her on an in-flight entertainment catalog and thought I would like her music. I did.
  • Plastiscines, Pony Pony Run Run and this particular Coeur de Pirate came to my attention thanks to pal AC, who played them back to back in a Youtube face-off contest we had one evening.
  • ‘Girls’ by the 1975 was brought to my attention by Max Landis on Twitter.

  • BONUS TRACK: because I am undecided about whether I like the MS MR remix or the original version of MØ’s ‘Pilgrim’.
Movies

Twenty Fifteen, Post 4: The Netflix Queue

On the 1st of January, there were 224 items on my Netflix queue, including movies and TV shows. This is the first-world equivalent of owning a 3 TB hard drive, copying a bunch of movies from friends’ disks and feeling smug about it. “Have you watched that movie?” “No, but I have it on my drive.” Or on my Netflix list. Well, fuck that, I thought. I would empty that list, or at least put a sizable dent into it.

So over the last few days, I have been picking random movies from the list and watching them. If I like them enough, they stay in the list, so that I can watch them again later. If I don’t, they get deleted.

  1. Le Chef A fluffy feel-good movie about an almost-has-been chef who is about to lose his Michelin star because of his traditional cooking, and a wannabe chef who can’t seem to get a break. Jean Reno and Michaël Youn play the two protagonists, and even though at points you can feel the script going through its buddy-comedy paces, it was a fun watch. Much fun is poked at molecular gastronomy, live cookery shows and celebrity chefs. There is a cringe-inducing Japanese sequence that I would rather forget. Final status: kicked off the list.
  2. Le Weekend Just keeping the French theme going. But this was a British movie, with Jim Broadbent, Lindsay Duncan and Jeff Goldblum. An aged couple goes to Paris to relive their honeymoon; the burden of a relationship that has gone on for decades weighs on their vacation. Dark at times, light-hearted at others, this is a perfect movie for your inner cynic. I found out that the screenplay was by author Hanif Kureishi, and that made me want to watch more of his works. I love the ending, and that makes me want to keep it on the list, but let’s see.
  3. In A World… From Paris, we move to Los Angeles. This is a movie set in the voice-acting industry, the title of the film referring to the words that a voice actor named Don LaFontaine made famous in numerous trailers. Directed by and starring Lake Bell, it is about what happens when a female vocal coach – daughter of an acclaimed voice actor – is shortlisted to take over the legacy of LaFontaine’s famous delivery. Stars a bunch of comedy superstars, including Demetri Martin, Tig Notaro and Ken Marino in supporting roles. Quite a blast, but good for a single viewing only. Kicked off the list.
  4. Beginners Ewan McGregor, Christopher Plummer and Melanie Laurent star in this lovely movie about relationships and commitment. I had seen the trailer for the movie three (or was it four?) years ago, but never went around to watching it. It deals with Oliver (McGregor) dealing with the aftermath of his father’s death. His father, you see, was gay, and came out of the closet after his mother died. Heart-wrenching at times, particularly because the characters are so well-written, this movie also has some of the best dog-dialogues you will ever see on screen. I would actually love to watch this movie again some time, so it stays on the list. (I watched this movie just after finding out that Ewan McGregor is also quite the traveler. With his friend Charlie Boorman, he rode his motorcyle around the world. Twice, in 2004 and 2007. There is even a book and TV show called Long Way Around, based on  their exploits.)

Only 220 more to go.

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