I’ve
seen three movies in the past week or so, and I learned something about myself and
writing.
I’ve
had a fairly long stretch of vacation this holiday season. Work normally closes
down for the week between Christmas and New Year’s, and this year, since both
holidays fell on a Wednesday, we were off from Dec. 20 to Jan. 2. Add a couple
of days of vacation on both sides, and it comes close to about three weeks.
Although, these days, in 21st century America, the idea of vacation
is better described as “work-release program.”
We’ve
done some fun things. We watched a fireworks display in our local suburb. We
went to the “Garden Glow” at the Missouri Botanical Gardens, some 18 displays
of lights around very familiar parts of the gardens. And we watched three
movies, with one more to go (The Hobbit,
Part 2).
We
saw Philomena,
starring Judi Dench as a woman in her 70s who some 50 years before had been
forced to give up her child for adoption. And she wants to find him. So she
enlists the help of an unemployed journalist (played by Steve Coogan), and
through the story of finding a son we learn much about what motivates her and
what motivates the journalist, and how both are trying to make sense of their
lives. It’s based on a true story.
As
I watched it, and considered it afterward, I realized that’s often what we
writers do – write to make sense of something – our lives, our childhood, a
traumatic event.
And
then we saw the critically acclaimed Inside Llewyn Davis, by the
critically acclaimed Coen Brothers. Yes, I used “critically acclaimed” twice. I
found it a depressing movie. I understand why the critics like it. Set in the
Greenwich Village folk music scene of the early 1960s, it’s loosely based on a
true story, and it’s a story of how a folk singer fails. He keeps doing the
same things over and over again, and he’s generally unaware that he’s doing
that.
As
depressing as I found it, I did learn something from it, and that is that how
you treat people is a manifestation of your personality and perhaps your
history. I also learned that repeating the same mistakes over and over will not
result in success.
And
then we saw Saving Mr. Banks, the
story of how Walt Disney (Tom Hanks) convinced the writer P.L. Travers (Emma Thompson)
to let him produce Mary Poppins (also
based on a true story). Mixing flashbacks in her life in rural Australia from
50 years before with the trials and tribulations of writing the movie script,
we gradually come to understand why she wrote the books, and why it was so
difficult for her to allow the filming.
One
key line is a scene with the writers, when Travers says that Mary Poppins “didn’t
come to save the children.” By that time, we suspect who it was that Mary
Poppins actually came to save, and it wasn’t Mr. Banks. Not really. It was the
writer herself.
I
don’t know if it’s a theme in movies this year or not, or if these are the
movies I’m attracted to, but all three are based on true stories, all three are
about the act of creation, and all three are about redemption and forgiveness
(or the lack of it). All three reminded me of what I do in my own writing.
Something
unexpected happened for me. It wasn’t until I saw Saving Mr. Banks that I understood why I’ve written two novels, and
a slew of related manuscripts behind them. I understood the “how” of writing
them, how they came to be, and I’ve talked about that quite a bit on this blog
and in several interviews. But it was the movie that helped me see the why.
Those
two novels, with stories and characters so completely unlike my own experience,
are me making sense of my childhood and young adult life. They’re about the
people I grew up with. They’re about what failed and what succeeded. And they’re
about seeking redemption and forgiveness.
It’s
not a completely comfortable understanding. But it is a good one to begin a new
year with.
Photograph: A scene from the movie Saving Mr. Banks.
7 comments:
A fine post, Glynn. Proud to call you my friend.
Wishing you much success in this New Year.
Wonderful reflection upon why we write and how it relates to our life experience. I know that the concept for The Glade Series came from games my brother and I would with our miniature stuffed animals.
Oh, and you will absolutely love The Hobbit movie!
Happy New Year, Glynn!
Glynn, we saw Saving Mr. Banks on Christmas day and my brother and his family saw it a few days ago.
Last night for our NYEve get together my sister in law asked me, 'so, did the P.L. Travers story make you think maybe about re-writing your own father story?' and I realized in some ways that's why I was weeping so at the end of the film. My childhood was not a happy one, father-wise and it seems God is stirring something in me to get it all down and paper to make sense of it, as you mention.
Great post--thanks for the brave sharing.
The "why" - for me it swings wild between being the fuel and the road block.
Thanks for sharing your insight, wisdom, and talent.
Blessings on this new year.
I see that Inside Llewyn Davis, was the Jerry Grayson's last acting role as the character Mel Novikoff.
I wonder if we can ever place the time that we stop moving away from home and turn the corner enough to be making our way back again. Or is the curve so wide that we can not really pin a point, but, just find ourself one day going it that direction?
I so appreciate these reflections, Glynn, and agree that we often write to make sense of our stories as much as to get them down for 'posterity,' whatever the heck that is. I've seen "Philomea" and liked it very much (also "The Book Thief," which I thought was a fine film) but Mr. Banks is on the list for future viewing. Not sure about Llewellyn. . .
Thank you for sharing your insights Glynn. I'm in the midst of writing a little mystery. I didn't think it really had anything to do with anything, but I'm rethinking that now. I don't suppose we can write anything that comes from our hearts that doesn't somehow reflect something of our past. I must go see "Saving Mr. Banks."
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